Braking device
09920798 ยท 2018-03-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16D51/54
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D51/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D2125/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D51/32
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
B62L5/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16D65/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D51/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D51/54
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
To provide a braking device that achieves unidirectionality without limiting the direction of rotation of a rotor. The present invention is characterized by being equipped with a housing (10), a rotor (20) provided inside the housing (10), brake shoes (30) provided between the rotor (20) and the housing (10), first protruding parts (40) that move together with the brake shoes (30), and second protruding parts (50) that move in conjunction with the rotation of the rotor (20), with the first protruding parts (40) riding up on the second protruding parts only when the rotor (20) rotates in the normal direction, and thereby generating greater friction between the brake shoes (30) and the housing (10) than the friction that can be generated between the brake shoes (30) and the housing (10) when the rotor (20) rotates in the reverse direction.
Claims
1. A braking device comprising: a housing; a rotor provided inside the housing; a brake shoe provided between the rotor and the housing; a first protruding part configured to move together with the brake shoe; and a second protruding part configured to move in association with rotation of the rotor, wherein the first protruding part is pushed up by a moving of the second protruding part only when the rotor is in normal rotation such that friction larger than friction occurring between the brake shoe and the housing when the rotor is in reverse rotation, occurs between the brake shoe and the housing.
2. The braking device according to claim 1, wherein magnitude of the friction occurring between the brake shoe and the housing when the rotor is in the normal rotation, varies in proportion to rotating force of the rotor.
3. The braking device according to claim 1, further comprising: a supporting member supporting the brake shoe, the supporting member configured to prevent the first protruding part from getting over the second protruding part.
4. The braking device according to claim 1, wherein the rotor includes a first groove having a predetermined depth from an outer circumferential surface of the rotor, and a second groove having a predetermined depth from a bottom of the first groove, the brake shoe is arranged in the first groove, and the first protruding part is arranged in the second groove.
5. The braking device according to claim 1, wherein the first protruding part is in contact with the second protruding part at all times.
6. The braking device according to claim 1, wherein the brake shoe is arranged at a plurality of positions at regular intervals.
7. The braking device according to claim 6, wherein the brake shoe is arranged at at least three positions.
8. The braking device according to claim 1, wherein the first protruding part and the second protruding part are rotatable.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(12) Embodiments of the present invention will be more specifically described below based on examples according to the present invention. However, the technical scope of the present invention is not limited to the detailed descriptions below.
Example 1
(13) As illustrated in
(14) The housing 10 includes a peripheral wall 11, a bottom wall 12, flanges 13, and a lid 14. As illustrated in
(15) As illustrated in
(16) As illustrated in
(17) As illustrated in
(18) One brake shoe 30 is at least provided at one position. However, that type of configuration has a risk that partial wear of the one brake shoe 30 occurs. Therefore, brake shoes 30 are preferably arranged at a plurality of positions at regular intervals. Partial wear barely occurs in a configuration including two brake shoes 30 arranged at two positions at regular intervals, in comparison to the configuration including the one brake shoe 30 arranged at the one position. However, there is still a risk that the partial wear occurs. Therefore, three brake shoes 30 are most preferably arranged at at least three positions at regular intervals. According to the present example, as illustrated in
(19) As illustrated in
(20) As illustrated in
(21) The first protruding parts 40 and the second protruding parts 50 are preferably selected from parallel pins and steel balls in consideration of easy rotation and wear resistance. However, in a case where one or both of a first protruding part 40 and a second protruding part 50 are steel balls, since an area with which mutually coming in contact is small, wear easily occurs in comparison to a case where both are parallel pins. In a case where the parallel pins come in contact with each other, since an area with which mutually coming in contact is large, wear barely occurs. Therefore, the first protruding parts 40 and the second protruding parts 50 both are preferably parallel pins.
(22) The first protruding parts 40 adopted in the present example are the parallel pins, and fit into semicircular grooves 31 formed on inner surfaces of the brake shoes 30. As illustrated in
(23) The first protruding parts 40 are preferably in contact with the second protruding parts 50 at all times. This is because a configuration in which a state where the first protruding parts 40 and the second protruding parts 50 are in no contact with each other, is present, requires time for the second protruding parts 50 to come in contact with the first protruding parts 40 when the rotor 20 is in normal rotation, and responsiveness degrades. In addition, collision sounds occur when the first protruding parts 40 and the second protruding parts 50 come in contact with each other. When the first protruding parts 40 and the second protruding parts 50 remain in continually contact with each other, the responsiveness is satisfactory. The occurrence of the collision sounds can be also prevented.
