The present invention relates to a hydraulic motor with propulsion members retained against corresponding contact surfaces by resilient means inside said propulsion members and positioned between the latter and associated means performing a mechanical retaining action in the radial direction.
It is known in the technical sector relating to the construction of engines or motors with propulsion members moved by means of a fluid supply and therefore generally defined as hydraulic that there exists the possibility of forming the said propulsion members using a cylinder and a piston which are telescopically coupled together so as to be displaceable relative to each other, upon rotation of a cam associated with the driving shaft, thus imparting a thrust to the said shaft.
Said propulsion members may be arranged radially or obliquely.
It is also known that, in the case of radial engines or motors, one of the problems posed by said propulsion members consists in the need to keep the end edge of the cylinder and the piston sealingly adherent, respectively, to the said cam and a reaction element consisting of a cap fixed to the engine housing so as not to cause seepage of fluid during the relative travel movement of piston and cylinder.
One of the solutions commonly used to obtain this sealing effect consists in the insertion, inside each propulsion member, of a resilient element consisting of a helical spring arranged coaxially with the propulsion member and able to exert a thrust against corresponding internal projections of the cylinder and piston so as to press the latter against the associated bearing surfaces.
An example of this type of actuating system is known from the U.S. Pat. No. 3,577,830.
This solution, however, has certain drawbacks including those consisting in the dynamic stressing which the spring is subject to during the travel movement of the piston with respect to the cylinder, resulting in the need to design the said spring with excessively large dimensions, producing a strong thrust on the sliding contact surfaces, with consequent greater wear thereof.
In addition to this, the presence of the spring and the associated projections supporting it inside the cylinder prevents a reduction in the volume of fluid which cannot flow out of the cylinder at the end of the compression phase (so-called “dead volume”), increasing the problems of replacement of the said fluid with new fluid supplied by the delivery ducts.
The technical problem which is posed, therefore, is that of providing a hydraulic motor provided with means for mechanically retaining each propulsion member against respective bearing and contact surfaces where the hydraulic seal preventing seepage of the thrusting fluid must be ensured.
Within the scope of this problem a further requirement is that said mechanical retaining means should envisage resilient means acting on the propulsion members with a thrust in a direction parallel to that of their longitudinal axis, which is independent of the working (compression/discharge) phase of the said propulsion member.
In addition to this it is required that said resilient retaining means should be easy and inexpensive to realize and install on motors of the known type and should allow the motor to be used also as a pump.
These technical problems are solved according to the present invention by a hydraulic motor with propulsion members positioned between a cam associated with a shaft and a reaction element, said propulsion members consisting of two elements, i.e. an internal element and external element, telescopically slidable with respect to each other in a radial direction and respectively provided with annular bearing edges kept pressed against corresponding contact surfaces of said reaction element and said cam via respective resilient means, said resilient means associated with the external element of the propulsion member being arranged outside the said element and the resilient means associated with the internal element being arranged inside the propulsion member and positioned in the radial direction between said internal element and associated means for mechanically retaining them.
Further details may be obtained from the following description of a non-limiting example of embodiment of the invention provided with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
As shown, the hydraulic motor according to the invention in the version with radial propulsion members comprises a casing 1 housing internally the shaft 2 mounted on bearings 2a and carrying the cam 3 on which the propulsion members 10 act radially.
Said propulsion members 10 in turn consist of a cylinder 11, one of the two end edges of which rests on the external surface 3a of the said cam 3, and of a piston 12 telescopically slidable in a radial direction inside the cylinder 11 and having one of the two end edges bearing against a spherical surface 1a formed inside the covers 1b constrained to the casing 1 of the motor via suitable fixing means.
The edge of said cylinder 11 and said piston 12 resting on the respective contact surfaces 1a and 3a of the cover 1b and the cam 3 (
In the zone of contact between the cylinder 11 and the cam 3 said retaining elements consist of: a slider 13 with a coaxial hole 13a, having a diameter slightly greater than the external diameter of the cylinder 11 so as to allow the latter to pass through it as far as an end-of-travel stop consisting of a tooth 11c extending outwards and able to engage with the radial retaining means described below.
Said slider 13 has, moreover, (
In this way the opposite rings 15 radially retain all the sliders 13 which, in turn, keep the associated cylinder 11 in bearing contact against the cam 3 during rotation thereof.
In order to maintain adherence between the slider 13 and the base 11a of the cylinder 11, a resilient element, in the example consisting of an undulating spring 16, is positioned between them, said spring being designed to impart a radial force resulting in relative contact between the contact surfaces 11b and 3a, which force is constant and independent of the working phases of the propulsion member 10.
As can be seen from
In the zone of contact between piston 12 and cover 1a the retaining elements consist of a pin 52 provided with a head 53 which has a spherical surface 53a resting on corresponding support elements 54 fixed to the casing 1a so that the head 53 itself forms a ball joint; the shank of the pin 52 has a cylindrical body 55 with a diameter such that its side surface 55a makes contact with the side surface of the piston 12 and an external end surface 55b arranged below an annular tooth 12c of the cylinder 12 projecting towards the inside thereof.
Resilient means in the form of a spring 16 are arranged between the cylindrical body 55 and the said annular tooth 12c so as to ensure constant adherence of the contact surfaces 12b, 1a during the various working phases of the propulsion member 10; the piston 12 furthermore supports, similar to that occurring in the bottom part of the ring 13, an end-of-travel element 50 for preventing the spring 16 from being stressed beyond its yield point.
The cylindrical body 55 also has, formed therein, the ducts 56 for conveying the fluid supplying the motor.
It is therefore obvious how the retaining devices according to the present invention allow two main advantages to be achieved compared to the known art; they in fact allow the resilient means to be no longer dependent upon the dynamic loads resulting from the relative travel movement of the piston and cylinder of the propulsion member with each rotation of the cam, allowing moreover filling of the chamber of the cylinder 11 with high-volume and low-weight bodies 55 able to limit the dynamic imbalance and reduction in the fluid dead volume.
In addition to this, the internal retaining devices according to the invention allow a larger section of contact to be obtained between the cylinder 11 and the piston 12 in the fully extended condition of the propulsion member 10, this factor being important for avoiding seizing during the return movement into the minimum relative extension of the two components.
The solution described above, which envisages engagement of cylinders and pistons with the associated contact surfaces, also allows the cylinders to perform a fluid suction function without loss of adherence to the said surfaces, and the apparatus is therefore able to be operated as a pump instead of as a motor.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2004A1219 | Jun 2004 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3577830 | Ortelli | May 1971 | A |
5967018 | Breveglieri | Oct 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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4406803 | Sep 1995 | DE |
0266806 | May 1988 | EP |
0851119 | Jul 1998 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050279206 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |