Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6322336
-
Patent Number
6,322,336
-
Date Filed
Thursday, February 3, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, November 27, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Freay; Charles G.
- Solak; Timothy P.
Agents
- Frishauf, Holtz, Goodman, Langer & Chick, P.C.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 417 502
- 417 493
- 417 494
- 417 224
- 417 326
- 417 442
- 417 223
- 074 127
- 074 409
- 074 491
- 074 128
-
International Classifications
- F04B3900
- F04B704
- F04B2300
- F16H2702
- F16H5518
-
Abstract
In a lubricating device for a plurality of lubricating stations, in particular for supplying lubricant to knitting machines, a pump device is provided that serves at the same time as a distributor device. To that end, the pump device has a piston which is provided with a control groove. The corresponding pump cylinder has an inlet and a plurality of outlets distributed over the cylinder wall. Depending on which of the outlets the control groove of the piston is made to coincide with, a corresponding lubricating station is selected. The pump device is thus a distributor device as well.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a lubricating device for a plurality of lubricating stations, especially for supplying lubricant, preferably oil, to lubricating stations of a knitting machine.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In knitting machines, for instance, the needle drive requires constant lubrication, which is equally true for the needle guide in the needle bed or needle cylinder, and so forth. Yet satisfactory, regular lubrication is extremely important, precisely in modern high-speed knitting machines. The lubricating stations must be reliably supplied with oil. As a rule, failure of the lubrication leads to increased wear and early failure of the knitting machine. On the other hand, the lubrication must be done in a thrifty way. It is counterproductive to supply too much oil to the lubricating stations. Such knitting machines are therefore often equipped with so-called pressure oilers or pressure oil lubricating systems, which feed oil under pressure from a central point to the individual lubricating stations via suitable lines.
A lubricating device for this purpose, known for instance from European Patent Disclosure EP 0 499 810 B1, permits reliable, metered lubrication of a plurality of lubricating stations. The lubricating device has a lubricant container in which a piston pump is accommodated. The output of the piston pump is connected to a motor-driven distributor valve, so that the pump outlet can be connected to one lubricant line at a time, selected from a group of lubricant lines.
It is an object of the invention to create a simplified lubricating device. It is another object of the invention to create an improved method of lubrication.
These and other objects are attained in accordance with one aspect of the invention directed to a lubricating device comprising a distributor device with which lubricant furnished by a pump is diverted to selected lines and can thus be delivered to selected lubricating stations. The distributor device and the pump device are combined into one unit. Combining the distributor device and the pump device into a unit makes for a considerably simpler design of the lubricating device. The triggering of the lubricating device can be simplified as well.
The pump device is embodied as a piston pump and has a piston that is axially displaceable in a cylinder. Together with the cylinder, this piston serves as a pumping element. The cylinder and the piston are also embodied as a control element. To that end, the piston is rotatably supported in the cylinder and is provided with control faces or conduits, with which control slots or outlets disposed in the cylinder are associated. The piston can be provided on its jacket face with at least one control conduit that is embodied in such a way that by suitable rotary positioning of the piston, it can be brought into coincidence with at least one of the outlet conduits at a time. If needed, the arrangement can also be made such that the control conduit can be switched into coincidence with a plurality of outlet conduits. The control conduit and the outlet conduits are disposed such that the work chamber, defined by the piston and the cylinder, communicates with whichever outlet conduit has been selected, over the entire stroke of the piston. In this way, all the oil volume positively displaced by the piston can be pumped into the outlet conduit. The piston pump embodied in this way is both a pump device and distributor device at one and the same time.
The pump device and the distributor device can be connected to a drive device that effects the rotation and displacement of the piston. This displacement motion is a pumping motion, so that the displacement drive forms a pump drive. If no displacement motion occurs, the rotary motion of the piston causes no change in volume in the cylinder, and as a result, only the blocking or uncovering of outlet conduits is controlled by the rotary motion. Thus the rotary drive is a distributor drive, and the piston is a control slide. The pumping and switchover can thus each be effected independently, by rotating and displacing the piston. This can be done by means of separate drive devices, or by a combined drive device that is capable of generating both a rotary and a displacement motion.
For rotating the piston, a stepping motor is preferably used, which generates a desired rotary positioning motion. Rotary positions to be taken for selecting an outlet conduit and thus for activating a lubricating station are simple to attain with a stepping motor. However, the displacement motion of the piston can be derived from this stepping motor as well. To that end, the piston is preferably connected to the stepping motor or other kind of control motor via a coupling, which initially allows a set or adjustable rotary play, and the relative rotation within the rotary play is converted by a gear means into the desired linear motion.
The rotary angle of the rotary play can be utilized to generate a linear motion. To that end, the piston is preferably connected to a locking device, which keeps the piston nonrotatable in arbitrary or selected rotary positions, but without blocking its axial displacement. By way of example, this locking device can be formed by a locking wheel, which can be brought into and out of engagement with a locking member. This is preferably done by means of a suitable radial motion of the locking member, for instance by means of a pull magnet. If the piston is held in a manner fixed against relative rotation, then a rotation of the stepping motor within the context of the rotary play of the coupling device is possible. The displacement device is now preferably formed by a gear, which converts this relative rotation between the piston and the rotator device into a linear motion of the piston.
In an especially durable, simple embodiment, the locking wheel is embodied as a ratchet wheel. The locking element then acts as a pawl, which allows a rotation of the locking wheel in a selected direction. The pawl can also be releasable, for instance by a lifting magnet, to allow rotation of the locking wheel in the other direction. Such an arrangement allows normal operation of the lubricating device with only a very few actuations of the lifting magnet, used by way of example, for releasing and locking the paw. Even if simple, inexpensive lifting magnets are used, this makes a long service life possible.
The gear can be formed by two threaded elements meshing with one another. The pitch of the thread of the threaded elements is dimensioned such that by the relative rotation between the piston and the control motor, within the context of the rotary play of the coupling device, one complete piston stroke is executed. The piston can be moved back and forth by rotating the control motor forward and in reverse.
As needed, still other devices can serve as the gear means. For instance, it may be expedient to provide a cam drive, which enables a reciprocating motion of the piston upon rotation of the rotary drive in a single specified direction. Such a cam drive can be formed by an undulating annular groove provided in the wall of a bush, in which groove a radially extending pin or prong runs, driven by the control motor.
The gear that generates the linear motion is preferably prestressed. This can for instance be accomplished by means of a magnet that keeps flanks of the gear that slide past one another in contact with one another. This is advantageous particularly with a view to correct metering of the lubricant. If the drive reverses its rotary direction, for instance to change from a forward piston stroke to a reverse piston stroke, then the turning points are precisely defined, and incorrect metering is avoided.
The outlet conduits leading out of the cylinder and one inlet conduit are each preferably provided with check valves. The pump device thus makes do without further control means. The check valves are preferably automatic valves, controlled by the differential pressure applied. No other valve control arrangements are needed.
For monitoring proper operation of the lubricating device, a sensor device that detects and monitors the reciprocating motion of the piston can be advantageous. It may suffice to monitor whether the piston attains a certain stroke or not. For instance, if one lubricating conduit is stopped up, the piston is unable to pump any lubricant into this conduit and is accordingly blocked. It fails to reach the switching point of the sensor device, and the sensor device detects this and turns off the affected machine.
Another aspect of the invention is directed to a method for the lubrication of lubricating stations of a machine by means of at least one pump via lines. Lubricant is pumped discontinuously by the pump to the lubricating stations via the lines. For lubricant supply to one or more lubricating stations, the applicable line or lines are subjected by the pump to a pressure that fluctuates over time. Regardless of the specific design of the pump device and distributor devices in attached lines, and regardless of how many lubricating stations are connected, it is expedient for the pump pressure to be modulated during individual lubricating pulses. If a stepping motor is used to drive the pump, its individual steps can be converted into micropumping pulses, whose train forms a lubricating pulse. The intervals between individual micropumping pulses are expediently dimensioned such that the pressure in the lines does not drop below a minimum limit value. The minimum pressure is preferably somewhat less than the requisite injection pressure for the connected nozzles. It suffices to keep any resilience (elasticity) of the lines under initial stress. This makes it possible either to meter especially small quantities of lubricant, or to prolong the lubricating process.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
shows the lubricating device in a schematic perspective view;
FIG. 2
shows the lubricating device of
FIG. 1
, in a sectional view of a detail and on a different scale;
FIG. 3
is a horizontal section taken at line III—III of the cylinder body
8
of
FIG. 7
, but with piston
21
assembled thereinto;
FIG. 4
is a horizontal section taken at line IV—IV of the lubricating device of
FIG. 2
;
FIG. 5
is a plan view of a locking wheel belonging to the drive device of
FIG. 4
;
FIG. 6
is a horizontal section through coupling device
39
, taken at line VI—VI in
FIG. 7
, but with pin
42
assembled thereinto;
FIG. 7
shows a pump device, belonging to the lubricating device of
FIG. 2
, with an associated coupling device, an associated locking wheel, and a threaded element for generating a linear motion;
FIG. 8
is a graph showing the course over time of the injection pressure of the oil stream flowing to an injection nozzle and the oil stream output by the injection nozzle;
FIG. 9
is a schematic plan view of a modified embodiment of a locking device with a locking wheel embodied as a ratchet; and
FIG. 10
is a schematic plan view of a further modified embodiment of a locking device with a locking wheel embodied as a ratchet.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
In
FIG. 1
, a lubricating device
1
is shown, which includes a supply container
2
, for lubricant, such as oil. A distributor and pump unit
3
is inserted into the supply container
2
and dispenses predetermined portions of lubricant at predetermined times to a group
4
of lubricant lines
5
a
through
5
e
that lead away from it.
The pump and distributor unit
3
schematically shown in
FIG. 1
is shown separately in
FIG. 2. A
piston pump
7
, which is both a pump device
7
a
and a distributor device
7
b
simultaneously is used for pumping and allocating the lubricant. The piston pump
7
, as seen particularly from
FIGS. 3 and 7
, includes a cylinder body
8
with a cylindrical through bore
9
. The through bore
9
is embodied on its lower end in terms of
FIGS. 2 and 7
as a stepped bore, because it has one portion
10
of increased diameter. This portion serves to receive a check valve
12
, whose valve body
14
is screwed for instance into a corresponding thread in the portion
10
.
The valve body
14
is provided with a through conduit
15
for receiving a valve closure member
16
. The head of the valve closure member
16
points toward the inner chamber, defined by the through bore
9
, of the cylinder body
8
. If needed, a spring, not shown, can brace the valve closure member against a valve seat embodied on the valve body
14
.
The valve body
14
is provided with a plurality of radial bores
17
, in the present example
12
of them (
17
a-
17
l
; FIG.
3
), which are all disposed in the same plane
18
to which the through bore
9
is perpendicular. The radial bores
17
a-
17
l
FIG.
3
), which are disposed in the same plane
18
to which the through bore
9
is perpendicular. The radial bores
17
a-
17
l
are disposed at equal angular spacings from one another, while the spacing between the radial bore
17
l
and the radial bore
17
a
is somewhat greater than the otherwise uniform spacings among the radial bores
17
a
through
17
l.
Check valves, not identified by reference numeral, are inserted into the radial bores
17
(the reference numeral without a letter following it stands equally for all the radial bores
17
a
through
17
l
), and these check valves allow a fluid flow in the radial direction outward, that is, from the bore
9
outward through the outlet conduit formed by the respective radial bore
17
, but not back again.
The lubricant lines
5
a
through
5
e
are connected to the outlet valves and lead to the lubricating stations. The check valves can be provided as needed also on an end of the respective line
5
a
through
5
e
remote from the distributor device
7
b,
in which case only connection nipples are screwed into the radial bores
17
.
A piston
21
is inserted into the through bore
9
, and its outer diameter substantially matches the inside diameter of the through bore
9
, so that while the piston is seated axially displaceably and rotatably in the through bore
9
, it also together with the through bore defines a work chamber
22
relatively tightly (FIG.
2
). Along with its cylindrical jacket face
23
, the piston
21
also has a substantially plane end face
24
. A control groove
25
extends over the jacket face, beginning at the end face
24
, parallel to the center axis
26
of the piston. The length of the control groove
25
is preferably equal to or somewhat greater than the spacing of the plane
18
from a “top” dead center
27
of the piston; this point is represented by a dashed line in FIG.
2
.
The piston
21
reaches top dead center
27
with its end face
24
when the work chamber
22
is smallest, or in other words, in terms of
FIG. 2
, when the piston
21
is in its bottommost position.
The control groove
25
, as
FIG. 3
shows, is relatively narrow and extends in the circumferential direction along the jacket face
23
over a circumferential region that is approximately equivalent to the diameter of the radial bores
17
at the wall of the through bore
9
. The depth of the control groove
25
is dimensioned such that the flow resistance in the control groove
25
is not substantially greater than in the radial bores
17
.
On its end protruding out of the cylinder element
8
, the piston
21
is mounted in a connection cuff
29
and pinned to it (pin
30
). The connection cuff
29
is also connected via a further pin
31
to an actuating rod
32
that leads to a drive device
33
. The actuating rod
32
is connected in a manner fixed against relative rotation and solidly in the axial direction to a coupling half
34
, which has two ribs
35
and
36
extending axially and disposed parallel to and spaced apart from one another. Between these ribs, windows
37
,
38
are formed, which can be seen particularly in FIG.
6
.
The coupling half
34
belongs to a coupling device
39
, whose other coupling half
40
is formed by a radial pin
42
driven by a shaft
41
. This pin with both ends engages the windows
37
,
38
, and after each execution of a certain rotary play, here defined at 90°, it can come into contact with one flank of each of the ribs
35
,
36
.
The shaft
41
also has a bush
43
, which can be seen from FIG.
7
and establishes the connection to the radial pin
42
and is provided on its outside with a threaded element
44
. This threaded element has a male thread with multiple turns. Its pitch is dimensioned such that over 90° of the circumference of the threaded element
44
, a distance is traversed in the axial direction that corresponds to the complete piston stroke of the piston
21
.
During operation, the threaded element
44
is in communication with a threaded element
45
, which is seen in FIG.
5
and is embodied in an annular element or portion that is supported by the ribs
35
,
36
of the coupling half
34
. Thus when the rotary play of the coupling
39
is executed, the coupling half
34
changes its axial position relative to the coupling half
40
.
The portion of the coupling half
34
provided with the female thread (threaded element
45
) is embodied, on its outside, as a locking wheel
46
. This locking wheel has axially extending teeth
47
of approximately trapezoidal cross section, which serve to lock the coupling half
34
in a manner fixed against relative rotation but axially displaceably. This can be seen from
FIG. 4. A
locking bar
48
is displaceably supported radially to the locking wheel
46
. The locking bar
48
is prestressed by a compression spring
49
toward its radially outer position, in which it is not in engagement with the locking wheel
46
. A lifting magnet
51
serves with its armature
52
, via a corresponding rod
53
, to put the locking bar
48
into engagement with the locking wheel
46
, so that the rotation of the locking wheel is blocked in discrete positions specified by the teeth
47
. These blocking or locking positions each correspond to rotary positions in which the control groove
25
(
FIG. 3
) is aligned with one of the radial bores
17
. Accordingly, 13 interstices between teeth are present, 12 of which correspond to the positions of the radial bores
17
, and the 13th of which corresponds to the larger interstice between the radial bores
17
l
and
17
a
. The size of the interstices between teeth corresponds to the size of the spacings of the radial bores
17
.
The coupling half
40
is connected in a manner fixed against relative rotation to the shaft
41
, which forms the power takeoff shaft of a stepping motor
55
. This motor is oriented coaxially to the actuating rod
32
and is supported by a corresponding mount
56
. The mount
56
, which is embodied in multiple parts, also carries the lifting magnet
51
and has a tubular, tapering extension
57
, which is disposed coaxially to the actuating rod
32
and carries the pump unit
7
on its lower free end. There, it has a flange-like extension
58
, on which the lubricant lines
5
can be retained and which moreover has a microporous sieve
59
. This sieve is embodied in cup-like shape and encloses the lower end of the extension
57
. The lubricant flowing to the inlet valve
12
must accordingly pass through the microporous sieve
59
and is thus filtered.
On its side toward the actuating rod
32
, the coupling half
34
is provided with a hub
60
, which has a male thread
61
. On the hub
60
, an annular, axially polarized permanent magnet
62
, shown separately in
FIG. 7
, is retained with the aid of a nut
63
, for which nut the male thread
61
is intended. By means of its magnetic field, the permanent magnet
62
generates a force that keeps the threaded element
44
in engagement with the thread
45
without play. This serves to prevent an undesired idle motion in the gear at the reversal of the rotary direction of the stepping motor
55
; the gear is formed by the threaded element
44
and the female thread
45
and serves to convert a rotary motion into a linear motion.
The actuating rod
32
is supported on the extension
57
in a bush
65
, which is disposed adjacent the connecting cuff
29
in a corresponding partition of the extension
57
. The bush
65
allows both a rotary and an axial motion of the actuating rod
32
.
For monitoring the motion of the piston
21
, a magnetic sensor, for instance a Hall sensor
66
, is disposed on the inside of the extension
57
, adjacent to the permanent magnet
62
; it detects the position of the permanent magnet
62
and distinguishes between at least overshooting and undershooting a switching position. If needed, a further Hall sensor or other kind of position sensor
67
may be provided in the vicinity of the transverse pin
42
, in order to detect the position of this pin. Both the Hall sensors as well as the stepping motor
55
and the lifting magnet
51
are all connected to a control device, which controls the lubricating device
1
as follows:
For describing proper operation, it will be assumed that the piston
21
is initially in the position shown in
FIG. 3
, and the locking bar
48
, as a consequence of triggering of the pull magnet
51
, is in engagement with the locking wheel
46
(FIG.
4
). If the thread of the threaded element
44
is a right-handed thread, then the stepping motor
55
, at least if the transverse pin
42
is not yet in the position represented by heavy lines in
FIG. 6
, is now rotated in such a way that the transverse pin
42
is pivoted clockwise. For example, it is moved out of the position shown in dashed lines in
FIG. 6
to the position shown in heavy lines. On traversing this course, the axially fixed element
44
lifts the coupling half
34
in the axial direction in such a way that the piston
21
executes one complete intake motion. The work chamber
22
becomes larger, and lubricant, such as oil, flows into the work chamber
22
via the inlet valve
12
.
The locking wheel
46
is held in a manner fixed against relative rotation. At the latest when the transverse pin
42
runs up against the ribs
35
,
36
, the stepping motor
55
stops. The pull magnet
51
is now deexcited, and as a result the locking wheel
46
is released. The stepping motor
55
, which until now has served to impart a reciprocating motion to the piston
21
, now positions the now freely rotatable locking wheel
46
onward by one tooth. In the process, the transverse pin
42
carries the ribs
35
,
36
and thus the coupling half
34
along with it. The control groove
25
is thereby moved into coincidence with the radial bore
17
a
. Once this position is reached, the pull magnet
51
is triggered again and as a result presses the locking bar
48
into the corresponding interstice between teeth of the locking wheel
46
. As a result, this locking wheel is once again retained in a manner fixed against relative rotation.
For dispensing a desired portion of lubricant to the lubricant line
5
a,
the stepping motor
55
is now triggered counter clockwise. Because of the size of the windows
37
,
38
, the rotary motion is limited here to a one-quarter rotation. If the stepping motor
55
traverses this course, this rotary motion is converted, by interaction of the threaded element
44
with the female thread
45
, into an axial motion of the coupling half
34
that is oriented downward, in terms of FIG.
2
. Via the actuating rod
32
, the piston
21
is moved, without rotating, downward in the direction of its top dead center
27
. The positively displaced oil is correspondingly dispensed at the lubricant line
5
a.
There is no need for the entire course available to be traversed. The stepping motor
55
can also be stopped before it has executed a one-quarter rotation. A lesser quantity of oil is then correspondingly dispensed. As a result, fine metering of the oil portions to be dispensed is attainable.
Once the downward motion of the piston
21
has ended, the stepping motor
55
is actuated clockwise again, until the transverse pin
42
again meets the ribs
35
,
36
. The pull magnet
51
is now released, and as a result the compression spring
49
moves the locking bar
48
radially outward and releases the locking wheel
46
. The stepping motor can now rotate onward by one tooth (or as needed a plurality of teeth), carrying the coupling half
34
and thus the piston
21
by rotation along with it, in order to approach the next lubricating position. For instance, the control groove
25
is now made to coincide with the radial bore
17
b.
The process described in conjunction with the radial bore
17
a
now begins over again. As described, all the radial bores
17
can thus be approached in succession, and thus all the lubricant lines
5
can be supplied separately with suitable portions of oil.
The dispensing of an oil portion can be done in pulsed fashion, as illustrated by
FIG. 8
; the injection pressure p built up by the pump device
7
a
is modulated within a lubricating interval t
1
t
2
. To that end, the stepping motor
55
is triggered and moved incrementally, so that the piston
21
is likewise moved incrementally. In each of the brief resting periods, the pressure p can drop somewhat below a pressure limit value p
1
. The connected nozzles begin to inject at the pressure limit value p
1
. If the pressure meanwhile drops below this value, for instance to a somewhat lesser value p
0
, then the nozzles inject intermittently. The incoming flow v
1*
to the nozzles fluctuates as a result and over time, as a consequence of the elasticity of the lines. The nozzles inject the oil stream V
2
* droplet by droplet in the form of micropulses, so that the oil stream between individual droplets, because of the brief pressure drops, is zero. In this way, even small oil quantities can be dispensed over a prolonged time in the injection stream, using relatively large nozzles that are not likely to become stopped up.
When the lubricating device
1
is put into operation, venting of the pump device
7
a
may initially be needed. To that end, the piston
21
is rotated into a venting position, in which its control groove
25
coincides with a radial bore
17
l
that is open to the outside and in which no check valve is disposed. One or more complete piston strokes now cause the expulsion of air and the filling of the pump volume with oil. Proper operation can then be begun.
A modified embodiment of the locking mechanism is shown in FIG.
9
. Here the locking wheel
46
is embodied as a ratchet wheel. The locking bar
48
is embodied as a pawl. This makes it unnecessary to trigger the pull magnet each time the locking wheel
46
is to be indexed onward. The locking bar
48
is spring-loaded toward the locking wheel
46
. It enables a rotation of the ratchet wheel
46
in the clockwise direction (arrow
70
) for rotating the piston
21
and thus actuating the distributor. In the opposite direction (arrow
71
), however, any rotation is blocked, so that the pumping operation can be performed. It is now necessary to actuate the lifting magnet
51
only in a very few exceptional cases.
A further modified embodiment is shown in FIG.
10
. The toothing of the locking wheel
46
has teeth
47
with a relatively slight flank pitch. The locking bar
48
is embodied as a radially resilient pawl. The control of the rotary motion of the piston
21
in this embodiment is effected in that the stepping motor
55
, once the play of the coupling device
39
has been traversed, overcomes the detent moment of the locking bar by rotating clockwise or counterclockwise.
In a lubricating device for a plurality of lubricating stations, especially for supplying lubricant to knitting machines, a pump device
7
a
is provided that acts at the same time as distributor device
7
b.
To that end, the pump and distributor unit
7
has a piston
25
, which is provided with a control groove
25
. The corresponding pump cylinder has one inlet and a plurality of outlets that are distributed over the cylinder wall. Depending on which of the outlets the control groove
25
of the piston
21
is made to coincide with, a corresponding lubricating station is selected. The pump device
7
is thus at the same time a distributor device.
Claims
- 1. A lubricating device for a plurality of lubricating stations, in particular for supplying lubricant to a plurality of lubricating stations in a knitting machine,having a pump device (7a) for pumping lubricant, the pump device having a piston (21) supported axially displaceably in a cylinder (8), and having a distributor device (7b), by which the lubricant pumped by the piston (21) is to be distributed to one or more lines (5) of a group (4) of lines (5) leading away from the distributor device (7b), characterized in that the distributor device (7b) is part of the pump device (7a), and the piston (21) is connected to a locking device (46, 48), which serves to arrest the piston (21) in a manner fixed against relative rotation in selected rotary positions, while allowing an axial motion.
- 2. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that the cylinder (8) has a plurality of outlet conduits (17), which are controllable by the piston (21).
- 3. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that the cylinder (8) has a cylindrical cylinder wall, and that the outlet conduits (17) are disposed penetrating the cylinder wall.
- 4. The lubricating device of claim 3, characterized in that the control conduit (25), for forming the distributor device (7b), can be brought into coincidence with at least one of the outlet conduits by rotation of the piston (21).
- 5. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that the piston (21) is provided with at least one control conduit on its jacket face (23).
- 6. The lubricating device of claim 5, characterized in that the control circuit (25), for forming the distributor device (7b), can be brought into coincidence with at least one of the outlet conduits by rotation of the piston (21).
