This invention relates to modules, which include a DC motor, a fan and a shroud assembly, used in automotive engine cooling applications and, more particularly, to a module of reduce cost an easy to assemble.
Conventionally, in a typical engine cooling module such as the one described in U.S. Patent Publication 2007/0024135 A1, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this specification, the electric motor is a discrete subassembly. This publication shows a single module with one motor, one fan and one shroud. However there are conventional dual modules that include two motors, two fans and one shroud. Each motor in these dual modules is also a discrete subassembly.
With reference to
There is a need to combine/integrate conventional module components such that some of the motor subassemblies and/or components are either eliminated, or simplified, or built-in, or become an integrated part of a shroud, thereby increasing reliability of the module and reducing overall module cost and manufacturing costs. There is also a need to ensure that the motor rotational speed can be tuned at final assembly.
An object of the invention is to fulfill the need referred to above. In accordance with the principles of the present invention, this objective is obtained by providing a method of assembling a cooling module. The module has a shroud having a cover that receives a bearing structure. The cover has an opening therein. A fan is attached for moving air. A rotor and stator assembly has an opened end and includes a stator, including permanent magnet structure, and a rotor having laminations, windings, a shaft and a commutator. A brush and connector unit including brushes. The method mounts the fan to a first end of the shaft. The rotor and stator assembly is coupled to the cover to substantially close the opened end, with a second end of the shaft being received by the bearing structure. The brush and connector unit is inserted through the opening in the cover such that the brushes are associated with the commutator. The brush and connector unit is secured to the cover. Since the brush and connector unit is assembly last, it is easily accessible and thus serviceable.
In accordance with another aspect of the disclosed embodiment, a method of changing a speed of a fan of a cooling module during assembly is provided. The cooling module includes a shroud having a cover. The cover has an opening therein. At least one fan is provided for moving air. At least one rotor and stator assembly has an opened end. The rotor and stator assembly has a stator, including permanent magnet structure, and a rotor having laminations, windings, a shaft and a commutator. The fan is coupled to an end of the shaft. A brush and connector unit includes brushes. The method couples the rotor and stator assembly to the cover to substantially close the opened end. The brush and connector unit is inserted through the opening in the cover such that the brushes are associated with the commutator. The brush and connector unit is oriented to one of a plurality of positions relative to the cover. Each position of the plurality positions establishes a different angular position of the brushes with respect to the permanent magnet structure thereby increasing or decreasing speed at which the rotor and thus fan rotates. The brush and connector unit is then secured to the cover.
Other objects, features and characteristics of the present invention, as well as the methods of operation and the functions of the related elements of the structure, the combination of parts and economics of manufacture will become more apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description and appended claims with reference to the accompanying drawings, all of which form a part of this specification.
The invention will be better understood from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments thereof, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like parts, in which:
With reference to
As shown in
In addition to the components of the assembly 30, shown in
With reference to
The bearing structure 40 nested in the cover 42 can be provided in a few different ways. As shown in
As shown in
With reference to
Another way to assembly the module is shown in
The fan 36 also can be attached to rotor and shaft assembly 30 by use of fan adapters that are pressed onto the shaft 18. An example of this type of fan adapter is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,871,335, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this specification.
With reference to
With the embodiment of a Brush and Connector Unit (BCU), generally indicated at 52, in
The staking tabs 50 are still present on the motor case 12 as shown in
In the conventional configuration of
Additional components can be included into the BCU 52 depending on the requirement of the actual application. The following components can be added to BCU: additional brushes (and corresponding electrical connections) capacitors, diodes, or chokes for further improvement of the EMC (Electro Magnetic Compatibility), RFI (Radio Frequency Interference) levels. Also other electro-mechanical or electronic devices (for the purpose of speed detection and control, or abnormal condition/fault detection and protection devices such as stall, partial stall, high current, high temperature, ect. . . . ) can be integrated into the BCU 52 since the BCU 52 is easily accessible (serviceable). One would assume that the additional components would require more space; however, with integrating the components into cover 42 or BCU 52, the size of the unit can be maintained relatively small. The two brush system with link wound commutator as shown herein is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,694,599, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this specification.
With reference to
A1 is the angle between the center of a positive and a negative polarity brush and A1=(360/No. of permanent magnetic flux circuits in the motor); for example A1=90° for a 4 pole permanent magnet direct current (PMDC) motor as shown in
A2 is the angle between the center of two adjacent magnets or magnetic poles (with opposite polarity) and A2=(360/No. of permanent magnetic flux circuits in the motor); for example A2=90° for a 4 pole PMDC motor as shown in
As one can conclude, numerically A1 and A2 are the same and both of them are defined by the desired magnetic pole of a DC motor. However, A1 also can depend on the type of armature winding. Therefore, the angular relationships (A1, A2, A4) defined herein are relevant to an armature with lap winding and this winding is commonly known in the art.
