Claims
- 1-58. Cancelled
- 59. A journal bearing arrangement for a rotatable shaft comprising
(i) a housing configured to surround a shaft space and having a housing surface facing into the shaft space, (ii) a plurality of arcuate bearing pads arrayed about the shaft space overlying the housing surface, each having a bearing face adjacent the shaft space and a body face adjacent the housing surface, and (iii) a mounting arrangement, arranged to support at least one bearing pad with respect to the housing surface movable relative thereto in a direction to and from the housing surface, including associated with each said movable pad,
a stop comprising a restraining boss and a shoulder provided one each by the housing and bearing pad, said boss having a head portion arranged to overlie the shoulder to limit the extent of pad movement away from the housing surface and permit displacement of the bearing pad towards the housing surface, and a spring arrangement, operable to bias the pad away from the housing surface to the limit imposed by the stop and exert on said pad stopped by the stop a predetermined level of pre-load and, in response to load applied to the bearing surface exceeding said pre-load level, permit displacement of the pad towards the housing surface.
- 60. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 59 in which the spring arrangement comprises a plurality of individually deflectable resilient elements.
- 61. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 60 in which the mounting arrangement includes, associated with at least one said movable bearing pad, at least one support peg secured at one end of the peg with respect to one of the pad or housing and having a shank extending towards an unsecured end of the peg free to move with respect to the other one of the pad or housing, said spring arrangement comprises at least one stack of individually deflectable resilient elements arranged to bear on one another in a radial direction disposed in a state of compression between one of the pad or housing and the other one of the pad or housing, or support peg secured thereto, at least one said stack of resilient elements being apertured and associated with a support peg, disposed in co-axial relationship with the shank thereof.
- 62. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 60 in which the individually deflectable elements comprise annular dished washer springs and the spring means comprises at least one stack of said annular dished washer springs.
- 63. A journal bearing as claimed in claim 60 in which the individually deflectable resilient elements comprise leaf springs extending circumferentially with respect to the housing and shaft space, and the spring arrangement comprises, associated with each bearing pad between the pad and the housing surface a stack of said leaf springs arranged to bear one on another in a radial direction.
- 64. A journal bearing as claimed in claim 5 in which said stack comprises associated with each bearing pad at least a first spring terminating adjacent one end region of the pad and pivotally secured thereto, a second spring terminating adjacent the opposite end region of the pad and pivotally secured thereto, and a third spring mounted at its centre on a spigot extending along a radial axis and constrained by the spigot to sliding motion along the spigot and in respect of displacement from the housing surface.
- 65. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 64 in which each of the stacked leaf springs has a substantially cylindrical curvature centered on the housing axis and substantially equal to that of the others whereby the circumferentially overlapping springs are able to stack nested one within another.
- 66. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 65 in which the leaf springs associated with said bearing pads are arranged each to extend circumferentially with respect to the housing and shaft space and effect support for at least three circumferentially spaced bearing pads adjacent each other, each of said springs being offset circumferentially with respect to adjacent springs of the stack such that for each said bearing pad the associated first spring secured to said one end region comprises a third spring of a pad spaced circumferentially in a direction towards said opposite end region of the bearing pad and the associated second spring secured to said opposite end comprises a third spring of a pad spaced circumferentially in a direction towards said one end of the bearing pad.
- 67. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 65 in which for each said bearing pad the associated third spring extends from its mounting spigot through an angle in the range ±(60 to 120)°.
- 68. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 65 in which the first and second springs associated with a said bearing pad comprise respectively the third springs of the adjacent circumferentially spaced bearing pads.
- 69. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 65 in which the stop associated with each said movable bearing pad comprises at least one pair of shoulders spaced apart at opposite ends of the bearing pad in the circumferential direction, each shoulder having a surface facing towards the shaft space and rebated with respect to the bearing surface, and associated with each said shoulder a said restraining boss disposed with the head portion arranged to overlie one end shoulder of at least one adjacent pad and in which at least one said restraining boss passes through an aperture in each leaf spring extending circumferentially between spaced bearing pads and each said leaf spring has, in the vicinity of a said aperture, strengthening means to maintain spring deflection within elastic limits.