- 7. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that the piston (21) is rotatably supported in the cylinder (8).
- 8. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that the pump device (7a) and the distributor device (7b) are connected to a drive device (33), and the drive device (33) includes a rotator device (55) and a displacement device (44), with the piston (21) connected to both the displacement device (44) and the rotator device (55).
- 9. The lubricating device of claim 8, characterized in that the rotator device (55) has a control motor which generates a desired rotary positioning motion.
- 10. The lubricating device of claim 9, characterized in that the stepping motor can be connected to the piston (21) in a manner fixed against relative rotation by means of a coupling device (39).
- 11. The lubricating device of claim 10, characterized in that the coupling device (39) has a defined rotary play.
- 12. The lubricating device of claim 8, wherein the control motor is a stepping motor.
- 13. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that the locking device (46, 48) has a locking member (48), which can be brought into and out of engagement with a locking wheel (46) that is connected to the piston (21) in a manner fixed against relative rotation.
- 14. The lubricating device of claim 13, characterized in that the locking member (48) can be switched into and out of engagement with the locking wheel (46) by means of a positioning drive (51).
- 15. The lubricating device of claim 14, characterized in that the locking wheel (46) is embodied as a ratchet wheel, and the locking member (48) is embodied as a pawl.
- 16. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that a control device is provided, with which the stroke of the piston (21) can be defined.
- 17. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that an inlet conduit (12) leading into the cylinder (8) and outlet conduits (17) communicating with the lines (5) are each provided with one check valve.
- 18. The lubricating device of claim 1, characterized in that a sensor device (66) is provided for monitoring the motion of the piston (21).
- 19. lubricating device for a plurality of lubricating stations, in particular for supplying lubricant to a plurality of lubricating stations in a knitting machine,having a pump device (7a) for pumping lubricant, the pump device having a piston (21) supported axially displaceably in a cylinder (8), and having a distributor device (7b), by which the lubricant pumped by the piston (21) is to be distributed to one or more lines (5) of a group (4) of lines (5) leading away from the distributor device (7b), characterized in that the distributor device (7b) is part of the pump device (7a), the pump device (7a) and the distributor device (7b) are connected to a drive device (33), and the drive device (33) includes a rotator device (55) and a displacement device (44), with the piston (21) connected to both the displacement device (44) and the rotator device (55), the displacement device (44) is actuated by the rotator device (55), and the displacement device (44) is formed by a gear, which converts a relative rotation between the piston (21) and the rotator device (55) into a linear motion of the piston (21).
- 20. The lubricating device of claim 19, characterized in that the gear includes two threaded elements (44, 45), one of which is connected to the piston (21) in a manner fixed against relative rotation, and another of which is connected to the rotator device (55) in a manner fixed against relative rotation.
- 21. The lubricating device of claim 20, characterized in that at least one of the threaded elements (44) is connected to a magnet (62), in order to prestress the threaded elements (44) against one another.
- 22. A lubricating device for a plurality of lubricating stations in a machine, comprising:a combined pump and distributor unit including a piston supported to be axially displaceable and rotatable in a cylinder, said piston having a control groove adapted to eject the lubricant therethrough toward the lubricating stations due to axial displacement of the piston within the cylinder, a wall of said cylinder having a plurality of radial openings with which said control groove is sequentially alignable as said piston is rotated within the cylinder; pump drive means for axially displacing said piston within said cylinder to eject lubricant through said control groove; and distributor drive means for rotating said piston within said cylinder into sequential alignment with said openings in the cylinder wall; wherein said pump drive means and said distributor drive means are operable independently of each other to controllably produce axial displacement of said piston without rotation thereof, or rotation of the piston without axial displacement thereof, or both axial displacement and rotation of said piston with respect to one of said openings with which said control groove is brought into alignment.
- 23. The lubricating device of claim 22, wherein said pump drive means and said distributor drive means are components of one drive device.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
199 04 647 |
Feb 1999 |
DE |
|
US Referenced Citations (9)
Foreign Referenced Citations (5)
Number |
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Country |
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Apr 1954 |
DE |
40 21 557 A1 |
Jan 1992 |
DE |
0 499 810 B1 |
Mar 1995 |
EP |
1094985 |
May 1955 |
FR |
1502920 |
Mar 1978 |
GB |