This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. EP 10168521.2, filed Jul. 6, 2010.
This invention relates to a hydropneumatic piston reservoir with a primary cylinder having a separating piston with free mobility that is sealed off circumferentially from an inner surface of the cylinder, with the separating piston inside the primary cylinder separating two pressure chambers from one another and being acted upon, or able to be acted on, by a pneumatic pressure medium on the one hand and by a hydraulic medium on the other hand, and with the separating piston having an axial separating piston rod on one end that is sealed circumferentially from the primary cylinder, and runs as a plunger in a connected secondary cylinder that is acted upon or can be acted upon by a pressure medium.
Piston reservoirs of the above described type are used in particular in suspension systems for wheel support in motor vehicles. Thus, for example, DE 195 15 295 A1 describes a hydropneumatic suspension system with each hydraulic shock absorber leg (telescopic spring cylinder) acting to produce a spring force supporting the particular wheel load through a hydraulic medium against a spring reservoir. Such a spring reservoir is designed, in this case, as a piston reservoir of the type defined above generically. The piston reservoir has a “floating,” freely movable guided separating piston that separates the reservoir chamber (first pressure chamber) hydraulically connected to the shock absorber leg from a spring chamber (second pressure chamber) containing a compressible medium, in particular a gas. The separating piston here is connected to a separating piston rod guided out of the piston reservoir to the outside. Because of this separating piston rod, the separating piston has two pressure-impacted surfaces of different sizes, so that it acts as a pressure converter in such a way that the hydraulic pressure is always greater than the pneumatic pressure. In addition, in order to control the spring characteristic, the separating piston can be impacted by an additional spring force across its separating piston rod. In the known embodiment, this added spring force is produced by a secondary cylinder acting on the separating piston rod. The separating piston rod is fed in the manner of a plunger into the secondary cylinder, so that it is impacted with a force acting toward the separating piston by admitting to it a pressure medium in the secondary cylinder, which thus acts in the direction of the force applied by the hydraulic pressure. This added spring force thus has the tendency of reducing or compressing additionally the volume of the spring chamber of the primary cylinder. In the known suspension system, the secondary reservoirs of two piston reservoirs are also connected hydraulically to a common supplementary reservoir, so that a hydraulic medium under pressure is placed inside the secondary reservoir.
The known piston reservoir has been well proved in practice so far, but under some operating conditions, the allowable maximum pressure in the primary cylinder can be exceeded, which might sometimes lead to a cylinder cap being forced out on the side facing away from the secondary cylinder. In such a failure, the entire separating piston would be catapulted out of the reservoir by the pressure in the secondary cylinder.
The problem underlying this invention is to improve the known piston reservoir with respect to its safety.
This goal is attained by the features of this invention.
The invention provides that the separating piston rod or its end area constituting the plunger has a bumper element at the free end away from the primary cylinder, with a bumper area projecting radially over the outer circumference of the plunger. If in the failure case described above, the separating piston with the plunger should be accelerated by the pressure in the secondary cylinder toward the primary cylinder, then the bumper area of the bumper element strikes a bumper surface in front of a plunger passage to the primary cylinder, so that the separating piston together with the separating piston rod and the plunger is prevented from being able to leave the reservoir like a shot. In fact, deformation damages in the bumper area will then occur, which make the piston reservoir useless thereafter, so that it has to be replaced by a new piston reservoir. However, this is acceptable in the interest of increased safety.
With reference to a preferred sample embodiment shown in the drawing, the invention will be described in further detail below. The Figures show:
A hydropneumatic piston reservoir 1 pursuant to the invention according to
As also seen in
From the structural viewpoint, for assembly of the piston reservoir 1, the secondary cylinder 4 may be formed by a tube 30 closed at one end, with this tube 30 being screwed down pressure-tight by a thread 32 at its open end to a threaded connector 34 of the face 10 or of the cap 10a of the primary cylinder 2 screwed to the circumferential wall 6. The threaded connector 34 with a radial annular surface 36 forms a bumper for the bumper element 24 of the plunger 22. The threaded connector 34 also forms a passage 38 for the separating piston rod 20, with at least one circumferential gasket 40 for the separating piston rod 20 being positioned in the passage 38. This circumferential gasket 40 seals the annular gap between the separating piston rod 20 and the passage 38 pressure-tight, so that different pressures can prevail inside the secondary cylinder 4 and inside the adjacent pressure chamber 16 of the primary cylinder 2.
For purposes of assembly, it is also possible to form the bumper element 24 by a screw 42 that engages with a threaded shaft 42a in an axial internal thread 43 of the plunger 22, and that has a head 42b enlarged in diameter compared to the plunger 22, with the head 42b on its side facing the threaded shaft 42a having a radial annular surface 42c constituting the bumper area 28.
The piston reservoir 1 can be assembled as follows. First, with the forward end 8 (cap 8a) still open, the separating piston 12 is inserted in the primary cylinder 2 with the separating piston rod 20 in front. The separating piston rod 20—still without the bumper element 24 pursuant to the invention—is thus passed through the passage 38 and the seal 40 to the outside. The primary cylinder 2 can then be closed with the end 8 (the cap 8a), for which a threaded connection is preferably provided, for example such as a screw cap. The screw 42 constituting the bumper element 24 can then be assembled at the end of the separating piston rod 20 and screwed tight still freely extending to the outside and constituting the plunger 22. Finally, the tube 30 constituting the secondary cylinder 4 is fed by its open end over the plunger 22, and is screwed securely with its thread 32 to the threaded connector 34. Finally the pressure can be applied.
To do this, a pressure medium, pneumatic in particular, is applied to the secondary cylinder 4 through a filling connector. It is preferred to use nitrogen gas. Of course the application of a hydraulic medium is within the scope of the invention.
A hydraulic medium is applied through a line connector to the first pressure chamber 16 of the primary cylinder 2 encircling the separating piston rod 20 as an annular chamber. As a general rule, the first pressure chamber 16 is connected hydraulically to a shock absorber leg (telescopic spring cylinder) of a motor vehicle suspension system (not shown).
The second pressure chamber 18 opposite the separating piston rod 20 as a cylindrical chamber is exposed to a pneumatic pressure medium, particularly including nitrogen gas, through a filling connector.
For completeness, it should also be mentioned that the plunger 22 including the bumper element 24 is positioned as a frictionless “plunger” in the secondary cylinder, with radial circumferential spacing (i.e. non sealing) from the inside wall 4a of the cylinder.
In a particularly beneficial embodiment of the invention shown in
The invention is not limited to the illustrated and described sample embodiments, but also includes all equivalent implementations in the meaning of the invention. It is expressly noted that the sample embodiments are not limited to all features in combination, but instead each individual sub-feature separately from all other sub-features can have inventive significance by itself.
While the above description constitutes the preferred embodiment of the present invention, it will be appreciated that the invention is susceptible to modification, variation, and change without departing from the proper scope and fair meaning of the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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EP 10168521.2 | Jul 2010 | EP | regional |