The present disclosure relates generally to brake assemblies, and more particularly, to brake assemblies for providing retarder and friction brake controls in response to brake demand.
A hydraulic retarder brake and a friction brake are important devices for braking large scale and other machines. The hydraulic retarder brake is used when heavy braking is required such as on descending a slope. Using a service brake alone may cause excessive heat generation in the friction portion of the service brake. Using the hydraulic retarder brake may decrease heat generation and thus prevent excessive wear or damage. The hydraulic retarder typically has a set of rotor blades, a set of stator blades, and a hydraulic fluid coupling. The rotor blades rotate with a wheel, the stator blades are fixed to a housing mounted on the machine, and the hydraulic fluid coupling between the opposing rotor blades and stator blades transmits the energy of rotating rotor blades to the circulating hydraulic fluid as heat due to the viscosity of the hydraulic fluid resulting in deceleration of the machine. Hydraulic retarder brakes may also be used with a transmission or a power train.
The friction brake is typically a disc brake that is engaged against all or certain wheels of the machine, such as the rear wheels, typically through a manual or automatic clutch when emergency stopping is required. Emergency friction braking for off highway machines may be designed to meet requirements for stopping based on grade, weight, location, and population.
Conventional braking system designs generally treat retarding and friction braking actions as separate and independent events that require two brake assemblies—a first brake assembly for providing the retarding action and a second brake assembly for providing the friction brake action. See, for example U.S. Pat. No. 4,235,320, which describes a retarder brake assembly and a friction brake assembly that are controlled according to schedules. These conventional braking systems are expensive because they require two separate brake assemblies. They take up more space because each brake assembly has an independent blueprint. Because they are separate braking systems they require a separate set of input controls by the operator. In addition, the efficiency of a brake system which combines a retarder brake assembly and a separate friction brake assembly is generally the sum of the efficiencies of each separate brake assembly part. There are little braking efficiencies that each separate brake assembly draws from the other brake assembly in performing braking action.
There is a need for a braking system that is less expensive, takes up less space, and is more efficient in delivering both retarder and friction braking action. This disclosure addresses this or other problems in the prior art.
An illustrative retarding brake assembly includes a brake hub for mounting inside a housing of an axle of a machine for movement in an axial direction. The retarding brake assembly further includes an impeller brake for mounting inside said housing and a friction brake for mounting inside the housing. In a neutral position, the impeller brake and the friction brake are disengaged from the brake hub. In a first braking position under the action of a first applied hydraulic fluid pressure, the brake hub engages the impeller brake for retarding rotation of the axle. In a second braking position under the action of a second applied hydraulic pressure, the brake hub frictionally engages the friction brake for frictionally braking rotation of the axle.
An illustrative method for braking rotation of an axle of a machine includes: applying a first hydraulic pressure command to a brake hub mounted inside a housing of an axle of a machine for movement in an axial direction to engage an impeller brake mounted inside said housing for retarding rotation of said axle; applying a second hydraulic pressure command to said brake hub to both engage said impeller brake for retarding rotation of said axle and frictionally engage a friction brake mounted inside said housing for frictionally braking rotation of said axle at a first braking level; and applying a third hydraulic pressure command to said brake hub to both engage said impeller brake for retarding rotation of said axle and frictionally engage said friction brake for frictionally braking rotation of said axle at a second braking level.
An illustrative machine with a retarding brake assembly includes a machine having a brake hub mounted inside a housing of an axle of said machine for movement in an axial direction. An impeller brake is mounted inside said housing and a friction brake is mounted inside the housing. In a neutral position, the impeller brake and the friction brake are disengaged from the brake hub. In a first braking position under the action of a first applied hydraulic fluid pressure, the brake hub engages the impeller brake for retarding rotation of said axle of the machine. In a second braking position under the action of a second applied hydraulic pressure, the brake hub frictionally engages the friction brake for frictionally braking rotation of said axle of said machine.
The disclosed assembly brake brings together the performance of an impeller brake and the performance of a friction brake into an integrated brake assembly design. By locating both an impeller and a friction brake into an integrated brake assembly, a higher performance brake assembly results; one that advantageously provides impeller braking action under machine operating conditions requiring less demanding brake action such as to retard or slow down the machine, and that advantageously provides friction brake action when more demanding brake action is required such as for dead stop braking all under a single braking action applied by the operator to one brake assembly. By setting a gap 150 inside the integrated brake assembly (shown in
The machine 1 shown in
The powertrain retarder 15/21 includes devices or systems used to dissipate energy in systems powering or transmitting power to propel the machine 1. The powertrain retarder 15/21 may include a power retarder for an engine brake 21 and/or a power retarder for a transmission 15. The powertrain retarder 15/21 may include either of the engine brake retarder 21 or transmission retarder 15, or both. The engine brake retarder 21, transmission retarder 15, and any other included powertrain retarder may be used together and may complement one another.
The engine brake 21 is a device that retards or slows the engine 2 and machine 1 by dissipating energy. The engine brake 21, also known as a compression brake or Jake brake, works by actuating, opening, or controlling the engine's 2 valves. The engine brake 21 may open or actuate an exhaust valve of the engine 2 near top dead center of the compression stroke, thereby releasing compressed air into the exhaust to dissipate energy and slow the machine 1.
The transmission retarder 15, or another driveline retarder, dissipates energy in the driveline. The transmission retarder 15 may operate one or more hydraulic pumps attached to the transmission 16 to dissipate energy. The transmission retarder 15 may transfer fluid (hydraulic, transmission, or another available fluid) into a chamber spinning with the transmission 16. The chamber may include blades or other structures. When the fluid is added to the chamber, viscous drag is applied to the transmission 16 which dissipates energy and slows the machine 1. The transmission retarder 15 may also operate an electric motor, heater, or generator connected to the transmission 16 or driveshafts 4, 6 to dissipate energy.
The powertrain retarder 15, 21 may also include other retarders known in the art. For example, the powertrain retarder 15, 21 may include an exhaust brake that adds a controllable restriction in the exhaust system or an electric retarder that may use electromagnetic induction to apply a retarding force to the flywheel, transmission 16, or driveshafts 4, 6. Energy from the powertrain retarder 15, 21 may be used by other systems or stored for powertrain use later.
The controller 19 communicates with and controls the engine 2, powertrain retarder 15, 21, and transmission 16. The controller 19 also receives data from the grade sensor, throttle 13, brake pedal 3, and retarder lever 11. The controller 19 embodies an electronic control module or another processor known in the art capable of communicating, receiving, processing, and storing data. The controller 19 may also communicate, receive, and process more data with more systems than are described here. The grade sensor provides an indication of the grade of the terrain 18, upon which the machine 1 operates. The load sensor 14 provides an indication of the weight of the load 9 and machine 1.
The throttle 13 is depressed by the operator 8 to increase fuel to the engine 2 and increase the power of the machine 1. The brake pedal 3 is used by the operator 8 to apply the wheel brakes 10 and slow the machine 1. The retarder lever 11 is used by the operator 8 to apply the powertrain retarder 15, 21 and slow the machine 1. The controller 19 is configured to operate a system (not shown) for providing the above described control to the machine 1.
In one exemplary aspect illustrated in
Still referring to
The impeller brake 50 has an impeller rotor 51 mounted on axle 24 of the machine 1. Impeller rotor 51 defines a plurality of rotor blades 52 that extend outwardly from an outside surface 53 of the impeller rotor 51 into a cavity 60 of the housing 23. A stationary stator 62 is illustratively defined by an inside surface 63 of the housing 23. Alternatively, stator 62 may be a shroud (not shown) attached to the housing 23 along the inside surface 63 of the housing 23. As yet another illustrative example, stator 62 may be provided with blades (not shown) that extend inwardly from inside surface 63 of the housing 23 into cavity 60 of the housing 23. Impeller rotor 51 and stator 62 form a chamber 67 for holding an axle fluid (not shown). The axle fluid illustratively fills housing 23 to about the center line of axle 24 to provide what is known in the art as a center fill oil axle. The axle fluid provides fluid coupling between the rotor blades 52 and the stator 62 of the impeller brake 50.
A bearing 57 disposed between the impeller rotor 51 and the axle 24 disengages impeller rotor 51 from axle 24 when the brake assembly is being operated in a neutral position of no braking for reducing drag from the impeller rotor on the axle when the brake assembly is being operated in the neutral position of no braking. Illustratively, the bearing 57 is a sleeve of material (not shown) having a low coefficient of friction such as steel, brass, or bronze. Alternatively, bearing 57 may be a roller element bearing that provides a low coefficient of friction to the impeller rotor 51 and the axle 24 when the brake is being operated in the neutral position of no braking.
As illustrated in
Brake hub 30 has a first portion 33 facing impeller brake rotor 51, a second portion 34 facing a first portion 78 of friction brake 70, and a third portion 35 facing a first portion 81 of a brake piston 100. Disposed between said first portion 33 of said brake hub 30 and the impeller rotor 51 of the brake impeller 50 is a friction disc 90 mounted on axle 24 of the machine 1 for rotation therewith. Friction disc 90 has an annular shape (not shown) having an inside surface (not shown) provided with splines (not shown) for engagement with grooves 40 that extend axially along an outer surface 41 of the axle 24. The grooves 40 allow the splines 93 connected therewith and hence the friction disc 90 to move axially along the axle 24 under the influence of a hydraulic fluid pressure as described below. Brake hub 30 is connected to the axle 24 in a fashion similar to the connection of the rotatable friction disc 71 to the axle 24, namely, with an inside surface (not shown) of the brake hub 30 provided with splines (not shown) for engagement with the grooves 40 that extend axially along an outer surface 41 of the axle 24 to enable movement of the brake hub along the axle 24 under the influence of the hydraulic fluid pressure. As an example of an alternative connection, the inside surface of the hub may be notched, a groove (not shown) may be notched into the axle, and a key (not shown) may be inserted between the notch on the inside surface of the hub and the groove on the axle to keep the brake hub rotating with the axle while allowing for axial displacement of the brake hub by movement of the notch of the hub along the groove in the axle under the influence of fluid pressure.
The brake piston 100 is disposed between a back plate 110 of said housing 23 and the third portion 35 of the brake hub 30. The brake piston 100 is attached to the housing 23 using dowels and tabs (not shown). Hydraulic fluid enters brake assembly 20 through oil ports 120. Hydraulic oil entering the brake assembly flows into a cavity 130 formed in housing 23 through a portion 132 of the cavity 130 extending between a first surface 102 of the brake piston 100 and the back plate 110 of the housing 23. Hydraulic fluid pressure in the portion 102 of the cavity 130 extending between the first portion 102 of the brake piston 100 and the back plate 110 of the housing 23 under the action of brake pedal 3 (
Housing 23 has a plate 1100 provided with a threaded opening 1104. A first side 79 of friction brake 70 is seated against an inside portion 1102 of the housing 23. Housing 23 further has a back plate 1130 provided with a threaded opening 1132. A second side 75 of friction brake 70 is seated against the second portion 34 of the brake hub 30. A spring 1140 is disposed between the plate 1100 and the second portion 34 of the brake hub over a telescopic dowel (not shown) having ends that threadingly engage with threaded openings 1104 and 1132 to attach spring 1140 to the housing 23. Illustratively, two or three additional springs 1140 located generally equidistant about the perimeter of the housing may be used to enable the plate 1100 of housing 23 to be biased as it axially moves in the direction of the wheel under the influence of hydraulic pressure and under that bias to return the plate 1100 to the neutral position once the hydraulic pressure applied to the brake piston 100 is removed.
Illustratively, brake assembly 20 has a first fluid system 68 and a second fluid system 69. The brake assembly of impeller brake 50 and friction brake 70 are bathed in axle fluid used for lubricating the axle of the machine 1 to form the first fluid system 68 for the brake assembly. A port or ports 134 allow axle fluid to flow between an axle lubricating system (not shown) and the impeller and friction brakes for this purpose. The brake piston 100 is bathed in hydraulic fluid from a brake line responsive to the brake pedal 3 (
Illustratively, the first fluid system 68 may be designed to operate in a way that normal operation of the brake assembly 20 generally does not cause overheating. Alternatively, a recirculating cooling system 145 as shown in
In the neutral position of no braking, axle fluid sits in the cavity 60. The action of both a first braking position and a second braking position discussed below, activates impeller brake 50 alone or in combination with friction brake 70 to engage impeller rotor 51 with axle 24 for axial rotation of the impeller rotor 51. The impellor rotor's motion imparts both outwards linear and rotational motion to the axle fluid disposed between the impeller rotor and the stator. The motion of the fluid is effectively toroidal; travelling in one direction in the direction of the rotating rotor blade. The stationary stator surface creates a drag on the toroidally circulating fluid causing a back force on the blades of the rotor retarding of the rotation of the axle. The retarding braking energy heats the axle fluid, and the heat is dissipated (via the radiator core 142 shown in
Referring again to
Under the action of brake pedal 3 (shown in
Under the action of brake pedal 3 in a second braking position, brake piston 100 and brake hub 30 move axially in the direction of the friction brake 70 and the impeller brake 50 the distance remaining to close the second gap 151 frictionally engaging brake hub 30 and friction brake 70, through the frictional engagement of the second portion 34 of the brake hub 30 against the first side surface 77 of the friction brake 70, to provide friction braking to reduce the speed of the machine 1. In the second braking position, the impeller brake 50 becomes more deeply engaged as the closing of the second gap 151 by the second braking position moves rotor blades 52 of impeller rotor 51 deeper into channel 67. Increasing retarder brake action is the result which combined with the frictional braking action occurring in the second braking position further reduces the speed of the machine 1.
Under the action of brake pedal 3 in a third braking position, brake piston 100 and brake hub 30 move axially even further in the direction of the friction brake 70 and the impeller brake than in the first and second braking positions to provide increased frictional engaging of friction brake 70 and increased impeller braking of impeller brake 50 to provide emergency stopping of the machine.
As shown in
If the command is a MID COMMAND, the process advances to step 1040 where the machine 1 senses the mid command indicates a light braking action. At step 1042, the brake hub travels and engages the impeller deeper and also engages the friction disc providing light braking through fluid and frictional retarding. In response thereto, at step 1044, the machine further reduces speed.
If the command is a HIGH COMMAND, the process advances to step 1050 where the machine 1 senses the high command indicates a complete stop. At step 1052, the brake hub travels and engages the impeller and friction brake even deeper providing required stopping force, such as may be specified by machine operating requirements or by industrial standards. In response thereto, at step 1054, the machine stops.
Industrial Applicability
The brake assembly 20 described above provides the operator 8 with control over the machine's 1 speed. In a neutral braking position, the impeller brake 50 and friction brake are disengaged.
As the operator 8 begins down in inclined terrain 18 (see
As the operator 8 applies the brake pedal 3 to a second braking position for greater braking action to reduce the speed of the machine 1, brake piston 100 and brake hub 30 move axially in the direction of the friction brake 70 and the impeller brake 50 the distance remaining to close the second gap 151 frictionally engaging brake hub 30 and friction brake 70, through the frictional engagement of the second portion 34 of the brake hub 30 against the first side surface 77 of the friction brake 70, to provide friction braking to reduce the speed of the machine 1. In the second braking position, the impeller brake 50 becomes more deeply engaged as the closing of the second gap 151 by the second braking position moves rotor blades 52 of impeller rotor 51 deeper into channel 67. Increasing retarder brake action is the result which combined with the frictional braking action occurring in the second braking position further reduces the speed of the machine 1.
As the operator 8 applies the brake pedal 3 to a third braking position for even greater braking action to bring the machine to a stop, brake piston 100 and brake hub 30 move axially even further in the direction of the friction brake 70 and the impeller brake than in the first and second braking positions to provide increased frictional engaging of friction brake 70 and increased impeller braking of impeller brake 50 to provide emergency stopping of the machine.
The cross-over point 2050 of the power curves 2030 and 2040 shows that at machine speeds at about the speed of the cross-over point 2050 or higher you can retard the machine to maintain the indicated machine speed using the power of the impeller alone. This is because at this speed, the power of the impeller is greater than the power required to maintain the machine at the desired speed. Below this speed, the power generated by the impeller is insufficient to maintain the machine at the desired speed. Hence, if the machine is operating below this speed, the operator will need to use the friction brake in addition to the impeller brake to maintain the machine at the desired speed.
The cross-over point 2050 of the power curves 2030 and 2040 also shows that at machine speeds of about or higher than the cross-over point you can retard the machine at that speed. This is because at speeds at or higher than the cross-over-point 2050, the power of the impeller is greater than the power required to bring the machine speed to a dead stop. Below the cross-over point, the power generated by the impeller is insufficient to bring the machine to a dead stop. Hence, if the machine is operating at a speed below the cross-over point, the operator will need to use the friction brake in addition to the impeller brake to bring the machine to a dead stop.
These drawings illustrate some of the uses to which the brake assembly may be put and the benefits from those uses. At a speed of the machine above the cross-over point, the impeller brake provides a very useful source of braking power for retarding the machine to a specified speed or bringing the machine to a complete stop. These stopping requirements may be specified for machine operations and may include the stopping requirements that are specified by the ISO standards. Below the cross-over-point, the impeller brake provides the braking power required to retard the machine to a specified speed within these ranges of speed but not enough braking power to provide dead stop braking requirements. In this range of speeds of the machine, the disclosure provides for the coaction of the impeller brake with a friction brake to meet dead stop braking requirements.
The disclosed assembly brake advantageously brings together the performance of an impeller brake and the performance of a friction brake into an integrated brake assembly design. By locating both impeller and friction brake into an integrated assembly, a higher performance brake assembly results; one that advantageously provides impeller braking action under machine operating conditions requiring less demanding brake action such as to retard or slow down the machine and provides friction brake action when more demanding brake action is required such as for dead stop braking, all under a single braking action applied by the operator to one brake assembly, the integrated brake assembly of this disclosure. By setting gap 150, the closing of which activates impeller braking, to be narrower than the gap 151, the closing of which activates friction braking, the integrated brake assembly of this disclosure advantageously ensures that one brake assembly delivers impeller braking in circumstances where retarding or slowing down the machine is required and friction braking when dead stop breaking is required; all by the action of a single braking action by the operator.
The disclosed brake assembly provides a two stage integrated braking process and system incorporating two braking systems, an impeller retarder brake and a friction into the existing service brake design. The two-stage control scheme disclosed enables the retarding impeller to be engaged for light braking and down-hill hauling and for the friction disc to be engaged for immediate stoppage.
As an integrated assembly, the disclosed assembly may advantageously replace one or more of the hydraulic impeller systems that are currently used on off highway machines, such as a transmission hydraulic retarder.
The integrated brake assembly provides many other benefits including from a system and a component level. By incorporating the impeller retarder into the brake assembly, there is less wear on the friction discs which enables the friction discs to be used for longer periods of time between change-out. This allows for longer periods between friction brake maintenance. The disclosed brake assembly removes the need of a hydraulic retarder brake assembly separate from the friction brake assembly for hauling applications. This leads to cost savings by removing the need to have a retarder assembly separate from the friction brake. The bundled brake solution also uses the pressure from the retarder to perform active on-axle filtering due to the circulation of the axle fluid through the oil cooling system 145 under the action of retarder braking.
While the friction brake is shown as a friction brake including a plurality of rotatable friction discs mounted for rotation with the axle and a plurality of plates, one between each pair of adjacent rotatable friction discs, attached to the housing for axial movement attached to the housing said for axial movement interleaved between the plurality of rotatable friction discs; wherein in said neutral position and in said first braking position, said plurality of axially movable plates and said plurality of rotatable friction disc are disengaged it will be understood that the number of rotatable discs and plates depend on the design of the brake assembly. For example, it may be possible to use a single rotatable friction disc and single plate for the friction brake.
While the brake assembly of impeller 50 and friction brake 70 are shown in
While the integrated brake assembly is shown in
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the disclosed brake system. Embodiments other than the ones that are herein disclosed will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the consideration of the specification and practice of the disclosed braking system. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope being indicated by the following claims and their equivalents.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2517531 | Anderson | Aug 1950 | A |
3334711 | Anderson | Aug 1967 | A |
3882975 | Jedlitschka et al. | May 1975 | A |
4066157 | Gibbs | Jan 1978 | A |
4235320 | Polak et al. | Nov 1980 | A |
4324320 | Spurlin et al. | Apr 1982 | A |
4846316 | Fujinami | Jul 1989 | A |
5441335 | Stumpe et al. | Aug 1995 | A |
6382379 | Yoshimoto et al. | May 2002 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2028294 | Dec 1971 | DE |
3440081 | Jul 1986 | DE |
0793033 | Sep 1997 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20130240312 A1 | Sep 2013 | US |