Abstract: The piston rod of a pneumatic spring is expelled from the cylinder by compressed fluid in the cylinder until a normally open channel connecting two compartments of the cylinder cavity on opposite axial sides of the piston is blocked by cooperating valve elements on the cylinder and on the piston assembly.
Abstract: A pneumatic suspension element of the piston-and-cylinder type in which the escape of compressed gas from the cylinder cavity is prevented by a liquid in a portion of the cylinder cavity through which the piston rod passes. The compressed gas and liquid are introduced into the cylinder cavity through resiliently sealed gaps about the piston rod and/or through a porous partition separating the liquid-filled cavity portion from the gas-filled portion.
Abstract: A pneumatic spring of the piston-and-cylinder type for use with the engine compartment hood or trunk lid of a motorcar and subject to explosive destruction in the event of an engine fire or a collision is provided with frangible, reduced wall portions in the cylinder and/or in the tubular piston rod which yields under excessive stresses and releases the compressed gas from the cylinder under conditions in which it cannot propel pieces of the fractured spring at high velocity.
Abstract: A gas spring of the cylinder-and-piston type having a throttling passage in the piston has a cup-shaped receptacle coaxially mounted on the piston about the piston rod and a plunger mounted on the annular end wall of the cylinder through which the piston rod passes. The plunger enters the receptacle when the piston rod approaches the outer end of its stroke, and fluid can be displaced by the plunger from the receptacle only through a narrow gap between respective walls of the plunger and receptacle for supplemental damping action.
Abstract: A pneumatic spring of the piston-and-cylinder type suitable for balancing the trunk lid of a motorcar and like applications is equipped with a stop mechanism which stops relative axial movement of the piston or piston rod and of the cylinder in response to a force axially applied to the spring, but releases the cylinder and piston or piston rod from each other in response to an applied force greater than the first-mentioned force. Cooperating stop members on the cylinder and piston rod engage each other as long as the relative axial movement of the principal spring elements is stopped.
Abstract: In a column of telescopically adjustable height, the two coaxial telescoping members may be adjusted axially after a control button in an axial bore of one member is depressed. A bracket, longitudinally split into two members, passes into the bore through a radial opening of the one column member and is anchored axially and radially by conforming engagement with the column member. The operating lever for the control button is pivoted between the bracket members outside the column bore so that a small angular movement of the exposed lever part causes the terminal part of the lever in the bore abuttingly to engage the control button and to depress the same.
Abstract: In a pneumatic spring of adjustable length, the piston rod is sealed to the cylinder by an annular sealing disc stressed in compression between the inner cylinder wall and a rigid, tubular projection on the radial end wall of the cylinder through which the piston rod extends outward of the cylinder cavity. The sealing disc is axially longer than the projection so that it extends inward of the cavity beyond the projection and carries an annular sealing lip engaging the piston rod only under the fluid pressure in the cylinder cavity, but practically fully relieved by the annular projection from the compressive stresses.