Shoe for a drum brake, and associated drum brake
10323709 · 2019-06-18
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16D69/0416
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T29/4973
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
The invention concerns in particular a lining-holder cartridge for a drum brake equipped with shoes comprising a block provided with a rim for fixing a friction lining, the assembly forming a shoe for a drum brake, wherein it comprises a curved support in the form of a cylinder sector able to be fixed directly to the rim of said block, and it is provided with a friction lining with a shape adapted to that of said support. The invention greatly simplifies the replacement of drum brake linings, without removal of the brake blocks.
Claims
1. A lining-holder cartridge for a drum brake, comprising a block provided with a web and a rim for fixing a friction lining, the rim extending perpendicularly away from the web to form a T-shape with the web in cross section, the lining-holder cartridge forming a shoe for a drum brake, a curved support that forms a curve extending from one terminal end of the support to an opposite terminal end of the support, and which is configured to be fixed directly to the rim of said block, and a friction lining with a shape adapted to that of said support, wherein said support comprises two reinforcement gussets that extend from the one terminal end of the support to the opposite terminal end of the support, the reinforcement gussets provided on opposite sides of the web and formed by at least one metal sector welded under a bottom face of said support, wherein the support of the lining-holder cartridge is provided with at least one aperture, intended to cooperate with a corresponding protrusion provided on the rim of the block in order to provide the positioning of the lining-holder cartridge with respect to the rim of the block.
2. The lining-holder cartridge according to claim 1, wherein the lining comprises a plurality of through holes and is fixed to the support by a set of rivets positioned in said through holes.
3. The lining-holder cartridge according to claim 1, wherein said support comprises a plurality of holes for the passage of elements for fixing the lining-holder cartridge to the rim of the block.
4. The lining-holder cartridge according to claim 3, wherein the fixing of the lining-holder cartridge to the rim of the block is obtained by means of self-locking screws that pass through the fixing holes in the cartridge and the ends of which are fixed in bores provided in the rim of the block.
5. The lining-holder cartridge according to claim 1, wherein the reinforcement gussets of the cartridge are provided with orifices and the block is provided with corresponding axial holes aligned with said orifices in the reinforcement gussets, so that attached pins inserted in the axial holes in the cartridge and the orifices in the reinforcement gussets fix the lining-holder cartridge to the rim of the block.
6. The lining-holder cartridge according to claim 5, wherein the pins comprise at their ends grooves in which the ends of springs connected to the rim and holding the pins in place engage.
7. The lining-holder cartridge according to claim 1, in combination, a plurality of holes for the passage of elements for fixing the lining-holder cartridge to the rim of the block and self-locking screws that pass through the fixing holes in the cartridge and the ends of which are fixed in bores provided in the rim of the block.
8. A drum brake for a wheel of a vehicle, comprising at least two brake shoes, each comprising the lining-holder cartridge according to claim 1, wherein the block of each of the at least two brake shoes is actuatable by a lever.
9. The drum brake according to claim 8, wherein each lining-holder cartridge is fixed to the rim of the block of the shoe by screw and nut assemblies or self-locking screws.
10. The drum brake according to claim 8, wherein said lining-holder cartridge is fixed to the rim of the block by a set of pins engaged in orifices provided on the cartridge and corresponding holes provided on the block, said pins being held by springs.
11. A lining-holder cartridge for a drum brake, comprising a block provided with a web and a rim for fixing a friction lining, the lining-holder cartridge forming a shoe for a drum brake, a curved support in the form of a cylinder sector configured to be fixed directly to the rim of said block, and a friction lining with a shape adapted to that of said support, wherein said support comprises at least one reinforcement gusset, formed by at least one metal sector welded under a bottom face of said support, wherein the at least one reinforcement gusset of the cartridge is provided with orifices and the block is provided with corresponding axial holes aligned with said orifices in the at least one reinforcement gusset, so that attached pins inserted in the axial holes in the block and the orifices in the at least one reinforcement gusset fix the lining-holder cartridge to the rim of the block, and wherein the pins comprise at their ends grooves in which the ends of springs connected to the rim and holding the pins in place engage.
12. The lining-holder cartridge according to claim 1, wherein the fixing of the lining-holder cartridge to the rim of the block is obtained by means of self-locking screws that pass through the fixing holes in the cartridge and the ends of which are fixed in bores provided in the rim of the block.
13. The lining-holder cartridge according to claim 11, wherein the lining comprises a plurality of through holes and is fixed to the support by a set of rivets positioned in said through holes.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(1) Other features and advantages of the invention will emerge from a reading of the detailed description of the accompanying drawings, in which:
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(17) As can be seen, the brake shoe 1 is composed of a block 2 that provides the rigidity of the shoe, and a friction lining 3 intended to come into contact with the inside of the drum, during braking.
(18) The block 2 is provided with a radial web 4, arched in shape, surmounted by an axial rim 5 in the form of a cylinder sector, which is roughly perpendicular to the radial web 4.
(19) The block 2 terminates at each end in a fork provided with bearings, namely a bearing 7 provided for a roller, and a bearing 6 provided for a fixed point.
(20) The web 4 and the rim 5 of the block are typically made from cast iron or steel.
(21) The width of the rim 5 is equal to the width of the lining 3, which increases the weight of the shoe, in particular when the rim is also made from cast iron.
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(23) In the prior art, the lining 3 is fixed directly to the rim 5 of the segment by a set of tubular rivets 8. Consequently, when the lining is worn, in order to be able to remove the lining 3 with respect to the rim 5, it is necessary to pierce the rivets 8, and consequently it is necessary to remove the whole of the shoe 1, which requires removing the whole of the drum brake, with the consequences already described in terms of labour time and the cost of immobilising the vehicle.
