1. Field of Invention
The present invention relates to a locking device for a tire mounted on a wheel rim to optimize dynamic balancing of a tired wheel, particularly, but not exclusively, suitable for tire balancing machines, tire assembling-release machines and the like.
Balancing of a tired wheel is a delicate operation which in general has to be carried out with care by an operator as balancing could affect the road-holding of the vehicle and thus the safety of the passengers. As a matter of fact, a non-optimum balancing could result in vibrations and resonance phenomenons being caused owing to unbalanced forces or force resultants with respect during standard operation of the vehicle.
As it is known, the aforesaid forces are generated when a tired wheel is rotated about its axis of rotation owing to:
2. Description of Related Art
Tired wheel balancing is usually carried out by means of a balancing machine comprising a rotatable support which can rotate about an horizontal or vertical axis of rotation and is provided, e.g. with jaws for engaging the tired wheel rim or with a grip headstock comprising a number of expansion arms and being rotatable about the same axis of rotation, or with a fixing flange having a pneumatic threaded-hub system. When the tired wheel is rotated, by the rotatable support, any mass imbalance with respect to the axis of rotation is detected by suitable sensor means, e.g. magnetic, optical or pressure sensor means, suitably connected to an electronic computer unit adapted to store and process data forwarded thereto. At this point, the standard procedure adopted to re-balance a tired wheel provides, as known, trying to eliminate such unbalances by adding sufficient additional masse-balance weights at suitably chosen positions. For correct positioning of such masses in most recent balancing machines use is made of optical pointers (lasers) controlled by the electronic computer that had previously reckoned the precise positioning of the mass-balance weights along the wheel rim edge.
When the weight of such additional masse-balance weights, however, exceeds a predetermined value, e.g. about 50 g, it is usually preferable to cause the tire to rotate about the axis of rotation of the tired wheel with respect to the wheel rim (or viceversa), so as to compensate, at least to a large extent, mass unbalances due to the wheel rim for those caused by the tire.
Such a tire rotation about the axis of rotation of the tired wheel is carried out as follows:
To cause the tire to effect an angular rotation through about 180 degrees with respect to the wheel rim, no matter what tired-wheel maintenance machine is used, the operator usually acts on a suitable manually operated control, e.g. a pedal located on the base of the maintenance machine, thereby setting in rotation the rotatable support on which the wheel rim is secured. The wheel rim is thus set in rotation, and the tire is, in turn, caused to rotate owing to friction between the wheel rim edge and the tire bead.
The problem to be faced by the operator is to be able to lock or slow down any uncontrolled rotation of the tire that, due to friction, is dragged by the wheel rim secured to the rotatable support. Up to now, the operator has resorted to expedients, such as manually rotating the tire with respect to the wheel rim or manually slowing down the tire possibly by using a tool inserted between tire and wheel rim, while the maintenance machine causes the wheel rim to rotate. Such expedients are obviously troublesome and totally unsatisfactory.
This situation is even worse when a tire has a lowered bead or profile, as in this case the contact area between tire internal bead or edge and the wheel rim edge is much more extended than that provided in a standard tire, and thus the operator's task becomes much more difficult as higher strength is to be exerted in this operation in trying to stop or slow down tire rotation with respect to the wheel rim rotation. Moreover, with lowered profile tires use is made of alloy wheel rims that inevitably become damaged or at least scratched when tools are inserted between wheel rim and tire.
A further problem is faced when assembling and disassembling a special wheel tire. As a matter of fact, in order to mount a tire on a wheel rim the tire bead must get over and beyond the wheel rim edge, and thus the operator does force a portion of the tire bead by means of a suitable tool to exceed the wheel rim edge, after which care should be taken in gradually forcing the remaining tire bead to move beyond the wheel rim edge. Especially when dealing with wheels of large dimensions, e.g. truck or lorry wheels, the bead resistance to deformation is quite substantial, and thus it is quite difficult for the operator to accomplish the necessary steps to assembly or disassembly a tire.
The main object of the present invention is to provide a locking device arranged to block or slow down the rotation of a deflated tire dragged in rotation by a wheel rim on which it is, or is to be, mounted, thereby obtaining a controlled relative rotation of a tire with respect to its wheel rim.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a locking device suitable for preventing the tire or the wheel rim to become damaged while being assembled or disassembled onto or from each other.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a locking device that can be adapted to any type of tired-wheel maintenance machine.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a locking device that can be produced and operated at low costs, thereby substantially not to affect the overall costs of a maintenance machine in which the locking device is to be installed.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a locking device enabling an operator to mount-dismount a tire onto or from a wheel rim with a very limited effort.
These and other objects that will better appear below are achieved by a locking device for a tire in a tired-wheel maintenance machine which has a support frame, at least one rotatable support for a wheel rim mounted for rotation on said support frame and provided with blocking/unblocking means for said wheel rim, and driving means for said at least one rotatable support, said locking device comprising holding means anchorable to said support frame and comprising at least one engagement means suitable for removably at least partly engaging said tire of said tired wheel thereby preventing it from rotating, when its respective wheel rim is controllably angularly displaced by said drive means.
