AUTOMOTIVE DRIVETRAIN HAVING DEFLECTION COMPENSATION
A deflection compensation system for automobile drivetrain components is provided, wherein a shaft is able to continue in driving relationship to another shaft or coupler in driven relationship when their respective axes of rotation are misaligned. At least one of the shaft and the coupler is preferably supported independently of the other and provided with crown involute splines, whereby one of the shaft and coupler when out of relative alignment, continues to drive the other without the necessity of adding additional moving parts to the drivetrain component.
This application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 11/932,333 filed Oct. 31, 2007, entitled AUTOMOTIVE DRIVETRAIN HAVING DEFLECTION COMPENSATION, which is a divisional of application Ser. No. 11/130,913, filed May 17, 2005, entitled AUTOMOTIVE DRIVETRAIN HAVING DEFLECTION COMPENSATION which has now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,383,748 on Jun. 10, 2008, which is a non-provisional application of Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/575,344, filed May 28, 2004, and entitled GEARBOX HAVING DEFLECTION COMPENSATION, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION1. Field of the Invention
This invention involves the drivetrain of an automobile which compensates for movement and misalignment between driving and driven components thereof. Drivetrain components such as clutches, gearboxes or transmissions, and axle drive units are provided with deflection compensation which enables the axis of an input shaft or gear to be angled relative to the axis of the driven shaft or gearing nominally aligned with the input shaft without transmitting substantial deflection loading. The deflection compensation is preferably provided by employing crown involute splines on one of the driving and driven member and mounting the driving and/or driven component so that the centerline of rotation is determined independently of the other component, most preferably by substituting parts without adding additional moving parts to a conventional drivetrain component.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Automotive drivetrain systems typically involve a prime mover such as a motor (which may be of a variety of types, such as a combustion engine, electric or pneumatically powered motor), and may include in various applications a clutch, a gearbox or transmission such as an automatic transmission having a fluid coupling, and a driveshaft and an axle drive unit. Such drivetrain components typically include an input, such as a shaft or gear, and an output, for example a shaft or gear, whereby the rotating speeds of the input shaft and the output shaft may be varied between a direct drive relationship and one or several relatively different speeds through gear reduction. Power generated by the motor is operatively transmitted to the gearbox or transmission, and clutches or flywheels may be located intermediate the motor and the gearbox as is well known in the art. In many automotive applications, the gearbox is connected to the driveshaft which in turn rotatably drives a differential or other axle drive unit for transmitting the power to the axles and wheels of the automobile. Such drivetrains are often of substantial length, such as 2-3 meters. In addition, in many applications the motor and gearbox are of significant mass, and though the motor, gearbox and differential are connected to a frame, such as an automobile chassis or body, relative movement between these components occurs during operation. In addition, the motor, clutch, gearbox or transmission, and/or axle drive unit and axles may not be installed in precision alignment.
As a result of initial alignment variations, movement during operation, and other factors, the inputs and outputs, such as shafts, couplings, gears or other driving and driven members of the drivetrain, may be subjected to different lateral loading where their respective rotational axes are not in linear alignment. This may occur between the engine and clutch, the engine and transmission, the clutch and the gearbox or transmission, or between the axle and the axle drive unit even where the input shaft and output shaft are each journalled by bearings designed for maintaining alignment of the input shaft and output shaft. Two principal consequences of not having the input shaft and output shaft in their designed colinear alignment are typically experienced: one is excessive wear on one of the input and output shaft and their connecting gears and bearings; the other is a loss of power and efficiency in the power transmission. The loss of power and efficiency results from the necessity of a shaft to bend during rotation when its axis of rotation moves or is installed out of alignment. In order for the shaft to turn, some bending must occur, and this bending of high strength steel shafts, even when the bending is visually imperceptable, consumes energy and there is a loss of power delivered from the prime mover to the wheels.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention largely overcomes these problems and provides significant advantages over the prior art. That is to say, the drivetrain components of the present invention may be operatively coupled together in restricted spaces without loss of power or requiring additional energy expenditure to overcome energy losses incurred in bending shafts or the like to overcome misalignment of the axis of rotation of two interconnected drivetrain components. Unlike the use of universal joints typically employed to transmit rotational forces between a gearbox and a driveshaft, for example, the drivetrain components of the present invention may operate in restricted areas, and permit limited translation as well as variation between the angles of rotation of the driven components. Furthermore, in the present invention, the driving and driven components can be located independently, without the driving and driven members connected in such a way that bending of a shaft is a necessary consequence of rotational coupling.
Referring now to the drawings, an automobile 10 broadly includes a drivetrain 12. The drivetrain 12 includes an engine 14, a gearbox 16, a driveshaft 18, an axle drive unit 20, and wheels 22 which are driven to move the automobile 10. While a manual gearbox utilizing a manual shift lever for selecting the desired gear during operation is illustrated in the drawings, as used herein, the term gearbox is intended to include both manually actuated gearboxes as well as automatic transmissions such as those employing fluid couplings and torque converters as are well known to those skilled in the art. The engine 14 as used herein may include not only internal combustion or external combustion engines, but also electric or other motors which function as the prime mover for the automobile 10.
