This application is the U.S. National Phase Application, under 35 USC 371 of International Application PCT/JP2003/014567, filed on Nov. 17, 2003, published as WO 2004/092584 A1 on Oct. 28, 2004, and claiming priority to JP 2003-112238, filed Apr. 17, 2003, the disclosures of all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a swash plate compressor ideal in applications in which a working fluid such as a coolant gas is compressed and more specifically, it relates to a swash plate compressor assuring a higher level of freedom in the layout of the outlet port and the intake port.
Double-ended swash plate compressors capable of achieving large capacity and high efficiency with a simple structure are considered to be a highly viable option in applications such as automotive air-conditioning systems, and the specific structures proposed for double-ended swash plate compressors in the related art include that disclosed in Patent Publication No. 3266504 (see paragraphs 0020 to 0028, FIGS. 1, 2, 5 and 6).
This compressor includes a cylinder block having formed therein a swash plate chamber in which a swash plate is housed and a plurality of cylinders, pistons that move reciprocally inside the cylinders, a front-side cylinder head fixed to one end of the cylinder block via a valve plate and a rear-side cylinder head fixed to another end of the cylinder block via a valve plate. At each cylinder head, an intake chamber in which the working fluid to be guided into the cylinders is stored and an outlet chamber in which the working fluid having been compressed at compression spaces is stored are formed, and the compressor further includes an intake passage communicating between an intake port formed at a cylinder head and the swash plate chamber, a relay passage that communicates between the swash plate chamber and the intake chambers, an outlet passage formed at the cylinder block, which communicates with the front-side outlet chamber and the rear-side outlet chamber, an outlet passage formed at the cylinder block, which communicates with an outlet port formed at one of the cylinder heads and a guide passage that communicates between the outlet passages at a middle area thereof.
In the structure described above, the working fluid having flowed in through the intake port is guided to the swash plate chamber via the intake passage and then is guided into the intake chambers at the cylinder head via the relay passage. After it is compressed at the compression spaces, the working fluid is delivered into the outlet chambers, and then is made to flow out through the outlet port via the outlet passages and the guide passage.
However, the external component at which the intake port and the outlet port are disposed may need to be mounted at the cylinder block instead of a cylinder head, depending upon the compressor installation location, the piping layout or the like. If the design of the gas passages inside the compressor is to be completely modified each time the position of the ports needs to be altered, the design of the individual components constituting the gas passages, too, will have to be reviewed, which means that these components cannot be provided as universal components and that the advantages of mass production are not gained.
Accordingly, an intake gas passage and an outlet gas passage may be formed in advance at the housing and the external component having disposed thereat the intake port and the outlet port alone may be redesigned in correspondence to the positions at which the ports need to be located. However, this solution may lead to further problems in that the positions of the ports and the positions of the gas passages can be greatly misaligned depending upon the layout of the piping connected to the compressor, necessitating the gas passages formed within the cylinder heads to adopt complicated shapes and that the passages extending from the ports to the gas passages can become unnecessarily long, to result in lowered compressor performance, an increase in the number of machining steps and a more complex casting process.
A primary object of the present invention, which has been completed by addressing the problems of the related art discussed above, is to provide a swash plate compressor adopting a specific structure for the gas passages formed in the compressor to solve the problems described above and afford a higher level of freedom with regard to the port positions so as to achieve better versatility is supporting various compressor models assuming different port positions.
In order to achieve the object described above, the swash plate compressor according to the present invention, comprising a housing that includes cylinders formed therein, a drive shaft rotatably supported at the housing, a swash plate that is housed inside a swash plate chamber formed at the housing and rotates as one with the drive shaft and pistons that slide reciprocally inside the cylinders as the swash plate rotates, which is characterized in that a front-side intake chamber and a rear-side intake chamber disposed to the front and to the rear of the swash plate chamber along the axial direction, in which a working fluid to be guided into the cylinders is stored, a front-side outlet chamber and a rear-side outlet chamber disposed to the front and to the rear of the swash plate chamber along the axial direction, in which the working fluid having been compressed by the piston is stored, a first gas passage and a second gas passage extending along the axial direction, a third gas passage formed substantially symmetrical to the first gas passage relative to a plane containing the drive shaft, a fourth gas passage formed substantially symmetrical with the second gas passage relative to a plane containing the drive shaft and communicating with the second gas passage and an external component having an intake port and an outlet port to be connected to pipings, are all disposed at the housing, that either the first gas passage or the third gas passage is made to communicate with the intake port to supply the working fluid into the front-side intake chamber and the rear-side intake chamber and that either the second gas passage or the fourth gas passage is made to communicate with the front-side outlet chamber and the rear-side outlet chamber and the second gas passage or the fourth gas passage, which is not in communication with the outlet chambers, is made to communicate with the outlet port.
