This application is a National Stage completion of PCT/EP2009/062611 filed Sep. 29, 2009, which claims priority from German patent application serial no. 10 2008 042 597.4 filed Oct. 2, 2008.
The present invention relates to a propeller drive assembly for steering and driving a ship.
So-called pod drives for ships are known. Such drives are propeller drive assemblies for steering and driving a ship, which comprise a streamlined pod, for instance, as the control housing, which can be rotated or swivelled about a vertical axis to steer the ship. The propeller drive assembly comprises a transmission which is coupled to an engine via a drive shaft. Both the transmission and the engine are disposed in the hull. The control housing comprising a propeller is located in the water, however, i.e., outside of the hull. In order to cool the common lubricant circuit in the transmission housing and in the control housing, an external heat exchanger disposed in the saltwater circuit of the engine, which also cools the engine coolant, is used in known propeller drive assemblies.
Furthermore, an outboard drive unit for a ship is known from published patent U.S. Pat. No. 7,118,434 B2. The outboard drive unit comprises an underwater housing in which two propeller shafts for driving two propellers are mounted. Each propeller shaft is driven in the underwater housing by a bevel gearing. The underwater housing is rigidly held, at an opening in the hull, for connection to a transmission housing. The transmission housing is disposed in the hull and is driven by a drive motor which is likewise disposed in the hull. A common oil reservoir is provided, outside of the two housings, for cooling the common oil circuit of the transmission housing and the underwater housing.
If the control housing of the known propeller drive assembly or the underwater housing of the known outboard drive unit are damaged in a collision, for example, such that leakage occurs, all of the oil may leak out of the common lubricant circuit into the water. This is particularly disadvantageous and absolutely must be avoided.
The problem addressed by the present invention is, therefore, that of providing a propeller drive assembly of the initially described type, which is designed to ensure that not all of the lubricant will be lost if a leak occurs.
The problem addressed by the invention can be solved by a propeller drive assembly, for steering and driving a ship, having at least one drive motor and at least one transmission housing in a hull, and at least one control housing outside of the hull comprising at least one propeller on a driven shaft, wherein the control housing is pivotably disposed via a steering shaft on the transmission housing for steering the ship, and wherein a transmission output shaft is coupled to the driven shaft. According to the invention, separate lubricant circuits are provided for the transmission housing and the control housing.
The mutually sealed, independent lubricant circuits ensure that increased safety requirements are met with the propeller drive assembly, according to the invention, since only a small quantity of lubricant can escape if a collision occurs.
To achieve the mutual sealing of the two lubricant circuits of the housing, according to a possible variant embodiment, it is possible to seal the sealing points between the transmission housing and the control housing accordingly. Potential sealing points are the regions of the shaft passages of the transmission output shaft and the steering shaft. It is therefore possible to use at least one sealing element in each of these regions. Any suitable element, that reliably prevents lubricant or oil from escaping from one lubricant circuit and entering the other lubricant circuit, can be used as the sealing element.
Preferably the shaft passage can be sealed at the transmission output shaft using at least one radial shaft seal or the like. In that particular case, a type of radial shaft seal that is adapted to the installation situation can be selected from among the various available designs thereof, depending on the embodiment of the transmission output shaft and the surrounding components.
It is feasible, for example, to use a radial shaft seal having a sealing ring composed of metal or the like, for instance, on which at least one sealing lip or the like is disposed. In this type of radial shaft seal, the sealing ring can be connected to the steering shaft in the region of the shaft passage of the transmission output shaft, and the at least one sealing lip of the radial shaft seal can rest on a receiving element or the like enclosing at least a portion of the transmission output shaft. The shaft passages designed as radial gap between the steering shaft and the transmission output shaft or the vertical shaft of the transmission are therefore sealed, and so lubricant is prevented from escaping from the transmission housing along the transmission output shaft, into the control gearcase, and from there into the environment.
Depending on the embodiment of the transmission housing and the transmission output shaft mounted therein, it is also possible for at least one sealing lip of the radial shaft seal to rest directly on the transmission output shaft, for example. This is the case, in particular, when there is no receiving element for the transmission output shaft disposed in the region of the shaft passage. A plurality of sealing lips may also be used, in which case one rests on the receiving element and one rests on the transmission output shaft. Other structural embodiments are also feasible.
A further sealing point exists in the region of the shaft passage of the steering shaft between the transmission housing and the control housing, for example. This region must also be sealed accordingly. If the steering shaft is designed as a hollow shaft, for example, the steering shaft can be fixedly connected to an adapter plate or the like, for example. The adapter plate is fixedly connected to the control housing, and is rotatably mounted on the transmission housing. In this manner, the control housing can be accordingly rotated or swivelled, via the steering shaft, in order to steer the ship. In this embodiment, the sealing points must be sealed in the region of the shaft passages of the steering shaft. In that particular case, a sealing point exists between the adapter plate and the steering shaft, and another sealing point exists between the adapter plate and the transmission housing.
Since the connection between the steering shaft and the adapter plate is a fixed connection, preferably at least one O-ring seal, or the like, can be used according to a possible development of the invention. The connection between the adapter plate and the transmission housing is a rotatable connection, and so preferably a rectangular-section ring or the like, for example, is used here. Other seals that perform the relevant sealing function may also be used.
Further sealing points may need to be sealed, under certain circumstances, depending on the embodiment of the sealing region between the transmission housing and the control housing.
Within the scope of the present invention, a plurality of propeller drive assemblies, according to the invention, may also be disposed together in one ship for the driving and steering thereof.
The present invention will be explained in greater detail below with reference to the drawings. In the drawings:
The drive motor 2 and the transmission housing 4 are disposed in the hull, i.e., outside of the water. The control housing 7 comprising the propeller 8 is disposed below the hull, i.e., in the water.
The transmission input shaft is connected to the drive shaft 3 of the drive motor 2, which is not depicted further in
The control housing 7 is connected, via an adapter plate 11, to the steering shaft 10 designed as a hollow shaft, and therefore the control housing 7 is rotated or swivelled about the vertical axis with the steering shaft 10 when a steering motion is carried out, via the control transmission, to implement a desired steering motion of the ship 1.
According to the invention, the lubricant channel in the transmission housing 4 and the lubricant channel in the control housing 7 are separated from each other in the proposed propeller drive assembly. Oil is preferably used as lubricant. It is thereby ensured that all of the lubricant or oil will not escape from the housing if a leak occurs in one of the housings in the event of a collision.
To seal the two lubricant circuits with respect to one another (i.e., form a lubricant tight seal), at least one first sealing element 12 must be provided in the region of the shaft passage of the transmission output shaft 5 and at least one second sealing element 14 must be provided in the region of the shaft passages of the steering shaft 10.
As shown in
Preferably a metal sealing ring can be used as radial shaft seal 12, on which at least one sealing lip made of plastic, for example, is provided. The sealing ring is preferably fastened to the inner diameter of the steering shaft 10, and therefore the sealing lip preferably rests on a receiving element 13 which encloses at least a portion of the transmission output shaft 5. The sealing lip can also rest directly on the transmission output shaft 5. As shown in
At least one O-ring seal 14 is used as the second sealing element, between the outer circumference of the steering shaft 10 and the adapter plate 11, to seal the region of the shaft passages of the steering shaft 10. Lubricant is thereby prevented from entering the sealing gap between the fixed connection of the steering shaft 10 and the adapter plate 11.
Moreover, two rectangular-section ring seals 15,16 are provided, between the adapter plate 11 and the transmission housing 4, to seal the region of the shaft passages of the steering shaft 10. Other geometric shapes of the seals are also possible. The rotatable connection, between the adapter housing 11 and the control housing 7 and between the adapter housing 11 and the transmission housing 4, is established in this manner.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2008 042 597 | Oct 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2009/062611 | 9/29/2009 | WO | 00 | 3/25/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/037742 | 4/8/2010 | WO | A |
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3486478 | Halliday | Dec 1969 | A |
3896757 | Kucher | Jul 1975 | A |
3901177 | Scott | Aug 1975 | A |
3931783 | Croisant | Jan 1976 | A |
4650430 | Schiek | Mar 1987 | A |
5125858 | Salvetti | Jun 1992 | A |
5435762 | Reuter | Jul 1995 | A |
6394861 | Kolb et al. | May 2002 | B1 |
7118432 | Katayama | Oct 2006 | B2 |
20040203300 | Takahashi | Oct 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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858 771 | Jul 1949 | DE |
12 116 | Oct 1956 | DE |
1 027 042 | Mar 1958 | DE |
1 581 012 | Oct 1970 | DE |
20 2009 009 031 | Nov 2009 | DE |
983 462 | Feb 1965 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110177730 A1 | Jul 2011 | US |