Hydraulic valve device with multiple working sections with pump control system with by-pass line
10655648 ยท 2020-05-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F15B11/055
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2013/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2211/40553
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2211/40515
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2211/605
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2211/20546
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B11/042
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2211/3116
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B11/165
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2211/50554
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B2211/635
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F15B11/05
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F15B11/042
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Modular directional valve with two or more crossing elements (E1 . . . En) able, acting only on the entry side, to manage a variable displacement pump (PA) of the load sensing type. In particular, this management allows in a single drive, unlike the conventional crossing distributors, to make the flow rate to the utility independent of the load and allows setting a maximum flow rate at the end of the stroke; in multiple drives, it ensures that the sum of the required flow rates is independent of the loads. A compensated flow rate regulator is placed in the entry side so as to act only on the bypass line LC upstream of the first element (E1 . . . En) while a proportional choke is placed on the load line consisting of a 2-way 2-position tray.
Claims
1. A modular directional valve device, with one or more elements and for the management of a load-sensing variable displacement pump, each element including spools configured to control the drive to relative utilities, the modular directional valve device being arranged for a connection to the load-sensing variable displacement pump a supply line, which is divided into at least two channels, of which: a. a bypass line which, with the spools in central position, crosses all the elements and then connects to a tank through an independent connection, b. a load line which, with spools in central position, is a closed line, said modular directional valve device comprising, on the bypass line only and upstream of a first element of the one or more elements, a flow rate regulator group comprising at least one piloted spool and a choke, a control signal being connected to said flow rate regulator group acting on a proportional variable choke along said supply line or along said load line and wherein a load-sensing signal (LS) along said load line downstream of said choke reaches the load-sensing variable displacement pump.
2. The modular directional valve device according to claim 1, comprising a second choke along the control signal and a relief valve on the same control signal downstream of said second choke, the relief valve being calibrated at a pressure that brings the second choke to a maximum aperture which corresponds to a maximum displacement of the load-sensing variable displacement pump.
3. The modular directional valve device according to claim 1, wherein said flow rate regulator group is comprised in an entry side of the device.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) This and other features will be more apparent from the following description given purely by way of non-limiting example in the accompanying drawings.
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(7) With reference to
(8) The supply is connected in P1 to the entry side FE.
(9) One or more elements E1, E2, . . . En (in the case 2 elements E1 and E2) of the crossing type that allows connecting the PA pump and the tank to the various utilities through the uses (A1, B1, A2, B2).
(10) A bleeding side FS keeps the flow rates from the bypass line LC separate from those coming from the return of the utilities and from the bleeds of the valves and connects them both to tank T through two separate lines.
(11) In essence, the valve circuit of the valve device includes at least: A supply channel P1 connected to the LS pump, indicated with PA, which feeds the side FE and the crossing elements E1 and E2, downstream at high pressure; as mentioned, the number of elements varies in number depending on the number of utilities to connect, A bypass or crossing line, indicated with LC, the supply P1 to tank T; in other words, LC is a by-pass channel that connects the pump to the tank crossing all the elements in series, the passage has the maximum aperture when the spool is in central position and closes at the end of its stroke, Spools C1 . . . Cn of the elements E1 . . . En that intercept, among other things, said by-pass line LC; the passage in LC is open when spools C1 . . . Cn are in central position and decreases with increasing stroke up to close or achieve the maximum choke at the end of its stroke, A load line 4 connecting the supply P1 to the utilities with the closed passage in central position and open at the end of the stroke, also with possibility of intermediate choked positions.
(12) Contrary to what happens in standard crossing valve distributors, where they all are connected so as to come out of a single coupling, in the present invention the line and thus the flow rate flowing into the by-pass line LC is kept separate with respect to the lines of the return flow rates of utilities and valves, which equally go to tank T but with two separate couplings, that is: An independent line C, connecting the bypass line LC to tank T, A bleed channel 6, connected to a low pressure tank T, into which the bleeds of valves and utilities flow.
(13) From the above description, the pump flow rate in the entry side is divided into two channels: The bypass line LC which, with spools C1 . . . Cn in central position, crosses all the elements E1, E2 and then connects to tank T through connection C, The load line or channel 4 which, with spools C1 . . . Cn in central position is a closed line; the pressure relief channel 4 arrives at the utilities through the spools in parallel.
(14) The presence of a flow rate regulator group of the two-way compensated type is also noted, placed only on the bypass line LC and in the side, before all the sections E1 . . . En.
(15) Specifically, the flow regulator group consists of: A two-position compensated piloted spool 3, or with variable opening, which serves as a local compensator; A choked passage 2.
(16) The strength of a spring M and the pressure of the control line P, taken downstream of chokes 2 and 5, acts on the one side on piloted spool 3, while on the other side and in closing, the pressure of line 9 taken between the piloted spool and the choked passage 2.
(17) Spring M therefore imposes a suitable stand-by through the chokes, whose value must be lower than the stand-by set by the LS pump.
(18) Said regulator group is calibrated, for example, to 15-20 l/min on the line LC.
(19) Downstream of the flow rate regulator group and on the bypass line LC upstream the first element E1, the control pressure P is picked which acts by opening a choke, in this case a proportional opening tray 8, along the load line 4, the value of which will be determined by the load losses of the flow rate set by the compensated flow regulator through the bypass line LC.
(20) Since the flow rate is constant, the load losses and thus the control pressure are proportional to the stroke of spool Cn and only to the stroke of spool C1. Since the passage through said choke 8 is proportional to the control pressure P, it is therefore proportional to the stroke of the spools.
(21) The LS signal taken downstream of said choke 8 arrives at the LS PA pump; then, the latter will send a flow rate proportional to the opening of choke 8, in turn proportional to the control pressure, in turn proportional to the stroke of the spools.
(22) Operation
(23) Upon start up, the LS pump sends the minimum flow rate to generate the stand by. This corresponds to the calibration flow rate of the compensated flow regulator with lower stand-by. In fact, once such a flow rate has been reached, the regulator chokes to prevent the flow rate from exceeding the calibration, increasing the pressure in P1 up to the stand-by value of the LS pump.
(24) Said flow rate then flows all through the compensator tray 3, then through the by-pass line LC and arrives to tank T by line C.
(25) As said, downstream of the flow rate regulator group (piloted spool 3+choke 2) and on the bypass line LC upstream the first element E1, the control pressure P is picked which acts on the proportional choke 8, the value of which will be determined by the load losses of the flow rate through the bypass line LC.
(26) The provision of a second choke 5 is also noted, again placed on the control line 5, in addition to a relief valve 7, in the example calibrated at 30 bar.
(27) Therefore, the LS pump still generates the calibration flow which, along with the passages through the LC, must be such as to generate a control pressure P slightly lower than that which generates the opening of choke 8.
(28) In the central position of the spools, the LC is open while U is closed.
(29) The LS signal is to discharge through the bleed. The LS signal arrives at the LS pump which intervenes so that the pressure on the PA pump supply is equal to the sum of: the load-sensing pressure taken downstream of tray 8 (in this case zero) and the pump stand-by.
(30) Disregarding the distributed load losses, this is obtained from the LS pump by supplying the flow rate able to generate, through the flow rate regulator 3, choke 2 and the by-pass line LC that crosses all the elements in series, a load loss equal to the stand-by value of the LS pump corresponding to the constant pressure drop imposed by the pump between the supply and the load-sensing pressure.
(31) Now the flow rate of regulator 3 to that supplied by the pump and is calculated so as to generate a pressure drop through the choke 2 higher than the stand-by of the flow regulator 3. This means that the regulator intervenes by choking the LC so as to limit the flow rate through choke 2 to that single flow rate value able to generate, through choke 2, a load loss equal to the value of the stand-by of the flow regulator 3.
(32) Actuation of a Spool
(33) What happens when actuating a spool individually, such as the one indicated with C1, is now described. First, the connection between the load line 4 and the corresponding utility is opened (along lines A1 or B1). At the same time, the passage through the by-pass line LC narrows, whereby load losses increase, as does the control pressure P on choke 8 taken after the compensator piloted spool 3.
