The invention relates to a steering system in which a rod is longitudinally displaceable by a worm gear driven by torque transmitted from an electric motor through an intermediate transmission.
A generic steering system is known from DE 37 35 517 A1.
The generic publication describes a steering system with an electric motor, including a hollow shaft through which a push rod is passed, which is intended to steer the rear wheels of a passenger vehicle. This rod is driven in the longitudinal direction by the electric motor over a planetary transmission (functioning as an intermediate transmission) and a worm gear.
Planetary transmissions are expensive and therefore extravagant, since they contain a relatively large number of components and require special measures for reducing clearance. Moreover, the efficiency of planetary transmissions is not high and such transmissions tend to develop noise.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to create a relatively compact steering system with a worm gear, which is inexpensive to produce.
This objective is accomplished by a steering system which includes an electric motor including a hollow shaft. A rod is provided which passes through the hollow shaft. A worm gear includes a worm which is carried on the rod, and a nut having a nut outer contour connected torque-proof therewith for receiving torque. An intermediate transmission is provided which is operable to reduce an rpm of the electric motor, the hollow shaft being connected torque-proof with a driving outer contour which transfers torque to the intermediate transmission. The intermediate transmission includes a first gear wheel having a first gear wheel outer contour to which torque from the driving outer contour is transferred, and a second gear wheel connected torque-proof with the first gear wheel, and having a second gear wheel outer contour that transfers torque to the nut outer contour. The first and second gear wheels have an axle which is essentially stationary relative to a housing part of the steering system, such that the nut of the worm gear is drivable by the intermediate transmission to drive the rod in two longitudinal directions thereof by the electric motor acting through the intermediate transmission and the worm gear.
The steering system according to the invention can be adapted particularly easily to the requirements of a front wheel steering system. An electric motor with a low moment of inertia may be used. The space required is relatively small. The steering system may be part of a power-assisted steering system or a fully hydraulic steering system, and requires relatively few simple intermediate transmission parts. This improves reliability and makes for a quieter operation. In particular, expensive internal toothing and a bezel gear are not required.
Preferably, the worm gear is constructed as a roll body worm gear (roller gear or ball-and-nut gear).
The intermediate transmission may be comprised of a belt and chain drive (especially a toothed pulley drive), or of a cylindrical gear, or a combination of both. It may be two-stage or multi-stage and, in any case, stepping down.
In order to reduce noise, it is advantageous to produce at least one of the external contours (at the hollow shaft, at the nut of the worm gear, at a gear wheel), at least at the surface, from an elastic material, if it is constructed as an external gearing.
Examples of the invention are shown diagrammatically below by means of the drawings.
A further belt 14 transfers the torque from the pulley 13 to the outer contour of a pulley 15, which is also connected torque-proof with a ball-and-nut 16 of a roll body worm gear (in the example, ball-and-nut worm gear.) The ball-and-nut 16 is supported coaxially with the electric motor (rotatable, but, essentially, not displaceable in the longitudinal direction) in the housing 6 and, by means of a not visible screw on the rod 5, converts the torque into an axial force on the rod 5, which is supported so that it can be displaced in the longitudinal direction but essentially cannot be rotated.
The mode of functioning of the ball-and-nut worm gear, especially ball revolution, is adequately known from the general state of the art. In this connection, reference is made, for example, to the DE 103 10 492 A1.
The parts 9 to 15 identified above, form the above-mentioned intermediate transmission in the form of a belt and chain-driven transmission. In this connection, the outer contours of the parts 9, 11, 13, 15 are fitted to the inner contours of the belt and chain drives 10 and 14 (for example, toothed if a toothed belt is used).
In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 008 911.1 | Feb 2006 | DE | national |