TORQUE ADAPTER
20190242769 ยท 2019-08-08
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01L5/24
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A torque adapter for measuring a stall torque supplied by a rotary power source includes a housing, a mandrel rotatable relative to the housing, and a resistance subassembly. The housing includes an arcuate recess defined at least partially by a recess front wall a recess back wall. The arcuate recess includes a first rotational zone bounded on one side by the recess front wall, and a second rotational zone bounded on an opposite side by the recess back wall. The mandrel includes a flange portion having an arcuate protrusion received in the arcuate recess. The resistance subassembly includes a biasing member and is received into the arcuate recess. When the mandrel is rotated relative to the housing, the mandrel encounters nominal rotational resistance while the arcuate protrusion passes through the first rotational zone, and the mandrel encounters increasing rotational resistance while the arcuate protrusion passes through the second rotational zone.
Claims
1. A torque adapter for measuring a stall torque supplied by a rotary power source, the torque adapter comprising: a housing including an arcuate recess defined at least partly by a recess front wall and a recess back wall, the arcuate recess having a first rotational zone bounded on one side by the recess front wall, and a second rotational zone bounded on an opposite side from the first rotational zone by the recess back wall; a mandrel rotatable relative to the housing and having a flange portion, the flange portion including an arcuate protrusion received in the arcuate recess; a resistance subassembly including a biasing member received in the arcuate recess; wherein when the mandrel is rotated relative to the housing, the mandrel encounters nominal rotational resistance while the arcuate protrusion passes through the first rotational zone, and wherein the mandrel encounters increasing rotational resistance while the arcuate protrusion passes through the second rotational zone.
2. The torque adapter of claim 1, wherein the arcuate recess extends at least partially about a circumference of a circle, and wherein the arcuate protrusion extends at least partially about a circumference of a circle.
3. The torque adapter of claim 1, wherein the housing further includes an intermediate wall disposed in the arcuate recess between the recess front wall and the recess back wall.
4. The torque adapter of claim 3, wherein the arcuate protrusion includes a narrow portion and the intermediate wall includes a slot that permits the narrow portion to pass by the intermediate wall when the mandrel is rotated relative to the housing.
5. The torque adapter of claim 4, wherein the intermediate wall divides the first rotational zone from the second rotational zone, and the resistance subassembly is disposed in the second rotational zone.
6. The torque adapter of claim 5, wherein the resistance subassembly includes a slider having a slider front wall, and when the arcuate protrusion is located in the first rotational zone, the slider front wall abuts the intermediate wall.
7. The torque adapter of claim 6, wherein the biasing member biases the slider toward the recess back wall.
8. The torque adapter of claim 6, wherein the slider includes a first arcuate sidewall and a second arcuate sidewall, and the biasing member resides at least partially within a cavity defined by the first and second arcuate sidewalls and the slider front wall.
9. The torque adapter of claim 1, wherein the resistance subassembly causes the increasing rotational resistance by exerting an increasing resistive force against the arcuate protrusion when the arcuate protrusion passes through the second rotational zone.
10. The torque adapter of claim 1, wherein the arcuate protrusion includes a protrusion front wall and a protrusion back wall, and wherein when the arcuate protrusion passes through the first rotational zone from a starting orientation at which the protrusion back wall abuts the recess back wall, the mandrel rotates at least fifteen degrees relative to the housing before contact with the resistance subassembly.
11. The torque adapter of claim 10, wherein when the arcuate protrusion passes through the second rotational zone, the mandrel is capable of rotating a maximum of at least fifteen degrees relative to the housing while encountering increasing rotational resistance provided by the resistance subassembly.
12. The torque adapter of claim 1, wherein the housing further includes a first connector disposed in the housing and operable to mate with a corresponding second connector on a torque transducer to rotationally lock the housing to the torque transducer.
13. The torque adapter of claim 12, further including an adapter configured to adapt the size of the first connector to the size of the second connector.
14. The torque adapter of claim 1, wherein the arcuate recess is a first arcuate recess, the recess front wall is a first recess front wall, and the recess back wall is a first recess back wall, and the arcuate protrusion is a first arcuate protrusion having a first protrusion front wall and a first protrusion back wall; and wherein the housing further includes a second arcuate recess having a second recess front wall and a second recess back wall, and the mandrel further includes a second arcuate protrusion positioned in the second arcuate recess, the second arcuate protrusion having a second protrusion front wall and a second protrusion back wall.
15. The torque adapter of claim 14, wherein the mandrel is configurable in a starting orientation relative to the housing, and wherein in the starting orientation, the first protrusion back wall abuts the first recess back wall, and the second protrusion back wall abuts the second recess back wall.
16. The torque adapter of claim 15, wherein the mandrel is further configurable in a stalled orientation relative to the housing, and wherein in the stalled orientation, one of: a rotational resistance caused by a resistive force exerted by the biasing member is equal to the stall torque supplied by the rotary power source, such that the second protrusion front wall does not contact the second recess front wall; and a rotational resistance caused by a resistive force exerted by the biasing member is less than the stall torque supplied by the rotary power source, such that the second protrusion front wall contacts and abuts the second recess front wall.
