This application claims priority to French Patent Application FR 06 00 308 filed on Jan. 13, 2006.
This invention relates generally to a window regulator device for a vehicle opening frame and a method of assembling the window regulator device.
A window regulator is a device used in a motor vehicle opening frame equipped with a window to transmit a driving force exerted by a user or a motor to the window.
Vehicle door window regulators are described, for example, in documents FR-A-2 761 104, U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,141,910, 5,960,588 or 6,115,966. A window regulator generally includes a motor or a crank that drives a drum by a gear system. The drum drives a cable that acts on a slider secured to the window along at least one rail.
The gear system and the drum are generally arranged in a housing for ease of handling and to protect the window regulator. The housing containing the drum and the gear system can also include the motor and an electronic unit, or can include apertures for modular assembly with such components. A housing of this kind is described, for example, in documents U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,141,910 or FR-A-2 857 908.
When the window regulator is assembled, the rail or rails, the drive cable, the drum, the actuation motor or the crank, and if applicable the electronic unit, must be securely fixed in a door of a vehicle. All or some of the components of the window regulator can be pre-assembled on a carrier plate. For example, document FR-A-2 857 908 describes a carrier plate that brings together the drum on one side and the motor and the electronic unit on the other side. The carrier plate is then inserted in the door of the motor vehicle. Document U.S. Pat. No. 5,960,588 also describes a carrier plate that brings the drum and the motor together on the same side. The carrier plate is then fixed on an interior panel of the door. The carrier plate simplifies the final assembly of the window regulator in the door, but is bulky and relatively costly.
The window regulator can also be fixed on a panel that is then set into a structure of the door. The panel can be denoted by the term “door module,” and in addition to the window regulator components, can carry other door accessories, such as, for example, a loudspeaker or a lock. The panel of the door module must have good rigidity, in particular due to the tension of the cables, but especially when the window regulator is manually driven by the crank. The stresses applied to the crank, in particular at a limit stop, can be considerable and are passed on to the panel (with the risk of its deformation if it is too flexible), whether the panel is metal or plastic.
Alternatively, the drum housing, with or without the crank or the actuation motor and the electronic unit, can be fixed in the door after insertion of the rails and the drive cable. Each component is then fixed separately in the door, and the cable tension is then adjusted to drive the window accurately. Separate fixing of each component of the window regulator provides flexibility and adaptation to different layouts and door shapes, but complicates the final assembly of the window regulator in the door.
There is therefore a need for a simplified and low cost window regulator device that allows for good rigidity without making the panel too heavy if the window regulator is assembled on a door module panel.
Furthermore, in operation, when the window regulator is incorporated into a vehicle door, it can be necessary to change or repair the actuation motor and/or the electronic unit. When the actuation motor is removed, it is preferable for the drum to be kept in place and for the drive cable tension not to be released. If the cable tension is released, the cable can escape from its guide points, and the position of the window slider or sliders can become un-adjusted, making reassembly very complex. It is then necessary to readjust the settings for all the components of the window regulator.
There is also therefore a need for a window regulator device that allows for the removal of the actuation motor and the electronic unit without requiring the removal of the other components of the window regulator, particularly by maintaining the drum and the drive cable in position.
The invention provides a window regulator device assembled by placing a cable drum in a recess of a plate and securing the plate against a rail by the joint action of cable tension and mutual imbrication of lugs located, respectively, on the plate and on the rail. The assembly of the window regulator device can be simplified, and the cable drum is fixed independently of the mounting and removal of an actuation motor. Moreover, by fixing the plate on the rail, the rigidity of the rail can be taken advantage of when the window regulator is assembled on a door module panel. The door module panel does not need to be perfectly rigid because the stresses applied to the crank are partially absorbed by the rail and not by the panel alone, reducing the cost of the door module panel.
More particularly, the invention provides a window regulator device including at least one rail having at least one lug that projects from the rail, a plate having at least one lug and a recess, a drive cable, and a cable drum placed in the recess of the plate. The plate is fixed to the rail by the joint action of the tensioned cable and the mutual imbrication of the lugs of the plate and the rail.
Depending on the embodiment, the cable drum can be held in the recess of the plate by the lug of the rail, or the rail can have at least one cut-out that isolates the lug of the rail. The rail can have at least one aperture that receives the lug of the plate, or the plate can include at least one slot to receive the lug of the rail.
According to one embodiment, the window regulator device further includes an actuation motor fixed to the plate that engages with the drum. According to one characteristic, at least one fixing point of the actuation motor on the plate is located on the rail.
The invention also provides a door module including a panel, at least one rail fixed to the panel and having at least one lug that projects from the rail, a plate having at least one lug and a recess, a drive cable, and a cable drum placed in the recess of the plate. The plate is fixed to the rail by the joint action of the tensioned cable and the mutual imbrication of the lugs of the plate and the rail.
The invention further provides a vehicle opening frame including a window actuated by a window regulator device according to the invention.
The invention also relates to a method of assembling a window regulator device. The method includes the steps providing a rail with at least one lug that projects from the rail, placing a cable drum in a recess of a plate having at least one lug, securing the plate on the rail by the mutual imbrication of the lugs of the plate and the rail, positioning a drive cable along a cable run running from the cable drum, and tensioning the drive cable to immobilize the plate against the rail.
According to one characteristic, the method of assembling further includes a step of fixing an actuation motor onto the plate.
The invention further relates to a method of removing the actuation motor for the window regulator device according to the invention. The method includes the steps of releasing the actuation motor from the plate and maintaining the tension of the drive cable with the drum held in the recess of the plate by the lug of the rail.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the following detailed description of the embodiments of the invention, given as an example only and with reference to the drawings, which show:
A direction X, which is a direction of travel of the vehicle, a direction Z (vertical) and a direction Y (lateral and perpendicular to the X and Z axes) are defined conventionally.
