The present invention relates to gas springs and particularly to a gas spring which has an extendable rod that moves at a variable speed during its stroke.
Gas springs are used in a variety of applications including the automotive environment in which hoods, trunks, and hatches frequently include gas springs for assisting in opening the relatively heavy members and preventing them from closing too rapidly. In other environments, such as office cabinets which frequently have somewhat heavy vertically pivoted doors, gas struts are again often used to assist in opening and closing such doors in a controlled fashion. Examples of gas springs which have been used for such applications are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,615,867; 6,053,486; 6,776,270; and 7,073,642.
In most applications, it is desired to allow a door to initially close or open relatively rapidly and, in a closing application, subsequently slow near the end of its closing motion to prevent the door from slamming shut. To accommodate such action, gas springs have in the past been formed with a cylinder having an internal tapered groove which communicates with the sealed piston associated with the gas spring and which groove narrows as the spring reaches its extended limit to thereby provide more resistance to the movement of the damping oil used past the piston and rod coupled thereto at the end of its stroke when the door is closing. This and other approaches have required somewhat complicated designs for the gas spring and/or additional parts to provide a variable speed effect.
Thus, there exists a need for a gas spring which is relatively inexpensive to manufacture and yet provides the performance characteristics of more expensive and complicated gas spring structures.
The system of the present invention provides such a device by providing a gas spring having a cylindrical housing with a piston and piston rod extending from said piston and outwardly through one end of the housing. The cylinder includes a region pressurized with an inert gas and a region including a multiple viscosity fluid, such that the piston can move through both regions. As the piston moves under the influence of the pressurized gas, it moves through the multiple viscosity fluid. This results in the piston rod moving with respect to the housing at a variable slower speed. In one embodiment of the invention, two layers of different viscosity oils, with the oil adjacent the piston when raised having a lower viscosity and density than the second layer of oil, such that the piston will move more quickly through the first oil layer and subsequently be slowed significantly as it enters the second oil layer. The different densities of the fluids cause them to separate under the force of gravity when the gas spring is mounted in a generally vertical position. In another embodiment, the oil region includes a substantially continuously varying viscosity fluid. Thus, with the gas assist spring of the present invention, a relatively inexpensive gas spring includes a variable viscosity fluid to achieve the desired controlled slowing motion of the rod extending from the gas spring. The resultant structure provides the desired performance characteristics at a greatly reduced cost by employing reliable gas strut construction for durability.
These and other features, objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon reading the following description thereof together with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Referring initially to
Attached to the inner surface 17 of door 18 by fasteners 22 and mounting block 24 is a fulcrum bar 20 which extends on the side of pivot axle 19 opposite door 18 and is pivotally coupled by a ball and socket coupling 32 to the end of extendable piston rod 34 of gas spring 30. The opposite end of gas spring 30 also includes a ball and socket pivot coupling member 33 which is pivotally coupled to the side wall 13. In some embodiments, each of the side walls may include a gas spring with the door 18 including a fulcrum bar 20 at each end. The pivot connections 32 and 33 may be of the type described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,124,864, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein, which includes a quick disconnect lever 35 for assisting in the ease of installation of the gas spring 30 to the cabinet 10.
The gas spring 30, as is well known in the design and application of such springs, is pressurized with a pressure selected for a given application. When the cover 18, for example, in the
Gas spring 30 of the present invention is shown in detail in
Housing 40 includes an upper region 50 and a lower region 54 on a side of piston assembly 42 opposite region 50, as seen in
Upper region 50 of gas spring 30 will typically be filled with a pressurized inert gas, such as nitrogen, and, depending upon the application and the desired actuating force for piston rod 34, the pressure can be varied anywhere from about 10 psi to about 250 psi, although pressures as high as 600 psi have been employed depending also upon the size of the spring 30. The lower region 54 of spring 30, however, is uniquely at least partially filled with multiple viscosity fluids, such as oil. In one embodiment shown in
The oils 62 and 60 separate under gravity due to their different, specific gravities and, in one embodiment the higher viscosity, higher density oil 60 was Mobil glygoyle 460 having a viscosity of 460 cSt at 40° C. with a specific gravity of 1.076 at 15° C. In this embodiment, the lower density and viscosity oil 62 was Univis N32 commercially available from Exxon Company, USA, which has a viscosity of 32 cSt at 42° C. and a specific gravity of 0.87 at 15.6° C. The differences in specific gravity result in the striation of the levels of oil 60 and 62, as shown by boundary 63 in
During the initial extension of piston rod 34 from spring 30, as seen in
The specific oils 60 and 62 in the example are merely illustrative and numerous other oils employed in gas springs and having different specific gravity and viscosity characteristics can be employed, it being important that the specific gravities and viscosities are different to provide the resulting controlled desired variable movement of the piston rod of the gas spring.
Thus, with the gas strut of the present invention, a relatively inexpensively manufactured and reliable gas strut is provided with improved operational characteristics to allow the relatively quick initial movement of a movable member with respect to a fixed member between which the gas strut is mounted and subsequently progressively slower movement toward the end of travel of the moveable member with respect to the fixed member. This device can be applied in numerous applications in the automotive, furniture, and other fields to provide such desired control. As is also well known, a gas spring can be mounted in a configuration to control the movement of one member with respect to another in either direction (i.e., open or closed).
It will become apparent to those skilled in the art that these and various modifications to the preferred embodiments of the invention as described herein can be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.