A TRANSVERSE SEGMENT FOR A DRIVE BELT FOR A CONTINUOUSLY VARIABLE TRANSMISSION
20190346016 ยท 2019-11-14
Inventors
- Adrianus Antonius Jacobus Maria VAN TREIJEN (Breda, NL)
- Joost Johannes Cornelis JONKERS (Gilze, NL)
- Guillaume Gerard Hubertus ROMPEN (Munstergeleen, NL)
- Peter BROUWERS (Tilburg, NL)
Cpc classification
F16G5/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed is a transverse segment for a drive belt with a ring stack and with a number of transverse segments attached along the circumference of the ring stack, which transverse segment at least includes a base portion and two pillar portions, which pillar portions extend from the sides of the base portion in height direction, between which pillar portion an upper side of the base portion defines a support surface for supporting the ring stack. At least one pillar portion is provided with a hook part that extends in width direction in the general direction of the respective other pillar portion and whereof a bottom surface that is oriented in the general direction of the support surface extends at an angle relative to the width direction.
Claims
1-7. (canceled)
8. A drive belt (50) with a ring stack (8), which ring stack (8) is composed of a number of stacked endless rings and is convexly curved in width direction in a straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), and with a number of transverse segments (1) arranged along the circumference of the ring stack (8), which transverse segments (1) each comprises at least a base portion (10) and two pillar portions (11), which pillar portions (11) extend in height direction on either side of the transverse segment (1) from the base portion (10) and where between a top side of the base portion (10) provides in a support surface (13) for supporting the ring stack (8), at least one of which pillar portions (11) comprises a hook part (9) that extends width-wise in the direction of the respectively other pillar portion (11), wherein, a bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) facing the support surface (13) of the base portion (10) is oriented at an angle relative to the plane of the support surface (13) amounting to between 2 and 10 degrees.
9. The drive belt (50) according to claim 8, wherein, the said angle amounts to between 4 and 8 degrees.
10. The drive belt (50) according to claim 8, wherein, the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is an at least predominantly flat surface.
11. The drive belt (50) according to claim 8, wherein, the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is convexly curved.
12. The drive belt (50) according to claim 8, wherein, the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is concavely curved.
13. The drive belt (50) according to claim 8, wherein in the said straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), the ring stack (8) is convexly curved in width direction according to a radius of curvature Rars and wherein the said angle at which the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is oriented relative to the width direction satisfies the equation:
arcsinus(1/2 W/Rars), with W representing the width of the ring stack (8).
14. The drive belt (50) according to claim 13, wherein, a distance in height direction between the support surface (13) of the base portion and the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) of the transverse segments (1) thereof is larger than a dimension in height direction of the ring stack (8), which dimension is determined by the nominal thickness of the ring stack (8) in combination with the said curvature thereof in width direction.
15. The drive belt (50) according to claim 9, wherein, the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is an at least predominantly flat surface.
16. The drive belt (50) according to claim 9, wherein, the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is convexly curved.
17. The drive belt (50) according to claim 9, wherein, the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is concavely curved.
18. The drive belt (50) according to claim 9, wherein in the said straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), the ring stack (8) is convexly curved in width direction according to a radius of curvature Rars and wherein the said angle at which the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is oriented relative to the width direction satisfies the equation:
arcsinus(1/2 W/Rars), with W representing the width of the ring stack (8).
19. The drive belt (50) according to claim 10, wherein in the said straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), the ring stack (8) is convexly curved in width direction according to a radius of curvature Rars and wherein the said angle at which the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is oriented relative to the width direction satisfies the equation:
arcsinus(1/2 W/Rars), with W representing the width of the ring stack (8).
20. The drive belt (50) according to claim 11, wherein in the said straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), the ring stack (8) is convexly curved in width direction according to a radius of curvature Rars and wherein the said angle at which the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is oriented relative to the width direction satisfies the equation:
arcsinus(1/2 W/Rars), with W representing the width of the ring stack (8).
21. The drive belt (50) according to claim 12, wherein in the said straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), the ring stack (8) is convexly curved in width direction according to a radius of curvature Rars and wherein the said angle at which the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is oriented relative to the width direction satisfies the equation:
arcsinus(1/2 W/Rars), with W representing the width of the ring stack (8).
22. The drive belt (50) according to claim 15, wherein in the said straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), the ring stack (8) is convexly curved in width direction according to a radius of curvature Rars and wherein the said angle at which the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is oriented relative to the width direction satisfies the equation:
arcsinus(1/2 W/Rars), with W representing the width of the ring stack (8).
23. The drive belt (50) according to claim 16, wherein in the said straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), the ring stack (8) is convexly curved in width direction according to a radius of curvature Rars and wherein the said angle at which the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is oriented relative to the width direction satisfies the equation:
arcsinus(1/2 W/Rars), with W representing the width of the ring stack (8).
24. The drive belt (50) according to claim 17, wherein in the said straight part (ST) of the circumference of the drive belt (50), the ring stack (8) is convexly curved in width direction according to a radius of curvature Rars and wherein the said angle at which the bottom surface (14) of the hook part (9) is oriented relative to the width direction satisfies the equation:
arcsinus(1/2 W/Rars), with W representing the width of the ring stack (8).
Description
[0010] The above novel transverse segment design according to the present disclosure will now be explained further with reference to the drawing, in which:
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017] Both transmission pulleys 101, 102 comprise a first conical pulley sheave that is fixed to a pulley shaft 103, 104 of the respective pulley 101, 102 and a second conical pulley sheave that is axially displaceable relative to the respective pulley shaft 103, 104 and that is fixed thereto only in rotational direction. A drive belt 50 of the transmission 100 is wrapped around the pulleys 101, 102, while being accommodated between the pulley sheaves thereof. As appears from
[0018] The known drive belt 50 is composed of an ring stack 8 and a plurality of transverse segments 1 that are mounted on the ring stack 8 along the circumference thereof in an, at least essentially, contiguous row. For the sake of simplicity, only a few of these transverse segments 10 are shown in
[0019] In the drive belt 50 the transverse segments 1 are movable along the circumference of the ring stack 8, which ring stack 8 is typically composed of a number of flexible metal bands, which metal bands are stacked one around one another, i.e. are mutually nested. During operation of the transmission 100, the transverse segments 1 of the drive belt 50 at the driven pulley 101 are driven in the direction of rotation thereof by friction. These driven transverse segments 1 push preceding transverse segments 1 along the circumference of the ring stack 8 of the drive belt 50 and, ultimately, rotationally drive the driving pulley 102, again by friction. In order to generate such friction (force) between the transverse segments 1 and the transmission pulleys 101, 102, the said pulley sheaves of each pulley 101, 102 are forced towards one another in axial direction, whereby these exert a pinching force on the transverse segments 1 in the axial direction thereof. To this end, electronically controllable and hydraulically acting movement means that act on the respective moveable pulley sheave of each pulley 101, 102 are provided in the transmission 100 (not shown). In addition to exerting a pinching force on the drive belt 50, these movement means also control respective radial positions R1 and R2 of the drive belt 50 at the pulleys 101, 102 and, hence, the speed ratio that is provided by the transmission 100 between the pulley shafts 103, 104 thereof.
[0020] In
[0021] Each transverse segment 1 defines a base portion 10 and two pillar portions 11, whereof the base portion 10 extends mainly in the axial direction of the drive belt 50 and whereof the pillar portions 11 extend mainly in the radial direction of the drive belt 50, each from a respective axial sides of the base portion 10. In its thickness direction, each transverse segments 1 extends between a front surface 3 and a rear surface 2 thereof that are both oriented, at least generally, in the circumference direction of the drive belt 50. An opening 5 is defined between the pillar portions 11 and the base portion 10 of each transverse segment, wherein a circumference section of the ring stack 8 is accommodated. A radially outward facing part 13 of the circumference surface of the base portion, forming the radially inner boundary of the opening, supports the ring stack 8 from the radial inside, which surface part is denoted support surface 13 hereinafter.
[0022] In the row of transverse segments 1 of the drive belt 50, at least a part of a front main body surface 3 of the transverse segment 1 abuts against at least a part of the rear main body surface 2 of a respectively preceding transverse segment 1 in the said row, whereas at least a part of the rear main body surface 2 of the transverse segment 1 abuts against at least a part of the front main body surface 3 of a respectively succeeding transverse segment 1. The abutting transverse segments 1 are able to tilt relative to one another, while remaining in mutual contact at and through an axially extending and radially, convexly curved surface part 4 of the front surfaces 3 thereof, which surface part is denoted tilting edge 4 hereinafter. In
[0023] The pillar portions 11 of the transverse segments 1 are each provided with a projection 6 that protrudes from the respective front surface 3 in, essentially, the said circumference direction. In the drive belt 50, the projection 6 is inserted in a recess 7 provided in the opposite, i.e. rear surface 2 of an adjacent transverse segment 1 to limit a relative movement between the adjacent transverse segments 1, at least in radial direction, but typically also in axial direction.
[0024] The pillar portions 11 of the transverse segments 1 are each further provided with a hook part 9 extending in axial direction over the opening 5 that is thereby partly closed in radial outward direction by a bottom, i.e. radially inner surface 14 of each hook part 9. The hook parts 9 prevent that the transverse segments 1 can separate from the ring stack 8 in radial inward direction.
[0025] In
[0026] In the cross-section in the straight trajectory part ST of the known drive belt 50 of
[0027] As a result of its transverse curvature, the ring stack 8 arrives in contact with the bottom surfaces 14 of the hook parts 9 of the pillar portions 11 of the transverse segment 1 towards its axial sides, in particular at the location of the ultimate axial edge C14 of the hook part 9, as indicated in
[0028] In order to mitigate the contact between the ring stack 8 and the transverse segment 1 in the straight trajectory part ST of the drive belt 50, the axially extending bottom surface 14 of the hook part 9 or of the hook parts 9 of the transverse segment is angled radially outward, as schematically illustrated in
[0029] Further in
[0030] The present disclosure, in addition to the entirety of the preceding description and all details of the accompanying figures, also concerns and includes all the features of the appended set of claims. Bracketed references in the claims do not limit the scope thereof, but are merely provided as non-binding examples of the respective features. The claimed features can be applied separately in a given product or a given process, as the case may be, but it is also possible to apply any combination of two or more of such features therein.
[0031] The invention(s) represented by the present disclosure is (are) not limited to the embodiments and/or the examples that are explicitly mentioned herein, but also encompasses amendments, modifications and practical applications thereof, in particular those that lie within reach of the person skilled in the relevant art.