Seat adjuster
10479249 · 2019-11-19
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60N2/168
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60N2/2227
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60N2/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60N2/938
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60N2/2236
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G05G2505/00
PHYSICS
B60N2/169
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G05G5/08
PHYSICS
International classification
B60N2/90
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G05G5/08
PHYSICS
B60N2/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A seat adjuster, includes a brake acting between fixed and adjustable parts so the adjustable part is blockable in positions on the fixed part and releasable by a release element, an adjustment element acting on the release element, selectively adjusting the adjustable part in two opposite directions, and a locking element automatically engaging and interlockingly locking the adjustable part to the fixed part when the adjustment element is not actuated and automatically disengaging when the adjustment element is actuated, disengagement of the locking element and adjustment of the adjustable part being effected by moving the adjustment element out of neutral position, the locking element having a toothed segment for meshing with a toothed ring coupled to the adjustable part so the locking element is movable in the radial direction of the toothed ring between locking and release positions, in which the locking element meshes with or moves away from the toothed ring.
Claims
1. A seat adjuster, comprising: a brake which acts between a fixed part and an adjustable part and by which the adjustable part is adapted to be blocked in different positions on the fixed part and is adapted to be released by a release element thereof, an adjustment element which acts on the release element, for selectively adjusting the adjustable part in two opposite directions, and a locking element which automatically engages and interlockingly locks the adjustable part to the fixed part when the adjustment element is not actuated and automatically disengages when the adjustment element is actuated, wherein the disengagement of the locking element and the adjustment of the adjustable part is adapted to be effected by moving the adjustment element out of a neutral position in one of the two directions, wherein the locking element has a toothed segment for meshing with a toothed ring coupled to the adjustable part and is guided on the fixed part in such a way that the locking element is adapted to be moved in a radial direction of the toothed ring between a locking position, in which the locking element meshes with the toothed ring, and a release position, in which the locking element is moved away from the toothed ring, wherein the brake is a clamp roll freewheel brake and the release element thereof forms the toothed ring and is in engagement with the adjustable part such that a relative rotation of the release element and the adjustable part is possible only within a limited play, wherein the adjustment element is provided with a radially movable slide which has another toothed segment for engagement with the toothed ring, and wherein the adjustment element and the slide are in engagement with one another via complementary cams and notches such that a torque that is transferred from the adjustment element onto the slide causes a radial movement of the slide for establishing the engagement with the toothed ring.
2. The seat adjuster according to claim 1, wherein the complementary cams and notches translate rotary movement of the adjustment element away from the neutral position into a displacement of the locking element into the release position.
3. The seat adjuster according to claim 1, wherein the locking element is elastically biased into the locked position.
4. The seat adjuster according to claim 1, further including a release lever that is rotatable independently of the adjustment element about a same axis of rotation and is elastically biased into the neutral position, and wherein the slide is guided on the release lever.
5. The seat adjuster according to claim 1, wherein the adjustment element is elastically biased in an axial direction of the toothed ring into a position in which the adjustment element it is in frictional engagement with the release element.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) An embodiment example will now explained in conjunction with the drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) The seat adjuster shown in
(14) The brake 16 is a clamp roller type freewheel brake having an outer metal ring 26, a release element 28 made of plastics or metal, and three pairs of clamp rollers 30 which engage an inner peripheral surface of the outer ring 26. An inner race 32 for the clamp rollers 30 is formed by the outer peripheral surface of a portion of the pinion 12.
(15) As is shown in
(16) The inner race 32 is not perfectly cylindrical but forms a clamp contour which is designed such that the gap for the clamp rollers becomes narrower in the direction from the respective clamp roller towards the adjacent claw 34.
(17) As is shown in
(18) Consequently, when a torque acts upon the pinion 12 in one of the two directions of rotation, the pinion has the tendency to rotate relative to the release element 28, with the clamp rollers 30 sliding along the outer ring. In that case, however, one of the clamp rollers 30 of each pair will enter more deeply into the narrowing part of the gap and cause a clamp action between the outer ring 26 and the race 32, whereby the pinion 12 is blocked relative to the non-rotatable outer ring 26.
(19) In contrast, when the release element 28 is rotated, the claws 34 respectively urge one of the adjacent clamp rollers 30 against the elastic member 36, which will yield elastically, whereby the clamp roller is urged into the widening part of the gap and is prevented from blocking. Simultaneously, the ribs 42 engaging in the groves 40 entrain the pinion 12 so that the release element 28 and the pinion 12 are rotated together. As soon as the release element 28 is relieved again from the torque, the clamp rollers 30 are urged again into the clamping position by the elastic members 36, and the pinion will again be blocked in the position that has then been reached.
(20) As is shown in
(21) A spring 52 is received in a recess 54 of the locking element 14 and is supported, on the one hand, at a wall of this recess 54 and, on the other hand, at a lug 56 that is bent from the base plate 10, so that the locking element 14 is biased to the right in
(22) At the right end in
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(24) As is shown in
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(26) The adjustment element 22 is supported for rotation on a cylindrical extension 68 of the pinion 12 (
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(28) The bearing ring 70 is press-fitted on the extension 68 of the pinion and has a slightly conical shape, so that it presses upon the adjustment element 22 in the manner of a dish spring and at the same time draws a collar 73 of the pinion 12 against the lower edge of a boss 10a of the base plate 10 (
(29) When the adjustment element 22 is rotated out of the neutral position shown in
(30) The notches 66 and 58 of the slide 20 and the locking element 14 are so dimensioned that, when the adjustment element 20 with the cam 60 is moved away from the neutral position and thereby the engagement between the toothed segment 64 and the toothed ring 46 and, consequently, the drive connection to the release element 28 is established, the locking element 14 is simultaneously shifted into the unlocked position. The phase of the movement in which the teeth of the toothed segment 62 come into engagement with the teeth of the toothed ring 46 may overlap in time or coincide with the phase in which the teeth of the toothed segment 48 of the locking element 14 are released from the toothed ring 46. Then, in the further course of the rotary movement of the adjustment element 22, the release element 28 causes the release of the brake 16 and the adjustment of the pinion 12.
(31) The spring force of the spring 42 for the locking member 14 is preferably dimensioned such that, in the initial phase of the pivotal movement, when the cam 60 unlocks the locking element 14, the user feels a resistance which is approximately as high as later during the proper adjustment process.
(32) Due to the construction described above, it is achieved that the user does practically not experience any dead stroke or play when he or she moves the adjustment element 22 out of the neutral position in order to initiate the adjustment movement of the pinion.
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(34) The return lever 18 also forms two radially projecting supports 80 for the spring 76. Each of these supports has a bent lug 82 which engages in the corresponding end of the spring 76. When the return lever 18 is in the neutral position, the supports 80 are flush with the radial walls 78 of the cover, so that each end of the spring 76 is commonly supported by one of the walls 78 and one of the supports 80. However, when the return lever 18 is rotated in the manner shown in
(35) When, now, the actuating lever is released and, consequently, no torque acts on the adjustment element 22, the force of the spring 64 causes the slide 20 to be extended again so that the engagement between the toothed segment 62 and the toothed ring 46 is released. In this process, the adjustment element 22 is slightly rotated relative to the return lever 18, until the cam 60 is again centered in the notch 66. Now, the return lever 18 is subject to the force of the spring 76 and is thereby rotated into the neutral position together with the slide 20, whereby the adjustment element 22 is also returned into the neutral position whereas the pinion 12 is held by the brake 16 in the position it has reached.
(36) As soon as the adjustment element 22 has returned into the neutral position, the cam 60 can again be received in the notch 58 of the locking element, and the spring 52 assures the automatic return of the locking element 14 into the locked position. Thanks to the triangular shape of the teeth 46a, there is practically no tooth-on-tooth position which would compromise the re-establishment of the engagement of the teeth. At the latest, however, the engagement is established when, due to slight vibrations or due to a roll-off of the clamp rollers, a minor rotation occurs between the release element 28 and the locking element 14.
(37) When the neutral position has been reachedor optionally even at an earlier timethe pinion 12 may be rotated another step in the desired direction by rotating the adjustment element 22 again.
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