The present invention relates to a variable-displacement vane oil pump.
In general, a variable-displacement vane oil pump comprises:
Normally, there is further provided a moving device of the mobile ring according to a driving pressure between a central position on the rotation axis of the hub towards a predetermined extreme position, eccentric with respect to the rotation axis of the hub itself.
Furthermore, in the specific variable-displacement vane pump described and claimed in international patent application WO 03/023228 (PIERBURG), the moving device comprises a driving chamber made on a wall of the cavity and an overhanging projection of the mobile ring. The projection is adapted to slide in the driving chamber due to a driving pressure present in the driving chamber itself. Furthermore, in the pump described in the aforesaid document, there is a guiding device for guiding the mobile ring in the cavity. Furthermore, the guiding device comprises a protrusion coupled to a guiding seat, and a spring arranged inside the guiding seat, which elastically acts on the mobile ring.
The text of the aforesaid patent application WO 03/023228 (PIERBURG) must be considered to all effects an integral part of the present description.
Currently, the contact between mobile ring and main body of the pump occurs through a prismatic contact (surface-on-surface). This means that there is no lubrication between the two surfaces because there is direct contact between them.
During the life of the pump and in highly loaded engine applications, a direct contact between surfaces may lead as an undesired collateral effect to an initial adhesive wear followed by a subsequent abrasive wear.
Although, actually, catastrophic events caused by the contact between surfaces in highly loaded engine applications of the variable eccentricity vane pump have not yet been reported, it appears appropriate to introduce the innovations object of the present description.
Incidentally, in this context, “highly loaded engine applications” mean the applications in which the pump is subjected to very fast rotation speeds and/or very high pressures (i.e. some sports car engines or some truck engines).
Therefore, it is the object of the present invention to make a variable-displacement vane oil pump which improves the one described in international patent application WO 03/023228 (PIERBURG) and which at the same time is easy and cost-effective to manufacture.
According to the present invention there is thus made a variable-displacement rotary vane pump with the features claimed in the appended claims.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which illustrate a non-limitative embodiment thereof, in which:
In
The pump 10 comprises a main body 11 presenting a cavity 12 in which a mobile ring 13 is accommodated.
In the central part of the cavity 12 and within the mobile ring 13 there is a hub 14 provided with vanes 15, each of which is adapted to slide in a corresponding slot 16 obtained in the hub 14. The external ends of the vane 15 slide on an internal wall 13a of the mobile ring 13.
The volume defined by the internal wall 13a of the mobile ring 13 is a circular-base cylinder in the three embodiments shown in the accompanying figures.
Furthermore, the internal end of each vane 15 rests on a floating ring 17 within the hub 14.
In known manner, the hub 14 is rotationally integral with a shaft (SH) with which it is integral.
The aforesaid volume defined by the mobile ring 13 is characterized by its centre (X), while the hub 14 presents its own centre (Y) about which the shaft SH and thus the hub 14 itself turn.
As known, when the centre (X) of the mobile ring 13 coincides with the axis (Y) of the hub 14 (and of the shaft (SH)) the pump 10 is at its “dead point” and there is no pumping of oil from an intake pipe 18 towards a delivery pipe 19.
Therefore, in order to have pumping there must be an eccentricity (E) given by the distance between the two axes (X), (Y).
A pressurized oil feeding channel (not shown) hydraulically connects the delivery pipe 19 to a driving chamber 20, obtained in the wall 12a of the cavity 12. The driving chamber 20 is adapted to contain a projection 21 overhanging from the mobile ring 13. Evidently, in the driving chamber 20 there is the same driving pressure as the oil in the delivery pipe 19.
As shown in the accompanying figures, a guiding device 22 of the mobile ring 13 is provided in a diametrically opposite portion of the projection 21 (and of the driving chamber 20) with respect to the axes (X), (Y).
In turn, the guiding device 22 comprises a guiding seat 23 and a protrusion 24 (provided with an opening (SC)), which protrudes from the mobile ring 13 into the guiding seat 23 itself. The guiding device 22 further comprises a helical spring 25.
Furthermore, the helical spring 25, partially accommodated in the opening (SC), elastically stresses the protrusion 24 and thus also the mobile ring 13.
In use, the elastic force produced by the helical spring 25 serves to contrast the movements induced on the mobile ring 13 by the pressurized oil present in the driving chamber 20.
In this first embodiment, a first pin (SP1) driven into the main body 11 has been used to limit the friction between a wall 20a of the driving chamber 20 and a wall 21a of the projection 21; such first pin (SP1) slightly raises the surface 21a from the surface 20a creating a first gap (MT1).
Similarly, again in the first embodiment in
Thus, the contacts between the surface 21a and the first pin (SP1) and between the surface 24a and the second pin (SP2), respectively, continue to be sliding, but in the two gaps (MT1), (MT2) there is a slight thrust of the oil on the projection 21 and on the protrusion 23, respectively, which considerably decreases the involved loads.
In other words, although a proper lubrication is not established in the gaps (MT1), (MT2) the involved loads are smaller and the oil cools the walls 20a, 21a, 23a, 24a, with consequent positive effects on the general operation of the system.
In the second embodiment shown in
Finally, in the third embodiment shown in
Indeed, the main advantage of the solutions adopted in the pump object of the present invention is that due to the considerable decrease of wear between the parts in reciprocally relative movement (parts belonging to the main body of the pump and to the mobile ring), specifically between a projection (of the mobile ring) and the corresponding driving chamber and between a protrusion (again of the mobile ring) and the corresponding guiding seat.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
BO2006A000811 | Nov 2006 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2007/003658 | 11/28/2007 | WO | 00 | 2/18/2010 |