The present application relates generally to hydraulic systems such as those used on work machines including excavators, trucks, or other heavy equipment for construction, farm implements, and other machines adapted for performing work. More particularly, the present application relates to a securing mechanism for a sensor on a hydraulic cylinder. Still more particularly, the present application relates to a side load retention pin for retaining a position sensor within a hydraulic cylinder.
Position sensors may be arranged in hydraulic cylinders to monitor the position of the piston within the cylinder and, as such, allow for monitoring the extension and retraction of the piston rod extending out of a rod end of a hydraulic cylinder. These sensors may be secured in place using set screws that extend through the cap end of the hydraulic cylinder in an orientation generally perpendicular to an outer surface of the sensor. That is, the set screws may be arranged about a peripheral surface of the cap end of the hydraulic cylinder and may extend radially into and through a housing of the hydraulic cylinder to engage the outer surface sensor. Set screws can suffer from several different problems. In some cases the set screws simply do not get installed. In other cases, they are not torqued enough to maintain a tight grip on the sensor. In still other situations, and where a peripheral groove is provided, the set screw may fail to engage the groove because the sensor may not be fully in position when the set screw is placed.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,482,245 relates to a cylinder length sensor mounting/retaining assembly. The assembly includes a casing attachable to a blind end of the cylinder, a sensor retention cap affixable to the casing adjacent the blind end of the cylinder, and a locking pin extendable through the casing and positioned adjacent the sensor retention cap.
In one or more embodiments, a hydraulic cylinder may include a housing and a rod extending from a working end positioned outside the housing through a rod end of the housing to a piston end positioned within the housing. The hydraulic cylinder may also include a piston arranged on the piston end of the rod and configured to articulate within the housing. The hydraulic cylinder may also include a cap end secured to the housing and having a pocket for receiving a sensor. The pocket may have a cylindrical sidewall. The cap end may include a bore extending therethrough and arranged generally tangential to the sidewall where the bore extends into the cap end, breaches the sidewall, and extends further passed the pocket. The hydraulic cylinder may also include a retention pin configured for placement in the bore and for an interference fit with the sensor when the sensor is arranged in the pocket.
In one or more embodiments, a housing for a hydraulic cylinder may include a cap end comprising a pocket for receiving a sensor. The pocket may have a cylindrical sidewall. The cap end may have a bore extending therethrough and arranged generally tangential to the sidewall. The bore may extend into the cap end, breach the sidewall, and extend further passed the pocket.
In one or more embodiments, a retention pin may include a pinhead, a fastening portion distal to the pinhead and comprising a threaded engagement. The retention pin may also include a shaft portion distal to the fastening portion and configured for an interference fit with a retention groove on a sensor of a hydraulic cylinder. The retention pin may also include a positioning tip distal to the shaft portion and configured for free engagement with the retention groove.
With continued reference to
The housing 102 may be configured to contain and withstand relatively high fluid pressures and guide the piston 106 along a pathway allowing the piston 106 to articulate back and forth through a stroke length based on fluid flow on one more sides of the piston 106. The housing 102 may include a cylinder wall 116 defining a longitudinally extending cylindrical chamber 117. The housing 102 may also include a cap end 112 and a rod end 120. The cap end 112 may be a substantially closed end of the cylinder. A port 108 may be provided near the cap end for introduction and ejection of hydraulic fluid. The cap end 112 may include a cap eye 118 for securing the hydraulic cylinder 100 to the work machine. In one or more embodiments, the cap eye 118 may include an eye for receiving a pin or bolt allowing the hydraulic cylinder 100 to pivot relative to its connection to the work machine or implement of the work machine. The rod end 120 may close off of the end of the cylinder with respect to the piston 106 and the hydraulic fluid, but may include a sealed opening 122 for passing through of the rod 104. Like the cap end 112, a port 108 may be provided near the rod end 120 for introduction and ejection of hydraulic fluid.
The rod 104 may be secured to the piston 106 and may include a longitudinal element having a diameter smaller than the housing 102 and adapted for sleevably articulating within the housing 102 based on articulation of the piston 106. The rod 104 may be secured to the piston 106 at a piston end, may extend through the rod end 120 of the housing 102 to a working end, and may include an eye or other attachment feature on the working end. The eye or other attachment feature may allow the rod 104 to be secured to the work machine 100 or an implement of the work machine 100 and the eye may provide for pivoting motion of the connection by way of a pinned or bolted connection, for example.
The piston 106 may be arranged within the housing 102 and may be adapted to articulate through the housing 102 based on fluid flow into and out of the housing 102 on either side of the piston. In one or more embodiments, the piston 106 may be a cylindrical element having an outer diameter only slightly smaller than the inner diameter of the cylinder wall 116 of the housing 102. One or more seals 124 may be arranged on the piston 106 to provide the sealing engagement with the inner surface of the housing 102. The piston 106 may include a through bore for receiving and engaging the rod 104. For example, the piston 106 may threadably engage the rod 104 and, as such, may include a threaded through bore adapted to threadably secure the piston 106 to the rod 104.
Depending on the nature of the rod/piston connection and whether the rod extends fully through the piston, both the rod and the piston or just the rod may include a bore for receiving a sensing pipe 126 of the sensor 110. The bore may extend deep into the rod 104 in the form of a gun drilled bore. The bore may allow the piston 106 and the rod 104 to sleevably articulate over the sensing pipe 126.
The port or ports 108 of the hydraulic cylinder 100 may be adapted to deliver and receive hydraulic fluid from the hydraulic cylinder 100 and may be arranged at opposite ends of the housing 102 (i.e., one at the cap end 112 and one at the rod end 120). The ports 108 may provide for connection of hydraulic fluid lines and may provide the pathway for hydraulic fluid to enter and exit the hydraulic cylinder 100.
The cap end 112 of the cylinder 100 may be adapted for securing the cylinder 100 to the work machine or an implement thereof, containing cylinder pressure. As shown, the cap end 112 may include a bulkhead casting adapted for securing to the housing 102. As shown, the bulkhead casting may be welded to the cylinder wall 116 at a circumferentially extending weld 128. The bulkhead casting may include a piston stop surface 130.
Referring to
As may be appreciated from a review of
The sensor 110 may be retained in the pocket 148 with a retention pin 114. The retention pin 114 may extend through the cap end 112 of the cylinder 100 and may engage the retention groove 144 on the outer cylindrical wall 140 of the sensor 110 to retain the sensor 110 in position in the pocket 148. More particularly, the retention pin 114 may be arranged in a bore 162 that extends through the cap end 112 of the cylinder 100. The bore 162, and the pin 114 arranged therein, may be oriented substantially tangentially to the outer cylindrical wall 140 of the sensor 110 so that the side of the pin 114 engages the retention groove 144 of the sensor 110 in a cradling fashion. Moreover, various particular features of the bore 162, the bore position, the bore size, the pin size, and the pin geometry may provide for several installation and retention advantages.
Beginning with the retention pin 114, and with reference to
The shaft portion 166 of the retention pin 114 may be adapted to extend from a fastening portion 168 of the retention pin 114, through the bore 162, and across the side of the sensor 110 when the retention pin 114 is fully seated in the bore 162. In contrast to the positioning tip 164, the shaft portion 166 may be sized and positioned for an interference fit with the retention groove 144. That is, and with reference to
It is to be appreciated that while the shaft portion 166 may deflect to create an interference fit with the retention groove 144, the deflection may be limited to elastic deflection of the shaft portion 166. That is, the shaft portion 166 may deflect, but the relative positions and diameters mentioned may be selected to avoid stresses in the shaft portion that exceed the yield strength of the shaft portion material such that any deformations are temporary while the pin is in place and go away as the pin is removed. This may allow for the retention pin 114 to be smoothly removed from the bore 162 without hanging up on or getting caught on the sidewalls of the bore 162 due to more permanent deformations.
The fastening portion 168 of the retention pin 114 may include a threaded collar arranged proximal to the shaft portion 166. The threaded collar may be slightly larger than the shaft portion 166 or the same size as the shaft portion 166. In one or more embodiments, a larger collar may provide for better control over the alignment of the retention pin 114 with the bore 162 and stronger rotational strength for resisting the bending forces is the shaft portion 166. Moreover, in one or more embodiments, a larger threaded collar may provide an annular surface on a bottom side thereof that may receive an O-ring where tightening of the pin 114 causes the O-ring to engage an opposing annular surface and create a seal for the connection. In other embodiments, a seal groove 169 between the fastening portion 168 and the pin head 170 may be provided to receive an O-ring that engages a collar on the bore 162 an outboard side of the fastening portion 168. In one or more embodiments, for example, the connection may be a straight-thread O-ring (STOR) connection. While a threaded engagement between the fastening portions of the retention pin 114 and bore 162 has been described, a push fit connection, laterally extending pin, or other fastening mechanisms adapted to avoid motion of the pin 114 in a lateral direction (e.g., lateral to the cylinder 100 and longitudinal along the retention pin 114) may also be provided.
