The invention relates to a single lever control for combined control of the throttle, i.e. the number of revolutions, in a marine engine and of a reversing gear. The single lever control includes a rocking lever mounted onto a supporting arm, which is dynamically connected via a mechanical transmission system to the actuator of a reversing gear for switching the reversing gear into a state, in which the engine motion is transmitted to a shaft for driving a propeller or the like either in the same direction of rotation as the drive shaft or opposite thereto. The rocking lever supporting arm is also dynamically connected to position sensors adapted to sense the angular position of the lever and to generate a signal uniquely related to such angular position, which signal is transmitted to a controller of a motorized actuator of the engine throttle.
Single lever controls are well known and widely used in the art. For example, the owner hereof sells single-lever control of this type, as shown by Ultraflex catalog, pages 23 to 32, year 2008. The rocking lever controls a rocker arm via the supporting arm and a transmission system, which rocker arm has at its two ends a drive cable connected thereto, to transmit the angular displacement of the rocker arm to the member for switching the motion transmission state of the reversing gear, which may also be, for instance, a rocker arm keyed to motion reversal mechanisms control shaft.
When the lever is in a neutral position, the rocker arm is in a position in which the reversing gear is in an idle state, with motion transmission between the drive shaft and the propeller shaft being prevented. Starting from said neutral angular position, the initial angular displacement of the lever in a first direction and in a direction opposite to the former first causes a corresponding pivotal motion of the rocker arm, and said displacement stroke is transmitted by the cables to the actuator of the reversing gear which is thus switched into a state in which the engine shaft motion is transmitted to the propeller shaft with the two shafts rotating in the same direction and into a state in which the engine shaft motion is transmitted to the propeller shaft with said two shafts rotating in different, i.e. opposite directions. This corresponds to the forward and reverse gear of the boat. During said initial angular displacement stroke of the lever in either direction, the engine is maintained at idle speed, i.e. in a throttle condition in which the drive shaft runs a minimum number of revolutions. This allows the reversing gear to be switched from its idle state into the forward gear or reverse gear or from the forward gear directly into the reverse gear or vice versa, without being damaged, i.e. avoiding the damages that it might incur if the engine were in an accelerated state, with the drive shaft rotating at a high rpm.
Once the reversing gear has reached its switched state, any further stroke of the control lever is converted into an engine acceleration control, i.e. an increase of fuel or fuel-air mixture delivery.
It is apparent from the above that high accuracy is required of the transducers that convert the angular position of the control lever and the angular displacement thereof, and that position detection must be repeatable, i.e. not subject to drifts caused by inaccurate conversion of the position or motion into electric signals. In case of inaccurate correlation of the angular position or stroke of the lever to the generated electric signal, there may be no correct synchronism between the mechanical control of the reversing gear and the acceleration state, i.e. the number of revolutions of the above described engine.
This drift in the correlation of the angular position or stroke of the lever to the electric signal may be caused by excessive transducer tolerances or inaccuracies and clearances in angular motion transmission from the control lever to the transducer.
Such problems cannot be obviated by simply using more accurate, and accordingly more expensive transducers. Therefore, even with higher transducer accuracy, there will be no increase in the accuracy of control lever position reading and transmission and no repeatability of said position detection, and synchronism with the reversing gear position and control cannot be perfectly maintained.
The object of the present invention is to provide a single-lever control as described hereinbefore that uses simple and inexpensive arrangements to increase detection accuracy and repeatability of such detection, by advantageously allowing the use of more accurate transducers without incurring drawbacks associated with the loss or degradation of control lever function or higher transducer costs, with no higher accuracy being generally ensured.
The invention fulfils these objects by providing a single-lever control of the above mentioned type, in which the angular displacement of the lever is transmitted to a transducer which converts rotary motion into an electric signal uniquely related thereto via a gear drive, the input gear being controlled by the rocking lever supporting arm and the output gear being rotatably connected with the transducer control shaft.
In an advantageous embodiment, the rocking lever supporting arm carries a coaxial gear wheel which acts as the input gear of the gear drive, the latter being engaged with a gear wheel keyed to the transducer shaft.
Any required gear ratios may be obtained, and gear trains may be also particularly provided, e.g. in which the gear wheel keyed to the control shaft engages with a first pinion which is rotatably integral with a coaxial transmission gear wheel, which in turn engages with an output pinion coaxially keyed to the transducer shaft. This also allows fine adjustment of gear ratios, by simply replacing the gear wheel on the transducer shaft with a pinion and by placing an intermediate element between the gear wheel on the control shaft and the pinion on the transducer shaft, which element consists of two coaxial integral gear wheels having different numbers of teeth.
The gear wheels and the pinions of the gear drive have such a size as to provide a predetermined gear ratio, which may be a gear-up a gear-down ratio or a 1 to 1 gear ratio.
As a further improvement, this single-lever control may simultaneously control two or more transducers, each being designed to control the throttle adjusting actuator of a corresponding engine of the two or more engines on the boat.
The particular constructions as described above may be integrated together to control said two or more transducers, the gear wheel keyed to the control lever supporting arm being engaged with the pinion of a separate gear train for each of said two or more transducers.
Advantageously, the gears of each drive unit for each transducer may be identical.
When two transducers are used, these may be located in symmetrically opposite angular positions with respect to a center axis that passes through the axis of the control lever supporting arm and parallel to said lever in the neutral angular position.
Concerning the transducers, various types of transducers may be used. Hall effect position transducers, also known as Hall effect potentiometers, have been found to be the least expensive, resistant and reliable transducers.
These types of transducers are known in the art and include a shaft rotating about its own axis, which carries a permanent magnet. The rotation imparted to the magnet by the shaft causes a sinusoidal voltage fluctuation in a Hall element. Such fluctuation is later amplified. Thus, the sinusoidal signal of the Hall element may be used to generate a signal uniquely related to the angular position and/or angular displacement, as well as the speed at which such angular displacement occurred. As compared with traditional resistance potentiometers, Hall effect potentiometers have the advantage of not having wiping contacts, and hence of not being subjected to deterioration with time, for instance due to oxidation, which is a very important feature in marine environments. Apart from any degradation of the electronic circuits associated with the transducer, such as the amplifier, if any, or else, the transducer in itself would not be affected by being immersed in or wetted with water, which is also a highly advantageous feature in the nautical field. However, this type of potentiometers cannot ensure very high angular resolutions, and sufficiently small angular displacements of the control lever can be only measured by providing a high-gear ratio transmission of the control lever motion to the transducer shaft. A Hall effect potentiometer is sold, for instance, by Fae, based in Milan, under the name P32.
The above description clearly shows that, using less accurate sensors, i.e. with a lower resolution, and very simple and inexpensive construction arrangements, the single-lever controls as described hereinbefore may have a lower cost, with no function loss, but with considerably improved features, and providing a highly stronger and reliable single-lever control, especially in particular conditions of use, as is usual in the nautical field.
Further improvements will form the subject of the dependent claims.
The characteristics of the invention and the advantages deriving therefrom will appear more clearly from the following description of a non-limiting embodiment which is illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which:
Detailed descriptions of embodiments of the invention are provided herein. It is to be understood, however, that the present invention may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, the specific details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but rather as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art how to employ the present invention in virtually any detailed system, structure, or manner.
This embodiment shall be intended without limitation, and its inventive technical and construction features may be transferred, without requiring any inventive step, to single-lever control configurations including a case for the lever-controlled mechanism, such as dash panel configurations or other similar configurations.
The above described embodiment shall be considered without limitation concerning the construction of the gear train/s, each of which may be composed of at least two gears or more, engaged together in a cascade arrangement.
The illustrated embodiment with a 1 to 1 gear ratio is also to be considered without limitation, the gear wheels of the control lever supporting arm and of the shafts of the transducer/s having identical diameters and numbers of teeth.
In this embodiment, the single-lever control comprises a lever 2 that is rotatably fixed by one of its ends to a supporting arm 3 which extends into the compartment delimited by the bulkhead 1. A rocker arm 4 is pivotally fixed and pivots about an axis parallel to the axis of the control arm 3, and is dynamically connected to the arm 3 so that, when the control lever 2 is displaced from a so-called neutral starting position, e.g. a vertical position, during the first part of the pivoting stroke the rocker arm 4 is pivoted in the same pivoting direction as the angular displacement of the control lever. A cable 5 is connected to the opposite ends 104 of the rocker arm to transmit the angular stroke of the rocker arm, with the opposite end thereof being connected to a reversing gear controlling member. Thus, any pivotal motion in either direction of the rocker arm 4, caused by the initial angular displacement stroke of the control lever 2 from a neutral position, in either opposite direction, causes the reversing gear to be switched from the forward gear state to the reverse gear state, i.e. from a state in which it transfers the drive shaft motion to the propeller with the propeller rotating in the same direction of rotation as the drive shaft, to a state in which the rotary motion of the drive shaft is transferred to the propeller in a reverse direction with respect to the drive shaft.
Metal transmission cables 5 are guided through guide sheaths held in special end retainers 6.
An input gear wheel 107 is further integrally rotatably keyed to the supporting arm 3, which gear wheel is shared by two gear drive units 7, 7′, each disposed to engage the common input gear wheel 107 and transferring the rotary motion of the supporting arm 3, with a predetermined gear ratio, to a respective angular position or displacement sensor/transducer, generally designated with numerals 8, 8′.
The angular position or displacement sensors 8, 8′ have an input shaft 108, 108′, which is rotatably controlled by an output gear wheel 207 of the gear drives 7, 7′, which is keyed to the input shaft 108, 108′ of each of the two angular position and/or displacement sensors.
The gear wheels 107 and 207 are directly engaged with each other, no additional intermediate gears being provided therebetween. However, if gear-up or gear-down ratios are required, to increase or reduce the input rpm, then gear drives may be equipped with successively engaged gear trains. In a particularly advantageous embodiment, allowing quick replacement and not increasing the transmission size, a gear train designed to obtain a predetermined gear ratio is located between the input gear wheel 107 shared by the two drive units 7, 7′ and the output pinions 207 of the two drives, each being mounted to the shaft of one of the two angular position or displacement sensors 8, 8′.
In one embodiment, the intermediate gear train comprises, for each drive unit 7, 7′, a pinion which is engaged with the input gearwheel 107 and is coaxially and rotatably integrally fixed to a gear wheel engaging with the output pinion 207 of the input shaft 108, 108′ of the corresponding angular position or displacement sensor 8, 8′.
Here, at certain gear ratios or gear ratio ranges, the input gear wheel 107 keyed to the arm 3 for supporting the control lever 2 may be relatively large, with such a circumference as to allow the two gear trains and their respective angular position or displacement sensors 8, 8′ to be placed in relatively close positions, symmetrically opposed with respect to a plane of symmetry that passes through the axis of the supporting arm 3 and is parallel to the axis of the control lever 2 in its neutral position, i.e. in its vertical position.
The use of two angular position or displacement sensors 8, 8′ allows control of the acceleration state, i.e. the throttle, of each individual engine, when the boat is equipped with two engines. If a single engine is provided, one sensor 8, 8′ with a corresponding gear drive 7 will be only required and present.
Likewise, if three or four engines are provided, then each of them may be associated with a separate angular position or displacement sensor 8, with a gear drive for dynamic connection to the common input gear wheel 107.
It shall be noted that the mechanism for transferring the angular displacement of the control lever 2 to the rocker arm 4 is known per se and is not part of the present invention, therefore it will not be further described in detail, because it is not relevant to the invention.
The angular position sensor/s 8, 8′ may be of traditional type, such as resistive potentiometers, or of other type. Nevertheless, these types of sensors are expensive and unreliable in terms of safety and consistent operation when subjected to marine environment aggressions, which may lead to performance degradation or permanent damages thereto.
For this purpose, a so-called Hall effect potentiometer is used as a sensor 8, 8′.
Referring now to
It will be appreciated that the Hall effect potentiometer is free from any corrosion problem, no contact existing between moving and stationary parts. This also prevents any damage to the sensor, when it contacts water or is exposed to high humidity.
Concerning accuracy and repeatability of control lever angular position detection, the lever controls both the engine rpm and the switching state of the reversing gear, which advantageously allows the reversing gear to be switched between the forward gear, reverse gear and idle (neutral) states with the engine operating at minimum rpm. Using a traditional construction for the transmission of the angular motion of the control lever 2 to an angular position or displacement sensor or transducer, with high mechanical tolerances of the transmission, a deviation would occur between the lever position in which the reversing gear is switched and the lever position in which the engines run at minimum rpm. In this condition, the reversing gear might be damaged upon switching, and/or switching may even be prevented, because the reversing gear cannot be switched at high rpm, in spite of the force applied thereto.
With the invention, this effect can be avoided, and the higher accuracy of the sensors or transducers 8, 8′ may be fully utilized. The transmission between the control lever 2 and the input shafts 108 is so accurate and the transmission of the control lever motion to the transducer is so accurate and free of any clearance, that no synchronization drift or deviation occurs between the minimum rpm state of the engine and the reversing gear switching state, and the throttle or number of revolutions of the engine and the switching state of the reversing gears are always repeatable for substantially the same angular position of the control lever 2.
While the invention has been described in connection with the above described embodiments, it is not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular forms set forth, but on the contrary, it is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the scope of the invention. Further, the scope of the present invention fully encompasses other embodiments that may become obvious to those skilled in the art and the scope of the present invention is limited only by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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GE08A68 | Aug 2008 | IT | national |