The invention relates to a power steering system for motor vehicles, having a rotary slide valve which has a reaction piston which delimits an active and a passive reaction chamber.
The invention relates to a power steering system for motor vehicles, having a rotary slide valve which has a reaction piston which delimits an active and a passive reaction chamber, in accordance with the precharacterizing clause of claim 1.
A power steering system of the generic type is known from DE 197 47 639 A1.
Here, the laid-open specification of the generic type has a rotary slide valve with a rotary slide, a centering device being arranged between the rotary slide and a valve output member, said centering device comprising two centering elements which can rotate with respect to one another and at least one rolling body situated between the two centering elements. Here, one centering element is firmly connected to a reaction piston and is connected to the valve output member via a metal bellows so as not to rotate but to be axially displaceable. The other centering element is connected to the rotary slide so as to neither rotate nor be displaceable. The reaction piston is arranged around the rotary slide, radially outside the latter, in the region of the centering device and protrudes in the axial direction into the region of the rotary slide. The reaction piston is guided in a sealing manner both on the valve output element and also in a valve housing. It thus delimits an active and a passive reaction chamber, it being possible to supply a boost pressure, dependent on the steering force, to the active reaction chamber via a line. The boost pressure can be influenced in a known manner by an electrohydraulic converter as a function of the vehicle speed or of other parameters. Here, the reaction chamber can comprise the metal bellows or be configured in a space lying opposite the metal bellows with respect to the reaction piston. In the latter case, the reaction piston acts counter to the force of the metal bellows. The metal bellows is subjected to relatively high prestressing which is relieved during application by the reaction pressure being applied.
With respect to the further prior art, with reference to the functioning of reaction pistons, reference is made, furthermore, to DE 197 40 352 A1.
A selective pressure results from the reaction piston or the pressure difference, acting on the reaction piston, between the active and passive reaction chamber, said selective pressure leading to an advantageous steering sensation, as a result of a corresponding reaction to the steering handle, as a function of various parameters, in particular the traveling speed. This is achieved by a corresponding increase in the steering moment.
However, a reaction of this type or the increase in the steering moment is only desirable for static or controlled processes. In the event of undesirable influences, caused, for example, by roadway impacts, introduced disturbances or in specific driving states, dynamic processes may occur which trigger a pressure fluctuation in the reaction chamber, said pressure fluctuation causing an undesirable fluctuation in moment at the steering handle. The increased susceptibility to jolting in the event of severe oscillation of the pressure difference consequently leads to perceptible decreases in comfort, i.e. to jolts at the steering wheel as a result of the torque. The pressure difference oscillates particularly severely when one of the two reaction pressures oscillates severely or when the two reaction pressures are in antiphase.
The present invention is therefore based on the object of improving a power steering system of the type mentioned in the introduction, such that undesirable dynamic processes or introduced disturbances do not cause any decreases in comfort, in particular no jolts at the steering wheel as a result of the torque, and such that this improvement can be realized as cost effectively, simply and close to serial production as possible.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by connecting a damping piston to the active reaction chamber in order to absorb dynamic oscillations of the reaction pressure.
According to the invention, this object is also achieved by the power steering system described in claim 10, claim 11 and claim 14.
Severe oscillations between the reaction pressures of the active and passive reaction chambers are avoided by virtue of the fact that a damping piston is connected to the active reaction chamber. Because a damping piston is used, the oscillations in the pressure difference do not act exclusively on the surface of the reaction piston, but are absorbed by the reaction piston. The increased susceptibility to jolting during rapid traveling states with a defined track rod preload and introduced disturbances no longer leads to jolts caused by the torque, as has been shown in experiments. In practise, the damping piston serves as a soft pressure accumulator, which absorbs dynamic pressure fluctuations but correspondingly settles at constant pressure conditions. Dynamic pressure peaks which occur are thus not directly converted into mechanical energy, but are absorbed by the change in volume resulting from the damping piston.
The pressure amplitude in the active reaction chamber is discernibly reduced by the damping piston connected to the active reaction chamber.
It is advantageous if the side, remote from the active reaction chamber, of the damping piston is stressed counter to atmosphere and/or a spring, and the damping piston is configured as a complete cartridge and tuned to reaction chamber pressure peaks.
A refinement of this type, in which the side, remote from the reaction chamber, of the damping piston is stressed counter to atmosphere and/or a spring, has proven cost effective and simple to implement. Here, configuring the damping piston as a complete cartridge is likewise an advantageous and easily implementable measure for reducing the pressure peaks which occur.
The use of a complete cartridge or a closed system advantageously prevents problems occurring as a result of contamination or other external influences.
Furthermore, in one alternative refinement and development of the invention, there may be provision for the side, remote from the active reaction chamber, of the damping piston to be connected to the passive reaction chamber.
Additionally, in order to avoid severe oscillations of the individual reaction pressures and the effect that the oscillations in the pressure difference do not act exclusively on the surface of the reaction piston but are absorbed by the damping piston, a connection to the passive reaction chamber enables the two reaction pressures to remain in phase. The phase relation of the pressure in the active reaction chamber is thus virtually identical to that in the passive reaction chamber. Advantageously, such a design of the damping piston can also be configured as a complete cartridge, with a spring/piston combination tuned to reaction chamber pressure peaks. Here, the piston can be damped or preferably configured to be smooth running. It is also feasible here to tune the springs/masses to dynamics.
It is advantageous if the damping piston is provided with the functions of a cutoff valve or of a pressure limiting valve.
Adding the functions of a serial production cutoff valve to the damping piston makes a reduction in the number of parts and therefore also particularly inexpensive production possible. Restrictor bores, control and sealing edges, proportional to the relatively low spring stiffness of the spring of the damping piston, must be integrated in appropriate positions in order for it to be possible to ensure the functioning of the cutoff valve in a combination with the damping piston. The damping piston is therefore configured in such a way that the overpressure is reduced from a desired point on the path of the damping piston. The damping piston operates in the abovedescribed advantageous manner in the region below said overpressure reduction.
Advantageous refinements and developments of the invention emerge from the further subclaims and from the exemplary embodiments specified in outline form in the following text using the drawings.
The power steering system according to the invention for motor vehicles with a rotary slide valve has a construction which is known in principle, as described, for example, in DE 197 40 352 A1 and DE 197 47 639 A1, for which reason a more detailed description in the following text will be dispensed with. Therefore, only the features which are relevant to the invention will be explained in greater detail in the following text.
A damping piston 4 is connected to the active reaction chamber 2 in order to absorb dynamic oscillations or to avoid severe oscillations of the individual reaction pressures. As can be seen from
As can likewise be seen from
In experiments and calculations, it has emerged that configuring the spring 5 as a particularly weak spring with a spring stiffness between 0.2 and 2 N/mm is advantageously suitable for absorbing dynamic oscillations.
Configuring the damping piston 4 as a complete cartridge has proved to be particularly suitable with regard to series production and a configuration as a closed system shielded, in particular, from soiling or other external influences. Here, the damping piston 4 can be tuned to reaction chamber pressure peaks. It is feasible to tune the springs/masses to dynamics for this purpose.
In an alternative and advantageous refinement, the damping piston 4 shown schematically in
The basic construction of a cutoff valve, which is provided with a damping piston 4 or the solution according to the invention, is shown in greater detail in
In a further alternative embodiment (not shown), there can also be provision for the reaction piston 1 to have a diaphragm, which is arranged between the active reaction chamber 2 and the passive reaction chamber 3. In this way, the functioning of the embodiment already described in
As has already been mentioned, the exemplary embodiment shown in
The cutoff valve 8 shown in
In order to reduce the susceptibility to jolting, an adapted change in the opening cross section by means of the control edges 11 is employed, or the spring stiffness is employed with regard to a change in volume. However, it is also possible to combine the two procedures. In contrast to a serial production cutoff valve 8, the restrictor bores 9, 10 or the control and sealing edges 11 are arranged in such a way that a longer travel, which is adapted to the lower strength of the spring 5, of the piston 4a is necessary to completely open the overpressure function. Here, there may be provision according to the invention for the spring 5 to be prestressed counter to a first opening pressure. This has the consequence that the piston 4a is only lifted off above a certain pressure. When the piston 4 is lifted off or the piston 4a is moved toward the spring 5, the smaller restrictor bore 9 is active initially. Only when the pressure is increased further is the large restrictor bore 10 active. The restrictor bores 9, 10 are active here in a known manner when the control and sealing edges 11 are reached.
As can be seen from
In the exemplary embodiment shown, there may be provision for the spring 5 to be prestressed counter to an opening pressure of 3 bar. If a pressure greater than 3 bar occurs, for example 4 or 5 bar, the piston 4a travels a longer distance in comparison with the previously known cutoff valves. As a result, the cross sections are opened more quickly and to a greater extent, as a result of which the dynamic pressure peaks are correspondingly reduced. Although small pressure peaks, for example below 3 bar, cannot be absorbed using the solution according to the invention on account of the prestressing of the spring 5, it has been discovered in experiments that the pressure peaks which cause the susceptibility to jolting lie mainly in the region from 5 to 10 bar, in particular in the region from 6 to 7 bar, in which it is advantageously possible to reduce pressure peaks by means of the piston 4a shown in
In order to implement the solution shown in
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101 31 077 | Jun 2001 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040123730 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP02/06118 | Jun 2002 | US |
Child | 10731944 | US |