A3 is the angle between the centerline of the lamination tooth and the commutator slot. This angle is maintained by first pressing the shaft 18 through the core assembly 16 then, with a fix tooling, positioning both the commutator 20 and the core assembly 16 relative to each other (angularly with A3 and matching the axis of the shaft 18 with the center of the commutator 20). Next, the commutator 20 is pressed onto the shaft 18.
A4 is the angle between the centerline of a brush and the centerline of a magnet or magnetic pole. In the conventional configuration (
The advantage of the new configuration with BCU 52′ is that the motor timing can be changed (alternative angular positions between 70 and 74 are essentially changing A4).
Indications, e.g., 76 of the alternative positions can be molded onto the outside face of cover 42′ and each position can identify the change in speed value (increase or decrease). Then the BCU 52′ can be aligned with one of the indications 76.
The adjustability of BCU 52′ can be applied for creating common modules 71 for various platforms of a particular vehicle model. Such requirement or condition can occurs with different engine options, or where higher shaft power or towing capacity is required (higher output power from the engine generates higher heat and higher fan speed can increase the heat rejection). With the conventional design for different engine options to obtain higher speed/power modules the motor or even the fan had to be redesigned and this increased the cost of development, tooling, manufacturing etc. . . . The new module design 71 with adjustable BCU can be used for several vehicle platforms where approximately 5 to 10% speed change (increase or decrease) required. Since the output power of the module 71 is in function of the fan speed (S) to the power of 3 a 5% change in fan speed results an output power change of 16% (10% change in fan speed results a 33% change in power. The output power in function of speed is derived mathematically below:
P1=S1*T1/1352
P2=S2*T2/1352
K=S/(T)̂0.5
where:
T1=(S1/K)̂2
T2=(S2/K)̂2
then
P1=S1̂3/(1352*K̂2)
P2=S2̂3/(1352*K̂2)
Therefore P2/P1=(S2/S1)̂3
Another application of the angularly adjustable and removable BCU 52′ can be utilized in dual fan module applications where about 10 Hz speed separation is desirable between the fans. The speed separation requirement is due to NVH reasons (Noise Vibration Harshness). Frequency modulation or beating can result if sufficient fan speed separation does not exist. The position of BCU 52′ can be changed at final assembly on a product that failed the speed separation requirement, therefore reducing the scrap and/or rework cost.
Still another application of the angularly adjustable and removable BCU 52′ is the ability to change the direction of motor rotation easily without requiring a new brush card assembly/configuration (e.g. with a newly defined fixed A4). The direction of motor rotation can be changed just by rotating the BCU 52′ to the new required A4 position and by charging the magnets in opposite polarity (such as that the magnetic pole of the inner face of M1 becomes south and of M2 is north, M3 is south and M4 is north) or reversing electrical polarity to the brushes (B1 would be connected to the ground and B2 to the positive power input). The direction of rotation (clockwise (CW) or counter-clockwise (CCW)) can be molded onto the outside surface of cover 42′. For example, if the rotor and stator assembly 30 uses a four pole stator and twenty slot armature with a twenty bar commutator and lap winding, the rotation of the armature/fan from CW to CCW can be changed by simply reversing the polarity of each magnet and the position of the same BCU 52′ (as can be indicated on the cover 42′) needs to be rotated by 8° CW (for consistent reference in this specification, the rotational direction is identified at the end 34 of shaft 18 (
As explained in the above example, selecting the direction of rotation can be done quite easily with no additional cost or component. In conventional motors, two distinctive brush card assemblies are required, one to achieve one direction of rotation, the other for achieving the opposite direction of rotation.
There are many motor configurations (2 pole, 4 pole, 6 pole) with many different armature winding variations. However, all configurations can be incorporated into the configuration of the embodiment, using the advantages of the adjustable BCU 52′.
