1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a link plate for a plate-link chain for use in a drive system. The invention also relates to a plate-link chain that is made using link plates according to the invention, as well as to a chain drive that incorporates such a plate-link chain and a vehicle that includes such a chain drive.
2. Description of the Related Art
Both link plates and plate-link chains of the type referred to above are known in many forms from the known state of the art, as is explained hereinafter. It is also known that such link plates, as well as plate-link chains incorporating them, are limited in their ability to transmit power, and that the possibility thus exists that a link plate will be damaged, by power peaks for example, and will fail. Failure can be manifested in breaking of the link plate, wherein starting from that broken link plate a failure or breaking of the entire plate-link chain can follow, since the additional link plates that are positioned between the same articulation members must take over the power transmission of the broken link plate, and hence are loaded more severely. That heavier load results in the individual link plates coming closer to the limit of their power transmitting capability, or even exceeding it.
An object of the invention is to provide a stronger link plate and a plate-link chain using such a plate link that has greater strength. In addition, wear is to be reduced and the elasticity of the link plate is to be reduced. Furthermore, the present invention is intended to result in the need to assemble fewer parts to produce a plate-link chain.
The above-identified object is achieved according to the invention by designing the thickness of at least individual link plates to be greater, i.e., so that the plate-link chain is thicker in a chain width dimension. The result is larger contact surfaces between a link plate and an articulation member in the form of a rocker member that extends into an opening in the chain link, and to a large proportion of clean cuts with a smooth stamped surface. Furthermore, that results in very good perpendicularity between rocker member and link plate. A clean contact surface of that sort can reduce or even completely avoid shearing of the chain strand. The reduced pressure also enables reduction, and in the best case avoidance, of edge flow.
In consideration of the stamping quality and the flexural load on the rocker member, the plate thickness cannot be increased arbitrarily. It must also be taken into consideration that the tool and die costs increase disproportionately, depending upon the stamping thickness.
With a design of a link plate according to the invention and its use in a toothed chain, the additional advantage arises that the tilting effect when the chain enters the toothed wheel, caused by a moment between tooth and plate, is favorably influenced, since good perpendicularity of plate to tooth is ensured. That results in better guidance, and reduction or avoidance of shear loading in the teeth. Furthermore, lower pressure occurs as a result, so that edge flow can be reduced or avoided.
Some dimensional relationships that are tangible in numerical terms have proven to be especially favorable according to the present invention. It is especially advantageous, for example, if the ratio of pitch l to plate thickness d is in the range of 3.7 to 5.5. It is also advantageous if the ratio of the height of the rocker members h to the plate thickness d is between 1.3 and 1.9. A ratio of the rocker member width w to the plate thickness d in the range between 0.8 and 1.2 is also especially advantageous. Furthermore, it is especially advantageous if the ratio of plate land width s to plate thickness d is in the range between 0.8 and 1.2.
As mentioned earlier, the present invention also relates to a plate-link chain, in particular for a vehicle transmission, a vehicle power train, or a vehicle engine auxiliary drive, having a large number of link plates articulatingly connected with each other by rocker members. The rocker members extend transversely to the longitudinal direction of the plate-link chain, and curved contact surfaces are formed on the rocker members and the link plates, along which contact surfaces the rocker members and link plates are in contact with each other to transmit force. The respective contact surface has a width that extends transversely to the longitudinal direction of the plate-link chain, and when regarded in a sectional view running transversely to the width, in the longitudinal direction of the plate-link chain, an arc length.
There are various configurations for plate-link chains of the type described herein, depending upon their use in the vehicle drive system. When used in a stepless, conical-disk chain-driven variable speed drive (CVT) as part of the vehicle transmission, the rocker members have specially shaped end faces by which the tractive force between the conical disks and the chain is transmitted as frictional force. In most other applications in the vehicle drive system the plate-link chain is a toothed chain, i.e., on at least one side the link plates have teeth by which the tractive force is transmitted between toothed wheels and the chain. Toothed chains of that sort have become known in the state of the art, for example through U.S. Pat. No. 4,906,224. Such toothed chains are employed at a plurality of locations in the vehicle drive system, for example in all-wheel transfer cases, in front-mounted transverse transmissions for bridging the center-to-center distance from the differential, as drive chains of a hydraulic auxiliary unit within the transmission, as the valve gear timing chain of an internal combustion engine, or also as drive chains of other auxiliary equipment of the vehicle (coolant pump, lubricant pump, air conditioning compressor, generator, starter motor, hybrid auxiliary motor, brake booster, and the like).