- 70. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 65 in which each spigot includes an axially positionable spring stop to define the limit of third spring displacement radially away from the housing surface, the stop associated with each said movable bearing pad comprises at least one pair of shoulders spaced apart at opposite ends of the bearing pad in the circumferential direction, each shoulder having a surface facing towards the shaft space and rebated with respect to the bearing surface, and associated with each said shoulder a said restraining boss disposed with the head portion arranged to overlie one end shoulder of at least one adjacent pad, in which the restraining bosses are disposed so as to maintain each spigot-mounted spring in tension with its ends splayed apart by abutment of bearing pad shoulders, at which the ends of said springs are secured to the pad, with the heads of the restraining bosses.
- 71. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 70 in which the head portion of each restraining boss defines a cam surface and the associated pad end shoulder a co-operable cam follower permitting the shoulder to move radially and circumferentially with respect to the shaft space in abutment with the restraining boss and for the bearing pad to tilt as a result of differential movement between the shoulders at opposite ends of the bearing pad.
- 72. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 71 in which the mounting includes a damper comprising coupling within the spring arrangement between the stack of circumferentially extending springs associated with a said bearing pad and at least one bearing pad spaced therefrom circumferentially about the shaft space, whereby each bearing pad, in response to application of force to the bearing pad in excess of the bias force exerted thereon by the spring stack, is displaceable with the springs of the stack towards the housing until restrained by abutment, and displacement of the third spring of the stack creates, at each end of the third spring secured to an end shoulder of a circumferentially spaced bearing pad, a component of bias force acting substantially in the direction of said displacement and operable to slide the cam follower surfaces of the circumferentially spaced pad end shoulders along the cam surface of the respective restraining boss such that the distal end of the circumferentially spaced bearing pad is displaced by the cam surface towards the shaft space such that a part of the bearing surface of that pad is tilted and displaced towards the shaft space.
- 73. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 64 in which the mounting includes a damper comprising coupling within the spring arrangement between the stack of circumferentially extending springs associated with a said bearing pad and at least one bearing pad spaced therefrom circumferentially about the shaft space, whereby displacement of a said bearing pad in a direction towards the housing surface results in displacement of at least part of a said circumferentially spaced bearing pad away from the housing surface towards the shaft space.
- 74. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 59 in which the mounting includes a damper defined by the spring arrangement responsive to displacement of any particular bearing pad by rotation eccentricity of the shaft within the shaft space to reduce the return of energy from the spring means to the shaft substantially in phase with the eccentric rotation.
- 75. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 73 in which the damper comprises friction damping means operable to effect Coulomb damping between relatively sliding, abutting surfaces of the spring arrangement.
- 76. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim, 74 in which the damper is arranged to provide different damping at different circumferential positions about the shaft space.
- 77. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 59 in which the spring arrangement is arranged to provide at least one of spring rate and pre-load varying as a function of pad position about the shaft space.
- 78. A journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 59 in which the stop associated with each said movable bearing pad comprises at least one pair of shoulders spaced apart at opposite edges of the pad, each shoulder having a surface facing towards the shaft space and rebated with respect to the bearing surface, and associated with each said shoulder a said restraining boss extending from the housing surface adjacent said pad edge having a head portion disposed to overlie the shoulder.
- 79. A backup journal bearing in a housing for a shaft having a separate bearing suspension, the backup journal bearing comprising:
a journal bearing arrangement including a plurality of arcuate bearing pads; and an associated spring arrangement biasing each arcuate bearing pads against a stop, wherein a shaft space is defined by the locus of bearing surfaces of the arcuate bearing pads, with the shaft space having cross-sectional dimensions in excess of the shaft to define driving shaft rotation as operating gap corresponding to a permitted degree of shaft position departure from concentricity with the shaft space.
- 80. A back-up journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 79 in which the stop is radially displaceable relative to the housing surface so as to vary the magnitude of the operating gap.
- 81. A back-up journal bearing arrangement as claimed in claim 80 including a back-up control operable to determine the level of separate support for the shaft and to vary the operating gap by means of the stop as a function of confidence in said level of separate support.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
0115336.0 |
Jun 2001 |
GB |
|
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims benefit to International Application No. PCT/GB02/02399 filed on Jun. 6, 2002 and published in English under PCT (Article 21(2)); British Application No. GB0115336.0 filed Jun. 22, 2001; and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/296,345, filed Jun. 6, 2001, all which are incorporated herein by these references.
PCT Information
Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
PCT/GB02/02399 |
6/6/2002 |
WO |
|