Title of Invention | AN ACTUATOR FOR A VEHICLE BRAKE ESPECIALLY A DISC BRAKE |
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Abstract | A shaft (34) is supported in the bottom (22) of a casing (20) and is rotatable for mechanical brake application- A ramp assembly (40) which is fixed to the casing and designed as an annular plate is supported - —^ on the bottom (22) around the shaft (34) and prevented from rotating by an off-center twist stop (42), and it is centered in the casing (20) in a way bypassing the shaft (34). Moreover, a rotatable ramp assembly (50) is arranged inside the casing (20) so as to be axially displaceable and is connected to the shaft (34) for torque transmission. The rotatable ramp assembly (50) is supported in such manner on the ramp assembly (40) which is fixed to the casing that it converts torque applied to it by the shaft (34) into an axial actuating force (B). PRICE: THIRTY RUPEES |
Full Text | The instant invention relates to an actuator for a vehicle brake, especially a disc brake, comprising a casing which has a bottom, a shaft which is supported in the bottom of the casing and rotatable for mechanical brake application, a ramp assembly which is fixed to the casing and designed as an annular plate, supported on the bottom around the shaft, and prevented from rotating by an off-center twist stop, and a rotatable ramp assembly which is arranged for axial displacement in the casing and connected to the shaft for torque transmission, being supported in such manner on the ramp assembly fixed to the casing that it converts torque app¬lied to it by the shaft into an axial actuating force. An actuator of this kind is known from prior art. There, an eccentric twist stop for the ramp assembly fixed to the casing is provided either in the form of a pin produced by em¬bossing and engaging in a blind bore formed parallel to the axis in the bottom of the casing or a paraxial pin which has been driven into a blind bore in the bottom of the casing and engages in an aperture which is oblong in radial direction of the ranp assembly fixed to the casing. In both cases the shaft passes directly through the ramp assembly which is fixed to the casing and is embodied by an annular plate. As a conse¬quence, this ramp assembly rests directly on the shaft once radial clearance has been overcome that is unavoidable for manufacturing reasons and, upon brake actuation, it may accom¬modate the reactive moment which is exerted on the ramp as¬sembly fixed to the casing. This moment of reaction is propor¬tional, in first approximation, to the actuating torque intro¬duced through the shaft and may reach a magnitude at which the force by which the ramp assembly fixed to the casing supports itself on the shaft gives rise to considerable frictional resistance against any further rotation of the shaft. The ef- ficiency of the known actuator thus is noticeably reduced. Moreover, since the ramp assembly fixed to the casing does not come to be supported on the shaft until after radial cleamace has been overcome, the ramps with which this assembly is form¬ed and which usually are shaped essentially like circular atcs, will adopt an eccentric position at which they no longer are aligned precisely with corresponding ramps presented in the rotatable ramp assembly. For this reason roller bodies, such as balls normally placed between ramps which are mutually opposed, no longer are supported, as intended, on base sur¬faces but instead on lateral flanks of the ramps. That causes additional losses due to friction and this in turn entails wear, just like the friction between the shaft and the ramp assembly which is fixed to the casing. As a result, the ef¬ficiency of the actuator is reduced. It is, therefore, an object of the instant invention to im¬prove an actuator of the kind specified such that it will have a higher degree of efficiency and be less prone to wear. The object is met, in accordance with the invention, in that the ramp assembly which is fixed to the casing is centered in the casing, bypassing the shaft. In this manner the shaft is kept free of transverse forces which so far were transmitted to the shaft from the ramp as¬sembly fixed to the casing. The centering of the ramp assembly fixed to the casing remains unaffected by the unavoidable bearing clearance of the shaft and, therefore, can be more precise than is the case with the conventional actuator of the generic type in question. For this reason the ramps formed, on the one hand, in the ranp assembly fixed to the casing and, on the other hand, in the rotatable ramp assembly will remain better centered with respect to each other and consequently be less subjected to wear, regardless of whether these ranps co¬operate in pairs directly or through roller bodies in between. An embodiment of the invention with which the ramp assembly that is fixed to the casing is centered on a bearing bush by means of which the shaft is supported in the bottom of the casing has proved to be particularly advantageous. Double utilization of the bearing