The angularly adjustable and removable BCU 52′ can be very useful and practical in case the part needs to be serviced/reworked. Since the BCU 52′ can be removed from the cover 42′ even without taking the entire module out of the vehicle, the brushes 58 or any of the BCU 52′ components can be reworked or replaced. This feature can significantly reduce costs and is environmentally friendly because less material is being scraped, less energy (e.g., electrical, fuel, natural gas, etc.) is being consumed, and less pollution is being generated. In the conventional module configuration, the brushes or brush card assembly could not be easily replaced. Therefore, the entire motor was scraped and a new motor was mounted onto the shroud. In some conventional configurations, the motor is difficult to remove. Therefore, the entire module must be replaced. To put it into perspective and emphasize the cost advantage of the module 71 of the embodiment, with the serviceable BCU 52′: the typical cost of two brushes on the current market is approximately less than 1% of the module cost. From this, one can clearly conclude that the module 71 is environmentally friendly. Typically, commutator life exceeds the useful brush life by a factor of two, thereby making BCU replacement economical. The removable BCU 52′ allows for easy inspection or rework of internal components.
The embodiment provides, among others, the following features:
Simplified engine cooling module with rotor and stator assembly 30 and integrated module; the packaging technique reduces component/system cost.
The bearing structure 40 for supporting the motor shaft end 39 of the rotor and stator assembly 30 is integrated into the shroud 38.
The bearing structure housing 44 can be insert molded into the shroud;
The fan with rotor and stator assembly 30 can be balanced before completing the module assembly, therefore saving the cost of balancing the armature.
The cover 42 of the shroud 38 has six functions:
1. Provides structural support for rotor and stator assembly 30 and fan 36
2. Provides coverage/shielding to the rotor and stator assembly 30; environmental protection/shielding from foreign particles and objects,
3. Integrates/houses the bearing structure 40, and allows access to service bearing structure 40.
4. Integrates/houses features for BCU 52, and allow access, and provides mounting features and pre-marked positions for the BCU 52.
5. Provides alternative mounting positions for the BCU 52 to adjust motor performance (lower or increase speed)
6. Provides ventilation holes/features added into the cover 42 to allow airflow through the rotor and stator assembly 30.
Additional features of the embodiment include:
The module is fully serviceable since both the BCU 52 and the rotor and stator assembly 30 can be easily removed and there is no hard mounted end cap covering the rotor and stator assembly 30 as in the conventional configuration.
The rotor and stator assembly 30 can be removed from the module and can be replaced with new one.
In the conventional configuration, the end cap was permanently staked to the motor case. Rework was possible only for the armature; the motor case and magnet assembly were scrapped. The end cap assembly was then scraped after motor disassembly. With the new rotor and stator assembly 30 and integrated module system, all motor subassemblies can be reworked or replaced without scraping or damaging other subassemblies.
Features can be molded into the cover 42 to hold the brush (including RFI components) and connector assembly (requiring no additional brush card).
The partial brush card 54 including the feature for holding the brush (e.g., brush tube) and connector are molded together and it is a one piece unit.
Brushes can be integrated into the connector plastic assembly.
The module is serviceable; just remove the fasteners or release the mounting features of the BCU 52 and place/mount a new BCU 52 onto the module; this even can be done without removing the engine cooling module from the vehicle; (depending on the accessibility of the module system 71 under the hood of the vehicle).
The BCU 52 or components of the BCU 52 can be assembled to the cover 42 prior mounting the rotor and stator assembly. The brushes are locked into the brush holding features and released after the rotor and stator assembly 30 is mounted into cover 42.
The BCU 52 is assembled from the radial direction to the shroud 38 after the rotor and stator assembly 30 is mounted to the cover 42.
The BCU 52′ as shown in
The fan speed (power) can be adjusted. With the alternative mounting positions of the BCU 52′, the motor speed can be changed (sped up or slowed down). The advantage of this system is that the optimum/desirable operating speed can be maintained with a tighter tolerance; also less parts are being rejected for operating speeds being out of specification.
The position of BCU 52′ can be changed to adjust the speed separation between the fans in dual module application.
Electro-mechanical and electronic devices can be integrated into the BCU 52 for detecting abnormal operating conditions and protecting the module; and the serviceability of BCU 52 with additional units.
Additional brushes for switch brush operation can be integrated, since the BCU 52 is serviceable. Also, additional RFI and EMC components can be integrated into the BCU 52, 52′.
The BCU 52′ can be used with alternative mounting positions for changing the direction of fan rotation.
Since the embodiment uses some of the conventional motor components of
The foregoing preferred embodiments have been shown and described for the purposes of illustrating the structural and functional principles of the present invention, as well as illustrating the methods of employing the preferred embodiments and are subject to change without departing from such principles. Therefore, this invention includes all modifications encompassed within the spirit of the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of the earlier filing date of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/903,520, filed on Feb. 27, 2007, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this specification.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60903520 | Feb 2007 | US |