The present disclosure relates to hydraulic circuits for providing pressurized oil or hydraulic fluid in transmission and transaxles and more particularly to a hydraulic circuit including a positive displacement, bi-rotational pump having unidirectional hydraulic fluid output flow for transmissions and transaxles.
The statements in this section merely provide background information related to the present disclosure and may or may not constitute prior art.
Mechanically driven hydraulic pumps for transmissions and transaxles will invariably have mass, cost and packaging advantages over electrically driven pumps. A typical transmission uses a pump and valves to provide hydraulic fluid pressure and flow to the numerous mechanical devices of the transmission such as gears, bearings, actuators and electric motors. The location of the mechanically driven pump is not, however, without competing requirements and limitations. One option is to place it at the input to the transmission so that whenever the engine is rotating there is hydraulic fluid pressure and flow, but in many advanced propulsion transmissions, the engine is not always rotating and thus, under certain conditions, the pump will provide neither fluid pressure nor flow. As there is often a correlation between fluid consumption and vehicle speed, another option that is suggested and appears, superficially, to be advantageous, is a transmission output driven pump. Unfortunately, this choice ignores that fact that in reverse gear, the pump will rotate backwards, evacuating oil from the fluid network and returning it to the sump. Upon selection of a forward gear and attendant motion, several seconds may elapse before full hydraulic pressure is established.
From the foregoing, it is apparent that the location of the power input to a hydraulic pump is a transmission or transaxle is one of engineering constraints and compromises. The following disclosure addresses these constraints and compromises.
The present disclosure relates to a hydraulic fluid pump and hydraulic circuit for transmissions and transaxles having a bi-directionally rotating input that provides unidirectional output flow. The hydraulic pump is a positive displacement pump that is bi-rotationally driven by the output shaft of a transmission or transmission portion of a transaxle and a hydraulic circuit that includes a fluid pressure actuated and spring biased control valve and a plurality of check valves. The control valve operates and the check valves are arranged so that, regardless of the direction of rotation of the hydraulic pump, the inlet or suction side of the pump is always in fluid communication with the sump and the outlet or supply side of the pump is always in fluid communication with an outlet port of the control valve which supplies hydraulic fluid to the transmission. Specifically, in one direction of rotation of the pump, pressure in a line is supplied to the control port of the control valve to translate the spool or similar control element to connect the pressurized output of the pump to the fluid system of the transmission or transaxle. In the other direction of rotation of the pump, no fluid pressure is supplied to the control port of the control valve and the control element, biased by a spring, connects the other pressurized output of the pump to the fluid system of the transmission or transaxle.
Thus it is an aspect of the present disclosure to provide a hydraulic fluid pump for use in automatic transmissions and transaxles of a motor vehicle.
It is a further aspect of the present disclosure to provide a bi-directional hydraulic pump for use in automatic transmissions and transaxles of a motor vehicle that is driven by the output shaft of the transmission or the output shaft of the transmission portion of a transaxle.
It is a still further aspect of the present disclosure to provide a hydraulic pump assembly driven by the output shaft of an automatic transmission or transmission portion of a transaxle having a positive displacement pump and a hydraulic circuit that includes a fluid pressure actuated control valve and a plurality of check valves.
It is a still further aspect of the present disclosure to provide a hydraulic pump assembly driven by the output shaft of an automatic transmission or the transmission portion of a transaxle having a positive displacement pump and a hydraulic circuit that includes a fluid pressure actuated and spring biased control valve and a plurality of check valves.
It is a still further aspect of the present disclosure to provide a hydraulic pump assembly driven by the output shaft of an automatic transmission or the transmission portion of a transaxle having a bi-directionally rotated positive displacement pump and a hydraulic circuit that includes a fluid pressure actuated and spring biased control valve and a plurality of check valves.
Further aspects, advantages and areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. It should be understood that the description and specific examples are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
The drawings described herein are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses.
With reference now to
With reference now to
It should be understood that the drive configuration for the pump 20 of
At the outset, it will be appreciated and understood by those skilled in the art of power transmission that the meshing gears 22 illustrated in
Referring now to
The hydraulic pump 20 includes a first port 44 and a second port 46 which function, in one direction of rotation of the pump 40, as the suction (inlet) side and the supply (outlet) side and, in the opposite direction of rotation, as the supply (outlet) side and the suction (inlet) side. A transmission sump 48 disposed in the bottom of the transmission 16 or the transmission portion 32 of the transaxle 30 receives, stores and provides hydraulic fluid 50 through a first check valve 52 and a first fluid supply line 54 to the first port 44. The first check valve 52 is configured to open when the fluid pressure is lower at the first port 44 of the pump 20 than at the sump 48, that is, when, due to the direction of rotation of the hydraulic pump 20, the first port 44 is acting as the suction (inlet) side. A second fluid supply line 56 communicates between one side of a second check valve 58 and the sump 48 and a third fluid supply line 60 provides fluid communication between the other side of the second check valve 58, the second port 46 of the pump 20 and other components. The second check valve 58 is configured to open when the fluid pressure is lower at the second port 46 of the pump 20 than at the sump 48, that is, when due to the direction of rotation of the hydraulic pump 20, due to the direction of rotation of the hydraulic pump 20, the second port 46 is acting as the suction (inlet) side.
Disposed in parallel opposition across the first port 44 and the second port 46 of the pump 20 between a hydraulic line 62 (which is an extension of the third fluid supply line 60) and a hydraulic line 64 (which is an extension of the first fluid supply line 54) are a third bypass or pressure relief check valve 66 and a fourth bypass or pressure relief check valve 68. The third bypass or pressure relief check valve 66 opens when pressure at the first port 44 of the pump 20 is significantly higher than the pressure at the second port 46 to control or limit the maximum delivered hydraulic fluid pressure and is closed during conditions of nominal fluid consumption and pressure as well as rotation of the pump 20 in the opposite direction. The fourth bypass or pressure relief check valve 68 opens when pressure at the second port 46 of the pump 20 is significantly higher than the pressure at the first port 44 to control or limit the maximum delivered hydraulic fluid pressure and is closed during conditions of nominal fluid consumption and pressure as well as rotation of the pump 20 in the opposite direction.
The hydraulic circuit 40 also includes a two position, hydraulically actuated control valve 70, such as a spool valve or similar device having an axially translating spool 72 or similar moving member that is biased by a compression spring 74 toward a control port 76. The control port 76 is provided with hydraulic fluid through a fourth fluid line 78 (which is an extension of the third fluid supply line 60) having a metering orifice or flow restriction 82. The metering orifice 82 restricts hydraulic fluid flow to the control port 76 and slows translation of the spool 72, slowing transition between the two positions (states) of the control valve 70, thereby reducing transients and smoothing operation of the pump 20, its fluid output and the associated powertrain components.
The hydraulically actuated control valve 70 is provided with pressurized hydraulic fluid through two lines: a first valve supply line 86 (which is an extension of the third fluid supply line 60) which communicates with a first inlet port 88 of the control valve 70 and a second valve supply line 92 which communicates with a second inlet port 94 of the control valve 70 and the first fluid supply line 54 though a fifth check valve 96. An outlet or supply port 102 of the control valve 70 provides pressurized hydraulic fluid flow output of the control valve 70 to a supply line 104 which includes a second metering orifice or flow restriction 106 and which provides such hydraulic fluid to the components of the transmission 16 or transmission portion 32 of the transaxle 30 such as gears, bearings, hydraulic actuators, clutches and electric motors. Once again, the orifice 106 restricts fluid flow to smooth fluid delivery as the valve spool 72 transitions between its two states.
Referring now to
Accordingly, the first valve supply line 86 (which is an extension of the third fluid supply line 60) which communicates with the first inlet port 88 of the control valve 70 is connected to the outlet port or supply port 102 of the control valve 70 and the supply line 104, thereby providing hydraulic fluid to the components of the transmission 16 or the transmission portion 32 of the transaxle 30. For purposes of complete illustration and explanation, the fourth bypass or pressure relief check valve 68 is shown in
Referring now to
Accordingly, the first inlet port 88 of the control valve 70 is closed and the second inlet port 94, which is supplied with pressurized hydraulic fluid in the line 92 from the port 44 of the hydraulic pump 20 through the fifth check valve 96, connects to the outlet port or supply port 102 of the control valve 70 and the supply line 104, thereby providing hydraulic fluid to the components of the transmission 16 or transmission portion 32 of the transaxle 30. For purposes of complete illustration and explanation, the third bypass or pressure relief check valve 66 is shown in
It should be noted that in the foregoing description, for reasons of clarity and full explanation, certain hydraulic lines, such as the fourth hydraulic line 78 and the first valve supply line 86 are specifically referenced and described although they are, in fact, in direct communication with, an extension of and thus an integral part of another fluid line, in this case, the third fluid supply line 60. Accordingly, interpretation of the following claims should take into consideration that recited fluid lines may be portions or sections of other connected or associated lines, rather than separate, independent fluid lines.
The description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention.