A great variety of lawn sprinklers have been devised and manufactured. All are intended to distribute water as uniformly as possible over a given lawn area at the rate at which the water will soak into the ground. Some are simple sprinkler manifolds with no moving parts. Some provide for a multiplicity of streams from nozzles which rotate about a vertical or horizontal axis, and many are adjustable to limit the area to be sprinkled at any given setting. The constantly moving streams are preferable in that they spread the water for a given location of the sprinkler over a larger area for optimum absorption. While sprinklers rotating about a vertical axis supply water to a circular area, sprinklers which oscillate about a horizontal axis serving a rectangular area are generally preferred because the entire lawn can be uniformly watered by successively sprinkling areas with straight common boundaries. To achieve improved certainty and continuity of operation and uniform watering for a given setting, horizontal oscillating sprinklers have become increasingly complex with concomitantly increasing cost and mechanical failure probability.
An oscillating sprinkler is disclosed. The sprinkler has a drive motor coupled between an input port and an oscillating nozzle. The drive motor includes a flow adapter having a sun gear at one end and coupling to the input port at the other end. A gear assembly has a drive gear that is engaged with the sun gear of the flow adapter. A motor housing has a gear train chamber for the gear assembly, and a first chamber and a second chamber each providing for a path of flow. A switching mechanism has a valve block for alternatingly blocking and establishing the path of flow through one of the first chamber and the second chamber of the motor housing. A water wheel alternating in rotation between a clockwise direction and a counter clockwise direction based on the path of flow from one of the first chamber and the second chamber of the motor housing and engaging the gear assembly to rotate the gear assembly back and forth around the sun gear of the flow adapter and simultaneously moving the oscillating nozzle.
The switching mechanism further comprises a commutation yoke and a switch lever pivotally combined to the commutation yoke. The switch lever moves the commutation yoke into the valve block to alternatingly block and establish the path of flow through one of the first chamber and the second chamber of the motor housing. The switch lever pushes against one of the first stop and the second stop as the commutation yoke rotates in one of the clockwise and counter-clockwise direction and the force of the switch lever pushes the commutation yoke into engagement with the valve block with sufficient force to move the valve block to alternatingly block and establish the path of flow through one of the first chamber and the second chamber of the motor housing. The valve block has a first arm and a second arm each for blocking one of the first chamber and the second chamber of the motor housing, and the switching mechanism further comprises a first spring between the first arm of the valve block and the commutation yoke and a second spring between the second arm of the valve block and the commutation yoke.
Motor housing 112 has two sealed compartments that are separated by a sidewall 118 and two chambers 128 and 130 for providing a path of flow. The first compartment, a gear train chamber 120 receives a first gear assembly 122 and a second gear assembly 123 that cooperate to reduce an output of a drive gear 146 of first gear assembly 122, which rotates around a sun gear 148. The second compartment, a switch chamber 126 receives a switching mechanism 124. Switching mechanism 124 directs the flow of water through one of two chambers, chamber 128 and chamber 130, that correspond with clockwise and counter-clockwise rotation of a water wheel 143, respectively.
More specifically, first gear assembly 122 includes a shaft 134 to support a plurality of gears including, from bottom to top, alternating pinion gear 136a, spur gear 138a, pinion gear 136b, spur gear 138b, pinion gear 136c, spur gear 138c, and pinion gear 136d. Another pinion gear 140 that is coupled to water wheel 143 drives the bottom pinion gear 136a of first gear assembly 122, and the rest of pinion gears 136b and 136c and spur gears 138a and 138b on shaft 134.
Each spur gear 138a, 138b, and 138c in first gear assembly 122 engages a corresponding pinion gear 142a, 142b, and 144c, respectively, supported on a shaft 144 in second gear assembly 123. Near the top of shaft 134 of first gear assembly 122 is drive gear 146 that engages sun gear 148 on flow adapter 172. Drive gear 146 fits on a hub 154 around shaft 134 of first gear assembly 122. Gear train chamber 120 is closed at the top by cover 150 with drive gear 146 extending out of a sealed hole 152 of cover 150 and a hole 174 in upper plate 116 to engage sun gear 148 in flow adapter 172. This causes motor housing 112 to rotate back and forth around sun gear 148 with a frequency of oscillation.
Positioned within switch chamber 126 is switching mechanism 124 which causes the oscillating rotation of nozzle 108. Switch mechanism 124 includes a commutation yoke 156, a valve block 176, and switch lever 158 (see
The distance in the arc of travel for nozzle 108 is set by a first limit switch 180 and a second limit switch 182. First limit switch 180 is on a first spacer 184 that rotates with respect to the upper end of cylinder housing 110. Inside first spacer 184 is a first stop 186 at the end of a first arcuate path 188. Second limit switch 182 is on a second spacer 190 that rotates with respect to upper end of cylinder housing 110. Inside second spacer 190 is a second stop 192 at the end of a second arcuate path 194. First spacer 184 and second spacer 190 rotate with respect to each other so that with first limit switch 180 and second limit switch 184 at the farthest distance from each other first arcuate path 188 and second arcuate path are aligned with each other and first stop 186 and second stop 192 are at the maximum distance apart. This position will allow nozzle 108 to rotate back and forth in the longest path of travel and highest frequency of oscillation. As first limit switch 180 and/or second limit switch 182 are moved with respect to each other, first arcuate path 188 and second arcuate path are moved with respect to each other so that the aligned open space between them is smaller and the distance between first stop 186 and second stop 192 is decreased along with the frequency of oscillation. The movement of first limit switch 180 and/or second limit switch 182 changes the distance that nozzle 108 will travel back and forth.
Switch lever 158 is positioned with its fulcrum in a catch 157 near the bottom end of commutation yoke 156. The upper end of switch lever 158 projects out of a hole 117 in upper plate 116 where it alternatively pushes against one of first stop 186 in first spacer 184 and second stop 192 in second spacer 190 corresponding with a first extent and a second extent for oscillation. Turning to
Turning to
While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to exemplary embodiments thereof, it should be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made herein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by appended claims and their equivalents. The invention can be better understood by reference to the following claims. For purpose of claim interpretation, the transitional phrases “including” and “having” are intended to be synonymous with the transitional phrase “comprising.”
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201420406395.0 | Jul 2014 | CN | national |
This application claims priority to Chinese Application No. 201420406395.0 filed Jul. 23,2014 and to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/088,004 filed Dec. 5, 2014, the entirety of both of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein. This disclosure relates to sprinklers, and more particularly this disclosure relates to a gear driven oscillating sprinkler.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62088004 | Dec 2014 | US |