This invention relates to telescoping linear actuators, and particularly one with three telescoping sections actuated by two internal screw shafts linearly translated in opposite directions by drive nuts rotated by an internal motor.
A linear actuator is a device that extends along a straight line to provide mechanical force to operate a variable apparatus. Among other applications, a linear actuator can support any lift application that requires controlled vertical motion in a compact envelope, such as medical lifts, packaging applications, and material processing. For example, a vertical actuator may be provided in a hospital gurney to lift and lower the mattress plane with a patient thereon. Telescoping actuators have two or more nested sections that telescopically extend and retract under control of an actuating mechanism such as a hydraulic piston or motor-driven screw drive. One such actuator is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,026,970. One measure of an actuator design is its extended-to-retracted length ratio. Higher ratios are better for space efficiency. Other measures include energy efficiency, cost, noise, reliability, and safety, including prevention of unintended retraction or collapse of the loaded actuator during a power failure. However, it is difficult to maximize all of these measures concurrently in a single design.
The invention is explained in the following description in view of the drawings that show:
The lower screw drive nut 32 may be rotatably mounted on the housing base 23. The lower or distal end of the lower screw shaft 36 may be attached non-rotatably to the bottom or distal end of the outer telescoping section 22 via a push plate 37 attached to a base plate 21 of the intermediate section 22 or by other means. The lower screw shaft 36 passes through the lower drive nut 32, and is linearly translated by rotation of the lower drive nut 32.
The upper screw drive nut 34 may be rotatably mounted on the upper support plate 25 at the top end of the intermediate section 24. The upper or distal end of the upper screw shaft 38 may be attached non-rotatably to the top or distal end of the inner telescoping section 26 via a push plate 39 attached to a top plate 27 of the intermediate section or by other means. The upper screw shaft 38 passes through the upper drive nut 34, and is linearly translated by rotation of the upper drive nut 34. The push plates 37, 39 transfer and distribute forces between the screw shafts 36, 38 and the respective base plate 21 and top plate 27.
One of the screw drives 28, 30 may be left-handed while the other one is right-handed, so that turning both drive nuts 32, 34 in the same direction translates the respective screw shafts 36, 38 in opposite directions 44, 46. This forces the outer telescoping section 22 and the inner section 26 in opposite directions relative to the intermediate section 24, extending the actuator 20. Because the two drive nuts 32, 34 turn in the same direction, they can each be driven by a simple pulley/belt drive 48, 50 at opposite ends of the idler shaft 42 as shown, rather than by gears. Belt drives can be quiet, accurate, and reliable. Some automotive timing belts are designed to last 100,000 miles. Alternately however, other transmission means such as gears or sprocket-and-chain drives may be used.
The idler shaft 42 may be mounted rotatably in the housing 33 in the intermediate section 24, and extends between the two drive nuts 32, 34. The motor 40 drives the idler shaft 42 via a belt drive 35 or other means. The Idler shaft in turn drives the drive nuts 32, 34. Rotating the idler shaft 42 in a first direction translates two screw shafts 36, 38 in opposite directions relative to the intermediate section 24, extending the outer section 22 and the inner section 26 in opposite directions relative to the intermediate section 24. Rotating the idler shaft 42 in the opposite direction retracts the inner 22 and outer 26 sections. A mechanical brake 43 may be provided as later described. The two screw shafts 36, 38 may both have the same diameter and length, thus having the same maximum force capacity and drive parameters except for handedness. This reduces engineering complexity and maximizes space efficiency.
Because the brake spring 43 operates to resist the collapse of the actuator 20 under the influence of gravity on the hospital gurney or other weight being lifted, it is necessary for the drive motor 40 to overcome the braking effect of the brake spring 43 when retraction of the actuator 20 is desired. Optionally, an electrically-operated brake release linkage 62 may be used in some embodiments to pull the second end 43B of the brake spring 43 away from the circumferential surface 56 of the brake drum 54 to release the spring 43 from the brake drum 54 when retraction of the actuator 20 is desired. This reduces the load on the motor 40 during downward movement. A solenoid 64 may operate the linkage 62 to release the brake spring 43 whenever the motor 40 is powered to retract the actuator 20. The brake 43 may default to the engaged (non-released) condition when the solenoid is inactive during a power failure, thus preventing collapse of the actuator during a power failure.
A linear actuator based on an embodiment of the present invention may have an extension to retraction ratio such as 2.5:1 or more, due to the space efficiency of the drive mechanisms. The two ball screw assemblies occupy and same plane in space and are driven in the same direction, yet extend in opposite directions, allowing the actuator to achieve a low retraction height. There is no requirement for a transmission to produce counter rotating shafts since the opposite hand configuration eliminates this need. The two-stage, belt drive, ball bearing supported transmission configuration supports quiet uniform motion by eliminating a requirement foe meshed gears. Among other applications, the actuator can support any lift application that requires controlled vertical motion in a compact envelope, such as medical lifts, packaging applications, and material processing. For example, a single vertical actuator may be provided in a hospital gurney to lift and lower the mattress plane with a patient thereon. In such application, the dynamic axial force capacity of the unit may be for example about 4400 N or about 1000 lbs, and the static axial support capacity may be for example about 5400 N or about 1200 lbs.
An advantage of rotating the drive nuts 32, 34 instead of rotating the screw shafts 36, 38 is a reduction in the number of bearings. A rotatable screw shaft requires two bearings per shaft—one at each end—while a rotatable nut requires only one bearing. The present invention provides a mechanism for a telescoping linear actuator that maximizes the extended-to-retracted ratio, payload capacity, energy efficiency, reliability, and safety, while minimizing cost and noise.
While various embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes and substitutions may be made without departing from the invention herein. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US12/28216 | 3/8/2012 | WO | 00 | 9/8/2014 |