Information
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Patent Grant
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6270385
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Patent Number
6,270,385
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Date Filed
Tuesday, September 7, 199925 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, August 7, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
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CPC
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US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 440 38
- 440 47
- 440 67
- 440 70
- 440 71
- 060 221
- 060 222
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
A pump jet having a perforated wear liner inside the rotor housing for altering the spectrum of noise produced by the pump jet. The perforated wear liner is inserted in a circumferential recess formed on the inner surface of the rotor housing and surrounds the rotor tip region. The throughholes or perforations are preferably constant in size and regularly spaced. The perforated wear liner acts as a Helmholtz resonator liner which alters the spectrum of noise emitted from the pump jet during operation. Proper selection of the size, number and spacing of the holes permits the designer to control the specific noise spectrum range that is emitted from the front and rear lobes of the pump jet, thereby altering the hydrodynamic noise field.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention generally relates to pump jets used with outboard motors or in inboard/outboard or stern drive units of boats and other vehicles. In particular, the invention relates to means and methods for reducing noise produced by an operating pump jet.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In one type of conventional outboard motor, a propeller is driven by a powerhead to propel a boat through water. Most large outboard motors of this type inject the exhaust gas stream under water in order to reduce engine noise.
In a typical configuration shown in
FIG. 1
, the gas exhausted from the powerhead
10
flows downwardly through an exhaust channel
12
and exits the motor rearwardly through the propeller
14
. This type of motor is referred to as an exhaust-through-hub (ETH) motor.
A boat powered by an outboard motor equipped with a conventional open propellor generates a unique noise signature which is characterized by a three-dimensional noise field similar in shape to an ice cream cone lying on its side. The size of the noise field is determined by the propeller size, the number of propellor blades, the rotational speed of the engine. etc.
For many applications, the capability to restrict the size of the emitted noise field, as well as change its spectral intensity over the field of interest (e.g., audible near-field alteration), is desirable. A shroud or propeller guard can be used to achieve part of the noise field reduction, but installation of a shroud or propeller guard is accompanied by a loss in performance of the propulsion system.
Another type of conventional outboard motor has an axial-flow pump jet system driven by the powerhead. In a pump jet system, an impeller or rotor is mounted (e.g., spline fitted) directly on the propeller output shaft in place of the propeller. There are typically no modifications to the drive train, cooling or sealing components. A ducted housing surrounds the rotor. Such a system has the advantages of reducing hazards to swimmers in the vicinity of the motor, protecting the rotating elements from interference with and damage by foreign objects in the water, and improving the efficiency and performance of the propulsion system. Another benefit inherent with the pump jet is a directed jet of water that results in greater steering response. More pertinent to the present invention, the pump jet propulsor, with its high-efficiency shrouded design, alters the radial noise field and provides an opportunity to also alter the noise spectrum.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention has application in pump jets of the type having a rotor assembly surrounded by a housing. In one conventional type of jet pump apparatus, the housing comprises a rotor housing connected to a stator housing, the former surrounding the rotor and the latter being downstream of the rotor. The rotor is driven by the powerhead via a drive train. Rotation of the rotor impels ambient water from the housing inlet to the housing outlet.
Due to manufacturing tolerances, during rotation the rotor can wobble on the propeller shaft, causing the tips of the rotor blades to contact the opposing surrounding surface, thereby causing that surface to wear. If the inner circumferential surface of the rotor housing were placed in close surrounding relationship to the rotor, without an intervening member, then that rotor housing surface would experience wear. If that wear were allowed to continue indefinitely, replacement of the worn rotor housing could become necessary.
A conventional solution to this problem is to make a circumferential recess in the rotor housing at a position opposing the rotor blade tips and then to install a replaceable, i.e., sacrificial, circular cylindrical wear liner in that recess. Consequently, wear caused by the wobbling rotor will occur on the inner circumferential surface of the wear liner. When the damage to the wear liner reaches an unacceptable level, the wear liner can then be replaced without the necessity of replacing the rotor housing.
In accordance with the present invention the wear liner inside the rotor housing is modified in order to alter the spectrum of noise produced by the pump jet. In the preferred embodiment, a replaceable wear liner in the form of a perforated sleeve is inserted in a circumferential recess formed on the inner surface of the rotor housing. The perforated wear liner surrounds the rotor tip region and has a multiplicity of small, preferably circular throughholes.
