The invention relates to a hydraulic valve device, in particular a LS flow control valve, with a fluid connector arrangement containing at least a pressure supply connector (P), a return flow connector (R), a section load sensing connector (LS), two control connectors (P′A) and (P′B), two utility connectors (A, B) and at least one displaceable control for at least partially triggering connectors of the fluid connector arrangement.
DE 10 2005 033 222 A1 discloses a LUDV valve arrangement in which a control valve forms an inlet metering orifice to which an individual pressure compensator is connected downstream. By the LUDV valve arrangement, a hydraulic consumer connected to two consumer connectors of the control arrangement is triggered. To set a quick traverse, two pressure spaces of the consumer can be connected to one another and to a source of hydraulic fluid. To prevent sagging of the consumer pressure, this connection of the two consumer connectors takes place by the flow path of the hydraulic fluid having a check valve. By the directional control valve, only the connection to one of the consumer connectors is opened. The connection of the other consumer connector to the source of hydraulic fluid and/or the former consumer connector is possible in quick traverse only via the flow path of the hydraulic fluid and the opened check valve. Inadvertent movement of a hydraulic consumer in the quick traverse position of the valve arrangement is prevented with the known solution. The known LUDV control constitutes a special case of load sensing control in which the highest load pressure of the hydraulic consumer is reported to an adjusting pump. The adjustive pump is controlled such that the pump line contains a pump pressure exceeding the load pressure by a certain pressure difference ΔP. In the known LUDV control, the individual pressure compensators are located downstream from the metering orifices and choke the fluid flow between the metering orifice and the load so dramatically that the pressure following all metering orifices is the same, preferably equal to the highest load pressure or slightly above it. The greatest weakness of these hydraulic LS systems is their susceptibility to system vibrations in the load sensing control circuit, among other things due to the load change on the respective consumer.
EP 1 370 773 B1 discloses as a hydraulic valve device a directional control valve for controlling the pressure and the flow of hydraulic oil from and to working connectors of at least one fluid consumer, in which the pressure and flow rate can be controlled by a valve spool moveable in the spool bore and actuatable by at least one drive. By annular channels dynamically connected to the fluid consumer, at a symmetry center point of the valve arrangement, a tank connector annular channel (R) and on either side other annular channels one arranged symmetrically. For implementation of hydraulic pump triggering on one side of the axis of symmetry, with an A-annular channel assigned to one working connector, a first pump pressure annular channel, a first load sensing annular channel and a first end space annular channel are assigned. On the other side of the axis of symmetry, with a B-annular channel assigned to the other working connector, a second pump pressure annular channel, a second load sensing annular channel, and a second end space annular channel are assigned. The first load sensing annular channel is connected to the second load sensing annular channel by a load sensing connecting line. With the known valve solution, a type of quantitative divider for the connected consumers is attained. In these quantitative divider valves, the pressure compensators not controlling the pressure drop over the valve orifice, but accept the highest load pressure of the system. Fluctuating pressure losses in the feed line then directly disrupt the available pressure difference on the controller orifice to hinder constant flow control.
An object of the invention is to provide improved the valve solutions such that system vibrations in the load sensing control circuit can be better managed and such that constant flow control for the respectively connected hydraulic consumer is possible.
This object is basically achieved by a hydraulic valve device where the respective control assigned to each utility connector A, B has a valve spool to which a pressure compensator is connected upstream in the fluid direction to the respective utility connector A, B. The hydraulic LS system is less susceptible to system vibrations. As a result of the upstream pressure compensator, it can have a decisive effect on system stability. Pressure oscillations are often produced by mechanical vibrations of resilient structures in the respectively connected hydraulic consumers (crane arms) and are then transmitted by the load sensing circuit (LS) to the pressure compensator. The LS pressure (load reporting pressure) then constitutes the reference variable for the upstream pressure compensator in this respect and can smooth pressure oscillations even before the pressure is relayed to the following valve spool of the respective control, depending on its respective spool or piston position, then ensures constant supply for the respectively connected hydraulic consumer.
In addition to the indicated system smoothing, by the fluid succession from the pressure compensator with a downstream valve spool, regardless of the pressure difference on the control for the respective consumer, a constant useful volumetric flow is then available so that the total flow rate remains constant independently of changing load pressures on the consumer. In this way reliable operation for the respectively connected hydraulic consumer is ensured.
