This application is the National Phase of International Application PCT/IB2007/003145 filed Oct. 22, 2007 which designated the U.S. and that International Application was published under PCT Article 21(2) in English.
The present invention relates to an apparatus for guiding and moving supports for sensors or the like of submarines.
In the submarine technical sector it is known that, when the submarine is at periscope depth, a predetermined number of passive and active sensors have to be carried out of the water, for example radar and/or radio antennae, optronic heads and the like, which are normally housed in the submarine tower (or sail) and integral with tubes able to move by translation which, when required, are translated vertically by suitable hydraulic and/or electric raising devices, until the sensors emerge from the surface of the water above the tower.
It is also known that the devices (sensors, periscopes, antennae, snorkels) are raised above the sail (submarine tower) using guides on which the supports of the devices to be raised slide.
Said guides usually consist of a longitudinal body, integral with a fixed structure, on which sliding surfaces are made, on which the sliding blocks integral with the sensor movable support slide.
The guides have various sliding surface layouts, guaranteeing linear movement with the required precision and support for the loads which tend to shift or bend the moving supports. The extent of these loads is usually very high when the submarine is moving due to the resistance offered by the water on the raised device.
One very efficient guide configuration is that described in EP 0 711 702 having a rectangular plan and sliding surfaces positioned at the vertices of the rectangle in such a way that the sliding blocks push towards the centre of the side which supports the sliding surface, so that the thrust from the sliding block is discharged on the entire wall, compressing it.
Although functional, said solution is very heavy in practice, whilst end users currently seek lighter guiding and raising devices.
For this purpose, the possibility of creating the guide structures using composite materials is also known. However, if the guide is made using composite material, structures of the known type have the problem deriving from the fact that the composite material of the flat wall has a reduced resistance when subjected to compression forces such as those seen in the prior art structures.
In addition, in the typical case of composite materials consisting of layers placed on top of one another, the composite material itself when compressed risks separation of the layers (delamination).
Therefore, the technical problem posed is that of providing a guide apparatus for tubes which support the sensors of submarines, which is particularly light and strong, compact, easy and inexpensive to make and assemble and easily installed on any submarine with fewer operations to be performed on site.
Accordingly, the present invention achieves these results with a guide apparatus for supports for sensors able to move by translation in fixed guides integral with the sail of submarines and the like upon activation of an actuator, wherein the fixed guide has a polygonal cross-section, and wherein at each vertex of the guide there is at least one structure having the shape of a prism extending in the vertical direction along the entire body of the guide, the prismatic elements extending towards the inside of the guide in such a way as to form at least two sliding surfaces for corresponding sliding blocks belonging to the tube to be moved by translation.
Further details are provided in the following description of a non-limiting example of an embodiment of the present invention with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
As illustrated in
According to the present invention (
According to the preferred embodiment illustrated in the accompanying drawings, the two longitudinal structures 11 have the shape of a polygonal prism and the two sliding surfaces 12 are at right angles to one another and respectively parallel with the two directions, longitudinal X-X and transversal Y-Y.
The prismatic structures 11 allow sustained discharge of local stresses due to the sliding block supports and give the entire structure a high level of bending strength.
In a first embodiment the sliding surfaces 12 consist of the material used to make the exposed surfaces of the prismatic element 11. However, in another embodiment the sliding surfaces may be made by means of a surface treatment on the material used to make the prismatic element, to give the exposed surfaces suitable wear and friction properties.
According to another embodiment, the sliding surfaces 11 are preferably made by placing a sheet 11a of material with suitable wear and friction properties (for example steel) on top of the material used to make the prismatic guide element 11.
According to an alternative embodiment, the prismatic elements 11 (
However, the production of long bars of composite material with a closed cross-section and the required precision both of linearity along the length and surface finish is technically difficult and expensive. Therefore, the prismatic elements 111 are made of composite material by placing two sets of fibre layers on top of one another, respectively forming the perimeter surface 111a of the guide and the sides towards the inside of the sliding surfaces and between which a filler element 111b is inserted to create the prismatic element inner core.
The main function of the core is to create the prismatic element edge surfaces but, if made with structural material, it may increase the rigidity of the element.
If the core does not have a structural role, it may be made of a light material or with a material which can be removed in the production process.
As illustrated in
As can be seen, the guide apparatus disclosed, and in particular the convex shape of the guide elements 11 and the matching concave shape of the sliding blocks 22 allows only a tensile stress to be applied on the guide structure, which always occurs at the vertices of the lateral walls of the guide structure and always towards the outside of it, thus preventing compression forces, and allowing it to be made of composite material, making the overall structure significantly lighter whilst having the same resistance to stresses as conventional guides.
The lower weight of the structure also results in reduced inertial loads from impacts, giving a structure resistant to minor stresses, having the advantage of also reducing the complexity and production cost.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2006A2030 | Oct 2006 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2007/003145 | 10/22/2007 | WO | 00 | 4/23/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/050206 | 5/2/2008 | WO | A |
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3196744 | Werner | Jul 1965 | A |
5786854 | Slade et al. | Jul 1998 | A |
7111745 | Nurse et al. | Sep 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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07 117 02 | May 1996 | EP |
1 177 974 | Feb 2002 | EP |
1 507 076 | Apr 1978 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100058969 A1 | Mar 2010 | US |