The present disclosure relates to alignment of a sensor component, such as a transmitter, within a sensor housing. In certain conventional sensors of type having adjustable emitters, the emitters have barrels disposed in matching sockets, allowing the direction in which the emitters are pointed to be varied. The barrel of the emitter is typically held in place by screws balanced by springs only. Glue is used to maintain the alignment after the alignment adjustment is done. However, it has been observed that the alignment can undergo significant drift as the ambient temperature changes. It is thus desirable to device a sensor assembly and method to allow convenient adjustment of the emitter, or another adjustable component while maintaining the stability of the sensor.
In one example aspect of this disclosure, a method for stabilizing a sensor component includes: positioning a portion of the sensor component relative to a support with a plurality of retaining members in contact with the portion of the sensor component, the plurality of retaining members including at least a first one of the retaining members being a resilient biasing member and a second one of the retaining members being an adjustable retaining member; adjusting the adjustable retaining member to reposition the portion of the sensor component relative to the support and deform the resilient retaining member; immobilizing the portion of the sensor component relative to the support with an additional, rigid retaining member in contact with the portion of the sensor component; and filling a space between the portion of the sensor component and the support with a glue.
The present disclosure relates to securing a sensor component, such as a transmitter, within a sensor housing with minimized alignment variability over a wide range of temperature variation, while facilitating ease of alignment adjustment. The disclosure is made with reference to an example device illustrated in the attached
Referring to
Inside the housing (130), as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In addition, a screw (360) can be used to fix the position of the bulbous portion (312) of the barrel (310), as shown in
In another example configuration, a screw/spring assembly of the kind shown in
Furthermore, the space between the barrel (310) and the mounting assembly is filled with glue (such as an epoxy), after the alignment of the barrel (310) has been adjusted and fixed, to further maintain the alignment.
The barrel and mounting assembly components are all metal in this example.
With the mounting assembly described above, especially with the feature of the screw/spring assembly, the alignment of the emitter barrel (or any other device for which alignment needs to be ensured) can be conveniently adjusted with the barrel held between screws and springs, i.e., with the screw in the screw/spring assembly in a refracted position. Once the adjustment is complete, the screw in the screw/spring assembly is tightened so that the barrel is securely held in place by at least two screws. The glue is then added to fill the space surrounding the barrel and further maintain the alignment.
In conventional sensors of this type, the barrel of the emitter is typically held in place by screws balanced by springs only. Glue is used to maintain the alignment after the alignment adjustment is done. However, it has been observed that the alignment can undergo significant drift as the ambient temperature changes. With the device described above, the alignment is fixed by screws after allowing adjustment. Improved alignment stability against temperature change is achieved while retaining the convenience of adjustment. Even with the metal screws, it is expected that the emitter barrel and other component will move around with varying ambient temperatures. The desired result is that even though the parts move around, they return to the same location when the temperature returns to the starting point. It has been found that glue does not return consistently to the original starting point but the metal nearly does. It is believed that this difference in behavior is attributable to the disordered molecular structure of the glue not being repeatable under varying temperature conditions, whereas the ordered nature of the molecules of metals exhibit the desired behavior where they do come to turn their original starting point naturally. One useful purpose of using the glue is to take up any void volume so that the barrel will not shift with shock loading or vibrations since the mechanical connections could be compromised under these conditions.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/963,249, filed Nov. 26, 2013, the content of which provisional application is incorporated herein by reference.
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