Ball nut and ballscrew absolute position sensor for vehicle steering system
12330709 · 2025-06-17
Assignee
Inventors
- Christopher R. Case Myers (Freeland, MI, US)
- Eric D. Pattok (Frankenmuth, MI, US)
- Travis L. Palmer (Frankenmuth, MI, US)
Cpc classification
F16H25/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H25/2015
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G01D2205/26
PHYSICS
B62D15/0225
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01D2205/14
PHYSICS
F16H25/2204
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G01D5/145
PHYSICS
International classification
B62D15/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16H25/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H25/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H25/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An absolute position sensor includes a first gear having a plurality of teeth, a rotational position sensor operatively coupled to the first gear to be configured to detect a rotational position of the first gear, and a second gear including a spiral tooth engaged with the plurality of teeth of the first gear to rotate with the first gear, and having a first end with a first distance from a center of the second gear, and an opposite second end with a second distance from the center of the second gear, the second distance being less than the first distance.
Claims
1. An absolute position sensor comprising: a first gear having a plurality of teeth; a rotational position sensor operatively coupled to the first gear to be configured to detect a rotational position of the first gear; and a second gear comprising a spiral tooth engaged with the plurality of teeth of the first gear to rotate with the first gear, and having a first end with a first distance from a center of the second gear, and an opposite second end with a second distance from the center of the second gear, the second distance being less than the first distance.
2. The absolute position sensor of claim 1, wherein a difference between the first distance and the second distance is equal to a distance between apexes of adjacent teeth of the plurality of teeth.
3. The absolute position sensor of claim 1, wherein the first gear rotates about an axis transverse to an axis of rotation of the second gear.
4. The absolute position sensor of claim 1, wherein the spiral tooth of the second gear extends around a center of the second gear.
5. The absolute position sensor of claim 1, wherein the rotational position sensor comprises a Hall-effect sensor.
6. The absolute position sensor of claim 5, wherein the Hall-effect sensor comprises a pair of magnets coupled to and radially offset from a center of a hub of the first gear to rotate with the first gear.
7. The absolute position sensor of claim 6, further comprising a biasing member engaged with the first gear to bias the first gear toward the second gear.
8. The absolute position sensor of claim 7, further comprising a housing including an enclosure that encloses the hub of the first gear and the position sensor, and a biasing structure coupled to the enclosure by a living hinge, the biasing member is engaged with the biasing structure to bias the biasing structure into the first gear.
9. An electric power steering system comprising: a ballscrew-nut assembly comprising a ballscrew, a nut, and a motor operatively coupled to one of the ballscrew and the nut to be configured to rotate the one of the ballscrew and the nut; and an absolute position sensor comprising: a first gear having a plurality of teeth; a rotational position sensor operatively coupled to the first gear to be configured to detect a rotational position of the first gear; and a second gear coupled to one of the ballscrew and the nut and comprising a spiral tooth engaged with the plurality of teeth of the first gear to rotate with the first gear, the spiral tooth having a first end with a first distance from a center of the second gear, and an opposite second end with a second distance from the center of the second gear, the second distance being less than the first distance.
10. The electric power steering system of claim 9, wherein the second gear is concentrically arranged around the ballscrew.
11. The electric power steering system of claim 9, further comprising a pair of tie rods coupled to each end of the ballscrew that are operatively coupled to a pair of knuckles, and movement of the ballscrew pivots the pair of knuckles.
12. The electric power steering system of claim 9, wherein a difference between the first distance and the second distance is equal to a distance between apexes of adjacent teeth of the plurality of teeth.
13. The electric power steering system of claim 9, wherein the spiral tooth of the second gear extends around a center of the second gear.
14. The electric power steering system of claim 9, wherein the position sensor comprises a Hall-effect sensor.
15. The electric power steering system of claim 14, wherein the Hall-effect sensor comprises a pair of magnets coupled to and radially offset from a center of a hub of the first gear to rotate with the first gear.
16. The electric power steering system of claim 15, further comprising a biasing member engaged with the first gear to bias the first gear toward the second gear.
17. The electric power steering system of claim 16, further comprising a housing including an enclosure that encloses the hub of the first gear and the position sensor, and a biasing structure coupled to the enclosure by a living hinge, the biasing member is engaged with the biasing structure to bias the biasing structure into the first gear.
18. An electric power steering system comprising: a ballscrew; a nut engaged with the ballscrew, such that rotation of the nut relative to the ballscrew moves the ballscrew through the nut; and an absolute position sensor comprising: a first gear having a plurality of teeth; a rotational position sensor operatively coupled to the first gear to be configured to detect a rotational position of the first gear; and a second gear concentrically arranged around the ballscrew to rotate with one of the ballscrew and the nut, the second gear engaged with the plurality of teeth of the first gear to be configured to rotate with the first gear.