A drive cable 40 winds and unwinds on a cable drum 30 engaged by an electric drive motor 50. Generally, an electronic unit 60 is associated with the drive motor 50 to control, among other things, the speed and direction of rotation of the drive motor 50. The cable drum 30 can also be driven by a crank.
The drive cable 40 is tensioned along a cable run defined by a set of deflecting pulleys 130 between ends of the guide rails 10 and the cable drum 30. The tension of the drive cable 40 must be controlled accurately. Excess tension prematurely wears the components of the window regulator device 19, which can result in breakage. Insufficient tension in the drive cable 40 allows play, which falsifies the calculation of the exact position of the window by the electronic unit and can result in the malfunction of certain applications, such as anti-pinch, for example. Insufficient tension in the drive cable 40 can also cause the drive cable 40 to come loose from the deflecting pulleys 130. The tension of the drive cable 40 is adjusted at the time of assembly of the window regulator device 19 in the door when the relative positioning of the cable drum 30 and the guide rails 10 is fixed. The cable drum 30 is fixed onto a plate 20 secured to the guide rail 10, and the drive cable 40 is tensioned along the cable run.
The lug 11 on the guide rail 10 projects diagonally towards both a back and a side of the guide rail 10. With reference to the guide rail 10 in position of the window regulator device 19 assembled in the door, the lug 11 extends in a direction having one X component and one Y component.
According to the invention, the plate 20 is designed to be secured against the guide rail 10. To this end, according to the embodiment illustrated, the plate 20 includes two lugs 21 isolated by two cut-outs 33 in an edge of the plate 20. The two lugs 21 of the plate 20 are designed to enter apertures 12 provided in the guide rail 10 on either side of the lug 11. The apertures 12 for receiving the lugs 21 of the plate 20 are approximately aligned with the short parallel side of the trapezium of the cut-out 13 of the guide rail 10, i.e., with the base of the lug 11 of the guide rail 10. The plate 20 also includes a slot 23 (shown on
The window regulator device 19 can be assembled in the following manner. At least one guide rail 10 including the lug 11 is manufactured. The cable drum 30 is placed in the recess 22 of the plate 20 on one of the edges. The drive cable 40 is positioned along a cable run running from the cable drum 30 and extending along the guide rail or rails 10 of the window regulator device 19. The cable run depends on the model of the window regulator device 19.
As illustrated in
The mutual imbrication allows the plate 20 to be immobilized in two directions, i.e., in the longitudinal direction of the guide rail 10 and in a direction perpendicular to a plane of the guide rail 10. When the guide rail 10 of the window regulator device 19 is fixed in the door of the vehicle, the mutual imbrication of the lugs 21 and 11 of the plate 20 and the guide rail 10, respectively, immobilizes the plate 20 in the directions Z and Y defined above. The plate 20 could, however, be released from the guide rail 10 in the direction X. To immobilize the plate 20 firmly against the guide rail 10, the drive cable 40 is tensioned between the cable drum 30 and at least two deflecting pulleys 130. The number of deflecting pulleys 130 depend on the model of the window regulator device 19. The drive cable 40 tension flattens the plate 20 against the guide rail 10 and blocks the plate 20 in the third direction X to immobilize the plate 20 firmly before the drive motor 50 is installed.
According to the embodiments, the drive cable 40 can be positioned along the cable run before or after the plate 20 has been secured to the guide rail 10 by mutual imbrication of the lugs 21 and 11 of the plate 20 and the guide rail 10, respectively. For example, a jig can hold the plate 20 and the guide rail 10 together before the installation and tensioning of the drive cable 40.
As illustrated in
The lug 11 of the guide rail 10 can have a hook shape, with a first part designed to be flattened against an edge of the slot 23 of the plate 20 and a second part designed to hook an edge of the cable drum 30. The hook shape of the lug 11 of the guide rail 10 allows the plate 20 to be held firmly against the guide rail 10 (by the first part), while simultaneously the cable drum 30 is securely held in the recess 22 of the plate 20 (by the second part).
The drive motor 50 can then be fixed to the plate 20 by screwing or any other suitable method. At least one of the fixing screws 55 can fix the plate 20 to the guide rail 10, even if the plate 20 is already firmly held against the guide rail 10 by the joint action of the tensioned drive cable 40 and the mutual imbrication of the lugs 21 and 11 of the plate 20 and the guide rail 10, respectively.
The window regulator device 19 can be assembled with the plate 20 fixed to the guide rail 10 by the joint action of the tensioned drive cable 40 and the mutual imbrication of the lugs 21 and 11 of the plate 20 and the guide rail 10, respectively. The window regulator device 19 thus assembled can be delivered to the manufacturer to be assembled in the vehicle door. The drive motor 50 can be delivered and assembled separately. The assembly of the window regulator device 19 in a vehicle door is thus simplified.
As illustrated in
Furthermore, in the case of an electrically driven window regulator device 19, the drive motor 50 of the window regulator device 19 according to the invention can also be removed without the need to remove the cable drum 30 at the same time and without releasing the tension in the drive cable 40. As illustrated in
Of course, this invention is not limited to the embodiments described as examples with reference to the figures. In particular, although the invention has been illustrated with only one lug 11 projecting on the guide rail 10 and two lugs 21 on the plate 20, it is understood that the number, shapes and locations of the lugs 11 and 21 of the guide rail 10 and of the plate 20, respectively, can vary while performing the fixing of the plate 20 to the guide rail 10 by the joint action of the mutual imbrication of the lugs 11 and 21 and the tension in the drive cable 40.
The foregoing description is only exemplary of the principles of the invention. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than using the example embodiments which have been specifically described. For that reason the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
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