This application is a 35 USC 371 application of PCT/EP2008/058777 filed on Jul. 7, 2008.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a method for winding a winding wire onto a winding body, an arrangement for winding a winding wire onto a winding body, and an associated magnet assembly for a solenoid valve.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In modern brake systems and driver assist systems, which include for example an antilock brake system (ABS), a traction control system (TCS), or an electronic stability program system (ESP system), solenoid valves are used for pressure modulation. Broken down roughly into their basic components, these solenoid valves are composed of a valve cartridge that is calk-mounted in a fluid assembly, and a magnet assembly installed as a rule in an associated control unit. The magnet assembly is activated with electrical activation signals in order to produce a corresponding magnetic field; the magnet assembly includes a wire winding that is wound onto a winding support and has a predetermined number of turns, a covering disk, and a housing casing. The covering disk here, functioning as a magnetic circuit component, is press-fitted into the housing casing in order to complete the magnetic circuit of the magnet assembly.
For the winding procedure, in which a winding wire is wound onto the winding body, a winding method is known from the prior art, which uses a so-called “wire remnant-free” winding. In this method, the winding wire is fixed in place not by means of an auxiliary pin but instead by means of an additional clamping during the changing of the winding body. In other words, a winding wire end of a preceding magnet assembly is used as the beginning of the subsequent magnet assembly. In this case, the winding wire is fixed in the winding body by means of a clamping in a wire-receiving slot of an electrical connection dome that is part of the winding body. The wire-receiving slot is embodied for connecting to the winding wire by forming a cut-and-clamped connection. Since the electrical connection dome is embodied in the form of an injection-molded plastic part, it is difficult, from an injection molding standpoint, to maintain the required tolerance for the slot width. In addition, process influences after the injection molding, such as shrinkage and water absorption are not, as a rule, taken into account in the component measurements. For this reason, the winding wire can, for example due to being pressed too weakly into the wire-receiving slot, slip back out of the wire-receiving slot during the cutting procedure on the winding machine or in subsequent assembly procedures, such as packing, transport, etc. and in the handling of the wound winding body. With too powerful a clamping, the winding wire cannot, for example, rest completely against a wire support and can separate upward from it. This can result in an incorrect positioning of the winding wire in which the contacting region toward the cutting blade is no longer present or under some circumstances, lies outside the contacting zone in the region of the cutting blade opening. In addition, a potential excessive back-slippage of the winding wire can result in a contact between the winding wire and the housing casing of the magnet assembly. Vibrations that occur with field loading can result in a shearing-through of the insulation of the winding wire and thus to a short-circuiting and therefore also a failure of the magnet assembly.
The method according to the invention for winding a winding wire onto a winding body has the advantage over the prior art that a winding wire beginning that is threaded into a first wire-receiving slot of a first connection dome is placed onto a first wire support that is situated after the first wire-receiving slot; before the winding procedure, the winding wire is reshaped and held in place in such a way that the diameter of the winding wire in a region resting on the first wire support is enlarged in the direction of the width of the first wire-receiving slot and the winding wire beginning is prevented from slipping back into the first wire-receiving slot. The holding and reshaping of the winding wire prevent the winding wire beginning from slipping back into the first wire-receiving slot of the first electrical connection dome during the winding procedure, the subsequent assembly procedures, and/or the handling of the wound winding body. This advantageously increases the process reliability, with the clamping dimension of the wire-receiving slot in the electrical connection dome no longer being critical to reliability.
The arrangement according to the invention for winding a winding wire onto a winding body, in which a winding wire beginning is threaded into a first wire-receiving slot of a first connection dome of the winding body, includes a holding-and-stamping die that is embodied so that—during a winding procedure by means of which a predeterminable number of winding wire turns are wound onto the winding body—it uses a holding surface to hold the winding wire beginning, which is threaded into the first wire-receiving slot, in place against a first wire support situated after the first wire-receiving slot, and reshapes the winding wire in a region resting on the first wire support in such a way that the diameter of the winding wire in this region is enlarged in the direction of the width of the first wire-receiving slot in order to prevent the winding wire beginning from slipping back into the first wire-receiving slot.
The magnet assembly according to the invention for a solenoid valve includes a winding body that has a first electrical connection dome with a first wire-receiving slot into which a winding wire beginning is threaded and a second electrical connection dome with a second wire-receiving slot into which a winding wire end is threaded. The first connection dome and the second connection dome are embodied, for example, in the form of injection-molded plastic parts and each have a respective wire support, which are situated after the first wire-receiving slot and after the second wire-receiving slot, respectively. In a region resting on the first wire support and in a region resting on the second wire support, the winding wire is reshaped in such a way that the diameter of the winding wire in these regions is enlarged in the direction of the width of the wire-receiving slot in order to prevent the winding wire beginning from slipping back into the first wire-receiving slot and to prevent the winding wire end from slipping back into the second wire-receiving slot. The plastic reshaping of the winding wire advantageously prevents the winding wire beginning and winding wire end from slipping back into the corresponding wire-receiving slot so that during the handling of the wound winding body and proper use of the magnet assembly, the winding wire beginning and winding wire end are held in place in the corresponding wire-receiving slots of the electrical connection domes and an optimal electrical connection to a corresponding control unit can be manufactured in order to produce a desired magnetic field by means of the magnet assembly.
It is particularly advantageous that the winding wire end threaded into the second wire-receiving slot is placed onto a second wire support situated after the second wire-receiving slot; after the winding procedure, the winding wire is reshaped and cut off in such a way that the diameter of the winding wire in a region resting on the second wire support is enlarged in the direction of the width of the second wire-receiving slot, thus preventing the winding wire end from slipping back into the second wire-receiving slot. The reshaping of the winding wire prevents the winding wire end from slipping back into the second wire-receiving slot of the second electrical connection dome after the cutting procedure, in subsequent assembly procedures, and/or in the handling of the wound winding body. This advantageously increases process reliability, with the clamping dimension of the wire-receiving slot in the electrical connection dome no longer being critical to reliability.
In an embodiment of the arrangement according to the invention, a cutting-and-stamping die is provided, which is embodied so as to cut off a winding wire end, which after the winding procedure, has been threaded into a second wire-receiving slot and rests against a second wire support situated after the second wire-receiving slot, and so as to reshape the winding wire in a region resting on the second wire support in such a way that the diameter of the winding wire in this region is enlarged in the direction of the width of the second wire-receiving slot in order to prevent the winding wire end from slipping back into the second wire-receiving slot. For the reshaping of the region of the threaded winding wire resting on the first wire support, the holding-and-stamping die has, for example, a first stamping protrusion that presses the winding wire into a first recess in the first wire support. The cutting-and-stamping die additionally has a second stamping protrusion that presses against the region of the threaded winding wire, which is resting on the second wire support, into a second recess in the second wire support in order to execute the reshaping. The recesses in the wire supports are embodied, for example, in the form of notches that each have a stamping edge that is situated directly behind the respective wire-receiving slot and bends the winding wire. The recesses embodied in the fond of notches, the holding-and-stamping die, the cutting-and-stamping die, and the stamping edges are embodied so that the shapes of the winding wire beginning and the winding wire end remain essentially unchanged. This advantageously assures a wire remnant-free winding, i.e. the winding wire end remaining in the wire guide of the winding machine is not bent and can thus be used as the winding wire beginning of the next winding support in the next winding process. The plastic reshaping of the winding wire in the region of the recesses and the bending of the winding wire by means of the stamping edges on the one hand prevents the back-slippage into the corresponding wire-receiving slot and on the other hand, the winding wire is deformed less in cross section, thus making it possible to facilitate the testing for the presence and spacing of the winding wire in a testing window of a subsequent camera testing and to prevent the occurrence of pseudo-errors in camera testing caused by reduced winding wire cross sections. In addition, the invention also makes it possible to reduce the volume of rejects in the manufacture of magnet assemblies.
The invention is described in further detail below in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
a is a top view of a winding body for the magnet assembly according to
b and 2c each show a detail from
a is a schematic side view of an unwound winding body for the magnet assembly according to
b is a schematic side view of a wound winding body for the magnet assembly according to
a is a perspective depiction of a holding-and-stamping die for the winding of a winding body of the magnet assembly according to
b is a schematic side view of the holding-and-stamping die according to
a is a perspective depiction of a cutting-and-stamping die for the winding of a winding body of the magnet assembly according to
b is a schematic side view of the cutting-and-stamping die according to
As shown in
As is shown in
As is shown in
As is shown in
The arrangement according to the invention for winding the winding wire 4 onto the winding body 3 and the associated magnet assembly 1 can be embodied so that winding wires 4 of different diameters can be wound onto the winding body 3 using the method according to the invention. Magnet assemblies that produce different magnetic forces can thus be manufactured using the same arrangement and the same winding body. The holding-and-stamping die 30, the cutting-and-stamping die 40, and the wire-receiving slots 12, 22 of the electrical connection domes 10, 20 can, for example, be embodied so that it is possible to work with a plurality of different wire diameters, including insulating varnish.
The reshaping of the winding wire according to the invention advantageously prevents the winding wire from slipping back into the corresponding wire-receiving slots of the electrical connection domes during the winding procedure, the cutting procedure, subsequent assembly procedures, and/or the handling of the wound winding body. This advantageously increases the process reliability, with the clamping dimension of the wire-receiving slot in the electrical connection dome no longer being critical to reliability.
The foregoing relates to the preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 039 344 | Aug 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/058777 | 7/7/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/22/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/024399 | 2/26/2009 | WO | A |
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