(24) The braking device including the above configuration operates as follows: That is, when the rotor 20 performs the normal rotation, the second protruding parts 50 move in the clockwise direction in
(25) When the rotor 20 is in the normal rotation, the degree of causing the first protruding parts 40 to get on the second protruding parts 50 is proportional to rotating force of the rotor 20. Thus, the magnitude of the friction occurring between the brake shoes 30 and the housing 10 varies in proportion to the rotating force of the rotor 20. That is, when the rotating force of the rotor 20 is small, as illustrated in
(26) When the rotor 20 performs the reverse rotation, side wall surfaces 22b of the second grooves 22 formed on the rotor 20 thrust the first protruding parts 40 in the counterclockwise direction in
(27) As described above, the braking device according to the present example includes the configuration in which the first protruding parts 40 get on the second protruding parts 50 only when the rotor 20 is in the normal rotation so that friction larger than the friction that can occur between the brake shoes 30 and the housing 10 when the rotor 20 is in the reverse rotation, occurs between the brake shoes 30 and the housing 10. Therefore, according to the braking device, unidirectionality can be achieved without the rotational direction of the rotor 20 regulated. The braking device also requires no unidirectional clutch so that the number of components is remarkably small. Therefore, there is an advantage that the amount of assembly man-hours is remarkably small and manufacturing costs are low. The braking device also has a simple configuration and requires no unidirectional clutch so that miniaturization of the device can be achieved.
Example 2
(28) As illustrated in
(29) The supporting members 60 are provided between a rotor 20 and the brake shoes 30. Inner surfaces 60a of the supporting members 60 are in contact with bottoms 21a of first grooves 21 formed on the rotor 20. Before starting of the rotor 20, gaps between outer surfaces 60b of the supporting members 60 and an inner surface 11a of a peripheral wall 11 of a housing 10, are formed. Grooves 61 on which the brake shoes 30 are mounted are formed on the outer surfaces 60b of the supporting members 60. Grooves 62 into which first protruding parts 40 fit are formed on the inner surfaces 60a of the supporting members 60. The supporting members 60 are formed of a material that barely deforms in comparison to the brake shoes 30, such as rubber, elastomer, or metal, having elasticity lower than that of the brake shoes 30.
(30) The supporting members 60 have a function for preventing the first protruding parts 40 from getting over second protruding parts 50. That is, when a situation in which the first protruding parts 40 that have got on the second protruding parts 50 get over the second protruding parts 50 due to rotating force exceeding a normal range of the rotor 20, occurs, braking force due to friction no longer occurs. Thus, there is a need to prevent this. As illustrated in
(31) The braking device according to the present example, operates, similarly to the braking device according to Example 1, in a case where the rotating force of the rotor 20 remain in the normal range. That is, when the rotor 20 performs the normal rotation, the second protruding parts 50 move in a braking direction in association with rotation of the rotor 20. In this case, outer surfaces of the brake shoes 30 come in surface contact with the inner surface 11a of the peripheral wall 11 of the housing 10. Accordingly, the brake shoes 30 do not move in the braking direction simultaneously with the starting of the rotor 20 so that the first protruding parts 40 get on the second protruding parts 50 as illustrated in
(32) Meanwhile, when the rotor 20 performs reverse rotation, side wall surfaces 22b of second grooves 22 formed on the rotor 20 thrust the first protruding parts 40 in a non-braking direction. However, in this case, the second protruding parts 50 move in the non-braking direction in association with the rotation of the rotor 20 so that the first protruding parts 40 do not get on the second protruding parts 50 as illustrated in
(33) As described above, the braking device according to the present example includes the configuration in which the first protruding parts 40 get on the second protruding parts 50 only when the rotor 20 is in the normal rotation so that friction larger than the friction that can occur between the brake shoes 30 and the housing 10 when the rotor 20 is in the reverse rotation, occurs between the brake shoes 30 and the housing 10. Therefore, according to the braking device, unidirectionality can be achieved without the rotational direction of the rotor 20 regulated. The braking device requires no unidirectional clutch, similarly to the braking device according to Example 1, so that the number of components is remarkably small. Therefore, there is an advantage that the amount of assembly man-hours is remarkably small and manufacturing costs are low. The braking device also has a simple configuration and requires no unidirectional clutch so that miniaturization of the device can be achieved.
REFERENCING LIST
(34) 10 housing 11 peripheral wall 11a inner surface of the peripheral wall 12 bottom wall 13 flange 13a hole 14 lid 20 rotor 20a hole 20b outer circumferential surface of the rotor 21 first groove 21a bottom of the first groove 22 second groove 22a bottom of the second groove 22b side wall surface of the second groove 23 groove 30 brake shoe 31 groove 40 first protruding part 50 second protruding part 60 supporting member 60a inner surface of the supporting member 60b outer surface of the supporting member 61 groove 62 groove