bush for support of the shaft, on the one hand, and for centering of the ramp assembly fixed to the casing, on the other hand, keeps the costs of manufacture and assembly of the bearing bush and of the ramp assembly fixed to the casing at the same level as those of the conven¬tional actuator. And, on top of that, it is exceptionally easy to slip or press this ramp assembly in tight fit on the bear¬ing bush outside of the casing in order then to insert both of them into the casing in a single operation, the bearing bush itself being pushed or pressed in tight fit into a bore in the bottom of the casing. In this context it is especially ad¬vantageous if the bearing bush has one portion of smaller ou¬ter diameter which engages in the ramp assembly that is fixed to the casing and another portion of greater outer diameter which is received in the bottom of the casing. An embodiment of the invention will be described in greater detail below as conpared to the prior art assumed to be known and with reference to diagrammatic drawings, in which: Fig. 1 is an axial sectional elevation of a spot type disc brake comprising an actuator according to the inven¬tion; Fig, 2 shows an enlarged cutout of fig. 1; Fig. 3 is cross section III-III of fig. 2; Fig, 4 shows a cutout similar to fig. 2 of a conventional actuator, and Fig. 5 is cross section V-V in fig. 4. The actuator presented in figs. 1 to 3 is installed in a floating caliper 10 which forms part of a spot type disc brake and is guided in conventional manner on a brake carrier (not shown) so as to be displaceable parallel to the axis of a fftrtbrake disc 12. The floating caliper 10 straddles the brake disc 12 as well as two brake pads 14 and 16 of which the first one 14 is adapted to be pressed directly by the actuator against the brake disc 12, That gives rise to forces of reac¬tion which displace the floating caliper 10 such that an inte¬gral leg 18 thereof makes sure that also the second brake pad 16 is urged against the brake disc 12. The actuator comprises a casing 20 which is made in one piece, for instance by casting, and includes a bottom 22 and a shell 24 formed with a cylindrical bore 26 which is open towards the brake disc 12 and with an inlet passage 28 which will connect to a master cylinder. A cup-shaped piston 30 having a closed outer face end wall 32 with a surface for abutment of the brake pad 14 is guided in the cylindrical bore 26. A shaft 34 for mechanical brake actuation is supported so as to be rotatable and axially displaceable in a bearing bush 36 in the bottom 22 of the casing 20 and coaxially with the pi¬ston 30. A lever 38 attached to the outer end of the shaft 34 normally is connected, for example, by a Bowden cable to a parking brake lever or pedal. A ramp assembly 40 fixed to the casing and embodied by an annular plate which is pressed on the bearing bush 36 and centered on the same with respect to the casing 20 rests against the inside surface of the bottom 22 of the casing, without touching the shaft 34. A twist stop 42 prevents rotation of the ramp assembly 40 which is fixed to the casing 20. In the embodiment illustrated, the twist stop 42 is embodied by a notched nail driven into a bore in the bottom 22 of the casing and engaging with radial clearance in an off-center aperture 44 in the ramp assembly 40 which is fixed to the casing, The ramp assembly 40 fixed to the casing is formed with three through-like ramps 46 which are elongate in circumferential direction and each receive a spreader 48 of spherical shape in the embodiment shown. The spreaders 48 each co-operate with a corresponding ramp and with an adjustable ramp assembly 50 likewise of annulus configuration. In the present embodiment this ramp assembly 50 is formed in one piece with the shaft 34. In this respect, and as regards further features, the actuator shown corresponds to the one known from prior art refered to at Page 2 above. The centering on the bearing bush 36 of the ramp assembly 40 fixed to the casing, which centering differs from the known actuator, is illustrated in greater detail in figs, 2 and 3. The bearing bush 36 has an inner diameter which is greater by a bearing clearance of the order of magnitude of 0,25 mm than the outer diameter of that portion of the shaft 34 which is received in the bearing bush 36, The bearing bush 36 is stepped at the outside; a portion 52 of greater outer diameter is received with little clearance, preferably none at all, in a widened portion 54 of a stepped bore in the bottom 22 of the casing 20 and, together with a narrower outer portion 56 of this stepped bore, defines a space in which a sealing 58 is received. The bearing bush 36 further has a portion 60 of smaller outer diameter on which the ramp assembly 40 which is fixed to the casing is seated in press fit. Upon rotation of the shaft 34 and consquently also of the ad¬justable rairp assembly 50, for mechanical actuation of the brake by means of the lever 8, the spreaders 48 roll along their ramps 46 which rise in circumferential direction. As a