This application is claims priority to German Application No. 10 2007 049 130.3, filed Oct. 12, 2007, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
This invention relates to a method for producing a hydraulic swivel motor and to an accordingly produced swivel motor having the features of an improved seal of the hydraulic chamber with respect to the surroundings and/or between the two working chambers achieved by a circumferential cover seal produced by friction stir welding.
A hydraulic swivel motor is used to convert hydraulic forces into mechanical forces, namely into rotation. A hydraulic swivel motor possesses for this purpose a hydraulic chamber comprising two working chambers. Each of said working chambers has at least one hydraulic connection for supplying and removing hydraulic fluid. To the extent that hydraulic fluid is supplied to one working chamber, hydraulic fluid is displaced from the other working chamber. This is obtained by means of a shaft penetrating the hydraulic chamber and having a vane protruding radially from the shaft to divide the hydraulic chamber into the two working chambers. A circumferential seal seals the vane at the inner wall of the hydraulic chamber. Further, the working chambers are separated from each other by means of a sealing strip stationarily located in the cover and extending axially along the shaft between the shaft and an inside wall of the hydraulic chamber. When hydraulic fluid is pumped into one working chamber, the hydraulic fluid cannot flow into the other working chamber due to the sealing strip on one side of the shaft and the seal on the vane on the other side of the shaft, but instead shifts the vane in the hydraulic chamber while displacing a corresponding hydraulic fluid volume out of the other working chamber. This leads to rotation of the shaft due to the firm coupling of the vane with the shaft.
The hydraulic chamber cannot be constituted by a self-contained housing, however. Rather, there are provided at least one, normally two, openings for guiding through and mounting the shaft. Furthermore, there is provided a further, bottom-side opening of the hydraulic chamber to permit the vane to be mounted on the shaft. For it is not possible to guide the shaft including the vane through the shaft openings of the hydraulic chamber. The bottom-side opening is closed with a cover after the shaft has been inserted into the hydraulic chamber through the shaft opening, and the vane has been connected to the shaft through the lateral opening. The above-mentioned sealing strip between the shaft and the inner wall of the hydraulic chamber is then seated between the shaft and the cover.
Both the cover opening and the shaft openings are sealed against leakage by means of conventional ring seals. Due to the extremely high hydraulic pressure within the working chambers, said seals are highly loaded and leakage can occur. Said leakage can occur on the one hand to the surroundings, namely on the cover seal and on the shaft seals, and on the other hand between the two working chambers, namely between the shaft and the sealing strip extending axially thereto on the one hand and between the vane and the inner wall of the hydraulic chamber on the other hand.
Furthermore, there is a further place, more precisely two further places, where leakage occurs from one working chamber to the other working chamber, namely between the cover and the inner wall of the hydraulic chamber below the two faces of the above-mentioned sealing strip. For the faces of the sealing strips are not at the level of the circumferential cover seal, but are offset radially inward therefrom for manufacturing reasons, so that there exists between the faces of the sealing strip and the circumferential cover seal a distance which should be kept as small as possible but can nevertheless cause non-negligible leakage flows due to the high hydraulic pressures.
One object of the present invention is to prevent as effectively as possible the leakage flows between parts not moving relative to each other, that is, a leakage of the circumferential cover seal to the surroundings and a leakage from one working chamber to the other working chamber between the cover and the inner wall of the hydraulic chamber.
This object may be achieved by the circumferential cover seal being executed as a friction stir weld joint. The use of this specific welding process does not only makes it possible to produce the cover seal, that is, the seal between the cover and an inner wall of the hydraulic chamber with respect to the surroundings, so as to be absolutely tight. This would be equally possible with any other welding process. The special value of this kind of weld joint is rather that only very little thermal energy is supplied to the parts upon joining and, due to this fact, the weld seam can be formed very close to the sealing strip normally made of plastic. The distance between the circumferential weld seam seal and the faces of the sealing strip can therefore be kept very small, and it is quite conceivable for it to extend up to the sealing strip. There arises at this point in any case at least a smaller leakage cross section between the two working chambers, which increases the efficiency of the swivel motor.
Additional features and advantages of the invention will be made apparent from the following detailed description of illustrative embodiments that proceed with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The invention will hereinafter be explained with reference to the accompanying drawings. Therein are shown:
Instead of the cover seal 12 configured for example as an O-ring according to
For processing reasons it is expedient if the cover 8 is so disposed in the stator 1 that the outer surface of the cover 8 is flush with the stator 1 in any case at the place where it is to be connected to the stator 1 by the friction stir welding process, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 049 130.3 | Oct 2007 | DE | national |