This invention relates to a rotary sprinkler and especially to a rotary sprinkler having a viscous brake retarding a rotatable water deflector and a rotatable water diffuser at different speeds of rotation.
A common form of rotary sprinkler includes a nozzle outputting a jet axially of the nozzle, and a rotor rotatably mounted with respect to the nozzle in alignment with the axial water jet and having a surface formation impinged by the water jet and effective to deflect the jet laterally of the nozzle and to rotate the rotor. Such rotary sprinklers, however, have a tendency to rotate at a high velocity, which decreases the effective range of the sprinkler. For this reason, such sprinklers have been provided with a retarding device or brake having a first surface rotatable with the rotor with respect to the nozzle, and a second surface with respect to the nozzle, and a viscous liquid between the two surfaces for retarding the rotation of the rotor. Sprinklers equipped with such retarding devices are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,660,766 and 4,796,811. In the sprinklers described in the above patents, the surface rotatable with the rotor with respect to the nozzle is in the form of a pin secured to the rotor, and the surface non-rotatable with respect to the nozzle is in the form of a cavity formed in a part of the rotary sprinkler fixed to the nozzle and containing the viscous liquid. U.S. Pat. No. 5,007,586 has a rotary sprinkler, a nozzle outputting a water jet axially thereof; a rotor rotatably mounted with respect to the nozzle in alignment with the axial jet and having a surface formation impinged by the axial jet to deflect the jet laterally of the nozzle and to rotate the rotor; and a retarding device having a first surface rotatable with the rotor with respect to the nozzle, and a second surface non-rotatable with respect to the nozzle, and a viscous liquid between the first and second surfaces.
A rotary sprinkler has a sprinkler body having a center axis and a nozzle attached to the sprinkler body for outputting a stream of water therefrom along the center axis. The sprinkler has a rotor rotatably attached to the sprinkler body and a rotatable water deflector rotatably attached to the rotor with a viscous fluid coupling and positioned in the stream of water exiting the nozzle. The water deflector has a surface shaped to deflect the water impinging thereupon from the nozzle to rotate the water deflector and the rotor. A water diffuser is attached to the rotor for rotation therewith and positioned to intermittently intersect the stream of water deflected by the water deflector so that a rotary sprinkler deflects water with a rotary water deflector into a rotating and slower moving water diffuser. The sprinkler rotor has a viscous fluid brake formed on one end thereof for retarding the rotational speed of the rotor and of the diffuser and water deflector rotatably attached thereto. The water deflector is rotatably attached to the rotor with a viscous fluid coupling to thereby rotate the rotor with the deflector while allowing slippage between the rotor and the deflector.
Other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the written description and the drawings in which:
The purpose of this invention is to create an irrigation sprinkler with two viscous brakes, one of which also forms a fluid coupling and rotates a water stream diffuser at a different rate of speed from a rotatable water deflector. The viscous brakes work in conjunction with each other to maintain a low RPM of the water deflector and to rotate a water stream diffuser at an even slower rate. The advantage of using a viscous brake or retarder is to keep the unit rotating at approximately 1 to 4 RPM which low RPM keeps the provider radius of the stream as large as possible with greater coverage over the area being sprinkled.
Referring to the drawings
A dual brake assembly 20 is mounted in the sprinkler and has a first viscous brake or retarder 21 and a second viscous brake 22, both of which are mounted to and form part of a central rotor 23. A first brake rotor portion 24 is attached to a central shaft 25 and is held in place by bearing 26 having an O-ring or other seal 27 around the shaft 25. The second viscous brake 22 has the rotary viscous brake portion 28 attached to the shaft 25 and is sealed with a bearing 30 and has an O-ring or other seal 31 around the shaft 25 to seal a viscous liquid between the brake rotor portion 28 and the surrounding portion of the sprinkler upper housing 32. Similarly, the bearing 26 seals in a viscous liquid around the brake portion 24 which holds the viscous liquid between the rotor portion 24 and the adjacent deflector portion 34 to form a braking or a viscous coupling between the rotary water deflector 15 and the rotor portion 24. The water deflector 15 rotates on the rotor portion 24 which rotation is retarded by the action of the viscous fluid. The deflection of the deflector 15 by the stream of water impinging thereupon rotates the deflector on the rotary brake portion 24 which in turn rotates the rotor 24 by the action of the fluid coupling. This in turn rotates the brake assembly 22 and rotates the rotor portion 28 against the viscous fluid to retard the rotation. Thus, the rotor 23 is turning at a slower speed than the deflector 15. As can be seen, one fluid brake 21 drives a second fluid brake 22 to retard the rotation of the water sprinkler.
The water diffuser 17 is attached to the rotor 23 shaft 25, as seen in
In operation, the water stream is first directed from the nozzle 12 to the deflector 15. The deflector 15 offsets the stream and angles it toward the area to be watered, such as agricultural plants. The offset stream applies a torsional force on the deflector 15 causing it to rotate. After the stream leaves the deflector 15, it is then interrupted intermittently by the diffuser 17 that is turning at a slower RPM than the deflector 15. The end result is a sprinkler that rotates slowly and breaks up the stream of water intermittently to create an even pattern of water on the area being watered without using mechanical parts such as ratchets or gearing. This is desirable for smooth operation and less chance of the operation being interrupted from contamination by dirt, insects, debris, and the like. Also a more random diffusion of water is obtained.
The viscous fluid chambers are filled with a viscous fluid, such as dimethyl silicone 1,000,000 ct. If there was no fluid in the fluid chamber, the deflector would rotate at a high RPM. As the deflector rotates, the shearing action of the fluid between the deflector and the rotor causes the rotor to be dragged along forming a fluid coupling with a slipping motion. The brake assembly is kept from spinning freely by the action of the second brake. The rotor 23 having the shaft 25 and brake portions 24 and 28 is not fixedly attached to the deflector.
As the deflector 15 rotates, it causes the main rotor shaft 25 and the diffuser 17, fixedly attached thereto, to rotate but at a slower RPM. The purpose of the differential in RPMs is so that the stream of water leaving the deflector is interrupted intermittently by the diffuser.
The purpose of the second brake assembly 22 is to allow the deflector 15 and diffuser 17 combination to rotate. If the diffuser 17 did not rotate, the interruptions on the diffuser would remain in the same position relative to a fixed point and the stream of water would always be diffused at the same points, causing voids in the area being sprinkled. It can be seen that the two brakes work in conjunction with each other to constantly reposition the diffuser as the stream of water exiting the deflector rotates. This assures that there will not be areas that are devoid of water in the area being sprinkled. However, the present invention is not to be considered as limited to the forms shown which are to be considered illustrative rather than restrictive.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040124266 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |