The present invention relates to a sprocket support member for a sprocket assembly of a bicycle rear wheel.
Over recent years, the number of transmission ratios available on bicycle gear change devices has progressively increased and sprocket assemblies for the rear wheel of a bicycle having nine or ten sprockets are increasingly common on the market. The progressive increase in the number of sprockets requires ever increasing research for reducing the weight of the sprocket assembly. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,935,034, assigned to the same assignee as the present invention, a sprocket assembly is described that includes a support member having a radially internal portion shaped such that it couples with a freewheel device and a radially external fastener portion. Two sprockets are mounted on the opposite surfaces of the fastener portion. A third sprocket can be mounted on the support member in addition to the first two sprockets through a plurality of spacer bushings. U.S. Pat. No. 6,102,821 describes a sprocket assembly in which two sprockets are fixed on opposite sides of a sprocket support member by pins that engage with aligned holes of the sprockets and of the support member.
With the progressive increase in the number of sprockets, in addition to the need for reducing the weight of the assembly, there is also the need for arranging the sprockets in positions that are closer one to the other. As a consequence, the space available for the sprocket support member becomes more limited. On the other hand, this support member performs an important structural function and it is necessary to ensure that it has high rigidity and resistance characteristics.
The present invention addresses the prior art's shortcomings by using a sprocket support member for a bicycle sprocket assembly comprising at least one engagement portion provided with means for coupling with a bicycle freewheel and at least one fastening portion arranged in a radially external position with respect to said engagement portion. The fastening portion has at least one hole for the mounting of at least one sprocket to the sprocket support member, wherein said fastening portion is axially displaced with respect to said engagement portion.
The sprocket support member according to the present invention will become evident through the detailed description that follows, provided purely as a non-limiting example. In the detailed description, the following Figures are discussed.
With reference to
In the embodiment illustrated in
The individual sprockets 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 are fixed together in pairs, 15 and 16, 17 and 18, 19 and 20 in the manner that will be described below. The sprocket pairs form three subgroups, indicated in
To perform this spacing function, the fastening portions 37 have a thickness, in the axial direction, equal to the desired distance between two adjacent sprockets. As shown in
With reference to
The sprocket support member 33 includes a plurality of fastening portions 37, arranged in radially in external positions with respect to and opposite the engagement portions 34. In the embodiment illustrated in the figures, the four fastening portions 37 are angularly spaced out at 90° from each other. Preferably the fastening portions 37 are on centerlines with the associated teeth 35. Each of these structural units is provided with an additional weight-saving cavity 39 located between the engagement portion 34 and the fastening portion 37. From the structural point of view, the sprocket support member 33 results to be formed by a series of equidistant structural units, each of which includes an engagement portion 34 and a fastening portion 37, the individual structural units being connected to each other by zones 38 of smaller radial dimensions.
The fastening portions 37 are axially displaced with respect to the engagement portions 34. More precisely, the fastening portions 37 are contained in a first plane 37′ orthogonal to the rotational axis of the sprocket support member 33, and the engagement portions 34 are contained in a second plane 34′ parallel to the first, see
Each fastening portion 37 includes a contact surface 40 and an outer surface 41. The surfaces 40 and 41 are preferably oriented in a radial direction and are mutually parallel. Each fastening portion 37 defines a mounting through hole 42. Preferably, each mounting hole 42 includes an enlarged portion 43 where it opens onto the outer surface 41.
Each fastening portion 37 includes an axial projection 44 located at the base of the contact surface 40. The axial, generally circular projection 44 creates a step between fastening portions 37 and the generally circular engagement portions 34. In practice, the axial projection 44 is formed by an axial displacement of the fastening portions 37 with respect to the engagement portions 34. Centering and support seats 45 are formed on the axial projections 44; each seat has the shape of a cylindrical sector coaxial with the respective fastening hole 42. The seat and fastening hole 42 are aligned to receiver a fastener.
With reference to
With reference to
It will be understood that from the structural point of view that each fastening element 48 behaves like a beam resting on the hole 42 and the centering and support seat 45. The sprocket 20 is attached by four of the fastening elements 48 located as described. This allows a highly rigid connection to be achieved. Only the sprocket 19 is surface mounted on the fastening element 48. From the point of view of the connection rigidity, the solution according to the present invention is superior to those of the prior art in which the sprockets are fixed by opposite parts of the fastening portion of the sprocket support member, because in the solutions according to the prior art both of the sprockets are surface mounted.
Each sprocket subgroup 31, 32, 33, is aligned on a wheel hub (not shown) using the engagement portions 34 and teeth 35 to align the sprocket subgroups on the wheel hub. Once aligned, the subgroups are tightened to the wheel hub using a standard fastener, generally known as a quick-release.
The sprocket support member 33 can be obtained through hot or cold plastic deformation or through material removal machining and can be made of steel, aluminum and its alloys, titanium or any other metallic material with good strength, hardness, and weight characteristics. The sprocket support member 33 can also be obtained through mould reticulation of a fabric made of structural fibers incorporated in a matrix of plastic material. The fibers are preferably either carbon fibers, glass fibers, aramid fibers, boron fibers, ceramic fibers or any combination thereof.
The shape of each sprocket support member 31, 32, 33 could differ from that illustrated. In a second embodiment of the sprocket support member 133 illustrated in
Each fastening element 48 could be constituted by a smooth cylindrical pin with ends to be deformed in situ to form the heads 50, 54 and the radial shoulder 52 could be substituted by a ring inserted on the pin between the two sprockets 19, 20. The contact surfaces 55, 56 of the radial shoulder 52 could be divergent or convergent with respect to the axis of the fastening element 48. In addition, each sprocket support member 31, 32, 33 could carry more than two sprockets.
Further, the present invention could also be used for the front gears of a bicycle transmission assembly.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02425621 | Oct 2002 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5246402 | Romano | Sep 1993 | A |
5782712 | Campagnolo | Jul 1998 | A |
5935034 | Campagnolo | Aug 1999 | A |
6102821 | Nakamura | Aug 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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892561 | Oct 1953 | DE |
0510371 | Oct 1992 | EP |
02425621 | Mar 2003 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040070166 A1 | Apr 2004 | US |