1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a shade system for a motor vehicle roof with at least one first and one second shade arrangement which are arranged offset to one another in the lengthwise direction of the roof and each have a take-up shaft, a length of shade which proceeding from its one end can be taken up thereon, and a pull which acts on the free end of the length of shade, and at least one compressively stiff drive cable which is driven by a drive and which is securely coupled at a first point to the pull of the first shade arrangement.
2. Description of Related Art
If a shade system with two shade arrangements is to be driven by a drive system and the two shade arrangements have a different extension length, conventionally each shade arrangement is assigned a separate drive consisting of an electric motor-driven pinion and two pinion-driven drive cables which each act strongly on one of the two lateral ends of the pull. One alternative possibility would be to drive the two separate drive cable systems which encompass two drive cables at a time by means of a common motor and an intermediate gearwheel. In any case this shade system is rather complex due to use of four drive cables and two motors or one motor and one intermediate gearwheel.
A generic shade system is described in DE 197 50 715 C1, two drive cables being driven by a common pinion and on each of the two ends of each cable there being a driver. The two shade arrangements have a different extension length, one of the two drivers being securely connected to the pull of the shade with the greater extension length. The length of the drive cables is dimensioned such that when the shades arranged back to back are pulled out, first the shade with the longer extension length is pulled out a distance by means of the securely mounted driver before the two free drivers are placed against the pull of the shade with the shorter extension length, then the two shades being jointly extended up to their full length.
DE 103 27 352 A1 describes a drive system for a motor vehicle roof, one motor driving two pinions which for their part in turn again drive two drive cables.
DE 103 33 474 A1 discloses a drive system for a motor vehicle roof, a motor driving two drive cables which jointly drive a sliding cover of the vehicle roof and a shade located underneath the sliding cover opening.
The object of this invention is to devise a driven shade system for a motor vehicle roof with two shade arrangements which allows different extension lengths of the two shade arrangements in which the pulls when moved always engage the drive cable, and which still has a simple and economical structure.
This object is achieved as claimed in the invention by a shade system as claimed in claim 1. Here it is advantageous that by providing an automatic locking element for the detachable coupling of the drive cable which is coupled securely to the first shade arrangement to the second shade arrangement, the two shade arrangements even for a different extension length can be driven by the same drive cable. In this way it is possible to drive the shade system with only a single drive cable or for bilateral driving with two drive cables and in the case of motion to always have a secure connection of the pull to the drive cable. In this way an economical, compact construction with as few parts as possible which is also suited for shade systems with center-driven pull is implemented.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will become apparent from the dependent claims.
Examples of the invention are detailed below by way of example with reference to the attached drawings.
As claimed in
The two shade arrangements 10, 12 can be actuated in the opposite direction, i.e. for unwinding or unrolling the length of shade 18 and 20 the pulls 22 and 24 must be moved in the opposite direction. In the example shown in
The take-up shafts 14, 16 are pretensioned in the take-up direction, for example by means of a suitable spring arrangement.
The two pulls 22, 24 are movably guided each laterally in a roof-mounted guide (not shown) in the lengthwise direction of the roof.
To actuate the shade arrangements 10, 12 there is a common drive system which comprises two drive cables 26 and 28 and one electric motor 30 with a pinion 32 driven by the motor 30, the pinion 32 on its outer periphery engaging two drive cables 26, 28 in the conventional manner in order to drive them in the opposite direction.
The two drive cables 26, 28 are made compressively stiff and are movably guided in the corresponding cable guides (not shown). Each of the drive cables 26, 28 at a first point 34 and 36 is securely engaged to one of the lateral ends of the pull 24 of the rear shade arrangement 12 and at a second point 38 and 40 engages one of the two side ends of the pull 22 of the front shade arrangement 10. The first point 34 and 36 and the second point 38 and 40 are located on opposing ends of the respective drive cable 26 and 28, the pinion 32 acting in between. Each drive cable 26, 28 is deflected twice by 90° at a time, the two drive cables 26, 28 together forming a configuration which is U-shaped in a top view and the pinion 32 acting in the connecting area between the two “legs” of the U. In this configuration the respective first point 34 and 36 and the respective second point 38 and 40 move in the opposite direction, the respective first point 34 and 36 acting on the pull 24 on the side other than the respective second point 38 and 40 on the other pull 22.
In the example shown in
As shown in
The drive cable 28 is provided on one end with a sleeve which is made as an end cap 62 and which surrounds the drive cable and functionally forms the second point 40.
The manner of operation of the coupling element 52 is detailed with reference to
In
But as soon as the end cap 62 and with it the coupling element 52 and the extension arm 50 reach the end position of the extension arm 50 or of the pull 22, in which the length of shade 18 is completely taken up, the fixed coupling between the coupling element 52 and the drive cable 28 is released.
This takes place in that the link pin 60 of the ratchet 42 runs into the link slot 68 of a roof-mounted link 70 and is guided in it by a corresponding tilt of the link pin 60 such that the ratchet 42 is pivoted around the pivot bearing 56 with respect to the coupling element 52 such that the projection 58 disengages from the tip of the end cap 62 so that the end cap 62 comes free from the coupling element 52. A stop 72 in the link slot 68 for the link pin 60 ends the motion of the coupling element 52 and thus of the extension arm 50 or the pull 22, while the drive cable 28 can move further by the corresponding sliding guidance in the slideway elements 54. This continued motion of the drive cable 28 is therefore necessary because the other end of the drive cable 28 at the point 34 is coupled securely to the pull 24 of the front shade arrangement 12 which has a greater extension length than the length of shade 18 of the rear shade arrangement 10.
The decoupled position of the coupling element 52 is shown in
The link 70 is omitted in
The sequence in which the two shade arrangements 10 and 12 are wound up was described above. When the shade arrangements 10 and 12 are being unwound, the described sequence proceeds in the reverse direction, i.e. first only the length of shade 20 of the rear shade arrangement 12 is unwound by displacing the pull 24, the operating cable 28 in
But since the roof module 74 has a center bracket 78, a shade system which covers the entire width of the roof module cannot be used here, but each of the two shade arrangements 10 and 12 from
In the case of pulls driven on both sides as in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 020 335 | Apr 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2005/004207 | 4/20/2005 | WO | 00 | 10/26/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/102803 | 11/3/2005 | WO | A |
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4466656 | Igel | Aug 1984 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
195 27 746 | Jun 1996 | DE |
197 13 348 | Jul 1998 | DE |
197 50 715 | Nov 1998 | DE |
19750715 | Nov 1998 | DE |
10327352 | Jan 2004 | DE |
103 33 474 | Feb 2004 | DE |
1 129 871 | Sep 2001 | EP |
2786809 | Jun 2000 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070221339 A1 | Sep 2007 | US |