RAPID RESPONSE TRIGGER
20200248826 ยท 2020-08-06
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16K39/024
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A hammer actuates a piston in a rapid response trigger to depressurize a control chamber, opening a path from a high pressure chamber to an exit conduit. The hammer acts in line with, but in opposition to, a spring biasing the control chamber closed using a centrally disposed piston. By aligning the spring, piston, and hammer in the same line of force, the response to the hammer is both more reliable and faster that prior triggers.
Claims
1. A rapid response trigger mechanism, comprising: a hammer; a housing having: a hammer access cavity; a control cavity exhaust port; and a high pressure conduit comprising in inlet, a transition segment, and an exit channel; a high pressure chamber distal to the inlet of the high pressure conduit; a valve having a proximal end disposed within the hammer access cavity, a distal end disposed within the high pressure chamber, a central passage connecting the proximal and distal ends, and a bypass port adjacent to the control cavity exhaust port; a piston disposed in the central passage having a trigger end protruding from the proximal end of the valve and a piston head disposed in the distal end of the valve; a spring biasing the piston head against the central passage; an enclosure within the high pressure chamber comprising an end plate with a pin hole and a peripheral wall conforming to an outer periphery of the distal end of the valve, the end plate, peripheral wall, distal end of the valve, and piston head establishing a control chamber, the pinhole forming a pressure equalizing link between the high pressure chamber and the control chamber; wherein movement of the hammer in a direction co-linear with the central passage of the valve and opposite a direction of force of the spring moves the piston distally against the force of the spring, disengaging the piston head from the central passage to open a path from the control chamber to the exhaust port, reducing a pressure in the control chamber; and wherein the distal end of the valve disengages from the high pressure conduit inlet, opening a pathway from the high pressure chamber to the high pressure conduit; and wherein, when the hammer is retracted from contact with the piston, the spring returns the piston head against the central opening, sealing the control chamber; and wherein, when the control chamber pressure approaches the high pressure chamber, the valve bears against the high pressure conduit inlet to thereby closes the high pressure conduit.
2. The rapid response trigger mechanism of claim 1, wherein the spring force acting on the piston and the hammer acting on the piston are co-linear and in opposite directions.
3. The rapid response trigger mechanism of claim 2, wherein the exit channel of the high pressure conduit is parallel to a movement of the piston when acted upon by the hammer.
4. The rapid response trigger mechanism of claim 1, wherein a seal is disposed between the peripheral wall and the distal end of the valve.
5. The rapid response trigger mechanism of claim 1, wherein an outer surface of the distal end of the valve is beveled and the inlet of the high pressure conduit is beveled.
6. The rapid response trigger mechanism of claim 1, wherein the high pressure chamber is a bottle attached to the housing.
7. The rapid response trigger mechanism of claim 1, further comprising an auxiliary valve that controls ingress of a high pressure medium depending on a position of the valve, the auxiliary valve increasing flow when the valve moves away from the high pressure conduit inlet.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0020]
[0021] The embodiment of
[0022] Inside the central passage 12 of the valve 2 is an elongate piston 3. The piston 3 comprises a shaft and a head, where the proximal end 35 of the shaft protrudes from the valve's proximal end 39 in the hammer access cavity 56, and the piston head 41 is seated against the central passage 12 within the radially expanded portion of the distal end 8 of the valve 2. The shape and size of the piston head 41 is selected to fit tightly against the piston seat 11, and in the closed condition (see
[0023] The embodiment further comprises a high pressure chamber 4, which may be connected to a tank, canister, or other source of high pressure medium. The distal end 8 of the main valve 2 is located within the control chamber 5, which itself is within the high pressure chamber 4. The enclosure 9 comprises a plate that is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis 52, and further comprises a peripheral wall 42 that forms an outer seal with the distal end 8 of the valve 2. In some embodiments, air can seep into the control chamber between the peripheral wall 42 and the end 8 of the valve 2, and in other embodiments the seal is air tight. In the sealed embodiments, the seal may be achieved by an O-ring with a close tolerance fit. A gasket 17 embodiment is also shown in
[0024] The housing 54 further defines a high pressure conduit inlet 16 that, in a closed embodiment (see
[0025] The enclosure 9, which forms part of the control chamber 5, has a small pinhole aperture 6 that connects the tank 4 with the control chamber 5. The aperture 6 may be fitted with a flexible interior membrane that permits fluid flow from the high pressure chamber 4 to the control chamber 5. Thus, when the high pressure chamber 4 is pressurized with a gas to a certain pressure, the control chamber 5 will relatively slowly fill with the same gas to the same pressure via the aperture 6.