A plate-link chain of the type described herein is made up of a multitude of link plates, which are articulatingly connected with each other by rocker members.
The transmission of force between the rocker members and the link plates takes place at contact surfaces which are formed on both the rocker members and the link plates, and along which the rocker members and the link plates are in contact with each other. The rocker members are also referred to as pins, which are placed in pairs as rocker joints in two openings in the plate, which have often grown together into one large opening in the case of chains for belt-driven conical-pulley transmissions.
Various functional surfaces are formed on the rocker members. The pair of rocker members positioned opposite each other in an opening of the plate-link chain are in contact with each other at the rolling region or roller surfaces. When the chain bends, a relative rolling motion by the angle of bend dictated by the geometry of the rocker members occurs at that location.
The contact surfaces of the rocker members are in contact with contact surfaces of the link plate, so that surface pressures occur between the contact surfaces of the link plates and the contact surfaces of the rocker members. Those contact surfaces must fulfill multiple requirements. First, the surface pressures that occur should not become too great because of the shape of the contact surfaces, and second, the contact surfaces should also function as anti-turning protection, so that the rocker members do not turn in the openings of the link plates.
For that purpose, plate-link chains that have segmented contact surfaces with two significantly different radii per segment have already become known. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,277,046 shows a plate-link chain having two contact surfaces on the rocker member with two different radii. Through those different radii an anti-turning protection is achieved, so that the rocker members do not turn in the opening of the link plates. Another known plate-link chain is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,236,399, which implements anti-turning protection through the fact that, again, two different radii are provided on the contact surfaces, or the centers of the radii are offset.
In addition to that anti-turning protection, the contact surfaces must also fulfill the requirement of a break-proof and fatigue-resistant plate-link chain. For that purpose, the surface pressures in the contact zone between the rocker members and the link plates must not exceed prescribed values. According to previous understanding, contact surfaces with little curvature and hence a large radius of curvature was necessary. According to the plate-link chains described above, an increase of the radius of curvature is therefore necessary in order to achieve a reduction of the contact pressure at the contact surfaces.
Surprisingly, it has now become evident that the responsibility for the occurrence of compressive stress spikes in the contact region of the contact surfaces of the rocker members and the plate-link chain does not rest with the existence of a small radius of curvature (and hence a large curvature), but rather local stress spikes occur more frequently in the transition region between different radii of curvature. That leads to the recognition that in the known plate-link chains significant stress spikes are present in the transition region from one radius of curvature to another radius of curvature, even when that transition runs tangentially, i.e., without a sharp bend.
A corresponding illustration is shown in
That is evident from the fact that although the roller surfaces on the rocker members are intended for turning when the plate-link chain bends, turning of the rocker members occurs at the contact surfaces, so that even in the case of plate-link chains with anti-turning protection, relative rotation occurs in the contact surface region of the link plates of the plate-link chain and of the rocker members, i.e., a shearing motion occurs between the rocker member and the link plate at the contact surfaces, which results in a mismatch of the contact surface at the transitions from one radius of curvature to a different radius of curvature. Therefore, the curvature of the link plate no longer matches the curvature of the rocker member.
The shearing motion results in a transition from region support in the contact zone between the rocker member and the link plate to a linear support, viewed over the width of the rocker member, and hence to elevated contact pressure in that contact zone, so that the result is the pressure maximum shown in
Hence there is a conflict of goals, to the effect that in the contact surface region attention must be paid to the requirements of permissible surface pressures, on the one hand, and on the other hand measures must also be taken to counteract turning of the rocker members relative to the link plates.
It is possible to design a plate-link chain for a vehicle drive, the chain having a large number of link plates articulatingly connected with each other by rocker members. The rocker members run transversely to the longitudinal direction of the plate-link chain and there are curved contact surfaces formed on the rocker members and on the link plates, along which surfaces the rocker members and link plates are in contact with each other to transmit force. The respective contact surface if the link plate has a width that extends transversely to the longitudinal direction of the plate-link chain, and when regarded in a sectional view running transversely to the width in the longitudinal direction of the plate-link chain, an arc length, and the contact surface has at least three regions with different curvatures along the arc length.
