The invention relates to a working cylinder with end position damping, which has a cylinder body that contains a cylinder chamber, the cylinder body for instance being in the form of a tube or an extruded profile section; two end parts that close the cylinder on its ends; a piston supported longitudinally displaceably in the cylinder chamber between two end positions; and a device for damping the motion of the piston upon the approach to a at least one of its end positions.
Pressure medium-actuated working cylinders often have end position damping to assure impact-free working action of the working cylinder. One example of such a pressure medium-actuated working cylinder with end position damping is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,758,127. In this working cylinder, an axially protruding, tubular, cylindrical damping pin is provided on each of the two face ends of the piston, and associated with the damping pin is a receiving opening in the respective end piece, toward it, of the cylinder body, into which opening the damping pin plunges upon the approach of the piston to its end position. The receiving opening is in communication with a device for throttled the diversion pressure medium enclosed in the damping chamber. The length of the path that the piston travels upon approach to an end position, from the position in which the damping pin is just beginning to penetrate into the receiving opening and closes the damping chamber, until the position in which the piston has reached its actual terminal position and for instance rests with its face end on the face end of the associated end part, is called the damping stroke. The length of this damping stroke is predetermined by the axial length of the damping pin and hence by the depth of the receiving opening, which in turn is limited by the axial dimensions or in other words the thickness of the end part. Since the installed length of a working cylinder is often predetermined, for instance by standards, for a given piston stroke, the damping stroke cannot be made arbitrarily long.
On the other hand, particularly when relatively large masses are in motion, a longer damping distance, or in other words a longer damping stroke, is appropriate, since by that means the kinetic energy of the moving masses can be better dissipated, which leads to lesser reaction forces on the subconstruction and usually also improves adjustability, especially with additional elements. In an end position—damped working cylinder known from German Utility Model DE 297 06 364 U1, the main piston of the working cylinder is preceded by a control piston, which carries a ring magnet and which is connected to the main piston via cone springs and slides displaceably on the piston rod. The control piston simultaneously serves a blocking device and as a valve for outflow conduits, and upon contact of the control piston with the respective end part of the working cylinder, a damping impoundment chamber is embodies, from which fluid can flow away via a throttled outflow bore. Although this working cylinder does have a longer damping path or stroke in comparison to the aforementioned prior art, nevertheless the cone spring requires additional installation space, which is in addition to the fact that the use of spring elements, because of their limited service life, is problematic in many applications.
It is therefore the object of the invention to create a working cylinder with end position damping whose damping device is distinguished by a simple, operationally reliable construction and which, with a limited installed length of the entire working cylinder, has a long damping stroke.
For attaining this object, in the novel working cylinder, the device for damping the motion of the piston upon the approach to at least one of its end positions has two cooperating damping elements, of which one is provided on an end part of the working cylinder and the other is provided on the piston, on its side toward that end part. The two end parts, upon the approach of the piston to its end position, close a damping chamber, which communicates with a device for throttled diversion of pressure medium enclosed in the damping chamber. To that end, the two damping elements are insertable axially into one another in telescoping fashion in the direction of the piston motion, for instance in that one of the two damping elements has a receiving opening embodied in the end part or the piston, and the other has a telescoping damping pin that is insertable in sealed fashion into the receiving opening. In a preferred embodiment, the damping pin has a sleeve, which is supported in limited axial displacement on a rodlike bearing part that protrudes axially toward the piston or the end part. In a working cylinder that has a piston rod extended through an end part, the bearing part can directly be part of the piston rod.
Of the two damping elements that are insertable into one another upon the approach of the piston to its end position, as least one is supported for limited longitudinal displacement on the end part or the piston between two axially spaced-apart terminal positions with respect to the piston or the end part as applicable. Both damping elements are provided with cooperating inhibiting means, under whose influence the longitudinally displaceable damping element, upon a movement of the piston away from its end position, is adjustable into a terminal position, which is farther away from the piston than a first terminal position that the damping element normally assumes. The displaceability of the one damping element relative the piston or the end part produces an additional damping stroke by a telescoping action of the parts sliding in one another upon the approach of the piston to its end position. The inhibiting means assure that upon the motion of the piton away from its end position, the longitudinally displaceable damping element returns to its outset position without requiring additional actuation devices, such as spring elements or the like, for doing so. Hence no additional installation space is needed. The simple construction moreover allows the use of parts produced on a near-mass-production basis even for long damping strokes, that is, long damping paths.