In one preferred embodiment of the valve device according to the invention, the pressure compensator is integrated within the valve spool. Both the pressure compensator and the valve spool are guided to be longitudinally moveable in relative motion to one another within the valve housing. This coaxial arrangement of the valve spool and pressure compensator is especially space-saving and leads to valve housings with a small structure. This arrangement still is especially reliable.
Shown to be especially reliable in one preferred embodiment of the valve device according to the invention, both the pressure compensator and the valve spool are held spring-centered in the initial position. The pressure compensator is triggerable by a LS pressure routed at the same time to one connection side of the valve spool which in turn can be triggered by the control pressure of a pilot valve. A control connector pressure tapped between the valve spool and pressure compensator triggers the pressure compensator by acting in the opposite direction to the LS pressure.
Other objects, advantages and salient features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, which, taken in conjunction with the annexed drawings, discloses a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
Referring to the drawings which form a part of this disclosure and which are schematic and not to scale:
The hydraulic valve device as shown in
The respective pressure compensator 18 can be triggered by the LS pressure designated as LSA and LSB in
Another connection side 28 of the valve spool 16 is connected to a return flow connector R and the LS pressure LSA and LSB can be triggered by a selector valve 30 connected by a check valve 32 to LSmax. The check valve 32 opens in the direction of LSmax. The pilot valves PA, PB are connected to a control pressure PST as the supply source and further to the tank connector T0.
The hydraulic valve device of
The axis of the respective valve spool 16 extends horizontally as viewed in
The entire space in the form of the through channel 40 in the lower part of the middle housing 38 is under the pump pressure P. From this space, one channel line at a time leads to the cavity axis of the respective valve spool 17 to the vicinity of the annular channels leading to utility connectors A and B. The two valve spools 16 are made identically and in a coaxial arrangement hold an inside pressure compensator 18 connected upstream from the valve orifice. They are also structurally identical to one another. As shown in
As
In the unpressurized state the control spring 24 presses the control piston of the pressure compensator 18 against the end of the blind hole of the valve spool 16. This pressure compensator piston is likewise made as a hollow piston and has a second radial passage 60 closing the connection to the opening 54 as a P-opening in the valve spool 16 in the stroke against the pressure compensator spring 24 (control edge of the pressure compensator 18). A first radial passage 62 is permanently connected to the valve orifice in the form of the first opening 52 in the valve spool 16. The spring chamber of the pressure compensator 18 is connected by the third radial opening 56 to the respective third passage 64 of the valve spool 16 and to the longitudinal grooves 66 on the jacket or outer surface of the control piston of the pressure compensator 18. These longitudinal grooves 66, of which only one is shown by the broken line in
When the pump pressure prevails over the pump connector P, this pressure also acts in the P′A or P′B chamber of the pressure compensator 18 and presses the control piston against the spring until the corresponding control edge closes. The P′A and P′B pressure is then adjusted exactly to the amount of the control spring 24 of the pressure compensator 18. The aforementioned radial openings and passages, as also shown in
If, at this point, a pilot pressure is selected by the pilot valves PA or PB, the pilot valve preferably being an electrohydraulic pressure reducing valve, with central supply from a control oil circuit PSt, the valve spool 16 is pushed against the spring force of the compression spring 22 in the direction of the R channel (compare
While one embodiment has been chosen to illustrate the invention, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 054 134 | Nov 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/007750 | 9/17/2008 | WO | 00 | 4/22/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/062564 | 5/22/2009 | WO | A |
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3911942 | Becker | Oct 1975 | A |
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5715865 | Wilke | Feb 1998 | A |
5791142 | Layne et al. | Aug 1998 | A |
6192928 | Knoell et al. | Feb 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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199 29 024 | Dec 2000 | DE |
101 35 298 | Feb 2003 | DE |
10 2005 033 222 | Jan 2007 | DE |
0 686 775 | Dec 1995 | EP |
1 370 773 | Dec 2003 | EP |
1 500 825 | Jan 2005 | EP |
1 710 446 | Oct 2006 | EP |
WO 02088550 | Nov 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100307621 A1 | Dec 2010 | US |