The invention relates to a piston arrangement for master and/or slave cylinders of a hydraulic actuating device for clutch and/or brake systems on motor vehicles.
In a known piston arrangement of this type (DE 100 62 988 A1), assembly is carried out in two separate steps. Firstly, the snap connection is brought about between the ram and the insert, referred to in said document as the piston link head. The unit preassembled in this way is then inserted into the recess and screwed into the latter by means of a threaded engagement. For this purpose, the recess is provided with an internal thread and the insert is provided with a corresponding external thread. On account of the threaded engagement, this known piston arrangement is expensive to manufacture, and special measures moreover have to be taken in order to prevent loosening of the screw connection. In terms of the requirements in mass production, assembly in two steps is complicated, wherein the handling of the preassembled unit consisting of the ram and the insert is made more difficult on account of the ball-and-socket connection of these parts.
It is an object of the invention to simplify the manufacture and assembly of such piston arrangement and to fix the insert in the recess of the piston so that it is secured against high pull-out forces introduced via the ram, even without threaded engagement.
According to the invention, there is provided a piston arrangement for one of a master and slave cylinder of a hydraulic actuating device for one of a clutch and brake system on a motor vehicle, comprising
In the piston arrangement designed according to the invention, firstly the insert is introduced into the recess of the piston until the peripheral chamfer of the insert strikes the first travel-delimiting stop. At the end of this first insertion travel, the insertion sleeve of the insert, which can be expanded to produce the snap connection, protrudes out of the recess of the piston.
The ram which is then pushed with its end ball first into the insertion sleeve in the axial direction of the piston drives the end ball with the axial force required to overcome the spring forces of the insertion sleeve until it meets the ball seat in the insert, as a result of which the snap connection is brought about. During this, the insert remains against its first stop in the recess of the piston because the axial pressure force required to produce the snap connection is smaller than the axial pressure force which has to be exerted on the ram in order to slide over the first stop, that is to say is smaller than the retaining force at the first stop.
When the axial pressure force on the ram is increased, the insert slides over the first stop in the recess of the piston, with partial elastic and also plastic deformation of the regions of the insert which bear against the first stop. The second insertion travel of the insert, which starts at this point, is delimited by the second stop at the inner end of the recess. Once the insert bears against the second stop, the expandable insertion sleeve of the insert is located within the recess and is tightly enclosed by the piston wall delimiting the recess. In this position, the end ball of the ram is located without play in the ball seat and cannot be pulled out of the insert and the insert cannot be pulled out of the piston, even if very high pull-out forces are applied.
The design of the piston arrangement according to the invention permits very simple assembly, in which the ram is driven with its end ball in a single axial movement into the insert inserted in the piston, wherein firstly the snap connection is brought about and immediately thereafter the insert is pushed into its final position in the recess. This does not lead to any deformation of the ball-and-socket joint which would give rise to play, since the transmission of pressure forces to the insert takes place via the form-fitting full bearing between end ball and ball seat.
Continuing the concept of the invention, the recess is designed as an elongate blind hole with a certain profiling which also produces the first and second stop for the insert. Accordingly, the insert is designed with an inner cylindrical section and an outer cylindrical section of larger diameter, in a manner adapted to the profiling of the elongate blind hole, in order to ensure the abovementioned simple assembly and the ability to withstand even very high pull-out forces.
Preferably, grooves are provided on the circumferential surface of the inner section of the insert in a uniformly distributed manner, which grooves reduce the bearing surface contact with that cylindrical hole section of the elongate blind hole which is slid over when the retaining force of the first stop is overcome by partial elastic/plastic deformation of the relevant region, as a result of which the necessary axial press-in force is reduced at the same time. Some of these grooves may have a greater axial length than the others, in order to evacuate air from the inner closed region of the elongate blind hole in the piston as the insert is pushed in.
The deformability of the inner section of the insert during the press-in operation may advantageously be increased by virtue of a concentric cut-out in the end face of its inner section, and thus the axial force required to press it in can be reduced. By virtue of ribs on the outer circumference of the insertion sleeve of the insert, the bearing surface portion of the insertion sleeve as it is pressed into the outer, first hole section of the elongate blind hole can also advantageously be reduced, and this also reduces the necessary axial press-in force.
A design of the ball end of the ram according to which the ball end is shaped so as to be free of any ridges in its surface regions which transmit pressure forces and tensile forces, allows the completely ridge-free moulding of an ideal ball joint, so that a play-free fit in the ball seat of the insert is made possible.
Advantageously, the materials for the three components of the piston arrangement are selected from aluminum, aluminum alloy and plastic. By using aluminum or an aluminum alloy for the piston, the latter can be designed to be relatively very thin-walled in the region of the insertion sleeve of the insert, without any strength considerations and without any fear of deformations of the piston wall when the insert is pressed in or in the event of axial tensile stresses via the ram. As a result, the insert, preferably molded from plastic as the ram, can also be given a larger diameter in this region, and this in turn permits an advantageously large ball seat and ball diameter.
For a better understanding of the invention and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The piston arrangement, the parts of the master or slave cylinder connected thereto and its individual parts are shown in the drawings on an enlarged scale compared to the actual dimensions for illustrative purposes, wherein
Of the master or slave cylinder, only the part of the housing 1 which accommodates the piston arrangement is shown broken open in
The piston 2 has a recess 5 in its outer end, said recess being designed as an elongate blind hole which is concentric with the central axis of the piston 2 and has a number of cylindrical hole sections of different diameter, as can best be seen from
The ram 4 which transmits the actuating travels and forces is provided with a ball end 9 which is shaped so as to be complementary to the ball seat 7 in the insert 6, which ball end 9 can be coupled to the insert 6 in order to mount the ram 4 in an articulated manner via a snap connection brought about by the expandable insertion sleeve 8. The achieved coupling is shown in
As can be seen from
In order to describe the insert 6, reference will now be made to
The inner section 21 of the insert 6 has in its circumferential surface a number of axis-parallel grooves 25 which continue up to its end face 24, some of which grooves 25′ have a greater axial length and serve to evacuate air from the recess 5 as the insert 6 is pressed into the latter. For the rest, however, the grooves 25, 25′ reduce the bearing surface portion of the inner section 21 relative to the third hole section 12 and therefore reduce the necessary press-in forces. Comparable effects are achieved on the one hand in that the insert 6 has a concentric cut-out 26 in the end face 24 of its inner section 21, which facilitates deformations of the inner end of the inner section 21 during the press-in operation, and on the other hand in that the insertion sleeve 8 of the insert 6 has a number of axis-parallel small ribs 27 distributed over its outer circumference, which ribs reduce the bearing surface of the outer section 20 of the insert 6 relative to the wall surface of the first hole section 10.
The ball end 9 of the ram 4 is molded so as to be free of any ridges in its surface regions which transmit pressure forces and tensile forces, as a result of which the ball-and-socket joint formed of the ball seat 7 and the ball end 9 can be manufactured with narrow tolerances and practically without any play, since no deformable and thus play-forming ridge is present in the area of contact of the convex and concave ball surfaces.
Suitable material pairings are obtained when the piston 2 is made of aluminum or an aluminum alloy, whereas the insert 6 and the ram 4 with its ball end 9 are molded from thermoplastic plastics. By way of example, glass-fiber-reinforced polyamides are suitable for this purpose.
The order of the operating steps for assembling the described piston arrangement is shown in
The piston 2 with the insert 6 can now be pushed into the guide sleeve 3, as shown in
The axial pressure force to be exerted on the ram 4 in order to bring about the snap connection is smaller than the axial pressure force to be exerted on the ram 4 in order to slide over the first stop. The insert 6 therefore remains at the first travel-delimiting stop in the position shown in
If the axial pressure force on the ram 4 is now increased, the insert 6 thus slides over the first stop with partial elastic and plastic deformation of the front end of its inner section 21, since the retaining force of the first stop is overcome. A second insertion travel of the insert 6 is thus started, said second insertion travel being delimited and therefore ended by the end face 24 striking the face 18 of the recess 5 which forms the second stop. This position of the parts can be seen from
Behind the sharp edge 15, the operation of pressing in and sliding over the first stop leads to a partial elastic back-deformation of the insert 6, so that the latter is held in the recess 5 in the position shown in
There is thus proposed a piston arrangement for master and/or slave cylinders of a hydraulic actuating device for clutch and/or brake systems on motor vehicles, which piston arrangement is characterized by simplified manufacture and assembly of its components and also withstands high pull-out forces introduced via the ram. A suitable insert is inserted into a recess of the piston up to a first stop, said recess being designed as an elongate blind hole. The insert has a ball seat and an expandable insertion sleeve which is undercut with respect to the ball seat and initially protrudes outwards with its expandable region. The ram is pushed into the expandable insertion sleeve in the axial direction with its ball end which is shaped so as to be complementary to the ball seat, until the ball end snaps into the ball seat. As the ram continues to be pressed in the axial direction, the insert slides over the first stop, is firmly pressed into a narrow hole section of the recess and finally strikes a travel-delimiting second stop at the inner end of the recess. In this position, the insertion sleeve is tightly enclosed by the piston wall and can no longer expand even in the event of very high pull-out forces, that is to say cannot release the ball end of the ram.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 053 913 | Nov 2004 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country |
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198 24 530 | Dec 1998 | DE |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060096452 A1 | May 2006 | US |