The present invention pertains to improvements to axial-piston hydraulic motors and more particularly to axial pistons having an alternating movement via a swash-plate.
It is known to manufacture hydraulic motors of this type in which the swash-plate is fixed in rotation, the pistons being arranged in a barrel piston chamber.
In motors of this type, the barrel is integral with the motor shaft driving the mechanical elements to which it is to give movement. This has the disadvantage that this type of transmission is scarcely compact.
One first object of the invention is to achieve a very compact transmission.
A second object of the invention is to make it possible, while maintaining a very compact transmission, to couple one or more motors to said drive shaft
The hydraulic motor of the invention is characterized by the fact that it comprises a motor shaft driven by direct mechanical transmission via one or more hydraulic motors arranged around said shaft.
Preferably the motor shaft comprises an inlet crown wheel on which the teeth of the barrel piston chamber mesh, axial pistons being arranged inside the barrel and bearing upon a swash-plate.
As an example and to facilitate the understanding of the invention, the following appended drawings show:
With reference to
On this toothed crown wheel 2 engage the teeth 4 of a barrel 5 in which bores 6 are provided for the pistons 7 of the hydraulic motor.
In known manner, the pistons 7 are hollow pistons with spherical head 8, each spherical head 8 lying against a swash-plate 9 via a shoe 10.
The barrel 5 is integral with a shaft 11, borne by two bearings 12 and 13, this shaft being parallel to the axis of shaft 1.
All these parts are positioned in a housing 14 inside which an inlet conduit 15 is provided for the hydraulic fluid under pressure and an outlet conduit 16 for said fluid.
Conduit 15 leads to a distributor 17 which is described in more detail below; this distributor 17 ensuring the sequential supply of pressurized fluid to bores 6.
The forces exerted one after the other by the pistons 7 (which total seven in the example shown) against the oblique surface of the swash-plate 9, which is fixed, cause the barrel 5 to rotate which drives shaft 1 in rotation.
With this arrangement, it is possible to avoid having to place end to end the hydraulic motor, consisting of pistons 7, swash-plate 9 and barrel 5, and the shaft 1, and it is therefore possible to achieve a very compact assembly which is most advantageous.
In addition, it can be seen that it is possible to arrange a plurality of barrel such as 5, hence of hydraulic motors, around the crown wheel 2; so that the extent of the drive torque applied to the shaft 1 can be determined at will.
As a result the plate 18 remains parallel at all times to the front face of the swash-plate.
This arrangement eliminates all the return springs of pistons 7 which are usually used.
This enables a hydraulic motor to be achieved which has no parasitic forces while remaining highly reliable in use since the shoes 10 housed between the swash-plate and the heads 8 of the pistons cannot escape.
FIGS. 3,4 and 5 show a variant of embodiment which gives a good illustration of the remarkable advantage of the present invention.
In this figures, the same parts carry the same references, but these references have not all been entered into
In these figures, it can be seen that the special design of the transmission between the hydraulic motor and the shaft 1 enables several hydraulic motors to be arranged around shaft 1, each barrel 5 of a hydraulic motor meshing directly with the crown wheel 2 of the shaft 1.
In
This characteristic is of particular advantage since it is therefore possible to determine at will the torque that is transmitted to the shaft 1 while preserving an extremely compact device as illustrated
This distributor comprises a tail end 20 which is subjected to the high supply pressure arriving via conduit 15. Inside this tail end 20 a central conduit 21 is arranged which communicates with a conduit 22 leading into a groove 23 in the form of an arc of a circle centred on the axis of the rotating barrel 5 and is hollowed in the lower face 24 of the distributor 17.
Within the distributor 17 two reservoir return orifices 25 are also arranged communicating with conduit 6, these orifices 25 leading into a chamber 26 hollowed in the lower face 24 of the distributor 17.
The distributor 17 must be balanced hydrostatically and, since this gives rise to slight leakage flow from the groove (23) (at high pressure) and the chamber 26 (at low pressure), the shape and surface of the planar face 24 applied against the rear face of the barrel 5 and the shape and surface of the groove 23 and of chamber 26 must be determined by calculation to obtain both hydrostatic balancing of the distributor 17 and the absence of any parasitic torque. Since this calculation is purely mathematical it is not described herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04 07742 | Jul 2004 | FR | national |
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5542307 | Hasegawa et al. | Aug 1996 | A |
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296 213 | Jan 1954 | CH |
19 45 440 | Mar 1971 | DE |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060005698 A1 | Jan 2006 | US |