The present invention relates to an outboard drive for boats for driving at least one propeller, comprising a gear housing, an underwater housing connected rotatably to the gear housing, mounting means arranged between the gear housing and the underwater housing for mounting the drive in a boat hull with the gear housing on the inside and the underwater housing on the outside of the hull and comprising an exhaust passage, which has an exhaust outlet opening into an exhaust inlet to an exhaust passage in the underwater housing, and power-operated means which are connected to an electronic control unit and by means of which the underwater housing is rotatable relative to the gear housing and the mounting means depending on control commands fed into the control unit.
Outboard drives of the kind indicated above are known, for example from SE-A-522 187. Compared with the more common stem-mounted outboard drives, it is characteristic of these drives that the underwater housing cannot, as in the case of the former drives, be tipped up out of the water, for example when the boat is left stationary for a relatively long time. They are consequently more susceptible to fouling by organisms in the water, for example acorn barnacles. Underwater housings made of cast metal, in particular bronze, which are used in the type described in the publication mentioned above, are especially susceptible. For example, acorn barnacles attach themselves so firmly that they have to be cut away.
In a known type of outboard drive of the kind indicated above, sealing surfaces around the exhaust outlet in the mounting means lie directly in front of sealing surfaces around the exhaust outlet in the underwater housing when moving straight ahead. When large steering deflections are performed, however, the exhaust outlet, and thus parts of the sealing surfaces as well, will be at least partly exposed, the exhaust gases through the exhaust outlet being blown out at least in part at the side of the exhaust inlet in the underwater housing. When putting-in manoeuvres are performed, great rudder deflections are often necessary, and, if the boat is left with a great steering deflection of the underwater housing after putting-in, the sealing surfaces are accessible to fouling which after a relatively long time, for example a month, can become extensive, which leads to greater steering force from the steering machinery being necessary and to the power consumption, the wear and the service requirement increasing.
The object of the present invention is to produce an outboard drive of the kind referred to in the introduction which eliminates the problem of fouled sealing surfaces around the exhaust outlet and inlet.
According to the invention, this is achieved by virtue of the fact that the said exhaust outlet is surrounded by a surface layer which counteracts fouling by organisms present in the water and that the control unit is arranged so as, on a given control command, via the power-operated means, to put the underwater housing in a predetermined position in which a surface of the underwater housing, which surface faces the exhaust outlet and surrounds the said exhaust inlet, lies within the surrounding boundary of the said surface layer.
By, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, arranging a sheet of Teflon® (polytetrafluoroethylene) which covers that region of the mounting means facing the underwater housing between the end positions of the underwater housing and having the engine control unit for a drive engine coupled to the drive give a control command to the control unit of the drive to put the drive in a position halfway between these end positions, that is to say the position for moving straight ahead, when the engine is shut off, the problems of fouling described above are eliminated automatically without the person responsible for the boat having to take any special action. Organisms such as, for example, acorn barnacles attach themselves very weakly to Teflon,
The invention is described in greater detail with reference to illustrative embodiments shown in the accompanying drawing, in which
The propeller drive designated generally by 1 in
Arranged between the upper gear housing 2 and the underwater housing 3 is a mounting element designated generally by 6 which consists of on the one hand a lower bowl-shaped housing part 7, which is connected firmly to the gear housing 2 in a way not shown in greater detail, and on the other hand an upper housing part 8 which, when the drive 1 is mounted through an opening in the bottom of a boat, is bolted to the lower housing part 7. Sealing rings 11 and 12 are arranged between conical surfaces 9 and 10 on respective housing parts 7 and 8.
The underwater housing 3 is mounted rotatably in the gear housing 2 in a known way. The rotary movement is brought about with the aid of an electric servomotor unit 13 which is assembled together with the gear housing 2 and, via an integrated planetary gear, rotates the underwater housing 3 relative to the gear housing depending on signals from an electronic control unit in the form of a control computer 14 which, in a practical embodiment, is also integrated in the servomotor unit 13. In the embodiment shown, the control computer 14 communicates with an engine control computer 15 for an internal combustion engine, for example a diesel engine, (not shown) connected to the drive.
The control computer 14 is arranged so as, on a signal from the engine control computer 15 indicating a command to stop the internal combustion engine (ignition off), to give a signal to the servomotor to put the underwater housing 3 in a position halfway between two end positions, that is to say in the straight-ahead position.
As can be seen from
The sector between the end positions 16 on the underside of the mounting element 6 is covered by a fouling-preventing layer, preferably a plate 27 made of polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon®), which is bolted to the mounting element 6 and has an opening 28 which coincides with the outlet opening 22. It has been found that even if water organisms, such as acorn barnacles, do after a relatively long time stationary become attached to the plate 27 on those surfaces which are not covered by the underwater housing in its straight-ahead position, they are nevertheless attached so loosely that they are easily scraped off by the underwater housing 6 when this is rotated during steering the next time the boat is taken out.
It is also conceivable, as an alternative to the model described above of having engine shut-off bring the underwater housing 3 into straight-ahead position, to arrange a separate manual control 30 which has a “parking position” in which the underwater housing is put in the straight-ahead position. A disadvantage of a separate manual control is of course that it is possible to forget to put it in the parking position just as it is also possible to forget to put it in the “off position” when starting the next time.
In a drive with the engine control function described above, which also has a brake for locking the underwater housing in the set position after the engine has been shut off, the engine control computer is also arranged so as to switch the brake off automatically via the control computer of the drive when the engine is started.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE2004/000827 | 5/28/2004 | WO | 00 | 11/8/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/115835 | 12/8/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070270053 A1 | Nov 2007 | US |