The working cylinder may be either a single- or double-acting working cylinder, with a piston rod extended through at least one of its end parts, but the concept of the invention can also be applied equally to cylinders without piston rods. The working cylinders are as a rule pressure medium-actuated, for instance being pneumatic cylinders, but a corresponding device for end position damping can also be provided in working cylinders or linear drives that have a different form of actuation, for instance via Bowden cables and the like.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings, in which:
While the invention is susceptible of various modifications and alternative constructions, certain illustrative embodiments thereof have been shown in the drawings and will be described below in detail. It should be understood, however, that there is no intention to limit the invention to the specific forms disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, alternative constructions, and equivalents falling within the spirit and scope of the invention.
Referring now more particularly to
A coaxial cylindrical piston rod 8 is fixed to the piston 4 and is guided through the end part 2 in sealed fashion. A piston rod seal is shown at 9. The piston rod 8 that crosses through the cylinder compartment 6 is lengthened on the diametrically opposite side of the piston. On its lengthened portion 10, a coaxial cylindrical bush 11 protrudes into the cylinder compartment 7 and is fixed to the piston 4 by a screw 12 that is screwed to the lengthened portion 10 of the piston rod.
One connection conduit 14, opening into a threaded bore 13, is provided in each of the two end parts 2, 3 and can be made to communicate, via a corresponding screwed-in connection fitting, with a compressed air source, or a ventilator, in each case via suitable valves, and which on its other sides opens into a respective cylindrical, cup-shaped receiving opening 15, which discharges into the cylinder compartment 6 and 7, respectively, on the side of the respective end part 2 and 3 oriented toward the piston 4. The receiving opening 15 is coaxial with the piston rod is closed on the side away from the piston 4 in both end parts 2, 3, which in the case of the end part 2 is achieved by the piston rod seal 9, while the receiving opening 15 in the other end part 3 is closed off by an integrally formed-on bottom part 16. Each of the two receiving openings 15 contains an elastic sealing element, in the form of an O-ring 20, that extends all the way around in an annular groove 18 in the vicinity of the mouth of the receiving opening. The axial depth of the two receiving openings 15 is as a rule the same and is dimensioned such that a maximum depth 21 is achieved without increasing the installed length of the working cylinder.
The receiving opening 15 in each of the two end parts 2, 3 forms a respective damping element of a device for end position damping of the piston 4. For that purpose, it cooperates with a second damping element, which is provided on the piston 4 and has a respective telescoping damping pin, which upon the approach of the piston to its respective end position is insertable in sealed fashion into the respective receiving opening 15, in order to define a damping chamber, which encloses pressure medium which effects a pneumatic damping of the piston motion upon the throttled outflow from the receiving opening.
The second damping element, cooperating with the receiving opening 15, has a cylindrical sleeve 19, which is supported for limited axial longitudinal displacement on the piston rod 8 on the side of the piston 4 toward the end part 2 on the cylindrical bush 11 on the side of the piston toward the other end part 3. On its side toward the respective end part 2, 3, the sleeve 11 is chamfered on the outside at 22, while on its diametrically opposed end it is formed with an annular flange 23, which defines a stop face 24 oriented toward the respective end part 2, 3. In the face end of the piston toward it, the annular flange 23 of each of the two sleeves 19 has a respective annular groove 25, which is capable of receiving the entire annular flange 23, as will be described in detail hereinafter.
As can be seen particularly from the detail “Z” in
In the first terminal position shown in
An annual bead 320 extending all the way around furthermore is provided on the two sleeves 19, for instance adjoining the chamfer 22; it can cooperate with the respective O-ring 20 in the end part 2 and 3, respectively, and together with this O-ring it forms inhibiting means for the axial motion of the sleeve 19 oriented away from the respective end part, as will be described below.
The two receiving openings 15 in the end parts 2, 3 each are provided with a device for throttled diversion of pressure medium enclosed in the damping chamber that is surrounded by the piston 4, the cylinder chamber 6 or 7 and the end part 2 and 3, respectively. In the illustrated embodiment, this device includes a throttle valve 33, which is shown in its details in the detail “Y” in
The throttle valve 33 has a valve body 37, which is pressed elastically by a valve spring 38 against a valve seat 39; the valve spring 38 being braced axially against a stopper 400 screwed into the bore 34. The valve body 37 in this case is in the form of a differential piston. If the same pressure of the pressure medium prevails in both conduits 35, 36, then the valve spring 38 can keep the valve body 37 on the valve seat 39 and can thus keep the throttle valve closed (
The end position damping of the working cylinder described functions as follows:
In the middle stroke position of the piston 4, shown in
In the stroke position shown in
If the piston 4, the piston rod 8, and a mass connected to them move at a certain speed onward in the direction of the end part 3, then, because of the throttled outflow of the pressure medium from the cylinder compartment 7, a pressure increase takes place in the cylinder compartment 7, which acts counter to the motion; in other words, damping of the motion of the piston 4 upon its approach to its end position takes place.
