This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/447,576 filed Feb. 13, 2003.
The present invention is generally directed to method and apparatus for expanding a tube at a plurality of support locations, and specifically to expanding chiller tubes at a plurality of support saddle locations simultaneously.
The present invention is used to expand tubing used in chillers. Chillers are a component of a refrigeration system typically being of a shell-and-tube design, the shell typically comprised of steel and the tubes being comprised, of copper or copper alloy. Chillers are used for large industrial process cooling and commercial air conditioning. The chiller comprises a plurality of tubes, from a few tubes to a few thousand tubes, depending upon the capacity of the refrigeration system, extending through the shell structure. The shell structure has a longitudinal axis and a head at either end of the shell structure. The heads typically act as manifolds for a fluid. The tubes extend through the shell structure generally parallel to the longitudinal axis of the shell structure. Within the shell structure, the tubes extend between tube sheets in the heads. The tube sheets include a plurality of apertures into which the tubes are inserted. The tubes are plastically deformed by expansion into the tube sheet structure to form an extremely tight joint to prevent a first fluid flowing through the tubes from leaking around the joint and behind the tube sheet and mixing with a second fluid flowing over the tube bundle. The tight joint also prevents the second fluid from leaking across the joint and mixing with the first fluid flowing in the tubes. Although very uncommon in chiller applications, if a 100% leak-proof seal is demanded, a weld can be placed at the joint between the tube and the tube sheet.
The shell structure of the chiller can be of varying lengths, and therefore contains tube supports for the plurality of tubes at one or more locations along the length between the tube sheets. The tube supports include a plurality of tube apertures into which the tubes are inserted to form a tube bundle. Tube supports are axially located along the tubes, providing them with support and the problem of leakage across the joint is not an issue unless the tube is cracked. Refrigerant fluid and water are the fluids typically used in these heat exchangers. One of these fluids flows through the tubes and exchanges heat with the other fluid flowing over the tubes. In some designs, water flows through the tubes and refrigerant flows over the tube bundle to accomplish heat exchange. In other designs, the refrigerant flows through the tubes and water flows over the tube bundle to accomplish heat exchange. For the purposes of this invention, the particular design is not important. However, it is important that in either design, the flow paths of the fluids remain independent so that mixing of the fluids is minimized or prevented. Depending upon the location of the chiller within the refrigeration cycle, the chiller may act as a condenser or as an evaporator. Again, the particular application is not important for this invention. It is important, however, that mixing of the two different fluids be minimized or prevented, while also providing support to the tubes in the chiller.
These tube supports provide mechanical support to the plurality of tubes and maintain their separation so they can be effective in providing heat transfer. During operation, to reduce any noise due to vibration of the tubes against the apertures in the tube support, it is necessary to secure the tube against the corresponding aperture in the tube support. This gap can also lead to damage to the tube during the life of the chiller. The damage can be the result of repeated vibration and fatigue. Alternatively, foreign materials, sometimes referred to as crud, can be trapped in the gap and can chemically attack the tube. Thus, it is desirable to close the gap in order to eliminate or reduce the vibration and prevent crud entrapment. The tube can be secured in the tube support by a variety of different methods that accomplish this purpose. Currently, this expansion is most economically performed by a tube rolling technique which mechanically expands the tube outer diameter against the circumference of the tube aperture in the tube support by permanent plastic deformation of the tube using a mandrel and a series of circumferential rollers. The rollers are forced against the tube by the mandrel which expands the tube. This mechanical action can thin the tube as the action of the rollers against the tube inner diameter can also remove material as the tube is expanded. This tube expansion ideally expands the tube outer diameter into contact with the circumference of the tube aperture in the tube support uniformly 360° about this circumference. Such ideal expansion is sometimes referred to as touch expansion. Not all expansions are ideal. On occasion, the tube can become highly distorted or upset along one or more arc segments of the aperture in the support plate so as to extremely hinder or prevent its removal, particularly if the location of the rollers with respect to the tube support is not carefully controlled. This undesirable expansion is sometimes referred to as an overexpansion, and is to be avoided when possible. The problems associated with tube rolling introduce into the tubes manufacturing variables that can lead to increased failure rates. Reliability can be improved if these variables are eliminated. In addition, tube rolling is accomplished by rolling each tube individually into each tube support.
Tube expansion of tubes in structures such as tube supports, tube sheets and baffles has been accomplished by an ideal expansion of the tube outer diameter against the inner diameter of such structures. The nuclear industry has accomplished this expansion in a controlled manner. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,889,679 outlines apparatus for locating a tube in relation to a tube sheet, baffle or support plate in a nuclear reactor steam generator and then expanding the tube sheet against the support plate once it has been properly located. As can be appreciated, the proper location of the tube in relation to a related structure in a nuclear reactor is exceedingly important, as failure to properly expand the tube or expanding an improperly located tube can lead to premature tube failure, having disastrous consequences, including contamination of non-radioactive secondary water with radioactive primary water, which can lead to radioactive contamination of the entire secondary system, which is supposed to remain non-radioactive. To achieve the necessary degree of quality assurance and reliability demanded by the nuclear industry, this patent sets forth a combination of an eddy current probe and an expandable bladder-type probe. The probe is inserted into each tube in the steam generator and the location of the tube with respect to an individual tube support plate, baffle plate or tube sheet is determined to within three thousandths of an inch (0.003″). The expandable bladder is then activated and the tube is expanded. The probe is then moved to locate the next support plate, baffle plate or tube sheet. The eddy current probe can inspect the extent of the expansion of the tube into the apertures in the structure. As one may expect, this operation is expensive and time consuming, considering that a steam generator includes hundreds and even thousands of tubes with multiple supports, baffle plates and tube sheets. However, due to the criticality of the operations and the overriding concern with safety, this time consuming, costly operation is acceptable, while cost-savings improvements that do not provide at least the same reliability and safety are not acceptable, and indeed will not even be considered.
A related patent is U.S. Pat. No. 4,649,493 which describes a similar apparatus for locating, inspecting and expanding a tube at a tube location adjacent to a support plate, baffle plate or tube sheet in a nuclear reactor steam generator. Again, because of the reliability and safety concerns in a nuclear reactor, each tube is expanded sequentially at each location as a precise determination is made of the location of the tube with respect to the related structure.
Another patent, U.S. Pat. No. 5,791,046 to Schafer issued Aug. 11, 1998, incorporated herein by reference, sets forth apparatus for expanding a sleeve in multiple locations against a defective region of a tube to accomplish a tube repair in an application such as a nuclear reactor heat exchanger. The apparatus disclosed in the patent utilizes the eddy current detector to locate the location and size of the defect and a plurality of bladders to expand a single sleeve in a plurality of locations to secure the sleeve against the tube and to reduce the leak rate between the tube and the sleeve. The location of the sleeve with respect to the tube defect is the critical aspect of the Schafer invention, as the defect can be located at any position along the tube.
What is needed is apparatus that permits the simultaneous expansion of a tube at multiple locations along its length corresponding to the position of the aperture in the tube support. This expansion should both simultaneously expand the tube against the tube support apertures, while assuring reasonable accuracy of the location of the tube with respect to the tube support, but without requiring overly accurate determinations of the location of the tube with respect to the tube support. The apparatus should also produce ideal expansions to uniformly expand the outer diameter into contact with the circumference of the tube aperture.
The present invention allows for the production of a plurality of uniform expansions of a tube in a plurality of support plates simultaneously. A plurality of tubes are expanded into apertures of the support plates in a repetitive manner, each individual tube being expanded into an aperture of each of the plurality of tube support plates simultaneously so that all expansions of the tube into the tube support are accomplished in the tube without the removal from the tube or repositioning of the bladders of the tube expander assembly in the tube. The operation is repeated until all of the tubes are expanded into their corresponding tube supports. Ideally, the expansions are accomplished in a simultaneous expansion of the tube expander assembly. The tube expander assembly of the present invention, when positioned in accordance with the present invention such that each bladder is centered on each land or opening of the support plates surrounding the tube, will precisely control the degree (magnitude) of expansion of each tube against the tube support aperture by controlling the amount of pressure applied to the bladders.
The tube expander spindle assembly of the present invention comprises a plurality of bladder assemblies that are positioned within a tube such that each bladder assembly is adjacent to a support plate when the tube expander assembly is positioned within a tube assembled into the tube support plates of the heat exchanger. Each bladder assembly includes a probe assembly and an expandable bladder, the expandable bladder being mounted on the probe assembly. The bladder assembly is smaller than the tube into which it is inserted. The number of bladder assemblies utilized corresponds to the number of tube supports in the heat exchanger surrounding the tube. Each probe assembly has a first member and a second member. Each member is apertured along its axial length, the aperture extending the axial length of the member. The first member includes a body having a first diameter, the first diameter being smaller than the inner diameter of the tube into which it is to be inserted. The first member has an axially-extending shaft extending away from the body, the diameter of the shaft being less than the first diameter of the body. The shaft has a cylindrical portion for receiving the expandable bladder. The expandable bladder is assembled over the shaft. When assembled, the expandable bladder has a diameter that is smaller than the inner diameter of the tube into which it is to be inserted. The shaft includes a first means for attachment at its an end opposite the body. This means for attachment, which can be any suitable and well-known attachment means, is to sealably connect the first member and the second member. The body includes a second means for attachment, opposite the first means of attachment, on the shaft to allow the end of the bladder assembly having the body to be connected to additional structure, as will be explained. The shaft has a second aperture extending in a substantially radial direction between an outer surface of the shaft and the axial aperture. This substantially radially oriented aperture allows for a fluid communication with the axial aperture, so that when the expandable bladder is assembled over the shaft, a pressurizing fluid can be used to pressurize and expand the bladder by flowing pressurized fluid axially along the shaft and then through the substantially radial aperture into the bladder. The second member of the probe assembly includes an axial first end and a second end. The axial first end of the second member includes a means for attachment to mate with the corresponding means for attachment of the first member in order to secure the first member and second member together, with the bladder being captured therebetween. The second end of the second member includes a means for attachment to allow the end of the bladder assembly having the second member of the probe assembly to be connected to additional structure, as will be explained.
The tube expander spindle assembly of the present invention includes a first connection tube of preselected length extending axially and having a first end and a second end, with a hard stop mounted to the first end. The first connection tube also includes a means for attachment at the second end for removably attaching the connection tube to one of the members of the probe assembly. The connection tube further including an axially extending aperture so that there is fluid communication along the first connection tube to the probe assembly when assembled thereto. The hard stop, which may be integral with the first connection tube or which may be a separate component, controls the distance that the tube expander assembly can be inserted into the tube, and is seated against a predetermined feature of the chiller, such as the tube sheet. Control of the distance from this predetermined feature is critical in assuring that the bladder assemblies are positioned within the tube adjacent the tube supports. Because the tube supports are at fixed, known distances within the heat exchanger, a tube properly assembled within the heat exchanger can receive a tube expander spindle assembly spindle with the bladders positioned with respect to a predetermined feature at the proper locations corresponding to tube supports. The means for attachment at the second end of the connection tube is adapted to mate with the means for attachment of the bladder assembly.
The first connection tube is attached to a bladder assembly. Additional connection tubes of preselected length, each tube having a first end and a second end and an axially extending aperture, include a means for attaching at each end. The preselected length of the connecting tubes is the predetermined distance between the tube supports, such that each assembled bladder will be adjacent a corresponding tube support. The attachment means at each end of the connection tube are adapted to attach to one of the attachment means of one of the members of the probe assembly. The assembly of the bladder assemblies and the connection tubes, which serve as connecting rods, provides the tube expander spindle assembly. The preselected length of each of the connection tubes in the tube expander spindle assembly provides a tube expander spindle assembly that, when properly assembled into the tube, is positioned adjacent to the predetermined reference feature of the chiller, the bladder assemblies in the tubes being adjacent to the tube support apertures. The predetermined reference feature may be the stop positioned adjacent a tube sheet or any other means for positioning the bladder assemblies adjacent the tube support apertures.
The tube expander spindle assembly of the present invention includes a means for fluidly sealing the means for attaching the connection tubes to the bladder assemblies. The axially extending apertures of the connection tubes and the bladder assemblies, when properly assembled to form the spindle, places the axially-extending apertures in fluid communication with one another in a sealed arrangement. The means for fluidly sealing the attachments between these mating components is to minimize or eliminate the leakage of pressurizing fluid across the attachment means so that sufficient pressure can be applied to the bladder assemblies to expand the bladders against the tube and plastically deform the tube against the tube support apertures at the preselected locations corresponding to where the tube passes through the tube support. This sealing means may be part of the attachment means of the mating components or may be a separate item.
At the opposite end of the tube expander spindle assembly from the first connection tube, the axial aperture must be sealed to prevent the escape of the pressurizing fluid. The means for sealing the opposite end can be any effective device that captures (or prevents the escape of) the pressurizing fluid so that the necessary pressure can be reached. It may be, for example a plug applied to the last bladder assembly, or the last bladder assembly may be designed without a means for attachment at one end, but rather with an axial aperture that is closed at one end. The terminal apparatus is applied to the last bladder assembly or is integral with the last bladder assembly to provide a means for sealing the axially extending aperture at the end of the tube expander spindle assembly.
