Spring preload adjustment device for an aircraft engine air bleed flap

11208951 ยท 2021-12-28

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

An air bleed device for an aircraft engine, including a frame and a flap able to rotate about an axis in relation to the frame, the device further including a return system configured to bias the flap in a determined position about the axis and including a torsion spring, a first end of which is connected to the flap and a second end of which is connected to the frame. The second end is connected to the frame by adjusting the preload of the spring by screwing when the flap is in the determined position.

Claims

1. An air bleed device for an aircraft engine, comprising a frame and a flap able to rotate around an axis in relation to the frame, the device further comprising a return system configured to bias the flap into a determined position around the axis and comprising a torsion spring, a first end of which is connected to the flap and a second end of which is connected to the frame, wherein said second end is connected to the frame by means for adjusting the preload of the spring by screwing when the flap is in said determined position; said means for adjusting comprise a connecting rod, a first end of which is articulated on said second end of the spring and an opposite second end of which is threaded and screwed into a tubular adjustment screw carried by said frame.

2. The air bleed device according to claim 1, wherein said first end of the connecting rod is connected by a rotatable connection to said second end of the spring.

3. The air bleed device according to claim 2, wherein said first end of the connecting rod comprises a mounting hole for a ball joint crossed by a guide ring in which said second end of the spring is engaged.

4. The air bleed device according to claim 1, wherein said tubular adjustment screw comprises a tubular body with inner thread which passes through a wall of said frame and in which said second threaded end of the connecting rod is screwed, and a head which rests on said wall and is configured to cooperate with a tool for driving this screw in rotation.

5. The air bleed device according to claim 1, wherein a rotation preventing locking nut is screwed onto the tubular adjustment screw.

6. The air bleed device according to claim 5, wherein said rotation preventing locking nut is screwed on an outer thread of said tubular body and rests on said wall of the frame on the side opposite to a head of said tubular adjustment screw.

7. The air bleed device according to claim 1, wherein said connecting rod extends along a Y-axis substantially perpendicular to said second end of the spring.

8. The air bleed device according to claim 1, wherein said connecting rod extends along an axis a Y-axis a substantially perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the flap.

9. The air bleed device according to claim 1, wherein said spring is helical and extends substantially around said axis of rotation of the flap.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

(1) The present invention will be better understood and other details, characteristics and advantages of the present invention will appear more clearly upon reading the following description, with reference to the annexed drawings on which:

(2) FIG. 1 represents a side view perspective and a front view perspective of a valve according to the prior art.

(3) FIG. 2 represents a front view perspective of a valve according to the invention.

(4) FIG. 3 represents a front view, perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the flap, with a cross-section at the level of the element 17, of the valve of FIG. 2.

DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION

(5) An example of a scoop 10 related to the invention, with reference to FIG. 2, comprises the same mechanisms as the scoop presented in introduction for the rotational movement of the flap around the axis X of its shaft 11 with respect to the frame 12. Here, the shaft line 11 and a part 14 are the only visible parts of the flap. The scoop can be similar in all respects to the previous one, except for the return mechanism of the flap. Here, a torsion spring 13, winding around the shaft 11 with a number of coils adapted to the level of the desired return force, is attached by a first 15 of its ends to a part 14 of the flap. This part 14 can be used, as before, to adjust the abutments of the flap. On the other hand, the second end 16 of the torsion spring is attached to a device 17 that interfaces with the frame 12.

(6) Referring to FIG. 3, this device 17 comprises several parts, so that the return torque of the spring 13 can be adjusted independently of the position of the flap around the axis X of the shaft 11 when it is in abutment. In FIG. 3, the flap is in an abutment position defined by the adjustment of the interaction of the part 14 with the frame 12.

(7) The device 17 comprises a connecting rod 18 which is mounted in the frame 12 so as to be substantially perpendicular to the shaft 11, next to the latter and positioned so as the second end 16 of the spring 13 passes through.

(8) For this purpose, a first end 19 of the connecting rod 18, which is at the level of the shaft 11 of the flap, comprises a ball joint 20 with a cylindrical bore to accommodate the second end 16 of the torsion spring 13.

(9) Advantageously, the cylindrical bore of the ball joint 20 contains a guide ring 21. The presence of the guide ring 21 enables the diameter of the passage for the rod of the spring 13 to be precisely adjusted at its second end 16, in order to achieve a precise guidance of the rod of the spring 13 in the ball joint 20.

(10) A second end 22 of the connecting rod 18, on the side of the frame 12, comprises an outer thread shaped to cooperate with the tapping of a hollow tubular adjustment screw 23, installed in a bore of the frame 12 so as to pass through it along the axis Y of the connecting rod 18.

(11) The adjustment screw 23 comprises a head 24 that is positioned in abutment against a surface of the frame 12 located on the other side of the frame with respect to the second end 16 of the spring 13. Advantageously, said head 24 comprises a pattern cavity to accommodate an adjustment key that allows it to be rotated in the bore of the frame about the axis Y of the connecting rod 18.

(12) Said adjustment screw 23 also has an outer thread on its part protruding from the frame 12 towards the spring. A lock nut 25 is screwed onto the outer thread of the screw 23, resting on the frame 12 on the side opposite the head 24 of the screw. The lock nut 25 is preferably self-braking, flanged in position.

(13) The device described above can thus be used to adjust the pre-load, or calibration, of the spring 13 when the flap is in the position shown in FIG. 3 by the positions of its shaft 11 and the part 14, here serving as an abutment in rotation while maintaining the first end 15 of the spring 13. The adjustment method comprise the following steps.

(14) First, the lock nut 25 is loosened to release the adjustment screw 23.

(15) In a second step, the adjustment screw 23 is rotated, using a suitable key, around its axis Y as indicated by the arrow F1. Since the connecting rod 18 is locked in rotation by the presence of the second end 16 of the spring in the guide ring 21, the rotation of the adjustment screw 23 drives the connecting rod 18 to be screwed in or unscrewed out of its tapping. As indicated by the arrow F2, this action thus moves the head 19 of the connecting rod 18 in translation along its axis Y, the direction of which is substantially perpendicular to the axis X of the shaft 11. The translation of the head 19 of the connecting rod drives with it the second end 16 of the spring 13. The rotational movement of the ball joint 20 and the sliding of the strand of the spring 13 in the guide ring 21 allow the second end 16 of the spring 13 to follow simultaneously and without local deformation the displacement of the connecting rod 18.

(16) In this way, the strand of the spring 13 connecting its second end 16 to the last winding coil performs a rotational movement around the axis X of the shaft 11 of the flap, which changes its torsion angle and thus the calibration of the spring 13.

(17) The adjustment screw 23 is thus turned in the appropriate direction around its axis Y until the specified return torque for the spring is obtained.

(18) In the last step, the self-braking nut 25 is tightened to lock the adjustment system.

(19) The advantage of this method is that it can be repeated to readjust the calibration, or preload, of the spring 13 to a modified abutment position of the flap, for example here by modifying the interaction of the part 14 with the frame 12, since at no time does it interfere with the first end 15 attached to the flap.