The invention relates to a safety belt retractor, especially for use in motor vehicles, having a blocking system that is controlled in a vehicle sensitive and/or belt strap sensitive manner, and also having a tensioning device, which acts on the belt shaft, for carrying out a reversible pretensioning of the occupants, whereby the belt shaft can be coupled with an electric motor, as a tensioner drive, via an interposed gear mechanism.
A safety belt retractor having the aforementioned features is known from EP 0 893 313 A2. An electric motor, which is rotatable not only in the belt unwinding direction but also in the belt winding direction, can be coupled to the belt shaft of the belt retractor; from the electric motor, via an interposed gear mechanism and as a function of certain driving situations, adjustable torques can be made to act upon the belt shaft. In this connection, in a predetermined shift position of the gear mechanism, the torque delivered by the electric motor can be transferred for tensioning the belt strap on the belt shaft. With regard to such a tensioning, with the known safety belt retractor a distinction is made between a so-called pretensioning and a performance tensioning. Within the scope of the so-call pretensioning, the strapped-in occupant, upon the occurrence of speed changes or deceleration values below the threshold for the triggering of the performance tensioning during an accident, is pulled via a reduced torque of the electric motor into his normal sitting position, and belt slack is removed from the safety belt. Since upon cessation of the change in speed the pretensioning is concluded, and as a reversible process can again be introduced upon the occurrence of a further appropriate driving situation, the strapped-in vehicle occupant has imparted to him a feeling of active security. If the triggering threshold for the performance tensioning is exceeded during an accident, the electric motor operates with an appropriately high torque.
In conjunction with the pretensioning of the safety belt, the disadvantageous situation of a self-blocking of the safety belt can occur in that via the pretensioning all belt slack is taken out of the safety belt system and the safety belt rests taughtly against the body of the strapped-in person, whereby depending upon the driving situation, at the end of the pretensioning process one cannot preclude that via a slight forward displacement of the body of the strapped-in occupant, the blocking disk of the blocking system on the side of the belt retractor will be brought into a load-transmitting engagement with a housing component. To the extent that in this blocking position of the blocking disk a return rotation of the belt shaft in the belt winding direction is permitted in order to bring the blocking disk out of its load-transmitting position, there must be effected in a disadvantageous manner, after conclusion of each reversible pretensioning, an additional post tensioning with a somewhat greater force than during the pretensioning, which leads to an undesired stressing of the system and/or reduction of the wear comfort for the vehicle occupant.
It is therefore an object of the invention, with a safety belt retractor having the aforementioned features, to prevent a premature activation of the blocking system and to thereby preclude a self-blocking.
The basic concept of the invention is that as a gear mechanism for the connection of the belt shaft to the electric motor, a worm or spiral toothing is provided that meshes with an external toothing of the belt shaft, whereby the spiral toothing is supported against a fixed counter-bearing such that upon the occurrence of an axial loading of the spiral toothing directed against the counter-bearing due to a load acting upon the belt shaft in the belt withdrawal direction, a rotation of the spiral, for receiving a torque applied by the belt shaft, is prevented via a support force.
To the extent that the invention proposes a spiral toothing as a transmission step for the transfer of the drive movement of the electric motor to the belt shaft, the inventive concept also involves, by means of a suitable design of the spiral toothing or by means of other measures at the conclusion of the tensioning movement via a rotation of the belt shaft in the belt winding direction, the prevention of a reversal of the belt shaft, due to a load acting upon the belt shaft in the belt withdrawal direction, by preventing the rotation of the spiral toothing in the appropriate direction of rotation to such an extent that the torque applied by the belt shaft is absorbed without permitting a reversal of the belt shaft. This prevents an activation of the blocking system in an advantageous manner. In this connection, the spiral toothing is configured in such a way that in the one direction of rotation of the spiral toothing, namely in the tensioning direction in conformity with the belt winding direction, the efficiency of the gear mechanism can be fully utilized, whereas in the opposite direction of rotation, in other words in conformity with the belt withdrawal direction, preventing rotation of the spiral is brought about in that the spiral toothing is supported against a fixed counter-bearing in such a way that with an axial loading of the spiral toothing directed against the counter-bearing due to the belt shaft, the prevention of the rotation of the spiral is brought about by the support force. To the extent that at the conclusion of pretensioning of the belt shaft a torque acts upon the spiral toothing, this leads to an axial loading of the spiral toothing that can be converted into an appropriately acting support force.
To the extent that pursuant to EP 0 893 313 A2 a performance tensioning is also provided in the event of a crash, the use of an electric motor having a gear mechanism embodied as a spiral toothing is also not precluded for the performance tensioning to the extent that the electric motor is designed to apply an appropriate torque. However, the performance tensioning can also be effected via another tensioner drive that acts upon the belt shaft, or via a tensioner, for example a buckle tensioner, which is disposed in some other region of the safety belt system.
Pursuant to one embodiment of the invention, the spiral toothing is coupled via a miter-wheel gearing to a drive shaft of the electric motor. This involves an especially space-saving manner of construction of the safety belt retractor, because the electric motor can be disposed directly over the shaft portion of the safety belt retractor.
To the extent that pursuant to one embodiment of the invention a crown wheel gear mechanism is provided as a miter-wheel gearing, this results in production advantages. Alternatively, however, the arrangement of a bevel gearing is also conceivable, whereby the tolerance zone positions of a bevel gearing can be controlled only at great expense during mass production. In so far, however, the use of a bevel gearing to realize the invention is not precluded.
Pursuant to an embodiment of the invention, the spiral toothing is formed on a carrier shaft, and the carrier shaft is connected to the miter-wheel gearing.
The prevention of the spiral rotation can be carried out pursuant to an embodiment of the invention in that disposed between the counter-bearing and the first land or thread of the spiral toothing is a component that increases friction. The friction-increasing component can, pursuant to an embodiment of the invention, be embodied as an intermediate or spacer disk of a material having a non-linear coefficient of friction; for example elastomers are in particular available that as the effect of force increases, an exponentially increasing frictional force occurs.
Alternatively, a bearing disk can be provided that deforms axially and elastically as the load increases, so that the first thread of the spiral toothing, under the effect of the support force, runs on a larger diameter in the bearing than without the effect of the support force.
Pursuant to a further embodiment of the invention, the surface of the gear mechanism that faces the spiral toothing is provided with a conical recess, and disposed on the carrier shaft is the conical friction body that is made of an elastic material and has a corresponding shape; in this embodiment, the increase of the friction force is effected by the conical shape of the recess and of the friction body, as well as by the elastic deformation.
Pursuant to a further alternative, a compression spring can be disposed between gear mechanism housing and spiral toothing, and carrier shaft and gear mechanism housing are provided with latching structures that interengage upon axial displacement of the carrier shaft;
instead of the compression spring, a tension spring can also be disposed at the appropriate end of the carrier shaft.
Pursuant to an embodiment of the invention, to achieve the prevention of the spiral rotation, the end face of the carrier shaft is supported against a shank of the drive shaft of the electric motor, so that in this way an appropriate braking moment is produced.
Alternatively, the crown wheel toothing of the crown wheel gear mechanism, which is effective between drive shaft of the electric motor and the carrier shaft for the spiral toothing, can have a multi-stage configuration such that with an axial loading of the carrier shaft, the transmission of the crown wheel gear mechanism changes, thus producing a braking moment for the rotation of the carrier shaft with the spiral toothing.
To the extent that the structural measures for preventing the spiral rotation are not yet adequate, to further absorb the torque emitted from the belt shaft, the electric motor can be designed with a further performance range for applying a holding moment that serves to aid in the prevention of the spiral rotation, so that in additional to the prevention of the spiral rotation by the electric motor, a blocking of the reversal of the spiral toothing in conformity with the withdrawal direction of the belt strap is applied via an appropriate holding moment.
Since, however, with the measures for the prevention of the reversal of the spiral toothing already adequate moments can be absorbed, the design of the electric motor with a performance range that serves for producing a holding moment additionally presents the possibility, during a force-limiting phase that is additionally provided with the aforementioned safety belt retractor, of establishing a controlled holding moment and hence of realizing an adaptive force limitation, for example together with a single stage or also multi-stage torsion rod. For this purpose, the holding moment of the electric motor can be adjustable by the motor control as a function of the load that acts on the belt shaft in the belt withdrawal direction.
With regard to the arrangement of the spiral toothing, pursuant to an embodiment of the invention the carrier shaft that carries the spiral toothing is held in a bearing at its end that is opposite the miter-wheel gearing, is mounted in an additional axial or thrust bearing that is surrounded by a bearing housing.
Expedient in this connection is the embodiment of the thrust bearing as a cup-shaped bearing because in so doing a deflection of the carrier shaft out of the axial starting position by a small angle is made possible, whereby again an increase of the gear mechanism friction in the context of the invention can be established.
To the extent that the mounting of the carrier shaft in an additional bearing housing is realized, it is expediently provided pursuant to an embodiment of the invention that the bearing housing form the counter-bearing for the spiral toothing.
Illustrated in the drawing are embodiments of the invention, which will be described subsequently. The drawing shows:
The safety belt retractor 10 seen in
On that side of the housing that is provided with the spring cartridge 13 a pretensioner housing is additionally indicated by the reference numeral 15; an electric motor 16, as a tensioner drive, is associated with the pretensioner housing.
As can be seen in greater detail from
In the illustrated embodiment, the spiral toothing 19 is not embodied as a self-blocking spiral gear, so that by means of additional structural measures care is taken that with a load that at the conclusion of a pretensioning acts upon the belt shaft 12, in the belt withdrawal direction (arrow 42) the axial force (arrow 40) that is applied by the belt shaft 12 onto the spiral toothing 19, and hence onto the carrier shaft 18, is converted into a friction-increasing support force, so that in this way an arresting or preventing of the rotational movement of the spiral toothing 19 is brought about.
Embodiments for effecting the increase of the frictional force are primarily illustrated in
The bearing disk 26 that pursuant to
With the embodiment illustrated in
In the same manner, in the embodiment illustrated in
With the embodiment illustrated in
This blocking of the spiral toothing 19 in only one direction of rotation is inventively realized in that the leading or first thread of the threads 49 of the spiral toothing 19, as viewed in the direction of rotation of the spiral toothing 19 in the belt withdrawal direction, rests against a friction-increasing component 25, 26, 28, 29, 30 that is disposed between the counter-bearing 23 and the first thread of the spiral toothing 19, so that upon beginning of rotation of the spiral toothing 19 in the belt withdrawal direction, the spiral toothing 19 is blocked or prevented in this direction of rotation (arrow 50).
Pursuant to the present application, after the conclusion of a tensioning process, with rotation of the belt shaft in the belt retraction direction, the function of the friction-increasing component is to immediately prevent a turning back of the belt shaft in the belt withdrawal direction. The first thread of the fixedly disposed spiral toothing therefore always and continuously rests against the friction-increasing component, which in turn is supported against the counter-bearing 23.
The function or movement of the spiral toothing during the pretensioning process and at the end of the pretensioning process enables the first tooth of the spiral toothing to be in contact with the counter-bearing, such that due to a direction of lead of the spiral toothing, a rotation of the spiral toothing 19 in a pretensioning direction is enabled and rotation of the spiral toothing in a direction opposite to said pretensioning direction is prevented by exertion of the load.
Thus, the spiral toothing is either formed as one-piece on the profile of the carrier shaft (see
Of course, the carrier shaft 18 is—and must be—non-displaceably disposed apart from the manufacturing tolerances, so that a corresponding force transfer from the crown gear 17 to the outer toothing 20 of the belt shaft 12 is possible. This technical teaching of the present invention relates to the principle that the carrier shaft 18 and the spiral toothing 19 both are disposed non-displaceably so that a fixed connection to the drive shaft 34 via the crown gear 17 on the one hand and to the outer toothing 20 of the belt shaft 12 on the other hand are provided.
The features of the subject matter of these documents disclosed in the preceding description, the patent claims, the abstract and the drawing can be important individually as well as in any combination with one another for realizing the various embodiments of the invention.
The specification incorporates by reference the disclosure of German priority document 102 24 236.4 filed May 29, 202 and PCT/EP03/05545 filed May 27, 2003.
The present invention is, of course, in no way restricted to the specific disclosure of the specification and drawings, but also encompasses any modifications within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 24 236.4 | May 2002 | DE | national |
The present application is a continuation-in-part of copending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/522,608, filed Mar. 2, 2010.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10522608 | Mar 2005 | US |
Child | 13143236 | US |