1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to devices for guiding and redirecting a flexible cable extending from a spool.
2. Description of Prior Art
Numerous cable guide designs are found in the prior art for sailboat rigging, excavating machines, cranes, winches, and other diverse applications for flexible cables. These guides include types for keeping a cable extending in a generally constant direction from a cable winding spool while allowing redirection of the cable to various angles beyond the cable guide. Some guides only allow redirection within a plane, and some of these are limited to about a 90-degree range of angles. Some guides provide a large range of angles in a plane by means of two adjacent pulley wheels. Others improve further on this by providing a swivel mount for the two pulley wheels, so the cable can be redirected in any plane. The two most relevant examples found are described below.
Stahl and Atkinson provide two circumferentially adjacent pulley wheels mounted in a swiveling frame. They also provide two parallel rollers on the frame. The wheels have parallel axes in a first plane normal to the swivel axis. The rollers have parallel axes in a second plane normal to the swivel axis. The roller axes are 90 degrees offset from the wheel axes about the swivel axis. A cable extending tangentially from a winding spool passes between the two pulley wheels, then between the two rollers, after which it can be redirected to any angle without changing its angle from the winding spool. The rollers add the capability of low-friction redirection outside the plane of the wheels.
The present invention provides the same advantages, but eliminates the rollers by providing a unique and non-obvious pair of opposed curved edges, making the present guide much simpler and less expensive. None of the prior devices have the same degree of both flexibility and simplicity as the present invention.
The main objective of the invention is provision of a reliable, low-friction cable guide that holds a flexible cable in a generally constant direction of extension from a cable winding spool, and allows the cable to extend from the guide with low friction in wide range of directions. Additional objectives include:
These objectives are met in a cable guide with a rotatable cage in which two pulley wheels are mounted with their circumferences tangent so that their cable grooves surround a cable passing between the wheels. The cage freely rotates about an axis that passes between the wheels. The cage axis is normal to the plane of the wheel axes. The cage extends forward of the wheels and forms two curved edges on opposed sides of the cage axis. Each curved edge has an apex at its forward-most point. A flexible cable can pass through the cage, between the wheels, and forward between the curves. Any deflection of the cable from the plane of the wheels causes the cage to rotate until the wheels are aligned with the cable. If the cable is extended in a direction such that it contacts one of the curved surfaces, it will slide away from the curve apex, and create a force against the curved edge that rotates the cage until the wheels are aligned with the cable. This switches the cable to properly ride on one or the other of the wheels, thus providing low friction cable operation for any cable direction.
The invention is a cable guide for flexible cable or cord of any type extending from a winding spool. The guide holds the cable in a generally constant direction from the spool, and redirects the cable to/from any angle of use without binding or rubbing.
The wheels are mounted in a slot 4 in the cage that divides the front end 2 of the cage, and is preferably open at the sides of the cage. The wheels preferably extend laterally outside the cage so the cable can be redirected around either wheel up to at least 170 degrees from the forward extension of the cage axis without contacting the cage. This range per wheel provides a total range of redirection of up to at least 340 degrees from one extreme to the other. The terminology “up to at least” means at least the given range is preferably offered in the product, and the cable can be redirected up to the given limit or less as needed.
In addition to redirection away from the forward extension of the cage axis over the pulley wheels, the cable can also be moved to any angle of rotation about the cage axis. This is made possible by rotation of the cage, which automatically aligns the wheels with the angle of the cable. The cage front extends forward of the wheels and forms two curved edges 8a and 8b where the front surface of the cage intersects the opposed side surfaces 4a and 4b of the slot 4. These curved edges lie on opposite sides of the cage axis. Each curve has an apex at its forward-most point, which is the central point on the curve, and is the point on the curve nearest the cage axis.
The curved edges 8a and 8b cause the cage to rotate into wheel alignment with the cable. The cable passes through the cage, between the wheels, and forward between the curves. If the forward extension of the cable is pulled away from the cage axis in the plane of the wheels, the cable rides on one of the wheels and is smoothly guided in the desired direction. If the forward extension of the cable is pulled in a direction such that it contacts one of the curved edges 8a or 8b of the cage, this contact generates a rotational force on the cage, causing it to rotate into wheel alignment with the angle of the cable. If the cable is extended in a direction normal to the wheels, and midway between them, the cable contacts one of the curved edges at its apex. This causes the cable to slip to one side or the other of the apex, switching it to a respective one or the other of the wheels for low friction operation.
Examples of appropriate shapes for the cable switching curves are shown in
The material of the curved edges is preferably a durable low friction material. For small cable under light loads, plastics such as Delrin or Nylon can be used. The whole cage is preferably made of the same material for simplicity of production. However, the curved edges can optionally have ‘lips’ of a desired low-friction material on a different case material.
The invention was developed with small cable-type displacement sensors in mind. However, it has broad applicability for many types of extendable cable and line uses, such as in winches, clotheslines, cranes, excavating machines, and sailboat rigging.
For use in a displacement sensor, the extension of the cable is measured by a sensor on or near the cable spool. For example, an inductive transducer can be connected to the cable spool axle to provide an electrical signal representing the rotational position of the spool. This signal can be converted to the linear extension of the cable, allowing the cable to be used as a measuring device in any direction from the spool.
Although the present invention has been described herein with respect to preferred embodiments, it will be understood that the foregoing description is intended to be illustrative, not restrictive. Modifications of the present invention will occur to those skilled in the art. All such modifications that fall within the scope of the appended claims are intended to be within the scope and spirit of the present invention.