In accordance with the preferred embodiment of the invention, the throughholes or perforations are constant in size and regularly spaced. The holes may be drilled, punched or otherwise formed. Preferably, the perforated wear liner is a circular cylindrical continuous ring or rolled strip. In surrounding relationship to the tips of the rotor blades, the perforated wear liner acts as a Helmholtz resonator liner which alters the spectrum of noise emitted from the pump jet during operation. Proper selection of the size, number and spacing of the holes permits the designer to control the specific noise spectrum range that is emitted from the front and rear lobes of the pump jet, thereby altering the hydrodynamic noise field.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a schematic view of a prior art ETH motor with a propeller.
FIG. 2
is a partial sectional view of a conventional ETV pump jet having exhaust streams discharged through at least two stator vanes.
FIG. 3
is a side elevational view showing the manner of attachment of the pump jet of
FIG. 2
to an outboard motor.
FIG. 4
is a partial sectional view of portions of a pump jet of the type shown in
FIG. 2
, having a replaceable wear liner in an inner circumferential groove formed in the rotor housing.
FIG. 5
is a partial sectional view of a rotor housing and wear liner arrangement in accordance with the preferred embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 6
is an isometric view of the rotor housing and wear liner arrangement depicted in FIG.
5
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
An outboard motor having a pump jet
16
of the ETV type is shown in FIG.
2
. The pump jet includes a rotor comprising a plurality of blades
18
extending radially outward from an outer rotor hub
20
. The outer rotor hub
20
is securely mounted on an inner rotor hub
22
. The rotor and inner rotor hub are assembled prior to installation. During pump jet installation, this one-piece rotor assembly is inserted onto one end of a propeller shaft
24
and secured to the shaft by a nut
26
. The other end of the propeller shaft is rotatably mounted in a bearing (not shown) which is housed in propeller shaft bearing housing
25
. Inner rotor hub
22
is connected to outer rotor hub
20
by means of radial struts, which are not visible in the partially sectional view of FIG.
2
.
In conventional fashion, the powerhead
10
drives the propeller shaft
24
to rotate via a drive shaft and gears, neither of which are shown in FIG.
2
. The drive shaft extends inside the lower housing unit
28
, while the gears are arranged inside the gear case
30
. Rotation of the propeller shaft in turn causes the rotor assembly to rotate. During rotation in forward gear, the angled blades
18
of the rotor impel water axially rearward to produce a forward thrust. In reverse gear, a reverse thrust is produced.
The rotor assembly is surrounded by a non-rotating rotor housing
32
. The rotor housing
32
is part of a one-piece rotor housing assembly, which also comprises a plurality of inlet vanes
34
and an inlet vane hub
36
. Each inlet vane
34
is joined at one end to the inlet vane hub
36
and at the other end to the rotor housing
32
. The inlet vanes direct water flow into the blades
18
of the rotor. The inlet vanes also block debris, sea creatures or human limbs from contacting the rotating blades of the rotor.
During pump jet installation, the rotor housing assembly is installed prior to installation of the rotor assembly. The inlet vane hub
36
is inserted into the downstream end of the gear case
30
. Referring to
FIG. 3
, the rotor housing assembly is joined to an anti-cavitation plate
38
by means of an upper bracket
40
and is joined to skeg
42
by means of a clamp
44
. Screw
45
squeezes the clamp
44
onto the skeg
42
. Screws
46
secure the clamp
44
to the rotor housing
32
. Screws
48
and bolts
50
attach the upper bracket
40
to the anti-cavitation plate
38
.
Referring again to
FIG. 2
, the rotor housing
32
, which has an inlet
33
for the intake of water, forms the upstream portion of the shroud which fully encloses the pump jet. The rearward portion of the shroud comprises a stator housing
52
which has an outlet
53
for the water propelled rearward by the rotor blades
18
. The stator housing
52
has an upstream edge which form fits with the downstream edge of the rotor housing
32
. Installation of a pump jet involves three steps: (1) attach the rotor housing to the anti-cavitation plate and skeg; (2) install the rotor on the propellor shaft; and (3) attach the stator housing to the rotor housing by means of screws (not shown in FIG.
2
). The stator housing
52
has a generally conical portion which decreases in internal diameter in the downstream direction. The minimum internal diameter of stator housing
52
is preferably located at the outlet
53
.
The stator housing
52
is part of a one-piece stator housing assembly, which also comprises a plurality of stator vanes
54
and a stator hub
56
. Each stator vane
54
is joined at one end to the stator hub
56
and at the other end to the stator housing
52
. The stator vanes convert rotational energy imparted to the water flow by the rotor blades into axial flow energy at the outlet of the stator housing
52
. One or more of the stator vanes
54
is hollow. Similarly, an internal cavity in the stator hub
56
forms a plenum cavity
58
, which is in flow communication with each hollow stator vane. Nut
26
extends into plenum cavity
58
in stator hub
56
.
The exhaust gas from the powerhead
10
flows downwardly through an exhaust channel
60
. The lower end of the exhaust channel
60
is in flow communication with a hub exhaust channel
62
which channels the exhaust stream rearward through the hub. The hub exhaust channel
62
is an annular space, which is bounded internally by the propeller shaft bearing housing
25
and the inner rotor hub
22
, and externally by the wall of the gear case
30
, the inlet vane hub
36
and the outer rotor hub
20
. The exhaust stream flows from the hub exhaust channel
62
to the plenum cavity
58
in stator hub
56
, and then into the hollow stator vanes
54
which communicate with the plenum cavity. Preferably at least a portion of the stator hub
56
is conical in shape. The exhaust stream in each hollow stator vane flows the length of the stator vane and discharges from a respective exhaust port
64
into the water stream surrounding the stator housing
52
.
As shown in
FIG. 4
, in one conventional pump jet apparatus the rotor housing
32
surrounds the rotor blades
18
and is separated therefrom by a wear liner
66
. The gap separating the wear liner
66
and the tips of the rotor blades is exaggerated in the drawing for the sake of clarity. The typical wear liner is a circular cylindrical ring or sleeve seated in a circumferential recess machined in the inner circumferential surface of rotor housing
32
. The inner diameter of the wear liner
66
is only slightly greater than the diameter of the circle defined by the blade tips during rotor rotation. Due to manufacturing tolerances, during rotation the rotor can wobble on the propeller shaft
24
(see FIG.
2
). As the rotor wobbles on the propellor shaft, the tips of the rotor blades
18
(see
FIG. 4
) can contact the inner circumferential surface of the wear liner
66
, causing that surface to wear. When the damage to the wear liner reaches an unacceptable level, the wear liner can be replaced without the necessity of replacing the rotor housing.
In accordance with the preferred embodiment of the invention shown in
FIGS. 5 and 6
, a wear liner
66
′ is provided with a multiplicity of small, preferably circular throughholes or perforations
68
which are constant in size and regularly spaced. The perforations
68
are distributed around the circumference of the wear liner and across the length of the wear liner, each perforation having a central axis coaxial with a respective radial line intersecting the central axis
70
of the rotor assembly. The holes may be drilled, punched or otherwise formed. The perforated wear liner
66
′ acts as a Helmholtz resonator liner which alters the spectrum of noise emitted from the pump jet during operation. Proper selection of the size, number and spacing of the holes permits the designer to control the specific noise spectrum range that is emitted from the front and rear lobes of the pump jet, thereby altering the hydrodynamic noise field.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the hydrodynamic noise field of a pump jet apparatus can be altered by substituting a perforated wear liner for an unperforated wear liner, i.e., by retrofitting the pump jet apparatus with a perforated liner. This is easily accomplished by removing the stator housing
52
from the rotor housing
32
(see
FIG. 2
) by unscrewing the set of screws which couple the housings; removing the unperforated wear liner
66
by sliding it rearwardly out of the recess in the rotor housing (see FIG.
4
); and then inserting a perforated wear liner
66
′ by sliding it forwardly into the recess in the rotor housing (see FIG.
5
). Alternatively, the unperforated wear liner can be removed, perforated, e.g., by machining, and then reinstalled in the rotor housing.
In accordance with a further aspect of the invention, interchangeable perforated wear liners corresponding to different noise spectrum ranges can be provided. The different noise spectrum ranges can be achieved by varying one or more of the size, number and spacing of the perforations for different wear liners. A wear liner having a first effect on the noise spectrum range can be replaced by a different wear liner having a second effect on the noise spectrum range of the pump jet.
The invention has application in both outboard drive units and inboard/outboard or stern drive units for watercraft and other vehicles. A propulsor of a stern drive unit is typically mounted to the stern or transom of a boat hull via a transom mount assembly or bracket. The shaft on which the pump jet rotor is mounted is driven to rotate by an engine mounted inside the boat via conventional gear assemblies mounted outside the boat.
While the invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In particular, it is not essential to practice of the invention that all of the perforations be the same size. For example, instead of providing perforations in the wear liner which are constant in size, two or more sets of perforations can be provided having different respective sizes, the perforations of different sizes, however, preferably being arranged in a regular pattern which is symmetric about the circumference of the wear liner. In addition, the hole spacing in the axial direction can be different than the hole spacing in the circumferential direction. Nor is the invention avoided by arranging the holes in a regular pattern of groups, with holes within a group separated by a first distance and with groups separated by a second distance different than the first distance. Many such variations are possible while still providing the equivalent function, namely, altering the spectrum of noise emitted from the pump jet. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
As used in the claims, the term “marine engine” includes both inboard and outboard motors.
Claims
- 1. A pump jet apparatus for a marine engine, comprising:a rotor assembly mounted on a rotatable shaft, said rotor assembly comprising a rotor hub coupled to said rotatable shaft and a plurality of rotor blades, each rotor blade being connected at one end to said rotor hub; a rotor housing surrounding said rotor assembly, having an inlet and an outlet, and comprising a circumferential recess surrounding said rotor blades; a ring-shaped wear liner installed in said circumferential recess and having a multiplicity of holes extending radially therethrough; a stator housing coupled to said rotor housing and having an inlet and an outlet for water flow, said inlet of said stator housing being in flow communication with said outlet of said rotor housing; and a stator hub positioned rearwardly of said rotor hub and inside said stator housing.
- 2. The pump jet apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein said holes are circular in shape.
- 3. The pump jet apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein said holes are constant in size.
- 4. The pump jet apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein said holes are regularly spaced.
- 5. A pump jet apparatus for a marine engine, comprising:a rotor assembly mounted on a rotatable shaft, said rotor assembly comprising a rotor hub coupled to said rotatable shaft and a plurality of rotor blades, each rotor blade being connected at one end to said rotor hub; a rotor housing surrounding said rotor assembly, having an inlet and an outlet; a ring installed between said rotor assembly and said rotor housing, said ring comprising means for altering a hydrodynamic noise field of said pump jet apparatus; a stator housing coupled to said rotor housing and having an inlet and an outlet for water flow, said inlet of said stator housing being in flow communication with said outlet of said rotor housing; and a stator hub positioned rearwardly of said rotor hub and inside said stator housing.
- 6. The pump jet apparatus as recited in claim 5, wherein said hydrodynamic noise field altering means comprise a multiplicity of openings in an inner circumferential surface of said ring.
- 7. The pump jet apparatus as recited in claim 6, wherein said openings are circular in shape.
- 8. The pump jet apparatus as recited in claim 6, wherein said openings are constant in size.
- 9. The pump jet apparatus as recited in claim 6, wherein said openings are regularly spaced.
- 10. A pump jet apparatus for a marine engine, comprising:a rotor assembly mounted on a rotatable shaft, said rotor assembly comprising a rotor hub coupled to said rotatable shaft and a plurality of rotor blades, each rotor blade being connected at one end to said rotor hub; and a housing surrounding said rotor assembly, having an inlet and an outlet for water flow, and comprising means for altering a hydrodynamic noise field of said pump jet apparatus, said hydrodynamic noise field altering means being arranged in surrounding relationship to said rotor assembly and comprising a multiplicity of recesses, each recess comprising a respective opening in an inner circumferential surface of said housing and not penetrating through to an outer circumferential surface of said housing.
- 11. The pump jet apparatus as recited in claim 10, wherein said housing is an assembly comprising a perforated ring-shaped liner and an unperforated outer shell surrounding said perforated ring-shaped liner.
- 12. A method for retrofitting a pump jet apparatus, comprising the steps of:uncoupling a stator housing from a rotor housing; removing an unperforated wear liner from a recess in said rotor housing; inserting a perforated wear liner in said recess in said rotor housing; and coupling said stator housing to said rotor housing.
- 13. A method for retrofitting a pump jet apparatus, comprising the steps of:uncoupling a stator housing from a rotor housing; removing an unperforated wear liner from a recess in said rotor housing; forming a multiplicity of perforations in said wear liner after said removing step; inserting said perforated wear liner in said recess in said rotor housing; and coupling said stator housing to said rotor housing.
- 14. An apparatus for propelling a watercraft, comprising:a rotatable shaft; a powerhead coupled to said shaft for driving rotation of said shaft; a rotor assembly mounted on said shaft, said rotor assembly comprising a rotor hub coupled to said rotatable shaft and a plurality of rotor blades, each rotor blade being connected at one end to said rotor hub; and a housing surrounding said rotor assembly, having an inlet and an outlet for water flow, and comprising means for altering a hydrodynamic noise field of said pump jet apparatus during rotation of said shaft, said hydrodynamic noise field altering means being arranged in surrounding relationship to said rotor assembly and comprising a multiplicity of recesses, each recess comprising a respective opening in an inner circumferential surface of said housing and not penetrating through to an outer circumferential surface of said housing.
- 15. The apparatus as recited in claim 14, wherein said housing is an assembly comprising a perforated ring-shaped liner and an unperforated outer shell surrounding said perforated ring-shaped liner.
- 16. The apparatus as recited in claim 14, wherein said openings are circular in shape.
- 17. The apparatus as recited in claim 14, wherein said openings are constant in size.
- 18. The apparatus as recited in claim 14, wherein said openings are regularly spaced.
US Referenced Citations (14)