17. The torque adapter of claim 16, wherein the resistance subassembly includes a slider having a slider front wall, and the mandrel is further configurable in an intermediate orientation relative to the housing, wherein in the intermediate orientation, the slider front wall abuts both of the first protrusion front wall and the intermediate wall.
18. The torque adapter of claim 1, wherein the mandrel further includes a spindle portion adjacent the flange portion, and a hexagonal shank at a distal end of the spindle portion.
19. A method of measuring a stall torque supplied by a rotary power source using a torque adapter and a torque transducer, the torque adapter having a mandrel and a housing, the mandrel being coupled to the rotary power source, and the housing being rotationally fixed to the torque transducer, the method comprising: activating the rotary power source to supply a torque to the mandrel; rotating the mandrel relative to the housing through a first rotational zone of nominal rotational resistance; rotating the mandrel relative to the housing through a second rotational zone of increasing rotational resistance; stalling rotation of the mandrel when the rotational resistance becomes equal to the torque supplied by the rotary power source; and measuring the stall torque of the rotary power source with the torque transducer.
20. The method of claim 19, further comprising: before activating the rotary power source, setting the torque adapter at a starting orientation at which a back wall of a first arcuate protrusion of the mandrel abuts a back wall of a first arcuate recess of the housing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0017] Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0018]
[0019]
[0020] With reference to
[0021] As best shown in
[0022] Referring back to
[0023] The housing 16 is further provided with an intermediate wall 48 disposed within the first arcuate recess 42 and dividing the first arcuate recess 42 into a first rotational zone 78 (
[0024] When the slider front wall 86 is in contact with the intermediate wall 48, the slider front wall 86 defines a forward boundary (i.e., with respect to the forward direction of rotation) of the first rotational zone 78. Likewise, when the slider front wall 86 is in contact with the intermediate wall 48, the slider front wall 86 further defines a rearward boundary of the second rotational zone 80.
[0025] When the mandrel 18 is coupled to the housing 16, the first mating surface 21 aligns with and abuts the second mating surface 41. The first arcuate recess 42 receives the first arcuate protrusion 62 and the second arcuate recess 50 receives the second arcuate protrusion 70. As best shown in
[0026] Referring back to
[0027] In operation, to measure the stall torque of a rotary power source (e.g., the rotary power tool 110), the torque adapter 10 is positioned between the rotary power tool 110 and the torque transducer 120 according to the arrangement of
[0028] With the torque adapter 10 in position and set to the starting orientation, the rotary power tool 110 begins supplying a torque to the torque adapter 10, which causes the mandrel 18 to begin rotating relative to the housing 16. The torque transducer 120 begins measuring the torque supplied by the torque adapter 10 at continuous intervals. The first arcuate protrusion 62 begins advancing from the starting orientation through the first rotational zone 78, through which the mandrel 18 faces only nominal rotational resistance (e.g., nominal frictional resistance between the mating surfaces 21, 41 of the flange 20 and housing 16, respectively). While the first arcuate protrusion 62 passes through the first rotational zone 78, the chuck 11 and the mandrel 18 angularly accelerate. The lack of significant rotational resistance through the first rotational zone 78 allows the rotary power tool 110 to initially overcome internal sources of rotational resistance (e.g., friction losses in an electric motor, a drivetrain assembly, etc.) before stall occurs and the stall torque is measured. Accelerating the chuck 11 and the mandrel 18 through the first rotational zone 78 prior to stalling the rotary power tool 110 provides a more accurate measurement of the stall torque.
[0029] With reference to
[0030] After reaching the intermediate orientation, the mandrel 18 begins to encounter increasing rotational resistance as it rotates relative to the housing 16 through the second rotational zone 80. The first protrusion front wall 64 presses against the slider front wall 86 and compresses the spring 36. As the spring 36 compresses, it exerts an increasing amount of resistive force against the first arcuate protrusion 62 via the slider 28. The resistive force of the biasing member 36 slows the angular acceleration of the mandrel 18 and causes the mandrel 18 to decelerate relative to the housing 16.
[0031] Eventually the resistive force exerted by the biasing member 36 matches the torque provided by the rotary power tool 110, and a final stalled orientation is reached at which the chuck 11 and the mandrel 18 cease rotation relative to the housing 16. When the stalled orientation is reached, the torque measured by the torque transducer 120 is a stall torque of the rotary power tool 110. By rotating the mandrel 18 through the angles 1 and 2 before stopping at the stalled orientation, the rotary power tool 110 overcomes the internal static frictional forces associated with an initial startup before supplying the stall torque measured by the torque transducer 120. This provides for a more accurate measurement of the stall torque of the rotary power tool 110.
[0032] In some applications, as shown in
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[0034] Various features of the invention are set forth in the following claims.