The present invention relates to a new and improved nozzle for a lubrication apparatus and to an emitter element therefor.
The provision of lubrication to a particular location in an apparatus, such as a knitting machine, loom, or the like, is often required. Such lubrication is often provided by a lubricant mist directed towards the targeted area, but the stream is often difficult to direct with accuracy. The lubricant provided by a mist system also often coagulates into drops of various sizes. The presence of a spray of drops having a range of sizes impedes control over the amount of lubricant dispersed and its accurate delivery. Other systems dispense a pulsed series of lubricant “slugs” or drops of varying size.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,639,028 to the present inventor and assignee, an improved nozzle apparatus for use in lubricant mist systems is disclosed. The nozzle set forth therein generates a lubricant stream of small, consistently sized drops that can be accurately directed to a part to be lubricated. Dripping from the nozzle is substantially eliminated, and the nozzle can be used over a wide range of air pressures, including reduced airflow lubrication systems of the aerosol type.
Mist generator systems in which the nozzle of the '028 Patent are employed may have a plurality of nozzles connected to a single generator, with the number of nozzles approaching 30 in number. With increasing energy costs, the cost of providing compressed air to such a plurality of nozzles can be a considerable operational expense. While limiting the amount of air passing through the nozzle would appear to be an obvious solution to such increasing costs, insufficient extraction of lubricant from the aerosol can occur as the air pressure is lowered, leading to excessive lubricant loss and thus mitigating the value of the nozzle apparatus.
The cycling of air through a plurality of nozzles can also conserve the amount of air required. U.S. Pat. No. 6,571,918 discloses a lubricant distributor that meters lubricant into precise individual volume amounts and directs individual volumes to a distribution and spray system. Such cycling systems can lessen air costs, but can lead to lubricant accumulation and run-off through a nozzle when the airflow is either off or below the designed operational threshold pressure for the nozzle. Such run-off results in lubricant loss as well as insufficient lubrication for the targeted area.
It is accordingly a purpose of the present invention to provide a new and improved nozzle assembly particularly adapted for use in reduced airflow situations in oil mist lubrication systems of the type disclosed in the '028 Patent.
A further purpose of the present invention is to provide a nozzle of the general type disclosed in the '028 Patent in which lubricant loss is substantially lessened, if not eliminated, during low airflow and no airflow periods.
Yet a further purpose of the present invention is to provide an emitter head for mist lubrication nozzles, such as those of the type set forth in the '028 Patent, that allows the nozzle to meet the aforementioned purposes and goals.
Yet a further purpose of the present invention is to provide a nozzle and emitter head which are of simple and economical construction, and which can be used in connection with existing lubricator equipment, including those of the type utilizing a cycling feed-type metering system, such as set forth in U.S. Pat. No. 6,571,918.
In accordance with the above and other objects and purposes, a nozzle in accordance with the present invention has a tubular housing having an emitter head that converts a sheet-like flow of lubricant into a series of lubricant drops that are directed to a lubricant target by an accompanying carrier gas flow. The emitter head has one or more passageways along which the lubricant and carrier gas flow. The passageways are of a tapered configuration, having a wide width entrance area to effect efficient collection of the lubricant and carrier gas, and an exitway of narrowed size, allowing the lubricant to be delivered to a needle-like end at the head where the drops are formed and from which the drops are propelled to the target by the carrier gas in the form of a series of consistently-sized drops.
A fuller understanding of the present invention will be obtained upon consideration of the following detailed description of a preferred, but nonetheless illustrative embodiment thereof, when review in conjunction with the annexed drawings, wherein:
With initial reference to
As seen in
As set forth in the '028 Patent, nozzle core 24 functions as an element for separating suspended oil from the carrier gas and for collecting the separated oil and channeling the oil into the interior of the carrier gas stream exiting from the nozzle. With further reference to
The emitter head 28, further detailed in
As seen in
The entranceway 44 is offset from the central/exit portion 46 of the passageway, with an asymmetrical inwardly tapering cross section, tapering inward from a widened mouth to the central/exit portion of the passageway by way of helical wall surface 48. The helical wall surface preferably has the same rotational sense as the helical portion 26. The bottom of the passageway may be at or slightly below the surface of the neck 30, as seen in
The passageway grooves may be three in number, located equidistantly about the periphery of the head, with each of the entranceway helical walls being of the same sense as the helix of helical portion 26. The grooves 42, by virtue of their tapering construction, accelerate the gas flow passing through the nozzle, thus providing for more efficient flow of the lubricant sheet along the grooves surfaces and entrainment and transport of the lubricant droplets forming on the needle tip 22 to the intended target. In addition, the helical wall of the entranceway, having the same sense of the helical portion 26, minimizes momentum loss of the gas carrier as it passes into the head, thus improving overall nozzle efficiency.