19. The electric power steering system of claim 18, wherein the second gear comprises a spiral tooth engaged with the plurality of teeth of the first gear to rotate with the first gear, and having a first end with a first distance from a center of the second gear, and an opposite second end with a second distance from the center of the second gear, the second distance being less than the first distance.
20. The electric power steering system of claim 18, further comprising: a biasing member engaged with the first gear to bias the first gear toward the second gear; and a housing including an enclosure that encloses a hub of the first gear and the position sensor, and a biasing structure coupled to the enclosure by a living hinge, the biasing member is engaged with the biasing structure to bias the biasing structure into the first gear.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The subject matter that is regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the claims at the conclusion of the specification. The foregoing and other features, and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) The embodiments described herein are used in conjunction with a steering assembly of a vehicle, such as a car, truck, sport utility vehicle, crossover, mini-van, marine craft, aircraft, all-terrain vehicle, recreational vehicle, or other suitable vehicles, including various steering system schemes.
(10) Referring initially to
(11) Referring still to
(12) Referring to
(13) Referring to
(14) As depicted, the first gear 72 may be coupled at a single end to the enclosure of the ballscrew-nut assembly 42 to be cantilevered into contact with the second gear 74. However, it is contemplated and possible that the first gear 72 is supported at both ends to be in contact with the second gear 74.
(15) The rotational position sensor 76 may be coupled to the end of the hub 84 of the first gear 72. The rotational position sensor 76 may be a Hall-effect sensor including a pair of magnets 90, a sensor board 92 that detects the position of the magnets 90, and a controller 94 communicatively coupled to the sensor board 92 to receive signals from the sensor board 92 indicative of a position of the magnets 90. The pair of magnets 90 may be coupled to and radially offset from the axis, or a center of the hub 84 of the first gear 72, to rotate with the first gear 72. The sensor board 92 may be positioned adjacent the end 86 of the hub 84 so that as the pair of magnets 90 rotate with the first gear 72, where the sensor board 92 may determine a rotational position of the first gear 72. The sensor board 92 sends signals to the controller 94 indicative of the rotational position of the first gear 72 based on the position of the magnets 90, and the controller 94 determines a position of the ballscrew 52 based on the rotational position of the first gear 72.
(16) Referring to
(17) Referring to
(18) The distance d1 of the spacing S defined by the spiral tooth 104 affects the rotation of the first gear 72 as the second gear 74 rotates. For example, when the distance d1 of the spacing S is increased, the gear ratio between the second gear 74 and the first gear 72 is decreased, such that rotation of the first gear 72 is increased for each rotation of the second gear 74. The gear ratio between the first gear 72 and the second gear 74 permits the first gear 72 to be limited to a single rotation over an entire length of travel of the ballscrew 52. For example, the motor 56 may rotate the nut 54 32 rotations to move the ballscrew 52 over the entire length of travel, pivoting the wheels 48 from a right turn configuration to a left turn configuration, and vice versa. In this example, the gear ratio of the second gear 74 to the first gear 72 would be equal to or greater than 32:1 to restrict the first gear 72 to rotating a single rotation or less, where a single rotational position of the first gear 72 is associated with a single position of the ballscrew 52. In other words, the magnets 90 on the first gear 72 are never in more than one position over the entire length of travel of the ballscrew 52, so that a single position of the wheels 48 is associated with a single rotational position of the first gear 72. Therefore, the rotational position sensor 76 of the absolute position sensor assembly 50 can detect the absolute position of the ballscrew 52 without the use of additional gears. In this described worm gear arrangement, the second gear 74 may be larger than the first gear 72, for example, the teeth of the first gear 72 having a smaller radius than the spiral tooth 104 of the second gear 74, to change large axial travel into small rotational motion on a perpendicular axis.
(19) Referring to
(20) Referring to
(21) The described type of sensor mechanization is a core requirement of systems that do not have an input shaft, as the motor sensor currently doesn't provide and exact steering position at startup. The embodiments are scaled so the rotation of the perpendicular shaft is at or below one rotation for the length of ballscrew travel required, thereby allowing the use of a single gear pair in contrast to current three gear pairs required on current position sensor designs because of the multiple input turns to get discrete position solutions. This is beneficial for new steer-by-wire system designs where the driver input is no longer required and allows the removal of perpendicular components of the pinion axis from a system architecture that still requires an absolute position sensing.
(22) While the invention has been described in detail in connection with only a limited number of embodiments, it should be readily understood that the invention is not limited to such disclosed embodiments. Rather, the invention can be modified to incorporate any number of variations, alterations, substitutions or equivalent arrangements not heretofore described, but which are commensurate with the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, while various embodiments of the invention have been described, it is to be understood that aspects of the invention may include only some of the described embodiments. Accordingly, the invention is not to be seen as limited by the foregoing description.