This application is a U.S. National Phase Application under 35 USC 371 of International Application PCT/SE2005/000872 filed Jun. 9, 2005.
The invention relates to a pneumatic vane motor of the type having a housing with a cylinder and a vane carrying rotor journalled in the housing in a eccentric disposition relative to the cylinder, wherein the vanes divide the cylinder into a number of moving cells each defined by a leading vane and a trailing vane.
One problem concerned with motors of the above type is the rather high sound level emanating from the pressure pulses in the exhaust air leaving the cylinder through the outlet ports in the cylinder. This problem can be and has been dealt with by fitting suitable exhaust silencers. However, silencers often generate further problems due to required extra space, particularly at portable power tools where the available space is very small. Providing an internal silencer, normally in the form of one or more extra expansion volumes, means a larger and more bulky tool housing. Fitting an external silencer means a device protruding from the housing and causing a more awkward handling of the tool.
It is a main object of the invention to create a pneumatic vane motor of the above mentioned type which generates a substantially reduced exhaust noise without any extra silencer being provided.
Further objects and advantages of the invention will appear from the following specification and claims.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are described below in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The motor illustrated in
The vanes 16 define between them four moving cells 22, 23, 24 and 25 each with a varying volume at rotation of the rotor 12. Each cell is confined between a leading vane and a trailing vane, viewed in the direction A of rotation of the rotor 12, and is supplied with pressure air when passing the inlet opening 17. Because of a difference in exposed area on the leading vane and the trailing vane there is obtained a driving force on the rotor 12.
The cylinder 11 is provided with by-pass passages 27 in the form of two parallel grooves each extending in a substantially circumferential direction. Each groove has an opening edge 28, viewed in the rotation direction A of the rotor 12, which is located at a point situated at a distance from the closing edge 29 of the inlet opening 17 corresponding mainly to the width of a cell 22-25, i.e. the peripheral distance between the leading vane and the trailing vane of each cell. In this embodiment of the invention the by-pass passage 27 has its opening edge 28 situated at the point in the cylinder 11 where the vanes 16 have their most extended positions, i.e. diametrically opposite the clearance seal 13. Since the rotor 12 has four vanes distributed at equal angular intervals there is 90 degrees between every two of them, and to prevent pressure air from getting a free passage through the cylinder 11 the angle between the closing edge 29 of the inlet opening 17 and the opening edge 28 of the by-pass passage 27 must exceed 90 degrees.
In the motor illustrated in
Starting with the position of the rotor 12 illustrated in
In this position, the cell 22 is under air pressure from the inlet opening 17 and the continuously open bores 18. The leading vane of cell 22, which is the trailing vane of the preceding cell 23 in the rotation direction A, has just passed the closing edge 29 of the inlet opening 17, whereas the leading vane of the cell 23 has reached the opening edges 28 of the by-pass passages 27. This means that no more pressure air is supplied to the cell 23, and that instead the by-pass passages 27 start connecting the cell 23 to the next cell 24 which has just been opened to the primary outlet 19 by its leading vane. The pressure air in the cell 23 starts evacuating through the cell 24 which will act as an expansion volume with a flow limiting connection with the primary outlet 19.
At continued rotation of the rotor 12 the cell 24 will be drained continuously through the main outlet 19. Further on, the leading vane of the cell will open up also the secondary outlet 20 to ensure a complete draining of the cell.
Returning to the cell 22, the leading vane will have an increasing active area continuously pressurised with pressure air from the inlet opening 17 during its travel through about 90 degrees from the closing edge 29 of the inlet opening 17. After a 90 degree travel, when reaching its most extended position the leading vane of cell 22 approaches the opening edge 28 of the by-pass passages 27. At the same time the trailing vane passes the closing edge 29 of the inlet opening 17, which means that no more pressure air is supplied to the cell 22. The leading vane of the cell 22 will now open up a communication with the preceding cell 23 via the by-pass passages 27 and a draining of the cell 22 will commence. So, each cell uses the preceding cell for a controlled drainage, wherein the preceding cell forms an internal expansion volume with a sound attenuating effect.
The embodiment illustrated in
The operation order of this motor is similar to the above described embodiment apart from the fact that pressure air in a working cell 123 will pass two vanes 116, thereby using two preceding cells 124 and 125 for pressure peak reduction and sound attenuation, before reaching the outlet openings 119.
The motor illustrated in
The cylinder 211 is provided with two by-pass passages 227a and 227b for opening up drainage passages to the very opening acting as an outlet at the moment, depending on the actual direction of motor rotation. At forward rotation A the opening 217 will act as an air inlet and the opening 219 will act as an air outlet, and depending on the by-pass passage 227b the opening 217 has a forwardly displaced closing edge 229. The angular distance between the opening edge 228 of the by-pass passage 227a and the closing edge 229 of the inlet opening 217 still has to be at least the same as the width of each cell defined by the vanes.
The operation order of this motor will be the same as the previously described examples with a pre-opening of a by-pass leakage before the leading vane of each cell reaches the outlet opening. In this case, however, the direction of rotation can be switched by supplying pressure air to the “outlet” opening 219 and draining exhaust air through the “inlet” opening 217. At reverse operation, the passage 227a will act as a part of the air inlet 219, and the by-pass passage 227b will serve to leak pressure air to the outlet to accomplish a successive pressure reduction and a sound attenuation.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE2005/000872 | 6/9/2005 | WO | 00 | 12/7/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/132572 | 12/14/2006 | WO | A |
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7-259503 | Oct 1995 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090016918 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |