None.
Research and development of this invention and application have not been federally sponsored, and no rights are given under any Federal program.
Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to the operation of large off-highway vehicles such as moving trucks, long haul trucks, mining trucks and dump trucks employing tires, for example, as large as feet tall, in general, and to a diesel electric motor operation utilized to control the wheels of such vehicles into forward, reverse and neutral manners of movement.
2. Description of the Related Art
With such vehicles frequently being used 24 hour/day, 7 days/week, reliable switch regulation is critical. Whether the switch control be located on a dashboard of a vehicle or alongside the driver's seat, anything less than long-time performance of the switch can result not only in an added cost of replacement, but in the more important taking of the vehicle off-line while a replacement switch is obtained and set to proper use. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, a usual control for this is one available from the General Electric Company as an SBM switch employing traditional electro-mechanical components. Although used for many years, such switches are characteristically known to wear from physical contact requiring regular replacement, yet their implementation still continues today.
It is an object of the present invention, therefore, to provide a 3-position switch able to actuate a circuit for the electronic control of these type wheels in forward, reverse, and neutral modes without using the electro-mechanical components which typify the prior art.
It is an object of the invention, also, to provide such a multi-position rotary switch available for future usage in providing more than the 3-standard positions available for these forward-reverse-neutral electro-haul vehicle implementations.
It is another object of the invention to provide a multi-position rotary switch which is substantially free of physical contact in its operation so as to thereby extend the life of the switch in its intended applications of use.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a multi-position rotary switch of this nature that will be competitive in price with the electro-mechanical rotary switches presently employed for these wheel controls in truck, rail or like industrial equipment.
It is yet another object of the invention to provide this switch for more general applications requiring a large number of repetitive operations with positive positioning on each operation.
As will be appreciated, multi-position rotary switch devices for vehicular uses are each coupled with a relay to conduct the required control voltage to the vehicle's transmission. Accordingly, the multi-position rotary switch of the invention utilizes a magnetic sensor to initiate the control without any direct contact of parts that could suffer from wear. As such, the switch will also be quite useful in the steel mill, petroleum, chemical plant and similar heavy industries where thousands of operations with positive positioning are required per week.
Although “reed-type” magnetic switches are utilized in a preferred embodiment of the invention, it will be understood that they are just common names for switches that are actuated magnetically and are normally open-circuited in usage. As set forth in the description that follows, this preferred embodiment employs a “cam” with eight lobes designed to index at 45° positions, along with spring loaded followers to provide a positive indent at each selected position location. For the “forward”, “reverse”, and “neutral” positions for an indicated rear wheel usage, 3 such “reed switches” are utilized.
These and other features of the invention will be more clearly understood from a consideration of the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the drawings for a 3-position rotary switch, a handle 10 is grasped and rotated to a selected position at 45° increments P1, P2 P3 (
In operation, the arm 19 with the magnet 33 attached follows the movement of the handle 10 and in each P1, P2 and P3 position shown in
As further shown in
A front stop finger 18 shown in
In construction, knurled screws 36 hold the magnetic arm 19 onto the preferably square shaft 11 in actuating the selected one of the 3 reed switches to be brought into play. The switches, being normally open circuit devices, come into play in being “closed” when the magnet 33 is in position. A rear sleeve spacer 28 secures the alignment of the cam 29 against undesired movement as might interfere with the operation of the follower 31, to hold the can position laterally. The tie rod 14 holds everything together, with the spacers being of a metal fabrication. When encased in a heavy duty polymer housing 13, and closed at the back with a rear cover 25, the rotary switch of the invention can then be secured with a large rear cover screw 26 (
Recognizing that a further implementation of an assembly might itself include the relay to connect to the control or pilot device in sending its electrical signals for various operations of equipment of the types by switch handle positionings, the advantage of the magnetic rotary device of the invention avoids the susceptibility of the electro-mechanical constructions which were susceptible to erroneous errors through physical contact wearings that caused its contacts to drift apart. Besides the contacts and followers having a tendency to wear out very easily, such movements undesirably varied the contact gap openings leading to further inconsistent operation and frequent needs to replace the contact tips. Quality issues were always present, with a concomitant suffering of operational longevity. With the invention as described above, the need for complex mechanical cam actions that were previously required to actuate the numbers of levers and contacts employed was significantly overcome, as shown by product testings. The end result is a simpler, more reliable, and longer lasting rotary switch for vehicular wheel and like equipment controls.
While there has been described what is considered to be a preferred embodiment of the present invention, it will readily be appreciated by those skilled in the art that modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the teachings herein. Thus, for example, while a 3-lobe cam could be utilized with the magnetic rotating switch of the invention, particularly for a panel mounting utilization of a cam with additional lobes would allow additional handle adjustments to an operator requiring further adjustment regulation of the vehicle or equipment. A 4-stage switch, or a 5-stage switch could be had in similar manner, as might find usefulness in various locomotive train applications. All that would there be needed then, is the connection of additional reed-type magnetic switch components and interconnections to provide the function desired. Essentially, then, for the 8 lobe cam 29 of
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