The housing that includes the third gas passage formed substantially symmetrical to the first gas passage and the fourth gas passage formed substantially symmetrical to the second gas passage relative to the plane containing the drive shaft in addition to the first and second gas passages extending along the axial direction can be used as a universal housing, without having to modify the layout of the group of gas passages at the housing even when the intake port and the outlet port are formed at different positions. Thus, common components can be used to form the gas passages, and also, since the intake port or the outlet port can be formed in conjunction with the shortest gas passage, the gas passages inside the housing do not need to be bent in complex shapes or the passages extending from the port to the gas passages does not need to be unnecessarily long.
The structure described above, which allows the first gas passage or the third gas passage to communicate with the intake port and the second gas passage or the fourth gas passage to communicate with the outlet port depending upon the specific positions of the intake port and the outlet port, can be adopted in conjunction with various port positions.
In addition, the structure described above is particularly effective in a swash plate compressor having the first gas passage and the third gas passage made to communicate with the swash plate chamber and further having formed at the housing a front-side relay gas passage and a rear-side relay gas passage that communicate between the swash plate chamber and the front-side intake chamber and between the swash plate chamber and the rear-side intake chamber.
If the housing includes a cylinder block having formed therein cylinders, valve plates each having formed therein an intake hole and an outlet hole in correspondence to each cylinder and cylinder heads fixed to the cylinder block via the valve plates, which form intake chambers that are allowed to communicate with the intake holes and outlet chambers that are allowed to communicate with the outlet holes, the valve plates, valve sheets having intake valves provided between the cylinder block and the valve plates, the cylinder heads and the cylinder block may constitute part of the components used to form the first through fourth gas passages. In addition, it is desirable that at least one of the components used to form the first through fourth gas passages be shared on the front-side and the rear-side.
a) is a sectional view taken along line Y-Y in
a
The following is an explanation of an embodiment of the present invention, given in reference to the drawings. A swash plate compressor 1 in
As shown in
Inside the front-side cylinder block 2 and the rear-side cylinder block 4, a swash plate chamber 12 is formed as the individual cylinder blocks 2 and 4 are assembled with each other, and a drive shaft 13, which is inserted at the front-side cylinder block 2 and the rear-side cylinder block 4, with one end thereof projecting out beyond the cylinder head 6 on the front-side to be locked onto the armature of an electromagnetic clutch (not shown), is disposed in the swash plate chamber 12.
In addition, at the cylinder blocks 2 and 4, a shaft support hole 14 that rotatably supports the drive shaft 13, a plurality of (e.g., 5) cylinders 15 extending parallel to the shaft support hole 14 and disposed over equal intervals on the circumference of a circle centered around the drive shaft 13, two intake passages 16a and 16b (only one of the intake passages is used during operation) communicating with the swash plate chamber 12 over the areas near the circumferential edges and extending along the drive shaft 13 in the axial direction, a plurality of relay passages 17a or 17b disposed over equal intervals on the circumference of a circle near the shaft support hole 14, communicating with the swash plate chamber 12 and extending along the drive shaft 13 in the axial direction and two outlet passages 18a and 18b separated from the swash plate chamber 12 and extending along the drive shaft 13 are formed.
In this embodiment, in which five cylinders are disposed over equal intervals, the intake passages 16a and 16b are formed between the second and third cylinders and between the fourth and fifth cylinders along the circumferential direction with a given cylinder designated as the origin point, whereas the outlet passages 18a and 18b are formed between the first and second cylinders and between the fifth and first cylinders. Thus, the intake passages 16a and 16b are formed substantially symmetrical to each other and the outlet passages 18a and 18b are formed substantially symmetrical to each other relative to a single plane containing the drive shaft (a plane containing the drive shaft and ranging in the upward/downward direction in
Inside the swash plate chamber 12, a swash plate 22, which rotates as one with the drive shaft 13, is fixed onto the drive shaft 13. The swash plate 22 rotatably supported at the front-side cylinder block 2 and the rear-side cylinder block 4 by thrust bearings 23, is held at a shoe pocket 25 formed at the center of the double-ended pistons 20 via a pair of shoes 24 assuming a semispherical shape, disposed so as to sandwich the edge of the swash plate 22 from the front and the rear. Thus, as the drive shaft 13 rotates causing the swash plate 22 to rotate, the rotational motion is converted to a reciprocal linear movement of the double-ended pistons 20 via the shoes 24 and the reciprocal movement of the double-ended pistons 20, in turn, varies the volumetric capacities at compression spaces 26a and 26b respectively formed between the pistons 20 and the valve plate 5 and between the pistons 20 and the valve plate 7 inside the cylinder 15.
The valve plates 5 and 7 are formed in an identical shape and at each valve plate an intake hole 27 and an outlet hole 28 are formed in correspondence to each cylinder 15, passing holes 31a and 31b are formed in correspondence to the intake passages 16a and 16b, passing holes 32a and 32b are formed in correspondence to the outlet passages 18a and 18b, passing holes 33 are formed each in correspondence to one of the relay passages 17a and 17b, passing holes 34 are formed in correspondence to one of the bolt insertion holes 21 and a passing hole 35 is formed in correspondence to the shaft support hole 14.
In addition, to the front and to the rear of the swash plate chamber 12 at the housing, i.e., at the front-side and the rear-side cylinder heads 6 and 8, a front-side intake chamber 29a and a rear-side compression chamber 29b, in which the working fluid to be supplied into the compression spaces 26a and 26b is stored and a front-side outlet chamber 30a and a rear-side outlet chamber 30b in which the working fluid having been compressed by the pistons and let out from the compression spaces 26a and 26b is stored are formed. At the cylinder head 6, auxiliary chambers 39a and 39b which do not communicate with the outlet chamber 30a are formed in correspondence to the intake passages 16a and 16b respectively and relay chambers 48a and 48b are formed in correspondence to the outlet passages 18a and 18b respectively so as to achieve communication with the outlet chamber 30a. Likewise, at the cylinder head 8, auxiliary chambers 40a and 40b, which do not communicate with the outlet chamber 30b are formed in correspondence to the intake passages 16a and 16b respectively and relay chambers 49a and 49b are formed in correspondence to the outlet passages 18a and 18b respectively so as to achieve communication with the outlet chamber 30b.
The intake chambers 29a and 29b are allowed to communicate with the compression spaces 26a and 26b via the intake holes 27 formed at the valve plates 5 and 7, whereas the outlet chambers 30a and 30b are respectively formed continuously around the intake chambers 29a and 29b and are allowed to communicate with the compression spaces 26a and 26b via the outlet holes 28 formed at the valve plates 5 and 7. In addition, the individual auxiliary chambers 39a, 39b, 40a and 40b communicate with the corresponding intake passages 16a and 16b via the passing holes 31a and 31b at the valve plates 5 and 7, valve sheets to be detailed later, at which the intake valves 3 are formed and passing holes at the gaskets. The individual relay chambers 48a, 48b, 49a and 49b communicate with the corresponding outlet passages 18a and 18b via the passing holes 32a and 32b at the valve plates 5 and 7, the valve sheets to be detailed later, at which the intake valves 3 are formed, and passing holes at the gaskets.
The intake holes 27 are each opened/closed by an intake valve 3 disposed at the end surface of the valve plate 5 or 7 toward the cylinder block, whereas the outlet holes 28 are each opened/closed by an outlet valve provided at the end surface of the valve plate 5 or 7 toward the cylinder head.
The intake valves 3, which are formed in shapes identical to one another on the front-side and the rear-side, are each formed as a tongue piece constituting an integrated part of a round valve sheet 37 by slitting the valve sheet 37 as shown in
In addition, the outlet valves 10 are formed in shapes identical to one another on the front-side and the rear-side and are each formed as a tongue piece, as shown in
Thus, on an intake stroke during which the volumetric capacities of the compression spaces 26a and 26b increase as the pistons 20 move reciprocally, the working fluid is taken into the compression spaces 26a and 26b from the intake chambers 29a and 29b via the intake holes 27 and the intake valves 3, whereas on a compression stroke during which the volumetric capacities of the compression spaces 26a and 26b decrease, the working fluid being compressed at the compression spaces 26a and 26b is forced out into the outlet chambers 30a and 30b via the outlet holes 28 and the outlet valves 10.
