COMBINATION OF A CHAMBER AND A PISTON, A PUMP, A MOTOR, A SHOCK ABSORBER AND A TRANSDUCER INCORPORATING THE COMBINATION
A piston-chamber combination has an elongate chamber with a piston movable therein between first and second positions. The chamber has cross-sections of different areas and different circumferential lengths at the two positions, and substantially continuously different cross-sectional areas and circumferential lengths at intermediate positions, area and circumferential length at the second position being smaller than that at the first. The piston is elastically deformable and has other features to adapt to the different cross-sectional areas and circumferential lengths of the chamber during movements of the piston.
This is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/473,080, filed Jan. 5, 2004 which is incorporated herein by reference and now U.S. Pat. No. ______, which is a 371 national phase application of PCT/DK02/00216, filed Mar. 27, 2002 which is also incorporated herein by reference, and which claims priority on Denmark application no. PA 2001 00506, filed Mar. 27, 2001 and Denmark application no. PA 2001 00507, filed Mar. 27, 2001, which priority claim is repeated here.
TECHNICAL FIELDA piston-chamber combination comprising an elongate chamber which is bounded by an inner chamber wall, and comprising a piston in said chamber to be sealingly movable relative to said chamber wall at least between a first longitudinal position and a second longitudinal positions of the chamber, said chamber having cross-sections of different cross-sectional areas and different circumferential lengths at the first and second longitudinal positions and at least substantially continuously different cross-sectional areas and different circumferential length at intermediate longitudinal positions between the first and second longitudinal positions, the cross-sectional area and circumferential length at said second longitudinal position being smaller than the cross-sectional area and circumferential length at said first longitudinal position, said piston comprising a container or envelope which is elastically deformable thereby providing for different cross-sectional areas and circumferential lengths of the piston adaptating the same to said different cross-sectional areas and different circumferential lengths of the chamber during the relative movements of the piston between the first and second longitudinal positions through said intermediate longitudinal positions of the chamber.
Inflation valves are the Dunlop-Woods valve, the Sclayerand valve and the Schrader valve. These are in use for inflation of closed chambers, e.g. tires of vehicles. The last two mentioned valve types have a spring-force operated valve core pin, and may be opened by depressing this pin for inflation and deflation of the chamber. Depressing the valve core pin may be done by manual activation, by a pressure of a fluid or by a valve actuator. The first two mentioned valve types may be opened by the pressure of a fluid alone, while the last mentioned one best may be opened by a valve actuator, as otherwise a high pressure may be needed to depress the pin.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThis invention deals with solutions for the problem of obtaining a friction force low enough to at least avoid jamming between a piston, specifically a piston comprising a container or envelope having an elastically deformable container or envelope wall, and the wall of an elongate chamber during the stroke, the chamber having different sizes of cross-sectional area's in its longitudinal direction, specifically those having different circumferential length's, when the piston is sealingly movable relative to said chamber.
A problem with embodiments of
This results in high contact pressures between the piston and the wall of the chamber: jamming may occur.
A further problem may be that embodiments of pistons comprising a container of WO 00/70227 may leak their fluid, and thus may change their sealing capability. As in the solutions of the earlier mentioned problem for pistons comprising a container with an elastically deformable wall the sealing force is created by internal pressure, leakage may be an important problem.
OBJECT OF THE INVENTIONThe object is to provide combinations of a piston and a chamber which may sealingly move when the chambers have different cross-sectional areas when the circumferences of these cross-sections are different.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn the first aspect, the invention relates to a combination of a piston and a chamber, wherein:
the piston is produced to have a production size of the envelope or container in the stress-free and undeformed state thereof in which the circumferential length of the piston is approximately equivalent to the circumferential length of said chamber at said second longitudinal position, the container or envelope being expandable from its production size in a direction transversally with respect to the longitudinal direction of the chamber thereby providing for an expansion of the piston from the production size thereof during the relative movements of the piston from said second longitudinal position to said first longitudinal position.
In the present context, the cross-sections are preferably taken perpendicularly to the longitudinal axis (=transversal direction).
Preferably, the second cross-sectional area is 95-15%, such as 95-70% of the first cross-sectional area. In certain situations, the second cross-sectional area is approximately 50% of the first cross-sectional area.
A number of different technologies may be used in order to realise this combination. These technologies are described further in relation to the subsequent aspects of the invention.
One such technology is one wherein the piston comprises an elastically deformable container or envelope comprising a deformable material.
In that situation, the deformable material may be a fluid or a mixture of fluids, such as water, steam, and/or gas, or a foam. This material, or a part thereof, may be compressible, such as gas or a mixture of water and gas, or it may be at least substantially incompressible.
This may be achieved by choosing the production size (stress free, undeformed) of the piston approximately equivalent to the circumferential length of the smallest cross-sectional area of a cross-section of the chamber, and to expand it when moving to a longitudinal position with a bigger And this may be achieved by providing means to keep a certain sealing force from the piston on the wall of the chamber: by keeping the internal pressure of the piston on (a) certain predetermined level(s), which may be kept constant during the stroke. A pressure level of a certain size depends on the difference in circumferential length of the cross sections, and on the possibility to get a suitable sealing at the cross section with the smallest circumferential length. If the difference is big, and the appropriate pressure level too high to obtain a suitable sealing force at the smallest circumferential length, than change of the pressure may be arranged during the stroke. This calls for a pressure management of the piston. As commercially used materials are normally not tight, specifically when quite high pressures may be used, there must be a possibility to keep this pressure, e.g. by using a valve for inflation purposes.
When the cross-sectional area of the chamber changes, the volume of the container or envelope may change. Thus, in a cross-section through the longitudinal direction of the chamber the container or envelope may have a first shape at the first longitudinal direction and a second shape at the second longitudinal direction, the first shape may be different from the second shape. In one situation, at least part when the deformable material is compressible and the first shape has an area being larger than an area of the second shape. In that situation, the overall volume of the container or envelope changes, whereby the fluid should be compressible. Alternatively or optionally, the piston may comprise an enclosed space communicating with the deformable container or envelope, said enclosed space having a variable volume. In that manner, that the enclosed space may take up or release fluid when the deformable container or envelope changes volume. The change of the volume of the container or envelope is by that automatically adjustable. It may result in that the pressure in the container or envelope remains constant during the stroke.
Also, the enclosed space may comprise a spring-biased piston. This spring may define the pressure in the piston when changing its volume.
The volume of the enclosed space may be varied. In that manner, the overall pressure or maximum/minimum pressure of the container or envelope may be altered.
When the enclosed space is updivided into a first and a second enclosed space, the spaces further comprising means for defining the volume of the first enclosed space so that the pressure of fluid in the first enclosed space may relate to the pressure in the second enclosed space. The last mentioned space may be inflatable e.g. by means of a valve, preferably an inflation valve, such as a Schrader valve.
The defining means may be adapted to define the pressure in the first enclosed space at least substantially constant during the stroke.
However, any kind of pressure level may be defined by the defining means: e.g. a pressure raise may be necessary when the container or envelope expands to such a big cross-sectional area at the first longitudinal position that the contact area at the present pressure value may become too little, in order to maintain a suitable sealing. The defining means may be a pair of pistons, one in each enclosed space. The second enclosed space may be inflated to a certain pressure level, so that a pressure raise may be communicated to the first enclosed space, despite the fact that the volume of the second enclosed space may become bigger as well. This may be achieved by e.g. a combination of a piston and a chamber with different cross-sectional area's in the piston rod, which is comprised in the second enclosed space. A pressure drop may also be designable.
Pressure management of the piston may also be achieved by relating the pressure of fluid in the enclosed space with the pressure of fluid in the chamber. By providing means for defining the volume of the enclosed space communicating with the chamber. In this manner, the pressure of the deformable container or envelope may be varied in order to obtain a suitable sealing. For example, a simple manner would be to have the defining means adapted to define the pressure in the enclosed space to raise when the container or envelope is moving from the second longitudinal position to the first longitudinal position. In this situation, a simple piston between the two enclosed spaces may be provided (in order to not loose any of the fluid in the deformable container or envelope).