[0026] It will be appreciated that an elevated pressure in the control chamber 5 tends to force both the main valve 2 and the piston 3 into the closed condition seen in
[0027] A compression spring 7 extends between the piston 3 and the enclosure 9 so as to bias the piston 3 in a proximal direction against the piston seat 11 and along the longitudinal axis 52 of the central bore and the central passage 12. It will be appreciated that the spring 7, through force applied on the piston 3, also biases the main valve 2 into the main valve seat 16 via the force applied on the piston head 41. Thus, the main valve 2 closing force is provided by both the pressurized control chamber 5, and also by the spring 7. In a starting condition, which is shown in
[0028] The main valve 2 is oriented in the housing in such a way that, in the closed position, the flow of the working medium is blocked from moving through the high pressure conduit exit channel 1. This is a result of the main valve's 2 position bearing against the inlet 16. The movement of the main valve 2 is the distal direction is limited by the enclosure 9. The peripheral wall 31 along with the enclosure, the inner wall of the distal end 8 of the valve, and the piston head 41, define the control chamber 5. In the closed position the piston head 41 bears against the piston seat 11 and blocks the actuating medium in the control chamber 5 from passing through the central passage 12, located inside the main valve body 2. In the body of the main valve 2, there are bypass ports 14 that connects the central passage 12 to the exhaust port 50 that empties in the atmosphere 13. The flow of the gas from the high pressure chamber 4 to the control chamber 5 is carried out through the control chamber filling port 6 and the gap 10 between the peripheral walls 42 of the enclosure 9 and the distal end 8 of the main valve 2.
[0029] The movement of the piston 3 inside the main valve body 2 in the direction of opening is carried out under the actuation of the distal movement of the hammer 15. In the direction of closing, the movement of the piston is guided by the influence of spring 7 and pressure of the actuating medium in the control chamber 5.
[0030] The opening-closing cycle of the valve can be conditionally divided into seven time increments or phases, marked with numerals from I to VII of
[0031] Phase I is characterized by the closed position of the piston 3, without the influence of the hammer 15 and the positive pressure in the high pressure chamber 4 compared with atmospheric pressure. In this case, the stable position of the main valve 2 is formed in the closed position, which is shown on
[0032] To open the main valve 2, it is necessary to overcome the static closing force illustrated in ,
a
(
,
4)) (point A on
[0033] At reduction of the pressure in the control chamber 5, the embodiment transitions to phase III in which the opening force on the main valve 2 (due to the pressure differential between the control chamber 5 and the high pressure chamber 4) begins to exceed the force acting on its closing (phase III on
[0034] At contact of the main valve distal end 8 with the enclosure's end wall, the process of the opening of the main valve 2 stops, and the process transitions to phase IV. At the fully opened main valve 2 the pressure in the exit channel 1 tracks the pressure in the high pressure chamber 4 and changes according to the change of this pressure (phase IV in
[0035] To return the main valve 2 to the closed position it is enough to remove the influence of the hammer 15 from the piston 3 (
[0036] Once the closing force on the main valve exceeds the opening force (phase VI in
[0037] As the main valve 2 moves proximally until its bears against the inlet 16, the flow of the actuating medium from high pressure chamber 4 to the exit channel 1 ceases and the stable closed condition of
[0038] In some applications, which are characterized by the key operating mode of the valve, it is beneficial to have a minimum time of valve transition from the closed state to the open and back. In the depicted embodiment, the time of transition from closed to open state (duration of phases II and III on
[0039] Also, the duration of valve opening depends on the volume of the control chamber 5 and the area of the filling passages (the control chamber filling port 6 and the joint gap 10) of the control chamber 5. Thus, in order to reduce the opening time of the main valve 2, it is necessary to either decrease the area of the filling passages (the control chamber filling port 6 and the joint gap 10) from the high pressure chamber 4 to the control chamber 5, or increase the area of the central passage port 12 from the control chamber 5 to the atmosphere 13. But, the reduction of the area of the filling passages increases the closing time (the duration of phases V and VI in
[0040] Reducing the opening time without the aforementioned disadvantages is possible at the expense of a variable area of influx from the high pressure chamber 4 to the control chamber 5. For this purpose it is necessary to add an auxiliary valve that changes the area of the filling passages depending on the position of the main valve 2. The auxiliary valve should increase the area of the filling passages when opening the main valve 2.
[0041] An alternate embodiment is shown in
[0042] While specific embodiments of the invention have been described and depicted, the invention is not limited to the described and depicted embodiments only unless expressly limited herein. Rather, one of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate many modifications and substitutions to the foregoing described embodiments, and the scope of the invention is intended to include all such modifications and substitutions. Accordingly, the scope of the present invention is properly governed by the appended claims, and not by any specific depiction or description herein.