It is to be noted that identical gaskets 9 and 11 are used on the front-side and the rear-side. The gaskets 9 are disposed between the cylinder block 2 and the valve plate 5 and between the cylinder block 4 and the valve plate 7, whereas the gaskets 11 are disposed between the cylinder head 6 and the valve plate 5 and also between the cylinder head 8 and the valve plate 7. As shown in
As a result, two gas passages, one communicating with the auxiliary chamber 39a at the front-side cylinder head 6 and the auxiliary chamber 40a at the rear-side cylinder head 8 via the intake passage 16a formed at the cylinder blocks 2 and 4, passing holes 61a formed at the gaskets 9 and 11, the passing holes 31a formed at the valve plates 5 and 7 and the passing holes 41a formed at the valve sheets 37, the other communicating with the auxiliary chamber 39b at the front-side cylinder head 40b at the rear-side cylinder head via the intake passage 16b formed at the cylinder blocks 2 and 4, the passing holes 61b formed at the gaskets 9 and 11, the passing holes 31b formed at the valve plates 5 and 7 and the passing holes 41 formed at the valve sheets 37 are formed to communicate with the swash plate chamber 12 at the housing. These two passages constitute a first gas passage (I) and a third gas passage (III) extending along the axis of the drive shaft 13.
In addition, a front-side relay gas passage α and a rear-side relay gas passage β are constituted respectively with the relay passages 17a and 17b formed at the individual cylinder blocks, the passing holes 63 formed at the gaskets 9 and 11, the passing holes 43 and 53 formed at the valve sheets 37 and 46 and the passing holes 33 formed at the valve plates 5 and 7, so as to communicate between the swash plate chamber 12 and the intake chambers 29a and 29b formed at the cylinder heads 6 and 8.
Also, two gas passages, one allowing communication among the outlet passage 18a formed at the cylinder blocks, the passing holes 62a formed at the gaskets 9 and 11, the passing holes 42a formed at the valve sheets 37 and the passing holes 32a formed at the valve plates 5 and 7 as necessary and the other allowing communication among the outlet passage 18b formed at the cylinder blocks, the passing holes 62b formed at the gaskets 9 and 11, the passing holes 42b formed at the valve sheets 37 and the passing holes 32b formed at the valve plates 5 and 7, are formed at the housing, and these two gas passages constitute a second gas passage (II) and a fourth gas passage (IV) extending along the axis of the drive shaft 13.
The first gas passage (I) and the third gas passage (III) are formed substantially symmetrical relative to a plane containing the drive shaft 13, and the second gas passage and the fourth gas passage, too, are formed substantially symmetrical relative to the plane. In addition, the second gas passage (II) and the fourth gas passage (IV) are made to communicate with each other at middle areas thereof via a guide passage 69, as shown in
At the housing adopting the structure described above, an external component which includes an intake port and an outlet port to be connected to piping is mounted, so that either the second gas passage (II) or the fourth gas passage (IV) is made to communicate with the front-side outlet chamber 30a and the rear-side outlet chamber 30b and that the intake port is made to communicate either with the first gas passage (I) or the third gas passage (III) with the outlet port made to communicate with either the second gas passage (II) or the fourth gas passage (IV), which is not in communication with the outlet chambers.
Namely, depending upon the specific position at which the external component is mounted at the housing, the optimal passages to communicate with the outlet chambers, the intake port and the outlet port are determined in the basic structure described earlier. More specifically, the ports are allowed to assume various positions, as shown in
The following is a detailed explanation of the individual modes with regard to the port positions. If the compressor installation location, the piping layout or the like necessitates the external component 70 to be mounted on one side at a side surface of the front-side cylinder block 2 or if it more desirable to mount the external component 70 at such a position, an intake port 71 is made to communicate with the first gas passage (I) via the front-side cylinder block 2 and the fourth gas passage (IV) is made to communicate with the front-side relay chamber 48b and the rear-side relay chamber 49b, as shown in
As a result, the working fluid having flowed in through the intake port 71 located at the front-side cylinder block 2 is guided to the front-side and rear-side intake chambers 29a and 29b via the first gas passage (I), the swash plate chamber 12 and the relay gas passages α and β, is let out into the front-side outlet chamber 30a and the rear-side outlet chamber 30b after it is compressed at the compression spaces 26a and 26b, and then enters the fourth gas passage (IV) from the outlet chambers 30a and 30b. The working fluid having entered the fourth gas passage from the outlet chamber 30a and the working fluid having entered the fourth gas passage from the outlet chamber 30b join each other at a middle area of the fourth gas passage (IV), the joined working fluid is then guided to the guide passage 69 to travel from the guide passage 69 through the second gas passage (II) and flow out through the outlet port 72 located at the front-side cylinder block 2.