In fact, the use of this piston may define any relation between the pressures in that the chamber in which the piston translates may taper in the same manner as the main chamber of the combination.
The container or envelope may be inflated by a pressure source inside the piston, or an external pressure source, like one outside the combination and/or when the chamber is the source itself. All solutions demand a valve communicating with the piston. This valve may preferably an inflation valve, best a Schrader valve. This valve type has a spring biased valve core pin and closes independent of the pressure in the piston, and all kinds of fluids may flow through it. It may however also be another valve type, e.g. a check valve.
The container or envelope may be inflated through an enclosed space where the spring-biased tuning piston operates as a check valve. The fluid may flow through longitudinal ducts in the bearing of the piston rod of the spring biased piston, from a pressure source.
When the enclosed space is divided up into a first and second enclosed space, the inflation may be done with the chamber as the pressure source, as the second enclosed space may prohibit inflation through it to the first enclosed space. The chamber may have an inlet valve in the foot of the chamber. For inflation of the container or envelope an inflation valve, e.g. a Schrader valve may be used, together with an actuator. This may be an activating pin according to WO 96/10903 or WO 97/43570, or a valve actuator according to WO99/26002. The core pin of the valve is moving towards the chamber when closing.
When the working pressure in the chamber is higher than the pressure in the piston, the piston may be inflated automatically.
When the working pressure in the chamber is lower than the pressure in the piston than it is necessary to obtain a higher pressure by e.g. temporary closing the outlet valve in the foot of the chamber. When the valve is a Schrader valve which may be opened by means of a valve actuator according to WO 99/26002, this may be achieved by creating a bypass in the form of a channel by connecting the chamber and the space between the valve actuator and the core pin of the valve. This bypass may be opened (the Schrader valve may remain closed) and closed (the Schrader valve may open) and may be accomplished by e.g. a movable piston. The movement of this piston may be arranged manually e.g. by a pedal, which is turning around an axle from an inactive position to an active position and vice versa by an operator. It may also be achieved by other means like an actuator, initiated by the result of a pressure measurement in the chamber and/or the container or envelope.
Obtaining the predetermined pressure in the container or envelope may be achieved manually—the operator being informed by a manometer which is measuring the pressure in the container or envelope. It may also be achieved automatically, e.g. by a release valve in the container or envelope. It may also be achieved by a spring-force operated cap which closes the channel above the valve actuator when the pressure exceeds a certain pre-determined pressure value. Another solution is that of a comparable solution of the closable bypass of the outlet valve of the chamber—a pressure measurement may be necessary in the container or envelope, which may steer an actuator which is opening and closing the bypass of the valve actuator according to WO 99/26002 of a Schrader valve of the container at a pre-determined pressure value.
The above mentioned solutions are applicable too to any pistons comprising a container, incl. those shown in WO 00/65235 and WO 00/70227.
In order to reduce the longitudinal stretching of the piston comprising a container when subjected to the pressure of the chamber, and to allow the expansion in the transversal direction, the container may comprise an elastically deformable material comprising reinforcement means, such as a textile, fibre or other reinforcement means, preferably positioned in the wall of the container. The piston comprising a container may also comprise reinforcement means which are not positioned in the wall, e.g. a plurality of elastic arms, which may or may not be inflatable, connected to the wall of the container. When inflatable, the reinforcement functions also to limit the deformation of the wall of the container due to the pressure in the chamber.
Another aspect of the invention is one relating to a combination of a piston and a chamber, wherein:
the chamber defines an elongate chamber having a longitudinal axis,
the piston being movable in the chamber from a second longitudinal position to a first longitudinal position,
the chamber having an elastically deformable inner wall along at least part of the inner chamber wall between the first and second longitudinal positions,
the chamber having, at a first longitudinal position thereof when the piston is positioned at that position, a first cross-sectional area thereof and, at a second longitudinal position thereof when the piston is positioned at that position, a second cross-sectional area, the first cross-sectional area being larger than the second cross-sectional area, the change in cross-section of the chamber being at least substantially continuous between the first and second longitudinal positions when the piston is moved between the first and second longitudinal positions.
Thus, alternatively to the combinations where the piston adapts to the cross-sectional changes of the chamber, this aspect relates to a chamber having adapting capabilities.
Naturally, the piston may be made of an at least substantially incompressible material—or a combination may be made of the adapting chamber and an adapting piston—such as a piston according to the above aspects.
Preferably, the piston has, in a cross section along the longitudinal axis, a shape tapering in a direction from the first longitudinal position to the second longitudinal position.
A preferred manner of providing an adapting chamber is to have the chamber comprise:
an outer supporting structure enclosing the inner wall and
a fluid held by a space defined by the outer supporting structure and the inner wall.
In that manner, the choice of fluid or a combination of fluids may help defining the properties of the chamber, such as the sealing between the wall and the piston as well as the force required etc.
It is clear that depending on from where the combination is seen, one of the piston and the chamber may be stationary and the other moving—or both may be moving. This has no impact on the functioning of the combination.
The piston may also slide over an internal and an external wall. The internal wall may have a taper form, while the external wall is cylindrical.
Naturally, the present combination may be used for a number of purposes in that it primarily focuses on a novel manner of providing an additional manner of tailoring translation of a piston to the force required/taken up. In fact, the area/shape of the cross-section may be varied along the length of the chamber in order to adapt the combination for specific purposes and/or forces. One purpose is to provide a pump for use by women or teenagers—a pump that nevertheless should be able to provide a certain pressure. In that situation, an ergonomically improved pump may be required by determining the force which the person may provide at which position of the piston—and thereby provide a chamber with a suitable cross-sectional area/shape.
Another use of the combination would be for a shock absorber where the area/shape would determine what translation a certain shock (force) would require. Also, an actuator may be provided where the amount of fluid introduced into the chamber will provide differing translation of the piston depending on the actual position of the piston prior to the introducing of the fluid.
In fact, the nature of the piston, the relative positions of the first and the second longitudinal positions and the arrangement of any valves connected to the chamber may provide pumps, motors, actuators, shock absorbers etc. with different pressure characteristics and different force characteristics.
The preferred embodiments of the combination of a chamber and a piston have been described as examples to be used in piston pumps. This however should not limit the coverage of this invention to the said application, as it may be mainly the valve arrangement of the chamber besides the fact which item or medium may initiate the movement, which may be decisive for the type of application: pump, actuator, shock absorber or motor. In a piston pump a medium may be sucked into a chamber which may thereafter be closed by a valve arrangement. The medium may be compressed by the movement of the chamber and/or the piston and thereafter a valve may release this compressed medium from the chamber. In an actuator a medium may be pressed into a chamber by a valve arrangement and the piston and/or the chamber may be moving, initiating the movement of an attached device. In shock absorbers the chamber may be completely closed, wherein a compressible medium may be compressed by the movement of the chamber and/or the piston. In the case a non-compressible medium may be positioned inside the chamber, e.g. the piston may be equipped by several small channels which may give a dynamic friction, so that the movement may be slowed down.
Further the invention may also be used in propulsion applications where a medium may be used to move a piston and/or a chamber, which may turn around an axis as e.g. in a motor. The principles according this invention may be applicable on all above mentioned applications.
The principles of the invention may also be used in other pneumatic and/or hydraulic applications than the above mentioned piston pumps.
The various embodiments described above are provided by way of illustration only and should not be construed to limit the invention. Those skilled in the art will readily recognize various modifications, changes, and combinations of elements which may be made to the present invention without strictly following the exemplary embodiments and applications illustrated and described herein, and without departing from the true spirit and scope of the present invention.
In the following, preferred embodiments of the invention will be described with reference to the drawings wherein:
Therefore, it is possible to sealingly move a piston comprising an elastically deformable container or envelope from a smaller to a bigger cross-sectional area while having the same internal pressure—within the limitations for the diameters of the cross-sections which were chosen in this experiment.
Therefore, when applying a chamber pressure on a piston comprising a pressurized elastically deformable container or envelope, it is possible to sealingly move as well, at least at the longitudinal position with the smallest cross-sectional area. The stretching due to the applied chamber force is big and it may be necessary to limit this.
The stretching in the longitudinal direction of the wall of the container-type piston may be limited by several methods. It may be done by a reinforcement of the wall of the container or envelope by using e.g. textile and/or fiber reinforcement. It may also be done by an inside the chamber of the container or envelope positioned expanding body with a limitation for its expansion, while it is connected to the wall of the container or envelope. Other methods may be used, e.g. pressure management of a chamber in-between two walls of the container or envelope, pressure management of the space above the container or envelope etc.
The expansion behaviour of the wall of the container or envelope may be depending on the type of the stretching limitation used. Moreover, the keeping of the piston which is moving over the piston rod, while expanding, may be guided by a mechanical stop. The positioning of such a stop may be depending on the use of the piston-chamber combination. This may also be the case for the guidance of the container or envelope over the piston rod, while expanding and/or subjected to external forces.
All kinds of fluids may be used—a combination of a compressable and a non-compressable medium, a compressable medium only or a non-compressable medium only.
As the change of the size of the container or envelope may be substantial from the smallest cross-sectional area, where it has its production size, and expanded at the biggest cross-sectional area, a communication of the chamber in the container or envelope with a first enclosed space, e.g. in the piston rod may be necessary. In order to keep the pressure in the chamber, the first enclosed space may be pressurized as well, also during the change of the volume of the chamber of the container or envelope. Pressure management for at least the first enclosed space may be needed.
FIGS. 8A,B,C show an inflatable piston comprising a container or envelope 228 at the beginning and 228′ at the end of a stroke. The production size is that of piston 228′ at the second longitudinal position in the chamber 186. The construction of the piston may be identical with that of FIGS. 7A,B,C with the exception that the reinforcement comprises of any kind of reinforcement means which may be bendable, and which may lie in a pattern of reinforcement ‘columns’ which do not cross each other. This pattern may be one of parallel to the central axis 184 of the chamber 186 or one of where a part of the reinforcement means may be in a plane through the central axis 184.
Pressure management for the piston comprising an inflatable container or envelope with an elastically deformable wall is an important part of the piston-chamber construction. Pressure management has to do with maintaining the pressure in the container or envelope, in order to keep the sealing on the appropriate level. This means during each stroke where the volume of the container or envelope changes. And in the long term, when leakage from the container or envelope may reduce the pressure in the container or envelope, which may effect the sealing capability. A flow of fluid may be the solution. To and from the container or envelope when it changes volume during a stroke, and/or to the container or envelope as such (inflation).
The change in the volume of the container or envelope may be balanced with a change in the volume of a first enclosed space, communicating with the container or envelope through e.g. a hole in the piston rod. The pressure may also be balanced, and this may be done by a spring force operated piston which may be positioned in the first enclosed space. The spring force may be originated by a spring or a pressurized enclosed space, e.g. a second enclosed space, which communicates with the first enclosed space by a pair of pistons. Any kind of force transfer may be arranged by each of the pistons, e.g. by a combination of the second enclosed space and a piston herein, so that the force on the piston in the first enclosed space remains equal, while the force on the piston in the second enclosed space reduces, when the pair of pistons moves more into the first enclosed space e.g. when fluid is moving from the first enclosed space into the container or envelope. This complies well with p.V=constant in the second enclosed space. The tuning of the pressure in the chamber of the container or envelope during the entire or a part of the stroke may also be done by a communication of the chamber and the chamber of the container or envelope. This has already been described in WO00/65235 and WO00/70227.
The container or envelope may be inflated through a valve in the piston and/or the handle. This valve may be a check valve or an inflation valve, e.g. a Schrader valve. The container or envelope may be inflated through a valve which communicates with the chamber. If an inflation valve is used, a Schrader valve is preferable because of its security to avoid leakages and its ability to allow to control all kinds of fluids. In order to enable inflation, a valve actuator may be necessary, e.g. the one disclosed in WO99/26002. This valve actuator has the advantage that inflation may be enabled by a very low force—thus very practical in case of manual inflation.
Having a valve communicating with the chamber, it may enable automatic inflation of the container or envelope, when the pressure in the container or envelope is lower than the pressure in the chamber. When this may not be the case, such higher pressure in the chamber may be created temporarily by closing the outlet valve of the chamber near the second longitudinal position of the container or envelope in the chamber. This closing and opening may be done manually, e.g. by a pedal, which opens a channel which communicates with a space between the valve actuator (WO99/26002) and e.g. a Schrader valve. When open, the valve actuator may move, but lacks the force to depress the core pin of the valve and hence the Schrader valve may not open—thus the chamber may be closed, and any high pressure may be build up for enabling inflation of the container or envelope. When the channel is closed, the actuator functions as disclosed in WO99/26002. The operator may check the pressure in the container or envelope by a manometer. Opening and closing of this outlet valve may also be done automatically. This may be done by all kinds of means, which initiate the closing of the outlet by a signal of any kind as a result of a measurement of pressure being lower than a predetermined value.
The automatic inflation of the container or envelope to a certain pre-determined value may be done by a combination of a valve communicating with the chamber and e.g. a release valve in the container or envelope. It releases at a certain predetermined value of the pressure, e.g. to the space above the container or envelope or to the chamber. Another option may be that the valve actuator of WO99/26002 may be open firstly after a pre-determined value of the pressure has been reached, e.g. by combining it with a spring. Another option may be that the opening to the valve actuator is closed when the pressure reaches a value over the pre-determined one, by e.g. a spring force operated piston.
When the chamber has a lower working pressure than the pre-determined value of the pressure in the piston, the arrangement 369 to control the closing and opening of the outlet valve 263 may be controlled by another actuator 363 through means 367 initiated by a signal 365 from the converter 361. A measurement in the chamber, giving a signal 371 to the converter 361 and/or 366 may automatically detect whether or not the actual pressure of the chamber is lower than the working pressure of the piston. This may be specifically practical when the pressure of the piston is lower than the pre-determined pressure.
FIGS. 13A,B,C show the combination of a pump with a pressurizing chamber with elastically deformable wall with different areas of the transversal cross sections and a piston with a fixed geometrical shape. Within a housing as e.g. cylinder with fixed geometrical sizes an inflatable chamber is positioned which is inflatable by a fluid (a non-compressable and/or a compressable fluid). It is also possible that said housing may be avoided. The inflatable wall comprising e.g. a liner-fiber-cover composite or also added an impervious skin. The angle of the sealing surface of the piston is a bit bigger than the comparative angle of the wall of the chamber in relation to an axis parallel to the movement. This difference between said angles and the fact that the momentaneous deformations of the wall by the piston takes place a bit delayed (by having e.g. a viscose non-compressable fluid in the wall of the chamber and/or the right tuning of load regulating means, which may be similar to those which have been shown for the pistons) provides a sealing edge, of which its distance to the central axis of the chamber during the movement between two piston and/or chamber positions may vary. This provides a cross-sectional area change during a stroke, and by that, a designable operation force. The cross-section of the piston in the direction of the movement however may also be equal, or with a negative angle in relation to the angle of the wall of the chamber—in these cases the ‘nose’ of the piston may be rounded of. In the last mentioned cases it may be more difficult to provide a changing cross-sectional area, and by that, a designable operation force. The wall of the chamber may be equipped with all the already shown loading regulating means the one showed on
Around an inflatable wall 238 a housing 234 with fixed geometrical sizes. Within said housing 234 a compressable fluid 232 and a non-compressable fluid 233. There may be a valve arrangement for inflation of the wall (not shown). The shape of the piston at the non-pressurized side is only an example to show the principle of the sealing edge. The difference in distance between the sealing edge and the central axis 236 at the end and that at the beginning of the stroke in the shown transversal cross-section is approximately 39%. The shape of the longitudinal cross-section may be different from the one shown.
Other embodiments of the piston are not shown.
Claims
1. A piston-chamber combination comprising an elongate chamber which is bounded by an inner chamber wall, and comprising a piston in said chamber to be sealingly movable relative to said chamber wall at least between a first longitudinal position and a second longitudinal position of the chamber,
- said chamber having cross-sections of different cross-sectional areas and different circumferential lengths at the first and second longitudinal positions, and at least substantially continuously different cross-sectional areas and circumferential lengths at intermediate longitudinal positions between the first and second longitudinal positions, the cross-sectional area and circumferential length at said second longitudinal position being smaller than the cross-sectional area and circumferential length at said first longitudinal position,
- said piston comprising an envelope defining an enclosed space, the envelope being elastically deformable thereby providing for different cross-sectional areas and circumferential lengths of the piston adapting the same to said different cross-sectional areas and different circumferential lengths of the chamber during the relative movements of the piston between the first and second longitudinal positions through said intermediate longitudinal positions of the chamber, wherein the piston is produced to have a production-size of the envelope in the stress-free and undeformed state thereof in which the circumferential length of the piston is approximately equivalent to the circumferential length of said chamber at said second longitudinal position, the envelope being expandable from its production size in a direction transversely with respect to the longitudinal direction of the chamber thereby providing for an expansion of the piston from the production size thereof during the relative movements of the piston from said second longitudinal position to said first longitudinal position.
2. A combination according to claim 1, wherein the cross-sectional area of said chamber at the second longitudinal position thereof is between 95% and 15% of the cross-sectional area of said chamber at the first longitudinal position thereof.
3. A combination according to claim 1, wherein the cross-sectional area of said chamber at the second longitudinal position thereof is 95-70% of the cross-sectional area of said chamber at the first longitudinal position thereof.
4. A combination according to claim 1, wherein the cross-sectional area of said chamber at the second longitudinal position thereof is approximately 50% of the cross-sectional area of said chamber at the first longitudinal position thereof.
5. A combination according to claim 1, wherein the envelope contains a deformable material.
6. A combination according to claim 5, wherein the piston comprises an enclosed space communicating with the deformable envelope, the enclosed space having a variable volume.
7. A combination according to claim 6, wherein the volume is adjustable.
8. A combination according to claim 6, wherein the enclosed space comprises a spring-biased pressure tuning piston.
9. A combination according to claim 1, wherein the piston includes at least one valve.
10. A combination according to claim 9, wherein the piston comprises a pressure source.
11. A combination according to claim 9, wherein the valve is a check valve.
12. A combination according to claim 1, wherein a foot of the chamber comprises at least one valve.
13. A combination according to claim 9, wherein the valve is a release valve.
14. A combination according to claim 1, including means for engaging the piston from a position outside the chamber, wherein the engaging means have an outer position where the piston is at the first longitudinal position of the chamber, and an inner position where the piston is at the second longitudinal position.
15. A combination according to claim 14, further comprising a fluid entrance connected to the chamber and comprising a valve means.
16. A combination according to claim 14, further comprising a fluid exit connected to the chamber and comprising a valve means.
17. A combination according to claim 14, wherein the chamber and the piston form an at least substantially sealed cavity comprising a fluid, the fluid being compressed when the piston moves from the first to the second longitudinal positions of the chamber.
18. A combination according to claim 14, further comprising means for biasing the piston toward the first longitudinal position of the chamber.
19. A combination according to claim 1, including means for engaging the piston from a position outside the chamber, means for introducing fluid into the chamber in order to displace the piston between the first and the second longitudinal positions of the chamber.
20. A combination according to claim 19, wherein the means for introducing fluid comprises a fluid entrance connected to the chamber including a valve.
21. A combination according to claim 19, wherein the means for introducing fluid comprises a fluid exit connected to the chamber and a valve.
22. A combination according to claim 19, further comprising means for biasing the piston toward the first or second longitudinal position of the chamber.
23. A combination according to claim 19, wherein the introducing means comprises means for introducing pressurized fluid into the chamber.
24. A combination according to claim 19, further comprising a crank adapted to translate the translation of the piston into a rotation of the crank.
25. A combination according to claim 6, wherein the enclosed space consists of a first and a second enclosed space.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 5, 2008
Publication Date: May 14, 2009
Inventor: NICOLAAS VAN DER BLOM (Birkerod)
Application Number: 12/185,973
International Classification: F04B 43/00 (20060101);