The tube expander spindle assembly of the present invention also includes means for pressurizing the tube expander assembly spindle, the means for pressurizing the spindle being in fluid communication with the axial apertures of the connecting tubes and then radially to the bladders so as to provide the spindle with apertures in fluid communication with one another and with the bladders so that pressure can be applied to the tube. The means for pressurizing permits the introduction of pressurizing fluid into the apertures, thereby raising of the pressure of the fluid within the apertures. This pressure is then applied to the bladders, which expand substantially uniformly outwardly against the tube and plastically deform the tube when the outwardly applied pressure exceeds the plastic yield point of the tube material.
The primary advantage of the present invention is that a tube can be simultaneously expanded at a plurality of locations corresponding to tube sheets and tube supports so that one tube can be expanded into the tube supports of a heat exchanger in one operation, thereby drastically reducing the time required for tube expansion. In addition, tube expansion using the tube expander assembly of the present invention can be accomplished by one man rather than the two required by the prior art tube rolling process, further reducing the number of man-hours required to accomplish tube expansion.
Another advantage of the present invention is that tubes expanded hydraulically or pneumatically in accordance with the present invention are more uniformly expanded with less surface deformation. In addition, because the expansion process of the present invention utilizes expandable bladders that do not remove material from the tube, the reliability of the tube expansion operation should increase with fewer resulting tube failures in the region of the tube expansion.
Still another advantage of the present invention is that the expansion can be better controlled in the expansion area to preclude either overexpanding the tubes or in providing tubes having minimal contact with the support plate.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following more detailed description of the preferred embodiment, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings which illustrate, by way of example, the principles of the invention.
The tube expander apparatus of the present invention provides an improved method for expanding tubes into tube supports and tube sheets for chiller applications. In addition to providing apparatus and methods for expanding a tube simultaneously at a plurality of locations along the tube where the tube passes through a tube support plate, the apparatus also overcomes potential problems in tubes due to out-of-tolerance conditions resulting from tube support plate/tube land misalignments, out-of-tolerance (oversize) support plate apertures and variations in tube wall thicknesses.
Referring now to
First connection tube 12 extends in an axial direction, having a first end and a second end. The connection means 26 is located on or at the second end. First connection tube 12 includes a means for locating the tube expander assembly within the tube relative to a datum, here a hard stop 30 located at an end opposite connection means 26. The hard stop 30 provides a means for locating the spindle assembly with respect to the chiller assembly. Because the distance from the chiller tube sheet to the first tube support is a known fixed distance which can be measured, the distance from hard stop 30 to first bladder assembly 14 can be preselected to correspond to this known fixed distance. When spindle assembly 10 is assembled into a tube in a tube sheet and hard stop 30 is brought up against the tube sheet face, which serves as the reference surface or datum surface, bladder assembly 14 is positioned within the tube and adjacent to the tube support aperture. Hard stop 30 preferably further includes a counter bore 32 in the surface facing the tube sheet to accept a tube that may be extending away from the tube sheet. The counter bore 32 prevents an extending tube from hampering the hard stop from contacting the reference surface, here the tube sheet. Hard stop preferably also includes an extension 34 or adaptor to allow hook-up to a pressurizing means such as a pump, although the hook-up may be provided by a hook-up to the first connection tube 12. The end of the tube expander spindle assembly 10 opposite the first connection tube 12 and adjacent to or as part of the last bladder assembly in the tube expander spindle assembly includes a fluid stop 36. Fluid stop 36 prevents fluid, preferably hydraulic, from exiting the opposite end of spindle assembly 10. Fluid stop 36 may be an integral part of the final bladder assembly 18, if desired. In this embodiment, that is, with fluid stop 36 as an integral part of the final bladder assembly, bladder assembly 18 in
Each of the connection means 26, threaded connections in the preferred embodiment further includes a means for preventing leakage of hydraulic fluid. Any well-known means for preventing leakage of a fluid may be used. This means may be a mechanical device, such as an o-ring seal. The sealing means may be any simple commonly used item, such as thread sealant, plumbers putty or Teflon tape. Any means for sealing the connection between the components of the tube expander spindle may be used, as long as tube expander spindle assembly 10 can be pressurized. The various means for providing such sealing are well known in the art and are not a novel part of the present invention.
