The invention relates to a servo drive for power-assisted steering of a motor vehicle, as well as to the hydraulic system represented by said servo drive.
Today, well-appointed motor vehicles are equipped, as a rule, with hydraulic devices for steering power enhancement, said devices amplifying the steering force imparted by the operator to the driving wheels via the steering wheel. Frequently, such systems operate on the basis of hydraulics.
Such a system has been known, for example, from document DE 196 42 837 C1. This system comprises a hydraulic cylinder that is connected to a tie rod and contains pistons that can slide back and forth in said cylinder. The piston represents an output member for moving the wheels. In the hydraulic cylinder, said piston divides two working chambers.
Each of the two working chambers is connected to a valve set, which, in inoperative position, does not admit pressurized oil to the two chambers and—during activation—admits pressurized oil, alternately, either to the one or the other working chamber of the hydraulic cylinder. In order to achieve this, a continuous-feed hydraulic pump is provided. The actuation of the valve block is derived from the movement of the steering wheel.
Each of the lines that connect the valve block to the hydraulic cylinder comprises a parallel circuit consisting of a throttle and a check valve. The check valve is oriented in such a manner that it admits the oil flow directed into the hydraulic cylinder, however, blocks the oil flow leaving the cylinder. The throttles that are connected parallel to the check valves only allow a limited oil flow out of the hydraulic cylinder. As a result of the parallel arrangement of the check valve and the throttle, it is achieved that the hydraulic oil can flow rapidly into the working chamber but only slowly out of it. This effects a damping of the steering motion and, in particular, an absorption of shocks that are exerted on the steering wheel by the wheels while the motor vehicle is moving.
The hydraulic pump operates continuously. While the operator turns the wheel up to its maximum stop and then continues to apply torque to the steering wheel against the end stop, the valve block remains in a position, in which pressure is applied to the appropriate working chamber of the hydraulic cylinder. If a continued movement of the hydraulic cylinder due to reaching an end stop is no longer possible, the maximum hydraulic pressure is thus built up in the hydraulic cylinder. In this instance, the hydraulic pump must go to zero regarding its delivery rate. In particular considering variable-rate hydraulic pumps, this leads to undesirable noise. In addition, this results in considerable power losses in the hydraulic system and thus to a heating of the oil. Consequently, larger oil coolers are required.
Considering this, it is the object of the invention to modify the hydraulic system in such a manner that said disadvantages do not occur or occur only in an attenuated form.
This object is achieved with the servo drive in accordance with claim 1, as well as with the claimed hydraulic system:
The servo drive in accordance with the invention comprises a working vessel with an output member arranged therein in a movable manner. For example, the working vessel may be configured as an elongated cylinder containing a piston that is an output member. However, the working vessel may also be represented by the working volume of a slewing drive with a slewing piston, said slewing piston then representing the output member. The servo drive may thus be any linear drive, slewing drive or even generally any rotary drive. Its working vessel is connected to two feed lines that alternately apply pressure to one or the other side of the output member—in the case of the piston from one end surface or the other end surface—in order to move the output member in a desired direction. In accordance with the invention, additional relief lines are provided, said lines being attached to the working vessel and being controlled by the output member. The control bores are respectively active, i.e., they are exposed, when the output member has reached its end position. A pressure relief in the, in fact, pressurized working volume is then possible via the relief line. The hydraulic fluid that is used may thus discharge, and the applied hydraulic pressure is reduced. As a result of this, the power losses in the hydraulic system and the noise generated by the hydraulic pump are reduced. Overall, the load on the system is reduced, which also permits the use of weaker hydraulic hoses. In addition, the decreased accumulation of heat in the system permits the size reduction of the existing oil coolers or makes them unnecessary. In addition, the load on the hydraulic pump and the V-belt frequently used for driving the hydraulic pump can be reduced. Also, it is possible to reduce the size of vibration dampers or of pressure buffers that are to be integrated in the hydraulic system.
Referring to its preferred embodiment, the servo drive in accordance with the invention is configured as a hydraulic linear drive cylinder comprising an axially movable piston that is seated in a sealed back-and-forth movable manner in the cylinder bore of the hydraulic cylinder. The feed lines terminate at locations in the interior space of the hydraulic cylinder that are preferably not reached or passed by the moving pistons. In contrast, the relief lines are preferably connected to the control bores which are exposed or blocked by the moving piston in a targeted manner. In so doing, the arrangement is preferably such that the piston, when it moves toward one of its end positions, initially closes the relief bore communicating with the relieved working chamber and then moves over said relief bore in order to expose it. When this occurs, the end position of the piston has been reached because the pressure-relief line connected to the control orifice now decreases the pressure in the pressurized working chamber. The hydraulic fluid can circulate relatively freely. The load on the pump and the generation of heat remain low.
The system in accordance with the invention makes superfluous the pressure relief valves that are otherwise necessary downstream of the hydraulic pump in power-assisted steering systems. When the end stops are reached, the formation of excess pressures on the hydraulic pump is prevented.
Preferably, the relief orifices are spaced apart in such a manner that the piston, in its center position, finds sufficient room between them. In so doing, they are preferably provided in a piston that is positioned in the center relative to the end surface, whereby the distance is as large as the desired piston stroke minus the piston thickness, said thickness having to be measured as the distance between said piston's end surfaces.
Considering a preferred embodiment, the relief line that is to lead out of the interior space is provided with a check valve which permits a flow out of the interior space but not into said space. By virtue of this measure, it is not only possible to use the power assist to move the piston into its end position but also to use the power assist to move said piston out of its end position.
Additional details of advantageous embodiments of the servo drive or of the hydraulic system are obvious from the drawings or the description, and are the subject matter of the claims.
The drawings show an exemplary embodiment of the hydraulic system in accordance with the invention. They show in
The servo valve 14 is a ¾-way valve, which—in center position when the element 13 is not twisted in any direction of rotation—offers straight passage from the line 19 to the line 22 and from the line 21 to the line 23. In addition, both paths are short-circuited between each other. If the element 13 is rotated in one or the other direction, the lines 19, 21; 22, 23 are connected to each other in a straight line or intersected in order to generate a force with the servo drive 15, said force supporting the force exerted on the rack 9 via the pinion 10.
The servo drive 15 comprises a working vessel 28, for example configured as a cylindrical pipe with closed ends. A piston rod 29 connected to an output member 30 extends through the two closures. In the present case, said output member is a piston with a sealed outside circumference, which, however, is supported in the working vessel 28 or the cylinder in a manner so that it can be moved back and forth. The piston 30 divides the working chambers 31, 32 in the cylinder 28, said chambers being respectively connected to the feed lines 25, 24. In addition, the relief lines 27, 26 terminate in the working chambers 31, 32. The relief lines 26, 27 contain check valves 33, 34 that permit a flow out of the interior space of the working vessel or cylinder 28, but not into the latter. Instead of the check valves, it is also possible to provide pressure control valves which adjust the pressure in the working chamber to a definable value as soon as said valves have been cleared. As a result of this, it can be achieved that the servo effect at the end stop will not drop off abruptly but will be retained in a reduced manner.
Furthermore, the distance C of the end surface 36 from the control orifice 39 of the piston 30 being in center position I preferably is equal to the difference between the stroke H and the distance A.
The servo drive 15 is symmetrical with respect to a center plane that is defined by the piston 30 positioned in the center position I and extends perpendicular to the axis that has been pre-specified by the piston rod 29.
The in-so-far described hydraulic system 1 and the power-assisted steering 2 work as follows:
Now, it is assumed that the operator wishes to steer the vehicle to the left. Referring to the conditions in
When it is moved to the right, the piston 30 initially covers the control orifice 39. The hydraulic fluid that has been displaced by the piston 30 may then discharge into the hydraulic reservoir 18 via the feed line 24 and the line 22, as well as the servo valve 14 and the line 21.
If the vehicle is to be steered in the opposite direction, the servo valve 14 reverses, and the working chamber 32 is supplied with hydraulic fluid via the feed line 24, while the hydraulic fluid may flow out of the working chamber 31 via the feed line 25 and the line 23.
If the initially described left turn of the wheels 3, 4 is maintained and continued to the left by continuous turning of the steering wheel 12 to the left until the maximum wheel turning position is reached, the piston 30 continues to move farther to the right until it has reached the position III as shown by
The hydraulic pump 16 is relieved in stop position due to the pressure reduction occurring in the end stop position of the piston 30 and due to the connection established via the relief line 26 between the pressurized line 23 and the pressureless line 23. Noise formation on the hydraulic pump 16 or on any other hydraulic components is minimized. The pressure accumulator 17 may potentially be omitted, or it may be minimized regarding its size or capacity. By reducing the otherwise occurring heat generation, the oil cooler may be omitted or its size may be minimized.
The control orifice 39 fixes the right end position of the piston path. Analogously, the control orifice 40 fixes the left end position of the path of the piston 30. If said position is cleared because the piston 30—while pressure is being applied to the line 22—has reached its left maximum position, the check valve 34 opens, and the pressure relief in the working chamber 32 occurs via the relief line 27, as a result of which—depending on the position of the pressure relief bore—the power-assisted movement of the piston does not take place, and a further movement of the piston rod may still only take place under the influence of a continued action of the steering force exerted by the operator. The load is removed from the hydraulic pump 16.
A servo drive in accordance with the invention comprises a hydraulic cylinder containing a piston 30 which divides two working chambers 31, 32. Relief lines 26, 27 that are connected to the working chambers 31, 32 via control orifices 39, 40 are used to fix the right and the left end positions of the piston 30. The control orifices 39, 40 are respectively exposed by the piston 30 in said piston's end position and then lead to a pressure relief in the active working chamber. Consequently, an end stop pre-specified by the position of the relief orifices 39, 40 is created, said end stop being due to the pressure relief occurring at the relevant location in the active working chamber. This measure relieves the hydraulic pump 16, in particular in the end stop positions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 049 959.7 | Oct 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP06/09873 | 10/19/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/25/2008 |