The present invention relates to a rubber spring for a vehicle wheel leaf spring suspension, said rubber spring comprising a rubber pillar attached at one end to a mounting plate adapted to be fixed to a wheel axle casing and at the opposite end to a tunnel shaped mounting member for housing an end of a spring leaf of a leaf spring suspension, said tunnel shaped mounting member having opposite interior surfaces adapted to face opposite surfaces of a spring leaf.
Previously known rubber springs designed as described above have tunnel shaped mounting members wherein the tunnel has opposite interior surfaces which are plane and parallel with one another, thereby allowing sliding but no or at the most very limited tilting movement of the rubber spring relative to the spring leaf of a leaf spring wheel suspension. This makes the mounting process rather complicated, when a wheel axle casing for a heavy truck is to be fixed to a rubber spring already mounted on the spring leaf, because all relative movement between the mounting plate and the axle casing, when aligning the mounting plate fasteners with corresponding fastening means on the axle casing, has to be concentrated to movement of the casing. Such a wheel axle casing with related components can weigh up to 1.5 ton. Therefore, all relative movement between the mounting plate on the rubber spring and the axle casing require the use of power operated jacking equipment.
The purpose of the present invention is to obtain a rubber spring as described by way of introduction which makes the mounting process when attaching the rubber spring to the axle casing less complicated and time consuming and therefore also less costly.
This is obtained by virtue of the fact that said opposite interior surfaces of the mounting member are shaped so as to allow tilting of the pillar relative to a first spring leaf housed in the tunnel.
In a preferred embodiment of the rubber spring according to the present invention said opposite interior surfaces of the mounting member are convex.
In a further development of the rubber spring according to the present invention, adapted for leaf spring suspensions having a plurality of leaf spring elements stacked on top of one another, said mounting member has an upper exterior surface shaped so as to allow tilting of the pillar relative to a second spring leaf located above the first spring leaf.
Since the mounting member can slide as well as tilt relative to the spring leaf end portion all relative movements between the rubber spring and the wheel axle can be performed by manual movement of the rubber spring, thereby eliminating the need for power operated jacking equipment during the final alignment of the components.
The invention will be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein
The leaf spring suspension 2 comprises a plurality of spring leaves, the two lower ones of which are designated 5 and 6. A rubber spring, generally designated 7, connects the lower spring leaf 6 with the wheel axle casing 3. The rubber spring 7 comprises a pillar 8 consisting of a plurality of rubber sections 9 vulcanized to intermediate metal plates 10. A tunnel shaped mounting member 11 is vulcanized to the uppermost rubber section 9 while a mounting plate 12 is vulcanized to the lowermost rubber section 9. The tunnel shaped mounting member 11 is in alternative embodiment screwed or riveted to the lowermost rubber section 9.
The lowermost spring leaf 6 extends through the tunnel 13 of the mounting member 11 with a slide fit while the mounting plate 12 is bolted to the wheel axle casing 3. Alignment of the interface of the wheel axle casing 3 and the mounting plate 12 with one another is a rather complicated procedure since the spring leaves, when the suspension 2 is unloaded, will be inclined in relation to a horizontal plane (see
The description above refers to a prior art leaf spring suspension. As is clearly shown in
In an embodiment of that type which is shown in
Of course within the scope of the invention other shapes than strictly convex can be used for the surfaces 21 and 22 as long as the cross-section of the tunnel 13 increases from the mid-section towards the ends and the surface 23 slopes towards the ends to allow tilting of the rubber spring 7 relative to the spring leaves 5 and 6.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0501533-4 | Jun 2005 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE06/00796 | 6/28/2006 | WO | 00 | 12/19/2007 |