The present invention relates to a hydraulic cylinder having a piston rod bearing a tool-receiving element.
Usually, because of the pressing force required, hydraulic drives having hydraulic cylinders are used for mechanical deforming or joining processes, such as for example punching, stamping, flanging, crimping, riveting or clinching. For safety reasons, when the power stroke of hydraulic cylinders is more than 6 mm, great safety requirements are placed on the systems used. Thus, for avoiding risks, complicated protective curtains and/or mechanical, pneumatic or electrical interlocking devices must be provided. As a result, the operator is very restricted in “handling” work in the dangerous region of the ram of a corresponding deforming or joining device.
Hydraulic cylinder systems which shut off the flow of the hydraulic medium in the hydraulic cylinder by an additional control circuit are well known. Thus, for example, a press is known in which the power stroke is turned on only when an electrically conducting connection is procured through the structural part to be worked via a ram of a tool-receiving element. Here, “finger safety” is secured because of the non-conductivity of the finger or fingers. Additional devices are known in which two electric sensors, working independently of each other, ensure that only a 6-mm power stroke takes place.
Known in addition is a press which uses an internal path-measuring system in order to allow, after calibration, the power stroke to be reduced or first set to 6 mm. Other accomplishments consist for example of a hinged mechanism, covering the region endangering the hands of the operator and only allowing the power stroke when in the folded state. Likewise known is a device with powerless partial thrust, which is characterized in that the drive of the thrust used therein is effected pneumatically and is limited to a total stroke of 60 mm. Another accomplishment consists in avoiding violation of the safety distance of 6 mm by limiting the speed of thrust to a prescribed amount, in order to ensure timely removal/withdrawal of the operator's limbs.
It is the object of the invention to propose a hydraulic cylinder which avoids the complicated and costly precautions known in the prior art as much as possible.
This object is accomplished by a hydraulic cylinder as described herein. By this means, an additional control circuit, be it pneumatic, electrical, mechanical or a combination thereof, advantageously becomes superfluous. The device, with like operating safety, thereby becomes substantially less costly than known systems. Here, the medium (e.g. hydraulic oil) which is used for the development of power is at the same time the medium for the safety shut-off. Other media, such as water or the like, for example, are alternatively usable here. An additional advantage consists in that the device according to the invention is not limited to a total stroke. Theoretically, all desired strokes technically producible can be executed. In addition, the device according to the invention also has the advantage that it is not limited to a maximum speed of movement. The thrust as well as the power stroke speeds are freely selectable with use of the device according to the invention, provided that the technical provisions (existing volumetric flow, feed-line cross sections, etc.) permit this. In addition, with the device according to the invention an internal anti-twisting means advantageously can be integrated with the device according to the invention and via a continuous piston rod an external adjustable full-stroke limitation can be built on, which makes it possible to limit the return stroke of the piston/ram, and hence the full stroke, in any desired position, in simple fashion.
The safety or automatic shut-off means is provided with two valve slides working independently of each other, i.e., upon failure of a component, a forward movement of the ram which might be a danger is no longer possible.
For better understanding of the invention and in order to show how it can be executed, it is described briefly below with reference to an exemplary embodiment.
The representations in
The operating routine of the work program of the hydraulic cylinder according to the invention will be described with the aid of the figures. The positions of the components of the hydraulic cylinder according to the invention shown in
For understanding of the present invention, components which are not absolutely necessary and which nevertheless have reference numerals in the drawing but are of little importance, are not expressly treated, since they can be deduced by those skilled in the art.
In the starting position (position a), the piston 40 is completely retracted. The first valve slide 100 is found in a first position I, in which it holds open a first fluid channel C and closes a second fluid channel D.
The individual operating steps in the use of the hydraulic cylinder according to the invention are the following:
1. Driving the Cylinder Out:
A main valve, not shown, is opened, so that, via a fluid channel A and the first fluid channel C held open by the valve slide 100, a hydraulic medium can flow into a chamber S (
2. The Tool-receiving Element 120 Touches Down on an Obstacle More than 7 mm Before the Predetermined Stroke End (Position 1b):
The valve slide 100 (
3. Return of Piston 40 from Position 1b:
The main valve, not shown, is reversed. Flow of the hydraulic medium into the chamber R via the line G (
4. The Piston 40 Travels into the End Position (Position 1c):
In a so-called desired position (e.g. 7.5 mm before stroke end) a second valve slide 140 accommodated in the piston 40 closes down on a sealing means 280 located in the cylinder housing 10. The sealing means selected in this exemplary embodiment is a ball 280.
The third fluid channel E is hereby sealed. At the same time, the connection of the fourth fluid channel F is opened. If the clinching tool, not shown, located in the tool-receiving element 120 is now set up, the valve slide 100 is actuated via the shut-off rod 130 and the first fluid channel C is thereby sealed. But now the hydraulic medium passes on into the chamber S via the lines A, D and F. The piston 40 does not stop, but travels its predetermined stroke to the end, all the way up into the position represented in
5. Retraction of Piston 40 from Position 1c:
The main valve, not shown, is again reversed. The medium flows into the chamber R via the line G. The hydraulic medium flows out of the chamber S via a check valve, not shown, located in line B.
6. Resetting of Shut-off Function:
For resetting of the shut-off function of valve slide 100, which has been made ineffective in work step 4, the valve slide 140 must again be shifted into its starting position, shown in
The hydraulic line F is hereby sealed again and the third fluid channel E opened again. Should the valve slide 140 now not reach its starting position again, which might be due to malfunction of the spring 390, upon return of the piston 40 the fluid channel E is opened before the line F is sealed. The chamber R is thereby connected with the chamber S. The piston cannot travel back again.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 33 669 | Jul 2002 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of PCT Ser. No. PCT/EP2003/007538, filed Jul. 11, 2003, which claims priority to German Application No. 102 33 669.5, filed Jul. 24, 2002, both of which are incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2858804 | Banker | Nov 1958 | A |
2969044 | Leduc | Jan 1961 | A |
4258609 | Conway | Mar 1981 | A |
5079997 | Hong | Jan 1992 | A |
5802953 | Nakamura | Sep 1998 | A |
5918526 | Jauhola | Jul 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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2 538 047 | Jun 1984 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050188834 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP03/07538 | Jul 2003 | US |
Child | 11041484 | US |