The pin head 170 may extend proximally from the fastening portion 168 and may be adapted for manipulating the retention pin 114 when the pin 114 is being inserted or removed from the bore 162. In one or more embodiments, the pin head 170 may include an internal or external tool engagement feature, such as an internal hex-shaped recess or an external hex-shaped outer surface. Still other tool engagement features may be provided such a square recess, square outer surface, star-shaped recess, straight slot, crossing slot, or other took engagement feature.
Turning now to the details of the bore 162 that the retention pin 114 may be inserted into. The bore 162 may extend through the cap end 112 of the cylinder 100 and may include a series of stages adapted for particular types of interfacing with the retention pin 114. As shown in
The sleeve portion 184 may extend from a fastening portion 186 of the bore 162, further into the cap end 112 of the cylinder 100 toward the pocket 148. As mentioned, the bore 162 and, thus, the sleeve portion 184 thereof, may be arranged generally tangential to the cylindrical outer wall 140 of the sensor 110 and, as such, generally tangential to the sidewall 150 of the pocket 148. As shown in
The sleeve portion 184 may be adapted to receive the positioning tip 164 and the shaft portion 166 of the retention pin 114. As such, the sleeve portion 184 may have a diameter or other crossing dimension 200 larger than the diameter or other crossing dimension 178 of the shaft portion 166 of the retention pin 114 and large enough to allow a particular amount of lateral deflection of the shaft portion 166 of the retention pin 114. That is, as mentioned above, the interference fit of the shaft portion 166 with the sensor 110 may cause the shaft portion 166 to deflect slightly as it engages the sensor 110. The sleeve portion 184 of the bore 162 may have a diameter or other crossing dimension 200 that is large enough to accommodate this deflection. However, the diameter or other crossing dimension 200 of the sleeve portion 184 may also be selected to limit the deflection of the retention pin 114 such that the pin 114 is unable to move fully out of the retention groove 144 due to contact with an opposing wall of the sleeve portion 184. In this way dislodgement of the sensor 110 may be avoided. In one or more embodiments, the sleeve portion 184 may have a diameter ranging from approximately 6.5 mm to approximately 12.5 mm, or from approximately 7.5 mm to approximately 10.5 mm, or a diameter of approximately 9 mm may be provided.
The fastening portion 186 of the bore 162 may be configured for engagement by the fastening portion 168 of the retention pin 114 and may provide for seated engagement of the fastening portion 168 of the retention pin 114. In one or more embodiments, as shown, the fastening portion 186 may include a bore having a larger diameter or crossing dimension 202 than the sleeve portion 184 and providing an annular seat at a top of the sleeve portion 184. This annular seat may be adapted for engagement by an O-ring on a bottom of an opposing annular surface of the retention pin 114. In other embodiments, the fastening portion 186 may have a collar on an outboard side thereof that is adapted for engagement of an O-ring arranged between the fastening portion 168 and the pinhead 170 of the retention pin 114. The peripheral wall of the fastening portion 186 of the bore 162 may include a threaded surface for engagement with threads on the retention pin 114 and the fastening portion 186 may have a depth sufficient to accommodate the fastening portion 168 of the retention pin 114. It is to be appreciated that where fastening mechanisms other than threads are provided on the retention pin 114, alternative shapes and features may be provided on the fastening portion 186 of the bore 162 that correspond to those features.
The pinhead counterbore 188 may include yet a larger portion of the bore having a diameter or other crossing dimension 204 larger than fastening portion 186. The diameter or crossing dimension 188 of the pinhead counterbore 188 may be selected based on the type of retention pin head 170 that is provided. For example, where an external tool engagement feature is provided on the retention pin 114, a wider counterbore 188 may be provide to allow sockets or wrenches to access the outer surface of the pinhead 170. Where internal or recessed tool engagement features are provided on the retention pin 114, a smaller or narrower counterbore 188 may be provided.
In operation and use, the present side load retention pin system may provide for retaining sensors within the hydraulic cylinder. The prominent nature of the retention pin may make the pin unlikely to be omitted like set screws. Moreover, the interference fit of the retention pin and the sealing type fastening port may help avoid insufficiently tight retention systems. Finally, the positioning tip of the retention pin may help to make sure the sensor is fully seated in the pocket before the retention pin is advance into position.
In one of more embodiments, a method 300 of assembling a cap end of a hydraulic cylinder may be provided as shown in
The above detailed description is intended to be illustrative, and not restrictive. The scope of the disclosure should, therefore, be determined with references to the appended claims, along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled.