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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to an oil or fluid pressure transmission device and more particularly to such a device wherein a sliding vane rotor is driven in either direction of rotation by fluid pressure from a valve controlled easily by simple operation of a control rod.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Conventional oil-pressure transmission devices cannot be adjusted quickly and sensitively in rotating speed and cannot change direction of rotation and they need a controlling valve to control the oil flow of the oil pressure pump for the purpose of adjusting speed.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of this invention to provide an improved device which overcomes the above problems.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a fluid pressure transmission device wherein fluid pressure acts directly on either side of the vanes of a rotor, the fluid pressure being controlled by a valve, so that the direction of the rotor can be easily and quickly reversed.
The above objectives are accomplished by this invention which consists of a cup-shaped housing closed by a cover plate to provide an inner cylindrical chamber, a rotor in the chamber having radially inwardly urged vanes engaging by roller followers on their inner ends with a substantially elliptically shaped cam which displaces the vanes radially. The cam is shifted with respect to the rotor axis from a central neutral, or non-operating, position to the right or left thereof to control the amount of displacement of the vanes to the right or left, respectively, into an annular space between the rotor and housing in which the pressurized fluid is flowing, the direction of flow being controlled by a valve mounted on the housing with inlet/outlet tubes connected to the annular chamber on opposite sides of a sealing partition. The flow position of the valve and position of the cam are simultaneously controlled by a control arm so that fluid pressure through the valve drives the rotor in either direction and the direction can be quickly reversed by simple shifting of the control arm.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective exploded view of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view taken along line A--A of FIG. 2;
FIG. 4 is a view similar to FIG. 3 showing an example of operating the present invention; and
FIG. 5 is a view similar to FIG. 4 showing another example of operating the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
As shown in FIG. 1, the present invention consists of a main housing 1, a rotor 2, vanes 3, an elliptical base or cam 4, a cover 5 and a control arm 6.
The main housing is cup-shaped having a radially extending bottom or web part 20 and a cylindrical side wall 30 and includes an oil valve 11 mounted on side wall 20 which surrounds the rotor 2 in radial spaced relationship which rotates inside the housing.
The rotor 2 is disposed inside the main housing 1, has a plurality of radial slots 21 and a cylindrical chamber 10 in which the vanes and cam 4 operate. The center of the rotor 2 is fixed onto a shaft 22 which extends axially outwardly through a hole 12 in housing 1. An axially extending boss 12 is provided extending into chamber 10 and engageable in recessed opening 7 in cam 4 as shown in FIG. 2.


Each of the vanes 3 is placed inside one of the slots 21 and can move radially back and forth along the slot. The radially inner end of each vane 3 has a roller 31 mounted thereon. In addition, between L-shaped seat 33 on each vane 3 and the radially outer end of radially extending spring housing openings 34 in rotor 2 adjacent slots 21 is a compressed spring 32 for resiliently urging each vane 3 radially inwardly, as shown in FIGS. 2-5.
The elliptical base or cam 4 is mounted inside rotor 2 and attached to a rod 41 at its center. The rollers 31 of vanes 3 have rolling contact on the outer surface of cam 4 to function as cam followers.
The cover 5 is bolted together with the main housing 1 so as to form a sealed annular chamber 16 within the main housing 1 and closed chamber 10 and has an elliptical hole 51 at its center for the rod 41 of the elliptical cam 4 to extend through.
The control arm 6 is assembled together with the cover 5 via a hole 61 which receives pin 13 extending from cover 5 to function as a pivot center for pivotal movement of control arm 6. The lower end of control arm 6 is shaped as a U-shaped fork 62 which engages with the part of the rod 41 extending outside cover 5. Therefore, when control arm 6 is pivoted about pin 13, the U-shaped fork 62 forces cam 4 to move to the right or left as viewed in FIGS. 3-5. In addition, the upper part of control arm 6 has an elongated slot 63 for receiving the end of a lever 111 of the oil valve 11 so that the control arm 6 also manipulates valve 11 to control the oil-flowing direction as will more clearly be evident from the further description below.
The oil valve 11 used in this invention is the same as a conventional valve used for controlling direction of flow of a common fluid, so it is not described herein because details thereof will be known to those having ordinary mechanical skill in this field.
Next, in FIGS. 2, 3, we can see that at the upper inside wall of the main housing 1, there is an isolated chamber 13 which contains a slide block 14 and a spring 14 urging slide block 14 into close contacting engagement with the outer surface of rotor 2. Fluid inlet/outlets 17, 18 are provided on opposite sides of the isolated chamber 13 extending through main housing 1 in the form of two separate tubes from valve 11. Of course, the rollers 31 of vanes 3 will always have rolling contact on the outer surface of cam 4 due to the compression of springs 32.
Moreover, FIGS. 2, 3 show structural views of this invention when control arm 6 is in its middle position. Under this condition, vanes 3 all remain within slots 21 of rotor 2 and the valve is closed so that the device is not working.
However, when the control arm 6 is moved to the left as shown in FIG. 4, the cam 4 will be moved to the right, so that those vanes 3 to the right of center of cam 4 will extend out of slots 21 into annular chamber 16. In this position fluid will flow into annular chamber 16 through inlet/outlet 18 to the right as viewed in FIG. 4 and drive rotor 2 clockwise together with shaft 22. If control arm 6 is moved to the right as viewed in FIG. 5, cam 4 will be moved to the left and rotor 2 will rotate counter-clockwise with shaft 22.
As described above and illustrated in the Figures, the present invention uses fluid pressure to create a driving force of rotation and, due to the direct contact of the fluid on vanes 3, attains the purpose of quick driving.
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