(34) Increasing the control pressure of the pump regulator leads to the opening of the passage through choke 8, thus setting the supply P1 in communication with the LS signal line. BY circuiting the P1 on the LS, the pressure in P1 increases progressively up to exceeding the load pressure on the driven utility. At that point, a flow rises through choke 8 whose value will be determined by the value of the stand-by at which the LS pump is calibrated.
(35) The compensated flow regulator group, however, maintains a constant flow rate through the bypass line LC: therefore, the load losses, the control pressure, the opening of choke 8 and the flow rate to the utility through the load line 4 remain constant, irrespective of the load.
(36) Moreover, since the flow rate is constant, the load losses and thus the control pressure are proportional to the stroke of spool C1 and only to the stroke of spool C1, the opening of choke 8 and thus the flow rate to the utility are a function only of the stroke.
(37) By further actuating spool C1, the load losses through the bypass line LC, and thus the control pressure P tend to increase, thus further increasing the opening of choke 8 and the flow rate supplied by the LS pump that will flow towards the utility by the intervention of the flow regulator that maintains a constant flow rate on the bypass line LC.
(38) It follows from the above that in the single drives, the flow rate to the utilities is independent of the load but only a function of spool C1. It follows that, in single drives, it is also possible to set a maximum flow rate to the utility.
(39) Actuation of Multiple Spools
(40) Assuming now that a second spool is actuated, that indicated with C2, the bypass line LC tightens further, resulting in increased load losses, increased pressure just downstream of the compensated flow regulator group, then increase in pressure P, resulting in an increase of the passage through the proportional choke 8 and thus of the flow rate supplied by the LS PA pump.
(41) The division of the flow rate between the two utilities depends on the reciprocal loads but the total flow supplied by the LS pump is independent of the utilities.
(42) If, at the end of the stroke of spool C2 the LC is closed, the flow rate set by the compensator flows to bleed through the relief valve 7, set at the pressure that leads the proportional choke 8 to the maximum aperture which corresponds to the maximum flow rate of the LS pump: the full flow rate at which the flow rate regulator is calibrated would directly go to bleed with a significant and useless energy dissipation.
(43) This problem is solved by the invention by inserting, before the picking point of the signal that returns to piloted spool 3 of the compensator and then to choke 8, a second choke 5: until the relief valve 7 intervenes, no oil passes whereby the flow rate set by the compensator is determined only by the first choke 2. By closing completely the by-pass line LC and opening the relief valve 7, the flow rate also goes through the second choke 5, thereby causing a suitable reduction of the flow rate set by the compensator piloted spool 3, a value that will be the minimum necessary to keep the relief valve open.
(44) In summary, the valve device comprises, on the bypass line LC only and upstream of the first element E1, a flow rate regulator group comprising at least one compensator piloted spool 3 and a choke 2; a control signal P connected to said flow rate regulator and to the proportional choke 8, whose passage increases as the control pressure increases; said control signal P being picked downstream of the compensator piloted spool 3 and after said choke 2.
(45) The variable displacement pump LS is managed by the LS signal, where now, however, the LS signal is no longer taken downstream of the fixed choke 8 but of tray 2, which generates a variable choke with the stroke.
(46) Then, the LS pump imposes a constant P through tray 8 and thus a flow rate which only depends on the stroke of tray 8 and which is constant at the same stroke.
(47) Choke 2 is instead managed by the flow regulator 3 which imposes a constant P through choke 2, and thus a constant flow rate through choke 2.
(48) Finally, it is noted that load line means the line connecting the pump supply to utilities A1, B1, A2, B2 . . . through spools C1, C2, . . . which in central position isolate the load line 4 from the utilities. In the subject patent, tray 8 is placed on this line as a function of choke proportional to control P.
(49) The spools are C1, C2, . . . which in central position: Keep the connection between the pump supply and the tank open through the bypass line LC. Keep the passage between the load line 4 and the utilities A1, B1 closed.
(50) By actuating the spool: The by-pass line LC chokes up to close The connection between the load line 4 opens, thus increasing the passage up to stroke end.
(51) Component 3 is substantially a piloted spool that keeps P constant through the fixed choke 2.