The present invention relates to a spool, a brake and an electric motor.
Certain bobbins for spools wound with winding wires are conventional.
A brake coil having a center tap (FIG. 4, reference numeral 6) is described in German Published Patent Application No. 36 13 294, which is usable as a brake for an electric motor. It is a disadvantage, in this case, that manufacturing it is effortful and costly. It is important, in this context, that each additional contact of the winding wire causes effort and costs during manufacturing.
The connecting of wire is described in German Published Patent Application No. 79 23 585, the winding wire of the spool having to be wound around the pin-shaped end several times (“wind around” page 4, 3rd paragraph, lines 4-5) and then soldered on. This requires too much effort and is costly.
A hook on a connecting piece is described in German Published Patent Application No. 34 07 758, which is provided to guard against pulling out (E2, page 9, line 11). It is a disadvantage, again, that connecting the winding wire requires much effort and is complicated.
Example embodiments of the present invention may provide a spool so as to make it more cost-effective and simpler to manufacture, especially including contacting. This also relates particularly to spools having a plurality of taps, especially at least one center tap.
The spool may include at least one bobbin and one winding wire, e.g., a winding wire lacquered or enameled for electrical insulation, the bobbin including at least one channel, e.g., one developed as a pocket, at least one sleeve, bush or bushing being electrically connected to the winding wire, the sleeve being electrically connected to an electrical line, e.g., a stranded conductor of a cable, the sleeve including deformable regions, for producing the electrical connections, a respectively deformable region being deformable such that a force-locking connection is provided and welding is able to be carried out.
The sleeve may make possible a cost-effective type of electrical connection. For example, the sleeve itself is able to be produced as a cost-effective punched bent component made of sheet metal. Since it has deformable regions, using these regions, winding wire sections or stranded conductor sections are able to be clamped, that is, able to be connected by force-locking. Welded joints are then able to be produced by appropriate heating. Using additional deformable regions, other parts of the cable are also able to be clamped, which makes strain relief implementable for the cable having the stranded conductor.
The sleeve may include at least one first support region which is provided as support and/or guidance for the winding wire, the sleeve including at least one second region, arranged as a tab, which is deformable for the force-locking connection to the winding wire and is providable for producing a welded joint to the winding wire, the sleeve including at least one third region, e.g., a wall part region, which is provided for a welded joint to the stranded conductor of a cable.
The winding wire may be easy to thread in and then may lie on the support surface, that is, it is able to be accurately positioned. In this manner, the threading is able to be carried out so well by the shaping of the sleeve that the winding wire is introduced into the second region, that is, the region of the deformable tab. The latter is deformable, that is, it is particularly easily pressed against a wall part for clamping, that is, the force-locking connection of the winding wire to the sleeve. But then, the clamped winding wire is able to be quickly and simply welded. The welded joint is well protected against stressing forces, because the force-locking connection continues to be effective, and thus unloads the welded joint.
Since the sleeve has an additional region for a welded joint to the stranded conductor of the cable, at the sleeve itself, a stable region is realized that is suitable for a welded joint, and consequently no further additional parts are required for the welded joint of the stranded conductor of the cable.
The sleeve may be a metallic punched bent component. For example, the sleeve may be suitably provided for producing an electrical connection between the winding wire and the electrical line or a stranded conductor. This may provide that a conductive metal and a metal that is especially suitable for producing a welded joint may be selected, and which is also cost-effective and is able to be manufactured by a punching and bending process.
The sleeve may be able to be fastened in the bobbin with force-locking and/or form-locking. For example, the sleeve may include at least one barb, especially for hooking into the channel. This may provide that the fastening is able to be achieved simply and cost-effectively.
The sleeve may include at least one first region, especially a region developed as a tab, which is provided as a support and/or guidance for the winding wire. This may provide that manufacturing faults may be minimized, since the winding wire is able to be positioned securely and reproducibly, with great accuracy.
The sleeve may include at least one second region, especially a region designed as a tab, which is deformable for the force-locking connection to the winding wire and is providable for producing a welded joint to the winding wire. This may provide that a good electrical connection is providable, simply and cost-effectively.
The sleeve may include at least one third region, especially a region designed as a tab, which is deformable for the force-locking connection to a stranded connector, especially of a cable, and is providable for producing a welded joint to the stranded connector. This may provide that a good electrical connection is providable, simply and cost-effectively.
The sleeve may include at least one fourth region, especially a region designed as a tab, which is deformable for the force-locking connection to a cable, e.g., to the insulation of the cable, and is providable for producing a welded joint to the stranded connector. This may provide that a strain relief is providable, simply and cost-effectively.
The lacquering of the winding wire may be removable when producing a welded joint at least in the vicinity of the electrical contact area, e.g., because of the heating that occurs during the production of the welded joint. This may provide that no special stripping operating step is required, but just the welding may be sufficient.
The regions may be connected at a wall part. This may provide that the regions are able to be held together in a stable manner, using the wall part.
The spool may include a center tap. This may provide for being able to realize particularly rapidly switchable brakes.
The spool may include encapsulating material, e.g., in the area of the channel and/or the winding. This may provide that chemical and mechanical protection is achievable. Besides that, the electrical insulating values are also able to be improved, in response to a suitable choice of the encapsulating material.
The bobbin may include a holding device for winding wire and/or cable. This may provide that the holding device is able to be produced already at the injection molding production of the bobbin, and thus no further operation may be required.
With regard to the brake, the brake coil may be arranged in the manner of the above-named spool. Thus, a cost-effective brake coil may be able to be implemented even having a center tap. Three sleeves are required for the center tap, using which, stranded connector at the beginning, in the middle and at the end of the winding of the spool, that is executed using winding wire, is tapped.
An electric motor may include a brake having a brake coil or a spool as described above. This may provide that the electric motor is able to be manufactured with low effort and costs, and a high degree of automation may be able to be achieved in the manufacturing.
Example embodiments of the present invention are explained in more detail below with reference to the appended Figures.
The construction of sleeves 1 are illustrated in
In
Regions having barbs 21 and additional tabs 24 are arranged to the right and left, and are also bent away. At the lower end of wall part 23, there are arranged as a right tab 20, arranged as a second region, and a left tab 25, arranged as a first region, and again they are bent away.
b illustrates what the bending state is of tabs 20, 25 when a cable with its insulation is introduced coming from the left, and the insulation is fixed using left tab 25. This fixing has the effect of strain relief for the stripped, right end part of the cable, that is, the bare stranded conductor. This stranded conductor piece is pressed together using tab 20 and is then electrically welded. This consequently creates a very good conductive connection of the stranded conductor to the sleeve, which bears large mechanical stresses because of the strain relief.
c illustrates the bending state of tab 22, which fixes the winding wire and to which the winding wire is welded.
By contrast to
a and 14b illustrate bobbin 2 in different orientations, channel 4 arranged as a pocket being illustrated, and slot 9 for the introduction of the winding wire also being illustrated. The winding wire is then wound, and at the end is guided via a corner and sleeve 1 to holding device 6, as is illustrated in
Holding device 6 may also be omitted on the bobbin and instead be provided on the tool.
The channel may be encapsulated at the end of the manufacturing process using an encapsulating compound. Consequently, one is able to achieve both mechanical and chemical protection for the spool winding.
The spool is able to be provided, e.g., as a brake coil of an electromagnetically operable brake. This brake may be used in, and integrated into an electric motor.
A refinement is illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 022 254 | May 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2005/003515 | 4/4/2005 | WO | 00 | 11/6/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/109606 | 11/17/2005 | WO | A |
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