If, on the other hand, the external component 70 must be mounted on the other side at the side surface of the front-side cylinder block 2 or if it is more desirable to mount the external component 70 at such a location, the intake port 71 is made to communicate with the third gas passage (III) via the front-side cylinder block 2 and the second gas passage (II) is made to communicate with the front-side relay chamber 48a and the rear-side relay chamber 49a, as shown in
As a result, the working fluid having flowed in through the intake port 71 located at the front-side cylinder block 2 is guided to the front-side and rear-side intake chambers 29a and 29b via the third gas passage (III) the swash plate chamber 12 and the relay gas passages α and β, is let out into the front-side outlet chamber 30a and the rear-side outlet chamber 30b after it is compressed at the compression spaces 26a and 26b, and then enters the second gas passage (II) from the front-side and rear-side outlet chambers 30a and 30b. The working fluid having entered the second gas passage (II) from the outlet chamber 30a and the working fluid having entered the second gas passage from the outlet chamber 30b join each other at a middle area of the second gas passage (IV), the joined working fluid is then guided to the guide passage 69 to travel from the guide passage 69 through the fourth gas passage (II) and flow out through the outlet port 72 disposed at the front-side cylinder block 2.
Next, if the external component 70 must be mounted on one side at a side surface of the rear-side cylinder block 4 or if it is more desirable to mount the external component 70 at such a location, the intake port 71 is made to communicate with the first gas passage (I) via the rear-side cylinder block 4 and the fourth gas passage (IV) is made to communicate with the front-side relay chamber 48b and the rear-side relay chamber 49b, as shown in
As a result, the working fluid having flowed in through the intake port 71 located at the rear-side cylinder block 4 is guided to the front-side and rear-side intake chambers 29a and 29b via the first gas passage (I) the swash plate chamber 12 and the relay gas passages α and β, is let out into the front-side outlet chamber 30a and the rear-side outlet chamber 30b after it is compressed at the compression spaces 26a and 26b, and then enters the fourth gas passage (IV) from the outlet chambers 30a and 30b. The working fluid having entered the fourth gas passage from the outlet chamber 30a and the working fluid having entered the fourth gas passage from the outlet chamber 30b join each other at a middle area of the fourth gas passage (IV), the joined working fluid is then guided to the guide passage 69 to travel from the guide passage 69 through the second gas passage (II) and flow out through the outlet port 72 located at the rear-side cylinder block 4.
If, on the other hand, the external component 70 must be mounted on the other side at the side surface of the rear-side cylinder block 4 or if it is more desirable to mount the external component 70 at such a location, the intake port 71 is made to communicate with the third gas passage (III) via the rear-side cylinder block 4 and the second gas passage (II) is made to communicate with the front-side relay chamber 48a and the rear-side relay chamber 49a, as shown in
As a result, the working fluid having flowed in through the intake port 71 located at the rear-side cylinder block 4 is guided to the front-side and rear-side intake chambers 29a and 29b via the third gas passage (III) the swash plate chamber 12 and the relay gas passages α and β, is let out into the front-side outlet chamber 30a and the rear-side outlet chamber 30b after it is compressed at the compression spaces 26a and 26b, and then enters the second gas passage (II) from the outlet chambers 30a and 30b. The working fluid having entered the second gas passage from the outlet chamber 30a and the working fluid having entered the second gas passage from the outlet chamber 30b join each other at a middle area of the second gas passage (II), the joined working fluid is then guided to the guide passage 69 to travel from the guide passage 69 through the fourth gas passage (IV) and flow out through the outlet port 72 located at the rear-side cylinder block 4.
In addition, if the external component 70 must be disposed on one side at the end surface of the rear-side cylinder head 8 or if it is more desirable to mount the external component at such a location, the intake port 71 is made to communicate with the first gas passage (I) via the rear-side cylinder head 8 and the fourth gas passage (IV) is made to communicate with the front-side relay chamber 48b and the rear-side relay chamber 49b, as shown in
In this case, working fluid that flows in through the intake port 71 located at the rear-side cylinder head 8 is guided to the front-side and rear-side intake chambers 29a and 29b via the first gas passage (I), the swash plate chamber 12 and the relay gas passages α and β and is let out to the front-side outlet chamber 30a and the rear-side of the chamber 30b after it is compressed at the compression spaces 26a and 26b, and then enters the fourth gas passage (IV) from the outlet chambers 30a and 30b. The working fluid having entered the fourth gas passage (IV) from the outlet chamber 30a and the working fluid having entered the fourth gas passage (IV) from the outlet chamber 30b join each other at a middle area of the fourth gas passage (IV) and the joined working fluid is then guided to the guide passage 69 to travel from the guide passage 69 through the second gas passage (II) and flow out through the outlet port 72 located at the rear-side cylinder head 8.
If the external component 70 must be mounted on the other side at the end surface of the rear-side cylinder head or if it is more desirable to mount the external component at such a location, the intake port 71 is made to communicate with the third gas passage (III) via the rear-side cylinder head 8 and the second gas passage (II) is made to communicate with the front-side relay chamber 48a and the rear-side relay chamber 49a, as shown in
In this case, working fluid that flows in through the intake port 71 located at the rear-side cylinder head 8 is guided to the front-side and rear-side intake chambers 29a and 29b via the third gas passage (III), the swash plate chamber 12 and the relay gas passages α and β and is let out to the front-side outlet chamber 30a and the rear-side outlet chamber 30b after it is compressed at the compression spaces 26a and 26b and then enters the second gas passage (II) from the outlet chambers 30a and 30b. The working fluid having entered the second gas passage (II) from the outlet chamber 30a and the working fluid having entered the second gas passage (II) from the outlet chamber 30b join each other at a middle area of the second gas passage (II) and the joined working fluid is then guided to the guide passage 69 to travel from the guide passage 69 through the fourth gas passage (IV) and flow out through the outlet port 72 located at the rear-side cylinder head 8.
Thus, while the intake port 71 and the outlet port 72 are made to communicate with different gas passages depending upon the installation position of the external component 70 having the intake port 71 and the outlet port 72 disposed thereat, the cylinder blocks 2 and 4, the valve plates 5 and 7, the cylinder heads 6 and 8, the valve sheets 37 and the gaskets 9 and 11 all include the passages and the passing holes necessary to constitute the first through fourth gas passages so as to allow the external component 70 to be installed at various positions. Thus, it is not necessary to modify the design of the gas passages. In other words, although the input port 71 and the outlet port 72 may be connected at different positions, the same first through fourth gas passages (I to IV) at the housing can be used, which means that universal components (the cylinder blocks 2 and 4, the valve plates 5 and 7, the valve sheets 37 and the gaskets 9 and 11) can be used to form the gas passages. As a result, a higher level of freedom is afforded with regard to the positions at which the intake port 71 and the outlet port 72 are formed. In addition, the need to form complex gas passages inside the cylinder heads is eliminated and the problem of the passages extending from the ports to the gas passages inside the housing becoming unnecessarily long is also eliminated, thereby precluding problems such as poor compressor performance, and increase in the number of machining steps that need to be performed and a complicated casting process.
As described above, according to the present invention, a first gas passage and a second gas passage extending along the axial direction, a third gas passage formed substantially symmetrical to the first gas passage relative to a plane containing the drive shaft, a fourth gas passage formed substantially symmetrical to the second gas passage and communicating with the second gas passage, and an external component that includes an intake port and an outlet port to be connected to pipings are disposed at a housing, either the second gas passage or the fourth gas passage is made to communicate with the front-side outlet chamber and the rear-side outlet chamber, and the intake port is made to communicate with either the first gas passage or the third gas passage and also made to communicate with the second gas passage or the fourth gas passage not in communication with the outlet chambers. Thus, even when the positions at which the intake port and the outlet port are formed need to be altered, the same housing can be used without having to modify the layout of the gas passages in the housing, which raises the level of freedom with regard to the positions at which the intake port and the outlet port are formed and allows the housing to be used in conjunction with various compressor models.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003-112238 | Apr 2003 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP03/14567 | 11/17/2003 | WO | 00 | 10/17/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2004/092584 | 10/28/2004 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070098568 A1 | May 2007 | US |