Further features and advantages of the locking device according to the present invention will become better apparent from the following detailed description of a number of presently preferred embodiments thereof, given by way of non-limiting examples of carrying out the invention, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the accompanying drawings, the same or similar parts or components have been indicated with the same reference numerals.
With reference first to
A suitable winding-unwinding reel or sprocket 3 is preferably spring-loaded, secured to the upright M, e.g. by means of support stirrups 4, and is part of a holding means 5, e.g. a flexible belt 5a made of any suitable material having a relatively high friction coefficient, the belt having one end thereof anchored to the winding sprocket 3 and being arranged to be wound-unwound onto and from the sprocket. The other end of the belt 5a removably fixed to a connection means 6, e.g. comprising a buckle-like member designed to engage, preferably by a snap-engagement, with an anchoring means 7, generally a sheath member secured to the upright M, preferably at a side opposite to that of the winding sprocket 3, and provided with a suitable release button, the whole like a coupling-uncoupling device for a vehicle safety belt.
After the wheel rim C is secured by the expansion jaws to the rotatable support of the maintenance machine 1, the tired wheel G is deflated, if required, and the bead of tire P is released from the wheel rim edge by any suitable means. The belt 5a is then pulled out by being unwound from sprocket 3, and wrapped once or twice around the tread of tire P, after which the buckle 6 is snap-engaged into the sheath 7. Thus, tire P by being constrained to the belt 5a is prevented from rotating with the wheel rim. When the operator presses the suitable pedal 2, the wheel rim C on the rotatable plate R is set in rotation and the friction generated between the wheel rim C and the tire P at its beads would drag in rotation also the tire P. However, such a friction is opposed and exceeded by friction generated between the belt 5a and tread of tire P.
As it will be noted in
In
Preferably, the pin-shaped member 9 is slidably engaged through a guide slit 10a formed in the upright M for positioning the end eyelet or ring 8 of the rope 5b at different levels thereby making it possible to locate tires P arranged on the rotatable plate R of the maintenance machine 1 at different heights. Another guide slit 10b is formed in the upright on its opposite side to the guide 10a, and designed to slidably engage with a pin member 11, whose end protruding from the upright M has an eyelet 11a to be engaged by the other end of the rope 5b. As it will be noted in
From a practical operational point of view, after the rope 5b has been wound and manually tightened about the tread of tire P, its free end threaded is passed through the eyelet 11a and locked in position by pawl 12. As it will be better noted in
Advantageously, arm 13 extends in an offset or angularly shifted direction, e.g. through 15°-20°, from its radial attitude with respect to the tired wheel G.
The belt 5a, unwound from sprocket 3, can pass around the upright M, be deviated, e.g. by a small pole 16, preferably extending parallel to the axes of rotation 18 and 20, enter the gap GA (
When the eccentric roller 17 is in its unblocking position the belt 5a or rope 5b is free to slide through the gap GA, whereas when the eccentric roller is in its blocking position the belt 5a or rope 5b is locked between the eccentric roller 17 and the idle roller 19 and cannot be further unwound.
The U-shaped stirrup 23 is spring loaded by any suitable resilient means, e.g. one or more helical springs 24 (
In another embodiment of the invention shown in
In an advantageous modification, spring or springs 24 are designed to act against the U-shaped stirrup 23 and to react against a disc plate 25a arranged to be controlled by the output shaft 26a.
According to another embodiment of the retaining device RD shown in
With reference to the embodiment shown in
A retaining device, as described above with particular reference to the embodiments in
In a first step, the rotatable support R starts rotating in a predetermined direction, thereby tightened the engagement means. The eccentric roller 17 or the displaceable roller 27 is then in its unblocked position and the spring 24 is not loaded (
In the embodiment shown in
The locking device as described above is susceptible to numerous modifications and variations within the scope as defined by the claims.
Thus, for example, the anchoring means in the embodiments described referring to
Moreover, the maintenance machine could be provided with a control device for the driving means of the rotating plate R, which allows, every time the operator pushes the proper pedal 2, the plate to rotate through a predetermined angle, e.g. 180 degrees, thus avoiding inaccuracy in the mutual angular movement between wheel rim and tire.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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VR2004A0086 | May 2004 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2470534 | Thomas | May 1949 | A |
2497644 | Watkins | Feb 1950 | A |
3578059 | Uhen et al. | May 1971 | A |
3970342 | Cotton | Jul 1976 | A |
4163468 | Mueller | Aug 1979 | A |
4840215 | Vijay et al. | Jun 1989 | A |
5458177 | Magnani | Oct 1995 | A |
5826319 | Colwell et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
6234232 | Kane et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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23 33 057 | Nov 1985 | DE |
2 104 460 | Mar 1983 | GB |
60 236809 | Jan 1975 | JP |
03099908 | Apr 1991 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050257896 A1 | Nov 2005 | US |