As the oil reaches the head assembly, it passes from the housing wall onto the facing surface of the main body portion and spreads over the surface of the passageway grooves, continuing to be driven forward along the passageways by the carrier gas. As the passageways exit onto the tapered exit portion 36 of the head, the oil film travels to its needle point 22. It collects there, forming a droplet of growing diameter, until the force exerted upon the droplet by the exiting carrier gas is sufficient to remove it from the point, carrying the droplet with the carrier gas flow to the target to be lubricated.
The passageway grooves have an uneven cross-sectional area, the cross-section of the groove lessening towards the exit edge 50 of the housing 18. This causes any lubricant that remains in that portion of the groove when gas flow is interrupted to be drawn back towards the wider entranceway portion 44 of the groove by surface tension. Thus, nozzle dripping is minimized.
The head construction depicted in
While the embodiments presented in the Figures depicts the emitter head as part of a unitary nozzle core construction including a helical portion 26, it is to be appreciated that other embodiments and adaptations of the invention are possible without departing from the intended scope of the invention, including utilizing the emitter head in a lubrication system in which a discrete element for coagulating lubricant from a mist into a liquid flow is not present, or is separate from an emitter head element. Thus, the present invention may be used in a variety of lubrication systems, including those in which lubricant is distributed in a liquid form using a metering device of U.S. Pat. No. 6,571,918, as well as the constructions depicted in FIGS. 5-7 of U.S. Pat. No. 5,639,028.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
436558 | Buckingham | Sep 1890 | A |
579371 | Watson | Mar 1897 | A |
746525 | Knobbs | Dec 1903 | A |
1022135 | Heinkel | Apr 1912 | A |
1129970 | Farr | Mar 1915 | A |
1191621 | Schmidt | Jul 1916 | A |
1320985 | Brightman | Nov 1919 | A |
1462361 | Blackwood | Jul 1923 | A |
1549537 | Hansen | Aug 1925 | A |
2011833 | Sorg | Aug 1935 | A |
2013120 | Wellcome | Sep 1935 | A |
2110365 | Imfeld | Mar 1938 | A |
2379944 | Willmott | Jul 1945 | A |
2391396 | Denison | Dec 1945 | A |
2404048 | Gepfert | Jul 1946 | A |
2553130 | Cadella | May 1951 | A |
2612407 | Bete | Sep 1952 | A |
2659427 | Bither | Nov 1953 | A |
2769355 | Crisp | Nov 1956 | A |
2804341 | Bete | Aug 1957 | A |
2840185 | Norgren | Jun 1958 | A |
2965271 | Soffer et al. | Dec 1960 | A |
2984421 | Hession, Jr. | May 1961 | A |
3008652 | McLean | Nov 1961 | A |
3191718 | Haywood | Jun 1965 | A |
3213919 | Calzolari | Oct 1965 | A |
3785560 | Hruby, Jr. | Jan 1974 | A |
4365758 | Schaming | Dec 1982 | A |
4483417 | Mann | Nov 1984 | A |
4514291 | McGarry et al. | Apr 1985 | A |
4515314 | Currall | May 1985 | A |
5058809 | Carroll et al. | Oct 1991 | A |
5064456 | Gantzer | Nov 1991 | A |
5160232 | Maier | Nov 1992 | A |
5240183 | Bedaw et al. | Aug 1993 | A |
5340273 | Rockwood | Aug 1994 | A |
5350039 | Voss et al. | Sep 1994 | A |
5639028 | Kotlyar | Jun 1997 | A |
5639029 | Sundholm | Jun 1997 | A |
5853129 | Spitz | Dec 1998 | A |
6010330 | Helton et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6289677 | Prociw et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
7337879 | Jager et al. | Mar 2008 | B2 |
20030000773 | Engler et al. | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20050051642 | Negoro | Mar 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2547644 | Dec 1984 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070125883 A1 | Jun 2007 | US |