The present application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to patent application Ser. No. 06/04167 filed in France on May 5, 2006, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
The invention relates generally to tires, especially running systems able to run at reduced pressure and intended to equip motor vehicles. These systems comprise a rim provided with a valve, a tire, and a support ring of approximately toroidal shape. In particular the invention relates to the extraction of the support rings from the tires.
This support ring, more commonly termed a foam support ring, is generally made of closed-cell cellular rubber. It is intended to take the load in the event of a loss of tire pressure. The cells may, in some cases, contain a pressurized gas.
The invention is more specifically concerned with the operations of assembling and disassembling a system containing a foam support ring.
To this end, assembly methods and machines able to insert the foam support ring into the tire have been developed, these being based on machines and methods known and used for introducing the curing bag into a tire and as described, by way of example, in Bines et al. U.S. Pat. No. 1,759,681 or alternatively as illustrated in
These machines comprise a chassis 5 on which rollers 1, 2 and 3 are mounted, these rollers being free to rotate about their respective axes Y1Y′1, Y2Y′2, Y3Y′3, the axes Y1Y′1, Y2Y′2 and Y3Y′3 being mutually parallel. A first roller 1 is able to move along an axis ZZ′, and the other two rollers move, symmetrically relative to the axis ZZ′, along an axis XX′ perpendicular to the axis ZZ′. The assembly machine according to the known prior art and illustrated in
A foam support ring B is installed in a tire in the conventional way by compressing the support ring using the rollers as illustrated in
The tire is then positioned around the support ring and, by maneuvering the rollers appropriately, the support ring is released into the interior space of the tire.
This method is well known for carrying out the operations of installing a curing bag and can be adapted with no particular difficulty to the installing of foam support rings, particularly to the assembly of systems intended for touring cars in which the seat diameter of the rim generally ranges between 13″ and 19″.
Equivalent insertion means are also described in applications EP 1 354 730 (corresponding to U.S. Publication 2003/0193114) or alternatively in application WO 95/33628 (corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 5,836,366). These devices do not address the problem associated with disassembly and extraction of the support ring.
The means described in application FR 2 319 503 are intended for extracting a solid chamber from the tire. However, their use requires a great deal of care to be taken, given that the insert is pulled out using a puller element similar to a gripper, the pulling forces of which are liable to injure and damage the insert.
However, the above-described means were not designed to facilitate the operation of disassembly. Specifically, the curing bag is generally extracted using suitable pulling grippers, once said chamber has been evacuated, so as to reduce its size.
It will be noted that one of the specific features of a foam support ring is that its volume is substantially constant at atmospheric pressure.
A method for fitting (installing) and extracting inserts is disclosed by way of example in patent application EP 0 010 004-A1 (corresponding to Jacquemin U.S. Pat. No. 4,251,906). This publication describes a machine and a method involving pusher bars able to eject the insert by exerting axial thrust on the sidewall of the insert.
This method may prove particularly effective for large-sized inserts and tires which have enough rigidity to be able to withstand the necessary pulling forces, but proves ill-suited to systems comprising a relatively elastic foam support ring, as is the case in passenger cars.
Furthermore, this method presents the disadvantage of deforming the foam support ring in the axial direction, and the effect of this is to introduce high torsional stresses into the sole of the foam support ring. These forces may detract from the quality of the bond between the support ring and the sole, or may even degrade this bond.
It is an object of the present invention to provide users of foam support rings intended for touring cars with a method and tooling allowing use of the machine to extract the foam ring from a tire.
The preferred operating procedure involves the following steps:
The proposed tooling F is formed of two mutually parallel forks joined by one of their ends to a head equipped with an end forming handles.
In this way, it is possible to use the same machine for fitting and removing the foam support ring, particularly in the case of support rings and tires intended to be used in passenger cars. In addition, this method proves to be relatively simple and the special tooling F required to implement it is inexpensive and easy to use.
The support ring is folded in a radial plane, thus avoiding any torsional loadings on the sole and any damage to the interface between the sole and the support ring during the extraction operation.
The description which follows relies on
The prior art machine D illustrated in
A second motorized axis XX′, positioned horizontally and perpendicular to the axis ZZ′, supports a second (2) and a third (3) roller of axes Y2Y′2 and Y3Y′3 respectively, the said axes being parallel to the axis Y1Y′1. The rollers 2 and 3 move along the axis XX′ symmetrically relative to the axis ZZ′ under the action of the motor 20.
A curved support 6, positioned at the base of the chassis, accepts a tire from whose interior the foam support ring is to be extracted. The tire's axis is parallel to the axes of the rollers 1, 2, 3.
The subsequent figures illustrate the various steps in the method according to the invention.
A first step is to lower the roller 1 onto the tread surface of the tire so as to apply a radially inward force in order to punch-in the surface radially inwardly until the top T of the foam support ring S carried by the tire is pushed radially inside the perimeter defined by the beads of the tire. Thus, there is formed a space E between the top of the foam support ring and the beads of the tire, which space E has to be large enough to receive a holding tool, such as a fork F according to the invention, which is illustrated in
Once the fork has been engaged between the beads and the top of the foam support ring, the roller 1 is raised until the tire more or less reverts to its normal shape since releasing the radially inward force also releases the elastic stresses. The fork then allows enough of the space E to remain to be possible for the operator to manipulate the tire in order to introduce the roller 1 into the space E between the two branches (101 and 102) of the fork. The position of the second and third rollers (2 and 3) is adjusted accordingly so that they slip into the internal space defined by the interior diameter of the support ring as is illustrated in
It is then possible to remove the fork and to lower the roller 1 between the rollers 2 and 3 so as to drive the foam support ring generally radially inwardly in a direction perpendicular to a plane defined by the second and third axes, at a location midway between those axes. The foam support ring travels past the plane and adopts the characteristic U-shape by playing on the elastic properties of the support ring as illustrated in
In this configuration, it is easy to disengage the beads at the bottom by tilting the tire appropriately, then to disengage the beads in the top part by lifting the tire up in order to end up in the configuration as illustrated in
All that then remains is for the roller 1 to be raised in order to release the foam support ring from the machine.
The fork F, as illustrated by
The separation between the two branches needs to be designed such that the roller 1 can slip between the two branches. In practice, this separation ranges between 20 and 30 cm, depending on whether it is small-diameter or large-diameter systems being processed.
Although it is preferred to use rollers (i.e., rotary cylinders) 1, 2 and 3, there could instead be used stationary (i.e., non-rotary) cylinders.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06/04167 | May 2006 | FR | national |