The invention relates to a rotary actuator comprising a first rotatable part, having a control surface with an undulating or sawtooth profile, and a fixed second part, having at least one detent element running on the control surface.
Rotary actuators of this kind are used in motor vehicles, for example, and are used to control different functions, which are indicated on a display, for example. They can be used to control different systems in the motor vehicle, such as a navigation system, an integrated telephone, an infotainment system and the like, and also to control or choose individual functions within the systems. A rotary actuator of this kind often also has a selecting function, being capable of axial actuation to select a desired function, thus having an axial switching function. However, the use of a latched rotary actuator of this kind is not restricted exclusively to the motor vehicle sector; on the contrary, a latched incremental rotary actuator of this kind can, of course, also be employed on any other equipment.
In order to provide the large number of functions and settings of many different kinds by means of the rotary actuator in a way which is recognizable for the user, it is necessary to provide unambiguous feedback in the form of haptic and acoustic feedback by means of the movement of the rotary actuator alone, thus ensuring that, as the rotary actuator is moved, the user “experiences” each individual movement from one latched position into the next both haptically and acoustically. For this purpose, the rotary actuator has a first rotatable part, which the user actively moves, which has a control surface with an undulating or sawtooth profile. This surface interacts with a detent element running on the control surface, which is provided on a fixed second part, relative to which the first part is moved. On known rotary actuators, the detent element is generally designed as a leaf spring component with a detent nose facing the control surface, the usual practice being to provide two detent elements of this kind, generally arranged offset by 180°, which are either fixed without play or mounted with a slight play. As the rotatable part is turned, the detent nose of the detent element runs up the control surface and is moved out of the detent receptacle by means of the control surface projection. As it is turned further, the detent nose reaches the tooth head of the control surface. If it is turned further once again, the detent nose of the spring fixed without play slides down the opposite tooth flank and enters the detent receptacle without the occurrence of a jump. However, if the detent nose of a spring subject to play reaches the tooth head and passes beyond it, it is displaced abruptly into the detent receptacle of the control surface and strikes against the opposite stop or opposite tooth flank, and there is a clicking noise. In the case of detent elements fixed without play, however, the clicking noise, in particular the intensity thereof, is dependent on the speed of operation. If the user turns the first part very slowly, there is as it were a “damped” slow sliding motion of the detent element into the latched position and consequently a slight clicking noise, in contrast with a rapid rotation, in which case the detent nose snaps very quickly and heavily into the detent receptacle. In the case of detent elements of this kind, which are guided without play, the acoustic behavior is therefore not constant irrespective of the rotation of the first part. On the other hand, a very slight rotational play in the notch is achieved. When the detent elements are mounted in a manner subject to play, acoustics independent of the speed of operation and hence more constant acoustic behavior are produced, but the rotational play in the notch increases, thereby impairing the haptic properties. This is because the snap action, in particular, contributes to the haptics and, as described, said snap action is ultimately dependent on the speed of operation. That is to say that both the haptics and the acoustics vary depending on the mounting of the detent elements and the speed of operation and that therefore a constant level of convenience of operation and uniform feedback to the user are not achieved.
The problem underlying the invention is therefore to achieve an improvement in the haptic and acoustic behavior of a rotary actuator of the type stated at the outset.
To solve this problem, provision is made in a rotary actuator according to the invention, in accordance with a first alternative of the invention, for the detent element to be accommodated, in a manner which allows movement against a restoring force, in an aperture which tapers in a V shape towards the first part, the detent element being accommodated with play between the side walls bounding the aperture, wherein the detent element interacts with the radially oriented control surface in such a way that, as it runs up a projection on the control surface as a result of the movement of the first part, it is moved against one side wall and, upon passing beyond the projection, strikes against the other side wall owing to the restoring force.
In the rotary actuator according to the invention, it is possible, on the one hand, for the detent element to be moved in the aperture relative to the control surface against a restoring force, i.e. it can be moved into the aperture over a control surface tooth against the restoring force. On the other hand, the detent element is also accommodated with lateral play in the aperture. The aperture itself is bounded by two side walls, which taper in a V shape towards one another, i.e. the aperture tapers in the direction of the control surface. The detent element, e.g. a ball or a roller, can therefore move between the two side walls. The aperture is situated directly adjacent to the control surface, i.e. the side walls bounding the aperture end as close as possible to the control surface.
When the first part is turned in operation, the detent element, which was previously accommodated in the detent receptacle, preferably positively, runs up the tooth flank of the next control surface tooth in the direction of rotation and, at the same time, is pressed against one oblique side wall and, owing to the fact that it runs up the control surface tooth along this lateral surface, is pressed into the aperture. When the uppermost point of the tooth head is passed, the detent element is as it were released and, owing to the restoring force, which urges it continuously against the control surface, it snaps against the opposite side wall more or less counter to the direction of rotation since the control surface tooth has been moved onwards relative to the aperture to such an extent that the subsequent detent aperture is already in the region below the aperture. There is therefore an abrupt change in contact from one side wall to the opposite side wall. This snap or bump action then produces a characteristic noise, which is perceived by the user and indicates to the latter that he has reached the next detent aperture.
In the rotary actuator according to the invention, the V shaped aperture thus produces an acoustic noise which is independent of the manner of operation since the snap action, i.e. the noise-producing change in contact from one side wall to the opposite side wall is ultimately dependent only on position, i.e. on the specific position of the respective control surface tooth which moves the detent element, not on the speed of operation. Equally independent of the speed of operation is the haptic behavior too, since the user receives direct feedback as to when the change in contact occurs, i.e. when the snapover occurs. Whereas the intensity of noise generation can be adjusted by means of the mass of the detent element, the material thereof, the restoring force applied and the flank angle of the V-shaped side walls of the aperture, the haptics can be adjusted by means of the shape of the control surface and of the detent element. In the case of the rotary actuator according to the invention too, only one such detent element is required, even if it is, of course, also possible to provide two such detent elements, for example.
As described, the detent element itself can be a ball or a roller. It is therefore a component of simple geometry which does not require any special production method and has low manufacturing tolerances, thereby making it possible to reduce the scatter in the haptic behavior, i.e. to ensure that all the rotary actuators according to the invention have more or less the same haptic behavior.
A spring element, in particular a helical or leaf spring, is expediently provided to produce the restoring force, urging the detent element continuously against the control surface. However, the spring element itself is mounted in such a way or has a bearing surface for the detent element such that the detent element can snap over from one side wall to the other in the manner according to the invention.
According to the invention, a second alternative solution according to the invention in the case of a rotary actuator of the type stated at the outset envisages that the detent element is fixed in position and interacts with an axially oriented control surface of the first part, which can be moved axially against a restoring force, wherein the first part engages with radial play in a recess by means of an axially aligned peg, wherein the peg has a frustoconical shape and the recess has a shape substantially complementary to the latter, with the result that, as the peg runs up a projection of the control surface as a result of a movement of the first part, said peg is raised while resting against the wall surface of the recess and, upon passing the projection, snaps back owing to the restoring force and strikes against the opposite wall surface.
While the above-described first alternative of the invention describes a rotary actuator construction having a radially oriented control surface, the second solution according to the invention specifies a rotary actuator construction having an axially oriented control surface. In this embodiment, the detent element is fixed in position, i.e. it is itself not moved, unlike in the first embodiment. On the contrary, the first part is moved by means of the axially oriented control surface, which can both be rotated about the pivot and moved axially against a restoring force. This is the case when a control surface tooth runs up the detent element. The first part is arranged on a pin-shaped rotary part, which forms the pivot, in such a way that it can be moved axially against the restoring force. When the rotary part is rotated, it is taken along and is thus moved relative to the fixed detent element. For this purpose, the first part engages by means of a peg in a recess on the rotary part, the peg being accommodated with radial play in the recess, that is to say it can be moved laterally somewhat, there being, of course, also axial mobility, in order to enable the first part to be raised and lowered. Once again, the characteristic feature of this embodiment of the invention is the shaping in the region of the recess and of the peg itself. The peg has a frustoconical shape and the recess has a shape complementary to the latter.
During operation, the control surface tooth runs up the detent element when there is a rotation of the first part brought about by rotation of the rotary part, starting from engagement of the detent element in a detent receptacle of the control surface, which engagement is preferably positive in this case too. Since said detent element is fixed, the first part is consequently raised and simultaneously rotated and is therefore moved axially along the pin-shaped rotary part against the restoring force. During this process, the bearing journal is necessarily also raised in the bearing recess and, during this raising motion, it rests against the wall surface of the bearing recess owing to the radial play. If the control surface tooth head then passes beyond the detent element, the first part is as it were “released” here. There is a more or less abrupt snapping in of the first part or of the detent recess of the control surface thereof on the detent element since the restoring force that has been built up urges it into this positive latched position. Associated with this is an abrupt change in the contact of the peg with the wall surface of the recess, that is to say that the peg snaps from one wall side to the opposite wall side and strikes against the latter. There is a surface-to-surface impact since the respective surface gradients are substantially the same.
In this embodiment of the invention too, there is defined noise generation since the peg always strikes against the wall of the recess owing to the snapping in of the detent recess of the control surface on the detent element, that is to say owing to the jump in the angle of rotation produced by the restoring force. An unambiguous haptic feedback is also given by virtue of this jump in the angle of rotation owing to the restoring force after the tooth head has been passed. The level of excitation can be adjusted by means of the mass of the detent disk, the material thereof and the flank angle of the surfaces striking against one another.
Here too, the detent element is a ball or a roller retained at a receptacle provided on the second part, for example, that is to say it is once again an easily produced component of simple geometry, although, if required, it is, of course, also possible for the second part itself to have a corresponding arched projection which forms the detent element, eliminating the need to install a separate detent element component.
To produce the restoring force, it is expedient to provide a spring element in this case too, in particular a helical spring or leaf spring through which a pivot of the first part passes. Since, as described, the first part in this embodiment of the invention is moved axially against a restoring force, a symmetrical construction is expedient since use is preferably made of a helical spring through which a pivot-forming peg of the first part passes.
In both embodiments according to the invention, it is fundamentally expedient if the detent element engages positively in a detent receptacle of the control surface. It is thereby possible to minimize the rotational play in the latched position to particular advantage.
Further advantages, features and details of the invention will emerge from the illustrative embodiments described below and with reference to the drawing, in which:
Assigned to the first part 2 is a fixed second part 8, which has an aperture 9, in which a detent element 10, in this case a ball, is accommodated against a restoring force 11 (indicated by the arrow) provided by a spring element (not shown specifically). The detent element 10 can move within the aperture 9, i.e. can be pushed deeper into the aperture, and is urged continuously in the direction of the radially oriented control surface 5 by the restoring force 11.
The aperture 9 is bounded laterally by two side walls 12, 13, which taper towards one another in the direction of the control surface 5, with the result therefore that the side wall spacing tapers towards the control surface 5. Thus, the aperture has a V shape. The detent element 10 can be moved sideways within the aperture, i.e. is accommodated with play between the side walls 12, 13.
In the initial position (
If, starting from the starting position shown in
As
In the case of rotations in the opposite direction, the same process takes place, except that the detent element 10 is moved and raised against side wall 13 by the respective tooth up which it runs, and, when it passes beyond the tooth head, it then snaps against side wall 12.
A detent element 10, in this case once again a ball, is accommodated in a fixed position on the second part 8 in a recess (not shown specifically here), that is to say that—unlike the embodiment shown in FIGS. 1-3—the ball does not move, it being the first part 2 which is moved in this rotary actuator 1. In this embodiment shown in
A shoulder 19 of larger diameter, which provides rotary support, is provided on the rotary part 3. The rotary part 3 is thus rotatably mounted. To enable the cam disk 4 that can move axially on the latter to be taken along during rotation, a peg 20 is formed on the underside of the cam disk 4, engaging in a recess 21 on the shoulder 19. A kind of dog clutch is thereby formed. The peg 20 has a frustoconical shape. The recess 21 has a shape complementary thereto. The peg 20 is accommodated with lateral play in the recess 21 and can therefore be moved to the side in the latter, resulting in a slight capacity for rotary motion by the first part 2, i.e. the cam disk 4, about the rotary part 3.
The mode of operation of this rotary actuator 1 can be seen from
As rotation continues, the tooth flank 14 runs further and further up the fixed detent element 10, until the tooth head, i.e. the tooth tip, rests on the detent element 10. An incremental onward motion then leads to an abrupt jump in the angle of rotation of the cam disk 4, which can move by a certain amount in the direction of rotation owing to the accommodation with play of the peg 20 in the recess 23. During this abrupt snap motion, there is a change in the contact of the peg 20 in the recess 21. It jumps from one wall side 22 of the recess to the opposite wall side 23. Due to the surface-to-surface impact with this wall surface 23, a clicking noise is produced. Depending on how great the mobility is, the cam disk 4 jumps at least partially into the next detent recess 7.
Here too, therefore, the noise is produced by the free mobility of the noise-producing elements. Whereas, in the first alternative of the invention, this was the detent element 10, which can move in the aperture 8, in the second alternative of the invention it is the peg 20, which can move in the recess 21, or the movable control cam 4. In the second embodiment too, an unambiguous haptic response can be experienced by the user since the action of snapping over the tooth head is associated with a haptically discernible change in the mobility of the rotary actuator 1.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2010 007 913.8 | Feb 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/007936 | 12/23/2010 | WO | 00 | 8/9/2012 |