The tube expander spindle assembly 10 of the present invention is connected to a means for pressurizing (not shown in
First member 84 includes a body portion 94 having means for attachment 96 of first member to a connection tube 12, 22. The means for attachment 96 can be any acceptable means that permits a fluidly sealable attachment to be made. In the preferred embodiment discussed above, connection tubes 12, 22 include male threads as means of attachment, so an acceptable means for attachment 96 in this embodiment include female threads which accept the male threads of the connection tubes. A thread sealant, o-ring seal, gasket or other means for preventing leakage of hydraulic fluid may be used between the threads. First member 84 also includes a shaft 98 extending away from body portion 94. The end of shaft 98 includes means for attaching 110 first member to second member. As shown, means for attaching 110 includes male threads, although any other known means of attachment may be used. Bladder 71 fits over shaft 98 between the threads and extending back into means for capturing 92, counter bore, as shown. The axial length of the bladder is about 1″. Shaft 98 includes an aperture 112 that extends in a radial direction from axially extending bore 82 so that there is fluid communication from axially extending bore 82. The location of aperture 112 is such that the bladder 71 is assembled onto shaft 98 over aperture 112.
As previously noted, second member 86 includes a flange with means for capturing 92 the remaining end 90 of bladder 71. Second member also includes a means for attachment 114 to attach second member 86 to first member 84. Here, the means for attachment 114 are female threads that mate with the male threads 110 of first member 84. A sealing means, such as an o-ring, gasket or thread sealant, Lok-Tite®, for example, may be used to prevent leakage of fluid once the members are assembled. The opposed end of second member 86 includes means for attachment of second member to connection tubes 12, 22. As discussed, any acceptable method may be used to attach second member to connection tube 22. In the preferred embodiment, as the connection tube includes a male thread; the means for attachment of second member to connection tube 12, 22 should be a female thread 96. A sealing means, such as an o-ring, gasket or thread sealant, Lok-Tite®, for example, may be used to prevent leakage of fluid once the probe assembly is assembled to a connection tube, or, if at the end of the tube expander spindle assembly, a fluid stop.
Referring to
While the present invention can be used to expand tubes into tube supports, it can also be used to expand tubes into tube sheets. This can be accommodated by the present invention by applying an additional pair of bladders and positioning these bladders along the spindle corresponding to the location of the tube within the tube sheet, in the same manner as bladders are located with respect to tube support apertures. The expansion of tubes into tube sheets may require a higher pressure. When a higher pressure is required, the higher pressure can be developed in the bladders adjacent the tube sheets without providing a higher pressure to the bladders adjacent the tube supports. This can be done using available techniques. For example, known techniques using bladders that have a different coefficient of expansion at the different locations can be incorporated onto the spindle. Thus, bladders that expand the tube against the tube sheet may be displaced or positioned radially outwardly further than the bladders that expand the tube against the tube support at a given pressure. Alternatively, a mechanical device that increases pressure can be associated with the bladders adjacent the tube sheets, such as the device described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,055,063 as a pressure intensifier. Still another technique may utilize isolation valves to isolate the bladders adjacent the tube supports from the bladders adjacent the tube sheets. In this embodiment, the expansion is done in two steps rather than one, as the first pressurization is done at a first pressure and the second pressurization is done at a second pressure. The bladders 71 adjacent the tube support are isolated from the higher pressure as it is applied to the bladders adjacent the tube sheet. While the expansion of the bladders in the tube adjacent the tube support is not performed simultaneously with the bladders in the tube adjacent the tube sheet, the operations being done in separate pressurizations, the operation is performed without having to move and reposition the spindle in the tube, which results in significant time savings. The process can be programmed into the controller so that the operation can be performed automatically, with controls provide to control the isolation valves, the controller operating these valves automatically. Currently, the expansion of the tubes adjacent the tube sheet is performed in two operations requiring positioning of the bladder or a mechanical rolling device in the tube.