result, the adjustable ramp assembly 50 is urged away from the ramp assembly 40 which is fixed to the casing, i,e, to the right in figs, 1 and 2, At the same time, the spreaders 48 exert forces of reaction on the ramp assembly 40 fixed to the casing. These reactive forces may be divided into components which act in parallel with the axis, urging the ramp assembly 40 against the bottom 22 of the casing, and into circxamferen-tial components whose moment with respect to axis A of the ac¬tuator may be represented as force couple F, F', as indicated in fig, 3. Force F is received by the twist stop 42 and directed into the bottom 22 of the casing. Force F' is taken up by the bearing bush 36 and likewise passed on into the bot- torn 22 of the casing without affecting the shaft 34 in any¬way. By way of comparison figs, 4 and 5 illustrate the structural disposition and the resulting operating conditions of the con¬ventional actuator according to EP 0 403 635 Bl. With that ar¬rangement too, the reactive force F occurring upon brake ap¬plication and acting in circumferential direction on the ramp assembly 40 is accommodated by the twist stop 42, The counter-force F' of the same magnitude, however, acts from the ramp assembly 40 fixed to the casing on the shaft 34 which then transmits it through the bearing bush 36 to the bottom 22 of the casing. Because of the unavoidable radial clearance with which the shaft 34 passes through the ramp assembly 40, this ramp assembly 40 fixed to the casing is pivoted about the twist stop 42 by the force F', as indicated by arrow P in fig. 5. The resulting pivot angle a, practice, may be an angle of 1.5 . As a result, the ramps 46 of the ramp assembly 40 fixed to the casing become shifted with respect to the corresponding ramps of the adjustable ramp assembly 50, In this context it is especially disadvantageous that the ramps of matching pairs become twisted with respect to each other about the eccentric¬ally disposed twist stop 42 rather than the central axis A so that they no longer can co-operate exactly as intended with the spreaders 48, This undesirable twisting and the likewise un-desired influence of force F' on shaft 34 are excluded with the arrangement according to figs. 1 to 3, WE CLAIM: 1. An actuator for a vehicle brake, especially a disc brake, comprising a casing (20) which has a bottom (22) , a shaft (34) which is supported in the bottom (22) of the casing and is rotatable for mechanical brake application, a ramp assembly (40) which is fixed to the casing and designed as an annular plate, supported on the bottom (22) around the shaft (34), and prevented from rotating by an off-center twist stop (42) , and - a rotatable ramp assembly (50) which is arranged for axial displacement in the casing (20) and connected to the shaft (34) for torque transmission, being supported in such manner on the ramp assembly (4) which is fixed to the casing that it converts torque applied to it by the shaft (34) into an axial actuating force (B) , characterized in that the ramp assembly (4) which is fixed to the casing is centered in the casing (20) , bypassing the shaft (34) . 2. The actuator as claimed in claim 1, wherein the ramp assembly (40) which is fixed to the casing is cen¬tered on a bearing bush (36) by which the shaft (34) is sup¬ported in the bottom (22) of the casing (20). 3. The actuator as claimed in claim 2, wherein the ramp assembly (40) which is fixed to the casing estab¬lishes a tight fit with the bearing bush (36) . 4. The actuator as claimed in claim 2 or 3, wherein the bearing bush (36) comprises a portion (60) of smaller outer diameter engaging in the ramp assembly (40) which is fixed to the casing and a portion (52) of greater outer dia¬ meter which is received in the bottom (22) of the casing (20). |
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517-mas-95 correspondences-others.pdf
517-mas-95 correspondences-po.pdf
517-mas-95 description (complete).pdf
Patent Number | 189258 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Indian Patent Application Number | 517/MAS/1995 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
PG Journal Number | 30/2009 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Publication Date | 24-Jul-2009 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Grant Date | 12-Feb-2004 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date of Filing | 28-Apr-1995 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name of Patentee | LUCAS INDUSTRIES PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Applicant Address | BRUETON HOUSE, NEW ROAD, WEST MIDLANDS B91 3TX ENGLAND. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Inventors:
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PCT International Classification Number | F16D65/56 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
PCT International Application Number | N/A | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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PCT Conventions:
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