System for protecting a rotatable shaft of a motor from excessive bending moments
11618549 · 2023-04-04
Assignee
Inventors
- Emil Ghapgharan (Burbank, CA, US)
- Lane Dalan (Simi Valley, CA, US)
- Pavel Belik (Simi Valley, CA, US)
- Christopher Eugene Fisher (Thousand Oaks, CA, US)
- Austin Craig Gunder (Red Lion, PA, US)
Cpc classification
F04D29/382
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/3007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/3023
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64U50/19
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64C2203/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
F01D5/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04D29/38
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02K7/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A motor assembly that includes a motor having a motor casing, a rotatable shaft extending from said motor casing to a shaft length and a hub coupled to said rotatable shaft, the hub having a circumferential skid surface disposed immediately proximal to the motor casing and having a channel configured to seat a propeller, when a propeller is present, wherein a bending moment applied to the shaft through the hub results in the circumferential skid surface contacting said motor casing.
Claims
1. A method comprising: applying a bending moment to a rotatable shaft extending from a motor, wherein the motor is attached to a first structure; bending the rotatable shaft by the applied bending moment such that at least a portion of a surface of a second structure contacts at least a portion of the first structure, wherein the surface of the second structure is disposed adjacent to and apart from at least a portion of the first structure; and applying a bending moment to a propeller coupled to the rotatable shaft, wherein the bending moment applied to the propeller is transmitted to the rotatable shaft.
2. The method of claim 1 further comprising: receiving and seating the propeller by the second structure, wherein the second structure is a hub.
3. The method of claim 1 further comprising: receiving the rotatable shaft by a cavity of the second structure, wherein the second structure is a hub which further comprises the cavity, and wherein the rotatable shaft has a threaded distal portion configured to threadably receive a spinner nut to hold the propeller to the hub.
4. The method of claim 2, wherein the hub has a channel which is contoured to approximate a bottom surface of an airfoil.
5. The method of claim 1 further comprising: receiving the rotatable shaft by a shaft cavity, wherein the shaft cavity extends approximately to a shaft length so that a circumferential skid surface is disposed immediately proximal to the first structure, and wherein the first structure is a motor casing.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the surface is at least one of: annular and non-annular.
7. The method of claim 1 further comprising: transferring a load between at least the portion of the surface of the second structure and at least the portion of the first structure during contact.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the surface comprises opposing radial hub wings.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the first structure is a motor casing and the second structure is a hub, wherein the surface is a circumferential skid surface which is spaced apart from the motor casing by a gap distance, and wherein the gap distance enables the contact of the circumferential skid surface onto the motor casing prior to reaching a load limit of the rotatable shaft.
10. A method comprising: applying a bending moment to a rotatable shaft extending past a skid face of a motor, wherein the motor is attached to a fixed structure; and bending the rotatable shaft by the applied bending moment such that a skid surface of a rotatable structure contacts the skid face, wherein the skid surface of the rotatable structure is disposed adjacent to the skid face during at least a portion of a rotation of the rotatable shaft, and wherein the skid surface is defined by opposing radial hub wings.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the skid surface is annular.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the skid surface is spaced apart from the skid face by a gap distance, and wherein the gap distance enables the contact of the skid surface onto the skid face prior to reaching a load limit of the rotatable shaft.
13. The method of claim 10 further comprising: limiting bending of the rotatable shaft by reinforcing contact between the rotatable structure and the fixed structure attached to the motor.
14. A method comprising: applying a bending moment to a rotatable shaft, wherein a rotatable hub is coupled to the rotatable shaft, and wherein the rotatable hub has a skid surface; bending the rotatable shaft by the applied bending moment such that the skid surface of the rotatable hub contacts a skid face of a motor for providing reinforcing contact, wherein the skid face of the motor is spaced immediately apart from an in complementary opposition to the skid surface of the rotatable hub; and seating a propeller onto the rotatable shaft by a channel, wherein the channel for seating is configured so that a bending moment applied to the propeller is transmitted to the rotatable hub through the rotatable shaft and results in the skid surface contacting the skid face for providing reinforcing contact.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the skid surface is at least one of: annular and non-annular.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the skid surface is defined by opposing radial hub wings.
17. The method of claim 14, wherein the skid surface is spaced apart from the skid face by a gap distance, and wherein the gap distance enables the contact of the skid surface onto the skid face prior to reaching a load limit of the rotatable shaft.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Embodiments of the invention are illustrated by way of example and not limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings, and in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) A system is disclosed for reducing the possibility of damage to an engine compartment due to a propeller strike during landing. In one embodiment of a method to protect a rotatable shaft of a motor from excessive bending moments, a bending moment may be transmitted from the propeller to a hub, and may then be further transmitted to the rotatable shaft. Bending deformation of the rotatable shaft may be limited by reinforcing contact made between a circumferential skid surface of the hub and a motor casing of the motor.