Typical chillers utilize three (3) or four (4) tube supports. The tube supports for the four-tube-support configuration are typically designed to be about 38″ apart with a tolerance of ±½″. A four tube-support chiller typically includes about 1300 tubes. The three-tube support configuration has tube supports positioned at distances about 42″ apart with a tolerance of ±½″. Of course, it will be recognized that chillers can be manufactured to have additional support plates or fewer support plates, the number of support pates dependent upon the overall length of the chiller and the support required for the tubes. Similarly, the number of tubes in a chiller can be varied. The plate comprising the tube support is about ±½″ thick. The distance between the tube sheet and the tube support at either end is also a fixed distance. The first step in the expansion operation is to accurately determine the dimensions between the tube sheets and the tube supports so that bladder assemblies 14, 16, 18 can be positioned at an appropriate location along tube support spindle 10. As should be obvious, the accumulation of tolerances can result in some variation. The tube expander assembly of the present invention can successfully expand tubes without overexpansion even when the bladder assemblies 14, 16, 18 are offset by about ½″. Those skilled in the art will recognize this offset as ±½″ tolerance, which is to say that successful tube expansion can be accomplished even when the bladder 71 is positioned at an edge of the tube support plate. However, the risk of overexpansion of a tube increases as the deviation from this tolerance increases.
In a simple application, for a chiller using a three-tube support application, a bladder assembly 18 is selected having a fluid stop 36 applied to one end of bladder assembly 18. One end of connection tube 22 is sealingly attached to the end of bladder assembly 18 opposite stop 36. A second bladder 16 is sealingly attached to connection tube 22, the length of connection tube 22 being selected so that the distance between bladder 71 of bladder assembly 18 and bladder 71 of bladder assembly 16 equals the distance between tube supports opposite a first tube sheet. Similarly bladder assembly 16 and bladder assembly 14 are assembled to a second connection tube. It should be obvious that connection tubes 22 of slightly varying lengths, for example about ¼″ length variations, can be available and selected for use depending upon the measured distance between the tube supports. First connection tube 12 to which is assembled hard stop 30 is then sealingly connected to bladder assembly 14. Because hard stop 30 on first connection tube 12 is adjustable, as previously discussed, hard stop 30 is adjusted so that the distance from seat surface 54 of hard stop to bladder assembly 14 corresponds to the distance from the face of the first tube sheet to the first tube support. Once this adjustment is completed, the spindle assembly 10 can be assembled into a tube by inserting spindle assembly until seat surface 54 of hard stop 30 contacts the tube sheet face. The counter bore 56 on hard stop will fit over any portion of the tube extending from the tube sheet face.
After spindle assembly 10 is assembled into a tube so that each bladder is adjacent to a tube support as shown in
While the above example contemplates expanding a copper tube against three tube supports using three bladders, one skilled in the art understands that the present invention can be arranged to expand tubes into any number of tube supports, as dictated by the design of the chiller. In addition, while the example sets forth expansion of copper tubes, the invention can be used in any other chiller application using tubes of a different material, such as copper-nickel tubes, stainless steel tubes and titanium tubes. Of course, these higher strength materials will require a higher pressure in order to achieve expansion, as the elastic limit at which plastic deformation begins is higher.
The tube expansion process of the present invention utilizing the tube expansion assembly of the present invention produces a very discrete area of uniform expansion around the circumference of the tube. This uniform expansion is not evident in tubes rolled by the prior art mechanical expansion methods, which display only a hint of tube expansion. This contrast is visible in
The embodiment of the present invention utilizes connection tubes having slightly varying lengths that are selected to match the distance of a measured feature of the chiller, either between adjacent tube supports or between tube sheets and tube supports, if tube sheet rolling is to be accomplished. However, it is possible to make the connection tube length itself adjustable. This can be done in a number of ways. For example, with reference to a connection tube 22, it is possible to provide a connection tube that is slightly undersize along with a series of spacers having an axially extending aperture that differ in length by a fixed amount, for example ¼″. Each spacer is designed to have a first end with a mating attachment means for attaching to the attaching means of the connection tube. For example, if the end of the connection tube is a male thread, then the first end of the spacer has a female thread. The opposite end of the spacer has an attachment means that allows it to be attached to a bladder assembly. For example, if the bladder assembly has female threads, then the opposed end of the spacer is provided with mating male threads. In this manner, an appropriate spacer can be attached to the end of the connection tube once the measured distance of the feature of the chiller is known. Alternatively, the connection tube can be fabricated slightly oversize (that is, slightly longer) for example by ±½″, with threads and a diameter slightly less than the mating thread diameters of a member of the mating probe assembly at an end where it mates up to the bladder assembly, and at least one of the first and second members of the probe assembly can be provided with extra mating threads to provide a total thread length of at least 1″. These extra threads in the at least one of the probe assembly members allows the connection tube to be threaded into the at least one member of the probe assembly until the desired length of the connection tube is achieved.
While the invention has been described with reference to a preferred embodiment, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040226332 A1 | Nov 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60447576 | Feb 2003 | US |