Torsional vibration damper having a bearing device
10563724 ยท 2020-02-18
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16F2236/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C2361/53
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16F15/173
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16C17/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16F2222/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16F2232/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A viscous torsional vibration damper includes: a) an annular damper housing, which bounds a damper chamber; b) an inertia ring arranged in the damper chamber; c) a bearing device, which supports the inertia ring in the damper housing and which has at least one bearing element with an axial bearing region and/or a radial bearing region, d) a shear gap between the inertia ring and the damper housing, which shear gap is filled with a viscous fluid, e) wherein a plurality of the axial bearing segments and/or a plurality of the radial bearing segments is circumferentially distributed on the at least one bearing element.
Claims
1. A viscous torsional vibration damper, comprising: an annular damper housing, which delimits a damper chamber; an inertia ring arranged in the damper chamber; a bearing device which supports the inertia ring in the damper housing and which has at least one bearing element including a plurality of axial bearing portions and a plurality of radial bearing portions, wherein the at least one bearing element is arranged between the inertia ring and an inner wall of the damper housing; and a shear gap between the inertia ring and the damper housing, which shear gap is filled with a viscous fluid, wherein the plurality of axial bearing portions and the plurality of radial bearing portions are circumferentially distributed on the at least one bearing element, both of (a) and (b) are met: (a) the plurality of radial bearing portions and the plurality of axial bearing portions respectively complement each other to form bearing portions of L-shaped cross-section, and (b) several of the plurality of axial bearing portions are connected together by axial webs, and several of the plurality of radial bearing portions are connected together by radial webs, where a strip thickness of the several of the plurality of axial bearing portions is greater than a strip thickness in a region of the axial webs connecting together the several of the plurality of axial bearing portions, and a strip thickness of the several of the plurality of radial bearing portions is greater than a strip thickness in a region of the radial webs connecting together the several of the plurality of radial bearing portions, and wherein each of the radial webs is separated from a respective circumferentially corresponding one of the axial webs by a respective gap therebetween.
2. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 1, wherein each of the axial webs connects together two of the plurality of axial bearing portions and each of the radial webs connects two of the plurality of radial bearing portions.
3. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one bearing element includes two bearing elements arranged in the damper chamber.
4. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 3, wherein the two bearing elements are each configured as one piece and/or made of plastic.
5. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 3, wherein at least one of the two bearing elements is configured as a ring which is circumferentially closed in mounted state.
6. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 3, wherein the plurality of axial bearing portions and the plurality of radial bearing portions include at least three axial bearing portions and at least three radial bearing portions, respectively, and the at least three axial bearing portions and/or the at least three radial bearing portions are circumferentially distributed on one or both of the two bearing elements.
7. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 1, wherein the damper chamber has a substantially rectangular cross-section.
8. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 7, wherein the at least one bearing element includes two bearing elements that are arranged in outer corner regions of the damper chamber between the damper housing and the inertia ring.
9. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 7, wherein the at least one bearing element includes two bearing elements that are arranged in inner corner regions of the damper chamber between the damper housing and the inertia ring.
10. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 7, wherein the at least one bearing element includes at least two bearing elements, and one of the at least two bearing elements is arranged on one of outer corner regions, and another of the at least two bearing elements is arranged in one of inner corner regions of the damper chamber, between the damper housing and the inertia ring.
11. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 10, wherein the at least two bearing elements are arranged in corner regions lying diagonally opposite each other in the damper chamber.
12. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one bearing element includes at least two bearing elements, and one of the at least two bearing elements comprises only axial bearing portions and only axial webs connecting same.
13. The viscous torsional vibration damper as claimed in claim 1, wherein the at least one bearing element includes at least two bearing elements, and one of the at least two bearing elements comprises only radial bearing portions and only radial webs connecting same.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(8)
(9) A circumferentially closed inertia ring 3 is inserted in the damper chamber 2. In a preferred but not compulsory embodiment, the inertia ring 3 here has a substantially rectangular cross-section. The inertia ring 3 is mounted by a bearing device in the damper housing 1. This is preferably arranged loosely, i.e. without preload, between the inertia ring 3 and the inner wall of the damper housing 1. In the damper chamber 2, a shear gap 4 is formed between the inner wall of the damper housing 1 and the inertia ring 3, and is filled with a damping medium, in particular a viscous fluid.
(10) The bearing device has bearing elements 5, 6 which are configured in annular form. The bearing elements 5, 6 serve to support the inertia ring 3 in the damper housing 1 so that it is rotatable relative to the damper housing. These bearing elements 5, 6 are preferably made of plastic and each form a plain bearing between the bearing housing 1 and the inertia ring 2. The bearing elements 5, 6 are preferably made of one piece, which makes handling particularly simple, or in further embodiments they are made of two or more pieces.
(11)
(12) The bearing element 5 is configured to be annular and has, circumferentially distributed, at least two or more axial bearing portions 8 and/or at least two or more radial bearing portions 7. According to
(13) In the shear gap 4, shear gap axial regions 4c, 4d and shear gap radial regions 4a, 4b are formed between the damper housing 1 and the inertia ring 3. In all embodiments, the axial bearing portions 8 lie in the shear gap axial regions 4c, 4d, and the radial bearing portions 7 lie in the shear gap radial regions 4a, 4b. The term radial is used in the technology of torsional vibration dampers, and in this application in the figures and description, to designate the direction of a motor shaft (not shown) for a constant radius (which corresponds to the direction of the lower dotted lines in
(14) The L-shaped bearing portions 5, each comprising one of the radial bearing portions 7 and one of the axial bearing portions 8, do not extend over the entire circumference of the annular bearing element 5. Rather, these are only provided in portions. They thus extend in the circumferential direction in total preferably over less than 50%, preferably over less than 40%, and in particular less than 30% of the entire circumference of the bearing element 5.
(15) Adjacent axial bearing portions 8 of the bearing element 5 are connected together in the circumferential direction by axial webs 10. Adjacent radial bearing portions 7 are connected together in the circumferential direction by radial webs 9.
(16)
(17) According to an alternative embodiment, the bearing element 5 could also be configured or formed slotted at one point on its circumference, in order to compensate for tolerances.
(18) Since the bearing portions 8, 9 no longer extend over almost the entire circumference of the bearing ring, but are only angularly distributed over portions, regions occur which can be additionally filled by the viscous medium, so that in comparison with the prior art, additional regions can be formed in which a viscous coupling is possible between the inertia ring 3 and the damper housing 1. This allows the shear gap to be maximized and the coupling between the inertia ring 3 and the damper housing 1 to be optimized. In order to create large regions which are additionally filled by the viscous medium, the total circumferential length of the axial bearing portions 8 and/or the radial bearing portions 7 should preferably cover less than said 50%, preferably less than 40%, and in particular less than 30% of the circumference of the bearing element and/or the inertia ring 3.
(19) Preferably, the strip thickness X1 and/or Y1 of the axial bearing portions 8 and/or the radial bearing portions 7 is greater than the strip thickness X2 and/or Y2 in the region of the axial and radial webs 10, 9 connecting the bearing portions. Preferably also, the axial width of the axial bearing portions 8 and/or the radial width of the radial bearing portions 7 is greater than in the bearing portions themselves. This too brings the advantage of additional space for viscous fluid for coupling between the inertia ring 3 and the damper housing 1.
(20) In the damper chamber 2, the bearing elements 5, 6 may be placed in the outer corner regions 12, 13 between the inertia ring 3 and the damper housing 1. For this, the inertia ring 3 in the region of the corresponding corner regions 12, 13 preferably has recesses 14, 15 which in any case extend radially, or diagonally radially and axially, and the installation depth of which is smaller than the strip thickness of the bearing elements 5, 6; this is advantageous for making the shear gap 4 narrow and keeping the space assumed by the bearing elements 5, 6 small, and for creating suitably dimensioned space for the viscous fluid in shear gap 4.
(21)
(22) A variant of the bearing element is shown in
(23)
(24) It is also possible to connect the axial bearing portions 8 and radial bearing portions 7 of the bearing elements 5, 6 together, not by axial webs 10 and radial webs 9, but just by one type of the connecting radial webs 9 and axial webs 10, i.e. either the axial webs 10 or the radial webs 9. Thus according to
(25) Finally, it is also contemplated (but not shown) that the axial bearing portions 8 and the radial bearing portions 7 are provided not at the same places on the circumference but circumferentially offset to each other. In this case, for example, axial bearing portions 8 would be formed on the bearing element at intervals of 40, and radial bearing portions 7 angularly offset by 20 to these. The axial and radial bearing portions 7, 8 here again have a greater strip thickness than the axial webs and/or radial webs 10, 9 connecting these.
(26) The damper housing 1 according to
LIST OF REFERENCE SIGNS
(27) 1 Damper housing 2 Damper chamber 3 Inertia ring 4 Shear gap 4a, b Shear gap radial regions 4c, 4d Shear gap axial regions 5, 5 Bearing element 6, 6 Bearing element 7 Radial bearing portion 8 Axial bearing portion 9 Radial web 10 Axial web 11 Bridge web 12 Corner region 13 Corner region 14 Recess 15 Recess 16 Corner region 17 Corner region 18 Flange X1, Y1 Strip thickness X2, Y2 Strip thickness
(28) The foregoing disclosure has been set forth merely to illustrate the invention and is not intended to be limiting. Since modifications of the disclosed embodiments incorporating the spirit and substance of the invention may occur to persons skilled in the art, the invention should be construed to include everything within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereof.