This invention relates to improvements in fluid power control systems for hydraulically actuated, cooperating multiple load-engaging members normally mounted on lift trucks or other industrial vehicles. The multiple load-engaging members may be load-handling forks, clamp arms for load surfaces of curved, planar or other configurations, split clamp arms for handling multiple loads of different sizes simultaneously, layer picker clamp arms and their supporting booms, upenders, or other multiple load-engaging members movable cooperatively, but often differently, by linear or rotary hydraulic actuators. Differences in the respective cooperative movements of the respective multiple load-engaging members may include one or more differences in position, speed, acceleration, deceleration, and/or other variables. Although such differences are sometimes intended, they usually are unintended and cause the cooperating load-engaging members to become uncoordinated.
The respective movements of such cooperating mobile load-engaging members have conventionally been controlled either manually or automatically by fluid power valve assemblies which regulate respective flows of hydraulic fluid through parallel connections to separate hydraulic actuators which move each load-engaging member. Hydraulic flow divider/combiner valves are commonly used to try to achieve coordinated synchronous movements of such parallel-connected hydraulic actuators by attempting automatically to apportion respective hydraulic flows to and from the separate hydraulic actuators involved. However, such flow divider/combiner valves are capable of controlling only roughly approximate movements of separate hydraulic actuators, with the result that their presence in any hydraulic control system prevents highly accurate control of the actuators and allows accumulated errors. Other prior systems, which attempt to automatically correct unintended differences in the respective simultaneous movements of separate hydraulic actuators by monitoring their respective positions to provide feedback to respective hydraulic control valves, either variably regulate the separate control valves simultaneously, or completely block one of the valves until the correction has been completed, thereby substantially limiting the speed with which the actuators are able to complete their intended movements.
An exemplary type of piston and cylinder assembly suitable for actuators A and B in the present disclosure is a Parker-Hannifin piston and cylinder assembly as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,834,574, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. Such piston and cylinder assembly includes an optical sensor, such as sensor 11 or sensor 13 in
The sensors 11 and 13 preferably transmit signal inputs to a time-referenced microprocessor-based controller 14, enabling the controller to sense differences in the respective movements of the hydraulic actuators A and B, including not only the differences in respective linear positions, displacements and directions of travel of each piston rod 10 and 12, but also differences in the respective speeds of each piston rod (as first derivatives of the sensed displacements relative to time), and in the respective accelerations or decelerations of each piston rod (as second derivatives of the sensed displacements relative to time). Where rotary movement of a hydraulic actuator is desired, rather than linear movement, the same basic principles can be used with rotary components.
The hydraulic circuit of
To extend both piston rods 10 and 12 from the cylinders of actuators A and B simultaneously in opposite directions, the spool of the valve 24 is shifted upwardly in
Conversely, shifting the spool of the valve 24 downwardly in
As an optional alternative, the hydraulic circuit of
Regardless of whether opening, closing or sideshifting movements are involved, the parallel hydraulic connections in
In the exemplary system of
Although the electrically-controlled fluid-power valves 40 and 42 are preferably of a flow restricting type, as a further alternative they could be of a variable-relief type which, when actuated nonsimultaneously to regulate the flow through one or the other of the actuators A and B, variably relieve (i.e., extract) hydraulic fluid from the fluid flow to decrease the flow, and exhaust such extracted fluid to the reservoir 16 through valve 24 and conduit 28.
In any case, the valves 40 and 42 preferably operate under the automatic control of the controller 14 by virtue of respective control signals 43 and 45 as shown in
An exemplary algorithm for the control of the valves 40 and 42 by controller 14 to regulate the respective flows of hydraulic fluid through actuator A and actuator B will be explained with reference to the exemplary simplified logic flow diagram of
On the other hand, if such difference in magnitude is not less than the minimum error tolerance, the controller 14 actuates the valve 40 to decrease the flow through actuator A, in relation to the size of the difference, by variably restricting the flow exhausted from the rod end of actuator A during its extension, thus retarding the extension movement of actuator A and thereby decreasing the position difference in movement between leading actuator A and lagging actuator B. Valve 42, however, is not simultaneously actuated and remains in its normal open condition. Therefore any excess pressurized flow from the pump 18 resulting from the restriction of flow through actuator A by valve 40 is automatically diverted to actuator B through conduit 34 to speed up the extension movement of the lagging actuator B to more rapidly catch up to actuator A.
Moreover, by decreasing the difference in movement between the two hydraulic actuators A and B as a result of decreasing, but not stopping, hydraulic flow through the leading actuator A, and by maintaining a maximum speed limit only on the leading actuator A and not on the lagging actuator B, the fluid power valve assembly not only enables more rapid correction of the unintended difference in movement between the two actuators A and B, but also minimizes any delay in completing their intended movements which would otherwise be caused by the correction process.
If the determination at step 52 of
The logic sequence on the right-hand side of
Alternatively, in the optional situation where the controller 14 is controlling movements of the piston rods 10 and 12 both in a common direction of movement as a result of having shifted the optional valve 44 to its flow-reversing position, the operation is still substantially the same as that shown in
Where the difference in movement being controlled is with respect to parameters other than position, such as speed, acceleration or deceleration, the controller 14 is able to sense these differences and cause their correction through the respective valve 40 or 42, as the case may be, to decrease or eliminate the difference using substantially the same approach exemplified by
The foregoing examples create asynchronous speeds of the respective actuators A and B to attain intended synchronous positions of the actuators more accurately and more rapidly than was previously possible. Conversely if it is desired to achieve similar benefits by using such asynchronous speeds to attain intended asynchronous positions of the actuators A and B, with one or more intended predetermined differences in their movements, this can be accomplished by appropriate different preset parameters for each actuator which are input to the controller at step 49 of
The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.
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