This invention relates to a check valve formed integrally with a tubular flow conduit and a method of manufacturing the same, as distinguished from securing a separate check valve assembly to the flow conduit.
In many applications it is desirable to incorporate a check valve in a fluid flow conduit or line to prevent fluid from flowing in one direction while allowing fluid to flow in the other direction. In certain of those prior applications a check valve has been integrated directly in the fluid line, thereby avoiding the necessity of using self-contained separate valve assemblies that must be joined in an appropriate manner to the tubing or pipe system. In such integrated applications, cost savings have been realized by using the tubing itself as the casing or body portion of the check valve assembly that is thus integrated with the tube. Such integrated check valve assemblies also eliminate leakage points from seals because they avoid breaking the continuity of the tubing.
Prior examples of integrating a check valve into a length of tubing stock are disclosed in the expired U.S. Pat. No. 3,387,625 Laure and in the expired U.S. Pat. No. 4,611,374 Schnelle et al. Both of these prior art patents incorporate a ball-type check valve in a flow conduit made of material that is capable of being shaped or worked. The integral valve cage or chamber as well as valve seat thus are formed by reducing the diameter of the tubing at two spaced points to thereby form both ends of the valve cage. One end is thus necked down to serve as the valve seat for the ball. The other end is likewise necked down to serve as a retainer either for a valve spring assembled in the valve cage (Laure '625), or for a valve-ball-retainer comprising a series of circumferentially spaced inwardly extending ball-retaining indentations that hold the ball from release from the cage, while allowing fluid flow around the ball through the tube (Schnelle et al '374).
While the aforementioned integrated in-line check valve and flow tube assemblies provide the aforestated advantages of avoiding assembling a separate check valve assembly to the tube, they are disadvantageous from the standpoint of requiring the nominal tube diameter to be reduced by the necking down operation both upstream and downstream of the ball valve element of the check valve, thereby reducing the fluid flow capacity of the tubular flow line.
In general, and by way of summary description and not by way of limitation, the present invention provides an improved in-line integrated tube and check valve assembly that comprises a fluid-flow conduit in the form of an elongated hollow tube having a linear end section open at one axial end to serve as a fluid flow outlet of the tube. The tube has a check valve element, preferably in the form of a ball, captured in an enlarged valve cavity integrally formed in the end section of the tube and axially spaced from the open outlet end of the tube. The tube has a nominal constant diameter upstream of the check valve cavity, and the tube wall forming the enlarged cavity has a cross sectional dimension greater than this nominal tube diameter. The tube cavity wall forms a valve seat at the upstream end of the valve cavity. Preferably a valve spring is also captured in compression in the cavity and lightly resiliently biases the valve element against the integrated valve seat.
The invention also provides an improved method of assembling the check valve element into the tube of deformable material. First the outlet and contiguous end portion of the tube are expanded by an end forming, cold working operation for a given axial length. The valve seat is formed within the tube end portion as it is being so end-form expanded, the valve seat being located where the expanded end portion integrally joins the unexpanded upstream portion of the tube that remains at the nominal diameter. Then a valve element and valve spring are inserted via the tube outlet and positioned within the expanded end portion of the tube with the valve element seated against the valve seat. Then the expanded tube outlet end portion is again deformed, but this time by an end-form swaging operation that reduces its diameter from the outlet up to a given location downstream of the valve spring to thereby form a valve cavity with a transition stop-shoulder wall that captures the spring within the valve cavity and in compression for lightly biasing the valve element against the valve seat. Preferably the tube outlet end portion is thus swage reformed back to the nominal diameter of the tube. In addition, the reformed tube end portion may be further end-form cold worked to form upset hose stop and sealing beads, compression flare configurations or other attachment configurations in the reformed tube geometry as desired for coupling the outlet end portion of the tube to flow line continuation structure.
Referring in more detail to the accompanying drawings,
The normal direction of flow of fluid through assembly 10 is indicated by the arrow F in
As shown only in
The preferred embodiment of the method of the invention for assembling check valve ball 24 into tube 12 of deformable material is illustrated in sequence in the forming and assembly steps illustrated in
Tube end portion 12 is shown in
In the first forming step of the method, the end portion wall 16 is radially expanded to form an intermediate portion 40 extending a given length upstream from outlet end 14 and having a diameter larger than that of wall 16 and integrally joined to wall 16 by a conical portion 42 having a taper angle less than that of wall 22. This expansion stage is preferably performed by a conventional end-forming head expansion tooling and technique (not shown). Typically in this process tube 12a is put in a segmented die that clamps portion 16 upstream of the region for forming wall 22 and has an internal cavity profile matching that of tube wall 40 and conical intermediate wall 42. An expanding mandrel tool is forced endwise axially into the open end 14 of tube wall 16, and has a shape and diameter suitable to cold work expand wall 16 out to the diameter of wall 40 shown in
In the next stage of the method illustrated in the progression from
In the next step of the method, illustrated in
In this next step of the method, illustrated by the transition from the form of
In the next step of the method illustrated by the sequence of progression from
The integrated tube and check valve assembly 10 of
From the foregoing description it will now be seen that the method and apparatus of the invention provide many advantages over the prior art, including eliminating a separate drainback valve subassembly component that must be attached by fittings and seals to an outlet end of a tube, this part being eliminated by end forming the valve shell directly into the tube. Moreover, unlike the aforementioned prior art patents discussed above, the flow diameter of tube 12 need never be reduced smaller than the nominal diameter of wall 16. Hence fluid flow through the integrated check ball assembly is not restricted by diametrical reductions in the tubing diameter. Also, check ball 24 operates in an enlarged diameter valve casing 18 so that the cross sectional flow area around valve ball 24 when open can be equal to the cross sectional flow area of wall section 16, or nearly so. Hence, fluid flow is not hampered by ball 24 operating in a constricted diameter tubing section as in the prior art.
The conical form of biasing spring 26, with its largest diameter abutting stop wall 32 and coil 30, provides a stabilized biasing arrangement for valve ball 24 even though operably “floating” as it opens into the large diameter cavity provided by valve casing wall 20. The swaging operation utilized to form tubing portion 34 in
Note also that the invention preferably integrates the check valve assembly into a linear tubular outlet end portion of the fluid flow conduit line. Therefore, conventional mass-production, high efficiency end-forming machines can be advantageously utilized to perform all of the cold working permanent deformation operations required to form the improved in-line integrated tube and check valve assembly 10 of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2137402 | Hoferer et al. | Nov 1938 | A |
2679903 | McGowen Jr. et al. | Jun 1954 | A |
3387625 | Laure | Jun 1968 | A |
3725990 | Petersen et al. | Apr 1973 | A |
3830258 | Leach | Aug 1974 | A |
4059881 | Sliger | Nov 1977 | A |
4295412 | Hachiro | Oct 1981 | A |
4611374 | Schnelle et al. | Sep 1986 | A |
4641405 | Green et al. | Feb 1987 | A |
4681559 | Hooven | Jul 1987 | A |
5392516 | Mazhar | Feb 1995 | A |
5582204 | Hiranuma et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
5649360 | Schwarz | Jul 1997 | A |
5799689 | Tang et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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01133634 | May 1989 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050039798 A1 | Feb 2005 | US |