In other words, the result is a plate-link chain that has contact surfaces along its curved length which, regarded in a sectional view along the longitudinal direction of the plate-link chain, have at least three regions with different curvature, so that large jumps in the curvature are prevented but nevertheless regions with small and large radii of curvature are provided, in order to counter turning of the rocker members relative to the link plates.
That utilizes the insight that in contrast to the known insights it is not important to provide the smallest possible curvatures with large radii of curvature in the contact surface region, but that there should be a sufficient number of different curvatures of the contact surface of the rocker members and the contact surface of the link plates, but that jumps in curvature that result in high stress spikes should be avoided.
According to an advantageous improvement, provision is made so that the ratio of the greatest curvature to the smallest curvature is a factor of at least two. That design achieves the result that there is sufficient anti-turning protection of the rocker members relative to the link plates, and together with the feature that the contact surface is provided with at least three different curvatures along its arc length or curve length, that there are also sufficiently small jumps in curvature present so that unacceptably high compressive stresses do not occur at the contact surfaces in the region of the jumps in curvature.
There is also provision that the curvatures in the at least three regions can remain constant within the individual regions along the arc length, i.e., so that the curve length or arc length can be composed of at least three circular-arc segments, regarded in a sectional view along the axial longitudinal direction of the plate-link chain. As a result, the jumps between the different curvatures of the arc segments are small, and regarded in terms of radius of curvature, for rocker members of a plate-link chain for a vehicle drive system, jumps of the individual radii of curvature can occur, for example, from 1 mm to 3 mm and then to 5 mm, compared to a too large jump in radius from 1 mm to 5 mm.
It is also provided that the curvatures in the at least three regions change within the individual regions along the arc length. In other words, that means that constant curvatures are not provided in the three different regions, but that the curvatures can, for example, change continuously within the individual regions. That makes contact surfaces possible which, regarded in an axial longitudinal section view of the plate-link chain, are made up of spiral segments whose curvature—and hence also their radius of curvature—changes continuously along the arc length. In addition to those spiral segments, contact surface forms are also possible which, regarded in the axial longitudinal sectional view, are made up of elliptic segments, whose curvature varies continuously between a minimum value and a maximum value. Also possible as segments of the curve length, in addition to those shapes, are sections of hyperbolas or parabolas, or, quite generally, contact surfaces that have curved segments along the arc length whose second derivative is constant.
According to an improvement, provision is also made so that the contact surface has curve segments along the arc length whose smallest radius of curvature along the arc length is located substantially in the middle of the arc length.
By having the smallest radius of curvature located substantially in the middle of the arc length, the greatest curvature falls outside of the respective end region of the contact surfaces. That results in the rocker members becoming stiffer than in an arrangement where the smallest radius of curvature is in the region of the respective ends of the contact surfaces, and hence they deflect less. With the rocker members deflecting less, the tractive force is distributed more evenly over all of the adjacent link plates and the link plates achieve a greater fatigue strength, and the plate-link chain as a whole is able to transmit a greater tractive force.
With a plate-link chain of that type, a result is that pronounced jumps in contact stress no longer occur in the transition region between different radii of curvature of the contact surfaces. The anti-turning protection of the rocker members in the openings of the link plates is also increased, in comparison with known plate-link chains.
The structure, operation, and advantages of the present invention will become further apparent upon consideration of the following description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
As explained earlier,
As can be seen in
Rocker member 5 and link plate 6 are in contact with each other at contact surface 9 and contact surface 10 to transmit force. Since link plate 6 has a certain thickness in the direction transverse to the drawing plane of
On rocker member 5, reference numeral 17 designates the roller surface with which rocker member 5 rolls against the opposing rocker member (again, a pair of rocker members is involved), the basic configuration being visible on the basis of
As has been further recognized, a more compressionally rigid design of the rocker members is possible if the largest curvature, and hence the minimum radius of curvature of the contact surface, runs approximately in the middle of the contact surface, regarded over the arc length or curve length of the contact surface.
d: plate thickness
s: outer land width
l: pitch
h: rocker member height
w: rocker member width
b: inner land width
Accordingly, the dimensional ratios presented earlier, according to the invention, are as follows:
I/d 3.7 to 5.5, and/or
h/d=1.3 to 1.9, and/or
w/d=0.8 to 1.2, and/or
s/d=0.8 to 1.2.
The resulting advantages were described above.
Although particular embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit of the present invention. It is therefore intended to encompass within the appended claims all such changes and modifications that fall within the scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 047 877.8 | Oct 2005 | DE | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60725880 | Oct 2005 | US |