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(10) In a preferred embodiment, the circumferential skid surface 107 may be disposed immediately proximal to a front skid face 109 of the motor casing 112 and spaced apart from the front skid face 109 by a gap distance (D.sub.GAP). In one embodiment having a shaft 100 outer diameter of 4.76 mm and a composition of 17-4 PH stainless steel, the gap distance (D.sub.GAP) may be approximately 0.51 mm. In alternative embodiments the gap distance may be 0.5 mm-1.5 mm. The gap distance (D.sub.GAP) is predetermined to enable impact of the circumferential skid surface 107 onto the front skid face 109 prior to reaching the load limit of the shaft 100 so that the shaft 100 is protected from excessive bending moments. The impact of the circumferential skid surface 107 on the front skid face 109 may serve to limit bending of the shaft 100 in the face of a potentially excessive shaft deflection due to, for example, a propeller strike. The gap distance (D.sub.GAP) may be limited at a maximum design distance by the yield load on the shaft and at a minimum by the stacked manufacturing tolerances of the hub, shaft, engine mounts, and other components (i.e., “motor assembly”) that affect positioning of the circumferential skid surface 107 with respect to the front skid face 109 of the motor casing 112. For example, more exact manufacturing tolerances of the motor assembly may allow the designed gap distance (D.sub.GAP) to be reduced in view of a given shaft's dimensions, support, and material, since manufacturing deviations may be less likely to cause inadvertent impact of the hub against motor casing during normal operation. If stacked manufacturing tolerances of the motor assembly are greater for the given shaft's dimensions, support and material, the gap distance (D.sub.GAP) may be increased to prevent known manufacturing variations from causing inadvertent impact of the circumferential skid surface 107 and front skid face 109 after assembly and during operation. Further, the gap distance (D.sub.GAP) may be sized to allow both dirt and water to easily and quickly exit the space between the hub and the motor. In an alternative embodiment, the motor is provided with the front skid face 109 positioned immediately proximal to the circumferential skid surface of the hub, when the hub is assembled on the rotatable shaft, during at least a portion of a rotation of the rotatable shaft.
(11) A sensor trigger, e.g., a magnet 108, may be coupled to the hub 106 at an outer diameter of the hub and facing the motor. As the shaft 100 drives the hub 106, the magnet 108 rotates with the shaft 100. Additionally, the sensor trigger may be mounted on or in the propeller 104. A second magnet 111 may be coupled to the hub 106 on a side of the hub opposite from the magnet to weightably balance the hub 106. A sensor 110 is coupled to the interior of the motor casing 112 to protect the sensor from the external environment (such as dust, rain and other contaminants), with the sensor 110 fixed at a location that is complementary to the magnet 108 to facilitate detection of the magnet 108 as it is rotated with the hub 106 past the sensor 110. The sensor 110 may be triggered by a Hall Effect sensor. In embodiments where the sensor trigger is mounted on or in the propeller 104, the sensor 110 may be located in the motor casing 112 or on an exterior surface of the motor casing 112. The sensor may be in communication with a motor controller through a motor cable 114 to provide feedback for propeller angular position location. In embodiments where the motor 102 is a permanent three-phase motor, each of the phase circuits of the motor may be selectively controllable to control rotation of the propeller 104 through the shaft 100.
(12) The hub 106 is illustrated as having a tapered exterior cross section with an interior cavity 116 to reduce its mass from what would otherwise be a solid component. The propeller 104 is depicted as seated in an indexer, e.g., a channel 118 sized to fit the width of the propeller, and located on an exterior surface of the hub that is on a side opposite from the motor 102. The angular orientation of the indexer with respect to the sensor trigger 108 is predetermined to facilitate proper angular alignment of the propeller 104 versus the sensor 110, as will be described more fully below. The propeller may be seated and held in the channel 118 by a spinner nut 120. The spinner nut 120 has a spinner nut post 122 that is inserted through a center channel 124 of the propeller 102 to threadably engage a hub post 126. The spinner nut 120 may accordingly press and hold the propeller 104 against the surface of the hub 106 to enable the shaft 100 to drive the hub 106 that then drives the seated propeller 104. Because the propeller 104 is pressed and held against the surface of the hub 106, application of a bending moment to the propeller (such as during a propeller ground strike) results in transmission of the bending moment through the propeller to the hub. The hub then transmits the bending moment to the rotatable shaft. Because the circumferential skid surface 107 is disposed immediately proximal to a motor casing 112 of the motor, bending deformation of the rotatable shaft 100 is limited with reinforcing contact between the motor casing 112 and the circumferential skid surface 107 of the hub 106.
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(16) In one alternative embodiment, the hub may be omitted and the propeller may be seated on the motor shaft. The propeller may be coupled to the motor shaft at a location immediately proximal to the front skid face of the motor, with the propeller itself having a skid surface. During operation, the propeller skid surface may contact the front skid face of the motor if the propeller experiences a ground strike that transmits a bending moment to the rotational shaft to protect the rotational shaft from excessive and potentially damaging (to the shaft and motor) elastic deformation.
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(20) The illustrations and examples provided herein are for explanatory purposes and are not intended to limit the scope of the appended claims. This disclosure is to be considered an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the spirit and scope of the invention and/or claims of the embodiment illustrated. It is contemplated that various combinations and/or sub-combinations of the specific features, systems, methods, and aspects of the above embodiments may be made and still fall within the scope of the invention. Accordingly, it should be understood that various features and aspects of the disclosed embodiments may be combined with or substituted for one another in order to form varying modes of the disclosed invention. Further it is intended that the scope of the present invention herein disclosed by way of examples should not be limited by the particular disclosed embodiments described above.