FIRST EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
(24) Reference is now made to
(25) The radial end of the web 4 comprises a rim 5 in the form a cylindrical sector, to which a lining-holder cartridge 26 (
(26) The lining-holder cartridge 26 also comprises, over the whole of the width of the metal support 27, a friction lining 3, known per se, and intended to cooperate with the internal surface of the drum, not shown.
(27) The friction lining 3 is preferably fixed to the metal support 27 by rivets 24.
(28) Advantageously, the lining-holder cartridge 26 also comprises reinforcement gussets 28, in the form of plates in an arc of a circle welded perpendicularly to the internal face 29 (
(29) By means of these reinforcement gussets 28, it is possible to reduce the width of the rim 5 of the block 4, so that the rim 5 now has a width less than that of the lining-holder cartridge 26. This also lightens the lined shoe 21 and reduces the manufacturing cost thereof.
(30) The lining-holding cartridge 26 is fixed to the rim 5 of the block 4 by a series of locked screws 25 (
(31) The result of the structure according to the invention is that the lining-holder cartridge 26 represents an independent intermediate structure, easy to remove from the shoe 21. Without the lining-holder cartridge 26, the shoe 21 is bare and simply reduced to a block, resized with a rim less wide than in the prior art. With the lining-holder cartridge 26 in place, the shoe 21 is said to be lined.
(32) Reference is now made to
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(34) Naturally a person skilled in the art will be able to size the various components cited, according to the braking forces to be applied.
(35) As shown in
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(37) In addition, as shown at 36 and 37, the ends of the web can have various shapes according to the customs of the various manufacturers.
(38) Conventionally, the materials used for the blocks and for the supports 27 of the braking cartridges 26 are cast iron and steel, which afford a good diffusion of heat allied to sufficient elasticity during operation.
(39) By virtue of this first embodiment of the invention, an operation of renovating a brake drum now comprises the following steps: removing the wheel; removing the brake drum, keeping the block in place; unscrewing the fixing screws 25 from the lining-holder cartridge 26 that carries the worn linings 3; replacing the worn lining-holder cartridge with a new lining-holder cartridge 26, and rescrewing the fixing screws 25; refitting the drum; refitting the wheel.
(40) Consequently it will be noted in particular that it is possible to keep all the original adjustments of the brake (screws, springs), since the block is not removed.
SECOND EMBODIMENT
(41) Reference is now made to
(42) For this purpose, the lining-holding cartridge 26 comprises apertures 59 (
(43) In addition, this arrangement constitutes better resistance to the braking force, which is transferred onto the transverse section of the protrusions 50, instead of being transferred onto the smallest cross section of the fixing screws 25 in the previous embodiment.
(44) In the preferred embodiment described in relation to
(45) To this end, the gussets 28 of the cartridge 26 are provided with orifices 52 that are in alignment with corresponding axial holes 62 provided at the protrusions 63 produced on the web 4 of the block. When the cartridge 26 is in place on the rim of the block, pins 53 are then engaged in the orifices 52 in the cartridge, and then in the axial holes 62 in the block, which has the effect of securing the cartridge 26 to the shoe block.
(46) In order to ensure that the pins 53 remain properly in place despite the forces and vibrations due to braking, springs 55 are positioned on two contiguous pins 53. The springs 55 are produced for example from a flat metal element the ends 58 of which engage in a groove 54 produced on each pin (
(47) In addition to its better resistance to braking forces, this preferred arrangement allows an even more rapid fitting and removal of the lining-holder cartridges, since the step of unscrewing and rescrewing the fixing screws 25 has disappeared, in favour of a more rapid step of fitting the pins 53 and springs 55.
(48) By virtue of this second embodiment of the invention, an operation of renovating a brake drum now comprises the following steps: removing the wheel; removing the drum from the brake, keeping the block in place; withdrawing the springs 55 and the pins 53; removing the lining-holder cartridge 26 that carries the worn linings 3, replacing the worn lining-holder cartridge with a new lining-holder cartridge 26, positioning the slots 59 in the cartridge on the protrusions 50 of the rim 5; refitting the pins 53 and the springs 55; replacing the drum; replacing the wheel.
THIRD EMBODIMENT
(49) It should be noted that a third embodiment of the invention can be envisaged. This is a mixed mode between the first and second embodiments, in which the method of fixing the cartridge 26 to the block by means of screws 25 would be kept as in the first embodiment, but the cartridge 26 would be positioned with respect to the block by means of the combination of protrusions 50 on the rim 5 and apertures 59 in the support 27 of the cartridge 26, as in the second embodiment.
(50) Naturally, the operating method for a drum brake renovation would be adapted accordingly.
Advantages of the Invention
(51) The invention responds to the stated problems. It results in a lower cost of the maintenance of the drum brake systems, in particular because it makes it possible to immobilise the vehicle for a minimum amount of time. This is because it allows an appreciably more rapid change of the worn linings.
(52) Because of the reduced value of the elements that carry the linings (namely the intermediate braking cartridge), the stock of spare parts represents a lower immobilised value and hence better profitability for the repairers.
(53) In addition, the modified brake according to the invention affords easy adaptation to the most representative brakes on the market, either by means of braking cartridges provided with the most widely sold standardised linings, or by means of complete lined shoes, comprising blocks specific to the various brake or vehicle manufacturers.
(54) Finally, by virtue of the invention, it is possible optimise the design of the block while maintaining compliance with the so-called WVA standards for linings, except for the passage holes for fixing the lining-holder cartridge. These WVA standards define, for all manufacturers, the dimensional characteristics (thickness, width, diameter, number of holes etc) of the friction linings. In