Steering gears for boats, usually consisting of an oil pressure operated pump activated by the steering wheel are well known; this steering wheel controls, through its own valve set, all oil pressure operated double acting cylinder, axially acting by its mobile shaft on the direction of the engine or rudder of the boat.
The valve set of this oil pressure operated pump features essentially two, so-called non-return valves which also control the fluid supply and discharge in the two cylinder chambers features, two relief-valves of the maximum pressure and several channels connecting these valves to the pumping pistons, to the pump tank and to the chambers of the cylinder controlling the direction of the engine and of the rudder of the boat.
This invention specifically concerns the valve set which, in known steering gears, consists of one single machined metal housing in which the lodgment of these valves and the necessary channels form a geometrically complex arrangement with very close tolerances and their machining requires the utilization of numerically controlled multi-axis tooling machines involving very expensive equipments and long working hours.
This invention has the aim to obtain the valve set of the oil pressure operated pump for marine steering gears in a faster and much cheaper way.
According to this invention, the valve set consists of three separate elements which can be easily assembled by suitable junction means, for example by bolts. These three elements are:
According to this invention, the valve housing and lower closing cover are obtained by pressure die-casting, preferably in aluminium alloy or zinc alloy or injection moulded in thermoplastic material.
These pressure die-casting or pressure moulded valve housings and lower cover are complete with all their necessary channels and holes for bolt-assembly. Threading of these holes through which to pass the bolts is the only one operation required.
The third element, i.e. the valve set, consists of a set of components lodged in a preferably parallelepiped shaped housing with square section and central through hole. This housing features necessary channels machined on a lathe with motor-driven X-Y-Z tools at a much lower cost than required for machining at the above mentioned job centers.
This solution according to the invention, not only permits to cut the production costs, as already explained before, but also facilitates maintenance of the non-return valves which can be easily replaced, whereas the known valve sets require cumbersome disassembly of its various components with the risk to cause damage to the valve packing.
Furthermore, according to this invention, the pump shaft on which the steering wheel of the boat is keyed, is provided with an easily replaceable seal kept in place on this shaft by a special shaped snug fitting cap to prevent the penetration of dust or water as normally happens with known gaskets. This shaft seal also protects the pump better from being damaged.
The oil pressure operated pump, according to this invention, is illustrated for exemplification purpose in the enclosed drawings in which:
With reference to the
The valve housing 1 also features a boring 12 for pressure compensation and balancing of the valve set 7, debouching, through radial recessing 13 of the offset borings, into the pipe 14 connected to the pump tank 5. This branch pipe 14 has also the function, together with a similar pipe 15, if provided, to install two or more oil pressure operated pumps complete with steering wheels located in different parts of the ship.
The top view of the valve housing 1 shows suitably threaded holes 16 to secure the housing 1 by bolting it to the bottom of the pump 8, while the view from below of the valve housing 1 shows threaded holes 17 for fastening the housing by bolting it to the lower cover 18 closing the valve set.
The upper surface of the valve housing 1 also features a dowel 19 for its centering with the lower surface of the pump 8 during assembly, while three blank holes 20, in which to insert the centering dowels 21 for assembly of the lower cover 18, are bored in the outer bottom surface of the valve housing.
A preferably rectangular shaped recess 22 is machined inside the valve housing 1 in which to lodge oiltight the valve set 7 which should also preferably be rectangular shaped.
Internally, the valve housing 1 also features some zones 23 to lighten the structure.
In the
The delivery or return flow of the pump 8 passes through the valve housing 1 by means of surface machined recesses 3 and ducts 6 and then reaches the axially centred radial ducts 29 of the valve set 7. The delivery or return flow passes through the ball valves 26 to reach the radial ducts 30 which are axially disaligned to save space, and then to reach the bottom cover 18, as explained hereinafter.
The raceway 31 is branched off from the inside 25 of the valve set 7 and is radially disaligned with respect to the centre line of the tubular shell 24 and this raceway 31 is connected to the channel 12 of the valve housing 1, which in turn is connected to the tank 5 of the pump 8.
The above mentioned raceway 31 is also connected to the ducts 32 and circumferential channels 33 of the plunger 27 so as to permit discharging of any overpressure, generated in the valve set 7 and in the hydraulic fluid circuits, into the pump tank 5.
The
The bottom cover 18 also features two channels 37 connected to the ducts 14, 15 which in turn are connected by threaded holes 38 to one or more other oil tanks if a multiple steering gear is provided.
For information purposes, most of the elements previously described are assembled in
As is known, the steering wheel 100 (
This lower end of this flange 39 closes the bottom of the oil tank 5 and features through holes 46 for the feed valves 2 of the equipment.
The oil taken in or compressed by the pump pistons is conveyed through the threaded fitting 11 in connection with the chambers of the flow dynamic cylinder and thus reaches the ball valve 26. The fluid, pressurized in one of the cylinder chambers (at the left in
The above described oil pressure operated pump features a valve set directly secured to the pump, but it is also possible to keep this valve set separated from the pump, but in such case, proper ducts shall be provided for connection to the pump and to the cylinder, as well as an element in which to lodge the suction valve connected to the inner part of the tank 5. The pump is provided with a seal 47 of any type such as a Corteco or O-ring fitted between the wheel shaft 43 and the pump casing 8 to prevent dust or fluids from entering the pump.
According to this invention, this seal 47 is easy to install, to fix, to remove and to replace, by means of the cap 48 provided with holes 49 through which to pass the fastening screws and fitted with a metal or thermoplastic insert 50. The outer edge 51 of this cap 48 has the shape of an inwards turned peak adherent to the wheel shaft 43, thus creating a perfect seal between the shaft and the outer pump walls.
Obviously, the invention here generally described, but without limiting, may be subject to variations and adjustments; some of its parts may be replaced by others having the same aims, based upon the various circumstances and on the nature of the oil pressure operated control pump.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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GE2002A0064 | Jul 2002 | IT | national |
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Number | Date | Country |
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42 41 418 | Jun 1994 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040013540 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |