The present invention relates to a continuously variable transmission provided with two pulleys with essentially cone-shaped sheaves and with a drive belt, as described in the preamble of claim 1. The design and operation of a transmission of this type are deemed to be known, for example from the international PCT publication WO-A-2004/111500, which also shows one of the known types of drive elements such as drive belts and chains. The drive belt shown in WO-A-2004/111500 is generally known as the Van Doorne pushbelt and is described in more detail, for example, in patent publication EP-A-1221563.
This pushbelt is characterised, inter alia, by a series of transverse elements, each comprising a lower body, a middle body and an upper body. The lateral side surfaces or pulley contact faces of the lower body are in this case intended for contact with the sheaves of a driving or primary pulley and those of a driven or secondary pulley of the transmission. Part of the top side of the lower body, facing the top body, i.e. a radially outwardly oriented edge thereof, forms a supporting surface for a continuous tensioning element, which is generally formed by one or more groups of a number of nested, flat, relatively thin rings made from metal. The top body of the transverse elements is located radially outside the tensioning element, while the middle body connects the lower body and top body to one another at the level of the tensioning element. The transverse elements are accommodated in the drive belt such that they can move with respect to the circumferential direction of the tensioning element.
Generally, the lower body of the transverse elements is provided with what is known as a tilting edge, namely a generally slightly rounded transition between a top side of the transverse element of virtually constant thickness and a tapering underside which extends in the front or rear surface between the pulley contact faces. The tilting edge permits a tilting or rolling movement between adjacent transverse elements, with the drive belt following a curved path over its circumferential direction, as is necessary at the location of the pulleys.
The Van Doorne pushbelt includes a number of the said transverse elements which is such that virtually the entire circumference of the tensioning element is filled with a virtually continuous series of transverse elements, which may be clamped between the sheaves of the pulleys so that a frictional force can be transmitted between them. Partly as a result of this, a driving power can be transmitted between the pulleys of the transmission, by virtue of the transverse elements advancing one another, with support and guidance from the tensioning element.
The present invention specifically relates to a transmission type wherein both the pulley contact faces of the transverse elements and the outer sheave surfaces of the pulleys that arrive into mutual contact during operation are convexly curved in the radial direction. Geometrically speaking, i.e. without any force being applied, a point contact is realised in this transmission type, rather than the—possibly discontinuous—line contact that is applied in more conventional transmission designs. As a consequence of such point contact, the contact pressure between the sheaves and the transverse elements will be relatively high when a normal force is applied therein, especially, where the belt runs at its smallest possible radius between the sheaves of the primary pulley (“Low ratio”). Such contact pressure and the stresses associated therewith may become a limiting factor in the design and/or application of the present transmission type.
It is an object of the present invention to mitigate this disadvantageous consequence of the said point contact. According to the invention, this object is achieved by the measure in the characterising clause of Claim 1. By this measure it is realised that the said contact pressure is favourably reduced, since in the smallest possible running radius of the belt where the contact pressure is otherwise the highest, a less concentrated contact is realised between the transverse elements and the pulley sheaves when a clamping force is applied, whereby the associated contact pressure and stresses are favourably lowered.
Favourably, in a more detailed embodiment of the invention the concave contour of the radially inner part of the radial contour of the pulley sheaves essentially matches the convex contour of the pulley contact faces of the transverse elements.
The present invention is explained in more detail below by way of example with reference to appended figures, in which:
The drive belt 3, which is shown in more detail in a tangentially oriented cross section through the transmission of
The transverse elements 32 are held in the pushbelt 3 such that they can move with respect to the circumferential direction of the tensioning element 31. In this arrangement, one main surface of each transverse element, for example the rear surface 42, is provided with a recess (not shown), and the respective other main surface thereof, for example the front surface 43, is provided with a projection 44, the projection 44 of a transverse element 32 in each case being received in the recess of an adjacent transverse element 32. The lower body 33 of the transverse elements 32 is provided with what is known as a tilting edge 45, namely a generally slightly rounded transition between a top side of the transverse element 32 of virtually constant thickness and an effectively tapering underside thereof, which tilting edge 45 extends in the transverse direction in the front surface 43 of the transverse element 32. The tilting edge 45 permits a tilting or rolling movement between adjacent transverse elements 32, with the result that the pushbelt 3, as seen in the circumferential direction, can follow a curved path between the sheaves 4, 5 of the pulleys 1, 2.
As is also shown in FIG. 2—though to a highly exaggerated extend—both the outer sheave surface 10 of the pulley sheave 4, 5 and the laterally oriented pulley contact faces 40 of the lower body 33 of the transverse element 32 are shaped with a convex curvature in radial direction, each curvature being described by a respective radius, i.e. Rr10 and Rr40. In practice, however, these two radii Rr10 and Rr40 are much larger than those shown in
In the transmission described above, the frictional contacts between the outer sheave surfaces 10 of the respective sheaves 4, 5 of the respective pulleys 1, 2 and the respective pulley contact faces 40 of the transverse elements 32 of the drive belt 3 occur in what are known as Hertzian elliptical punctiform contacts, in which a liquid lubricant is also used in order to limit wear and/or damage to the respective frictional surfaces 10, 40 as far as possible. It may be clear, and such is illustrated in
This latter situation is schematically depicted in
The present invention proposes to make use of the annular radially inner section 10f of the sheave surface 10, i.e. below the punctiform Hertzian contact CP2, to favourably lower the said highest load. In the above conventional transmission such inner section 10f of the sheave surface 10 does not arrive into contact with the transverse elements 32. However, according to the invention the shape of this surface section 10f may be changed from convexly curved in radial direction, i.e. as seen in a tangential cross-section, to straight or even concavely curved, such that the surface area of the said Hertzian contact is increased and the associated contact pressure and stresses are favourably lowered.
In the most preferred embodiment of the present invention, which is illustrated by
To ensure the proper operation of the transmission, the outer sheave surface 10 including the said radially inner section 10f thereof should preferably be formed as a continuous and smooth surface. This means that the said radially inner section 10f of the sheave surface and a convexly curved radially outer section thereof should not meet at an angle, but rather should smoothly merge with corresponding coefficients of direction.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NL05/00782 | 11/8/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/12/2008 |