In a further course of the approach to its end position, the piston 4 reaches the stroke position shown in
In this end position of the piston 4, the sleeve 19, over practically its entire length, is slipped onto the bush 11 and the screw 12 protrudes axially past the sleeve 19 slightly, as can be seen from
From a comparison of
The travel by the piston 4, from the stroke position in which the damping chamber in the cylinder compartment 7 has just been formed until the end position in
If the piston rod 8 moves to the left again, beginning at the end position in
The end position damping has been described above in conjunction with the approach of the piston 4 to the end part 3 remote from the piston rod 8. The conditions upon the approach of the piston to the other end part 2 are the same so that repeated explanation of that function is unnecessary.
The invention has been described above in conjunction with a dual-action pneumatic cylinder that operates with a piston rod 8. In principle, it is also applicable to working cylinders without piston rods, as shown for example in
Many versions of piston-rodless working cylinders are known. Examples of them are described in European Patent Disclosure EP 0 260 344 B1 and in U.S. Pat. No. 4,373,427. In such working cylinders, the pinlike damping element is often fixedly joined to the end parts of the cylinder, and upon the motion of the piston toward the end position, the damping element enters the piston. As the US patent shows, constructions that are the reverse of this have already been proposed, but that leads to correspondingly thick end parts. If the damping element is provided on the respective end part, then the space already present in the piston in these working cylinders is advantageously utilized for the pneumatic damping, and the end parts can be kept relatively short and independent of the damping length. The present invention makes it possible even in these cases to attain substantially longer damping paths without increasing the installed length of the cylinder, as can be seen from
Only those parts of the working cylinder that are essential to the invention are explained and shown. The aforementioned references, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference, may be consulted for the details. The tubular cylinder body 51 is closed on its ends by two end parts 52, 53 and surrounds a cylinder chamber, in which a piston 54 is longitudinally displaceable. The cylinder body 51 is provided with a longitudinal slit, through which a rib joined to the piston 54 leads outward to a force-transmitting element 55. The longitudinal slit is closed by an elastic sealing tape 56, which is in two parts and seals off the cylinder or pressure compartment 57, 58 from the outside on both sides of the piston 54. Each of the two end parts 52 has a tubular bearing part 59, which protrudes into the respective cylinder chamber 57, 58 and is oriented coaxially with the piston 54. On each bearing part 59, a sleeve 19 as in
The same is similarly true for the embodiment of the receiving opening 15, which extends axially in the form of a blind bore into the piston 54. The tubular bearing parts 59 in the end parts 52, 53 each discharge into a conduit 60, which leads to a throttle valve 33, similarly to that shown in
The invention has been described above in conjunction with throttle valve 33, which causes the throttling of the pressure medium flowing out of the respective cylinder compartment upon the approach of the piston to an end part and thus regulates the damping. Particularly in pneumatic cylinders with a relatively long damping path, it can be expedient, instead of such a throttle valve, to provide a pressure limiting valve, of the kind known for instance from U.S. Pat. No. 3,196,753 the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. The combination of a lengthened damping stroke by telescoping as described with a pressure limiting valve brings about a substantial improvement in the adjustability of the pneumatic damping. Since pressure limiting valves close below a defined, set threshold value, it is expedient in this case to proved a parallel conduit (see conduit 40 in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 032 853 | Jul 2005 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2786452 | Tucker | Mar 1957 | A |
3067726 | Williams | Dec 1962 | A |
3196753 | Maurer | Jul 1965 | A |
3677141 | Lagerqvist et al. | Jul 1972 | A |
3999463 | Greenwood | Dec 1976 | A |
4301714 | Stenlund et al. | Nov 1981 | A |
5307729 | Hedlund | May 1994 | A |
5692429 | Sonntag | Dec 1997 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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38 18 833 | Feb 1989 | DE |
297 06 364 | Jun 1997 | DE |
0 260 344 | Mar 1988 | EP |
11-132203 | May 1999 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070012532 A1 | Jan 2007 | US |