A primary shaft, such as the crankshaft 24 of an internal combustion engine 14, is typically bolted to a flywheel 26, shown for example in
The friction disc 28 of the present invention includes a novel clutch disc hub 40 which includes a central passage 42 having internal splines 44 at its rear end and an enlarged annular recess 46 at its forward end oriented toward the crankshaft 24. The central passage 42 receives therein a pilot stub 48 which is complementally sized for receipt in a pocket 50 at the rear end of the crankshaft 24 and also to be received within an annular pilot bearing 52 received in the annular recess 46 of the clutch disc hub 40. An input shaft 54 of the gearbox 16 is received in the rear end of the passage 42 of the clutch disc hub 40, and is provided with forward external splines 56, to be described in greater detail hereinafter, which intercalate with the internal splines 44 of the clutch disc hub 40 in driven engagement. The input shaft includes a rounded, slightly domed front surface 58 which facilitates the ability of the input shaft 54 to rock and tilt relative to the pilot stub 48.
Thus, in contrast to conventional input shafts which have a pilot machined as a part thereof for locating the input shaft on the crankshaft, the provision of a separate pilot stub 48 permits the input shaft 54 of the present invention to be located by the forward external splines 56 and the clutch disc hub 40. The clutch disc hub 40 may be held to the surrounding portions of the friction disc 28 by welding, rivets, or in any other conventional manner, or could be provided with external splines whereby the hub 40 is a separate component from the remainder of the friction disc 28.
The benefit if locating input shaft 54 on the clutch disc hub 40 rather than the crankshaft 24 is realized in the provision of forward external splines 56 in accordance with the present invention. The forward external splines 56 hereof are involute cut splines which help to self-locate the splines 56 with respect to the internal splines 44, and also are crowned as shown in
The internal splines 44 have a root and a spline edge including one end, another end, and a longitudinal length extending therebetween, with a middle portion intermediate the ends. The middle portion of the root and the spline edge may be cut whereby they are farther from the axis of rotation A of the clutch disc hub 40 than at either of the ends. It should be understood that in regard to the foregoing, the present invention contemplates that the internal splines 44 could be crown involute splines while the forward external splines 56 could be straight splines and still achieve the deflection compensation benefit. While this would be considered substantially equivalent in reversing which of the two components has the crown involute splines, machining of the forward external splines 56 as crown involute splines 60 is an easier machining operation than crowning the internal splines.
While preferably the input shaft 54, the input gear 84 and the main shaft 78 are all in perfect axial alignment and remain there during operation, as a practical matter this is not the case. For a variety of reasons, including the weight of the components, unevenness of the road surface, high speed turns, and difficulties in obtaining precision alignment during installation, the input gear 84, the main shaft 78 and the input shaft will not initially nor thereafter during operation enjoy coincident axes of rotation. Rather, the axes will be parallel but offset, or intersect, or both offset and non-parallel. In the present invention, the input shaft 54 is, as described above, free to shift and may be offset with respect to the clutch assembly 27 and the crankshaft 24 without noticeable loss of efficiency normally caused when gears bind or the shaft bends. Similarly, the input shaft 54 is not bound by the housing of the gearbox 16. Because of a variety of factors including the crown involute splines 60 of the rear external splines 82, the convex rear surface 76, and the fact that the main shaft 78 and the input shaft 54 are both located by the input gear 84 but the input shaft 54 is free to shift longitudinally and tilt or rock relative to the input gear 84, the input shaft 54 is permitted to be mounted and positioned independently of the gearbox 16 so that initial misalignments or relative movement of the engine, clutch assembly and gearbox does not result in appreciable efficiency losses.
The present invention also provides for deflection compensation of the drivetrain 12 in the axle drive unit 20 of the automobile 10. It may be appreciated that various configurations of drive units are employed for front engine-front wheel drive automobiles, rear engine-rear wheel drive automobiles, mid-engine rear wheel drive automobiles, and four wheel drive automobiles or more. Moreover the axle drive unit 20 may variously be of solid drive, differential, limited slip differential or other arrangements. The present invention maybe employed with any of these arrangements, where an axle is used to drive the wheels 22 of the automobile 10. Typically, however, the present invention would not be needed where the axles and the axle drive unit are of the independent suspension type, where the axles are coupled to the axle drive unit by universal joints to permit a wide range of motion.
The present invention presents distinct advantages in regard to the ability to locate the driven components independently, thus permitting relative movement and angular relationships. Thus, the input shaft can be located independently of the mainshaft of the gearbox, as well as the crankshaft and flywheel, and it is not necessary that the input shaft remain in alignment nor held against axial movement relative to the mainshaft. Further, the present invention provides deflection compensation for relative differences in axial alignment of the clutch assembly, the main shaft, and the input shaft. Further, the axles and axle drive unit may have their respective axes offset relative to one another to thereby reduce or minimize energy losses which would otherwise result when the axles were required to bend, or excessive wear in the splines.
Although preferred forms of the invention have been described above, it is to be recognized that such disclosure is by way of illustration only, and should not be utilized in a limiting sense in interpreting the scope of the present invention. Obvious modifications to the exemplary embodiments, as hereinabove set forth, could be readily made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the present invention.
The inventor hereby states his intent to rely on the Doctrine of Equivalents to determine and assess the reasonably fair scope of his invention as pertains to any apparatus not materially departing from but outside the literal scope of the invention as set out in the following claims.
Claims
1. In an automobile having a drivetrain, the drivetrain including an engine, at least one shaft operatively coupled to the engine and having a first axis of rotation, and a member having a second axis of rotation rotatably coupled with said shaft, the improvement comprising:
- a plurality of splines on said shaft, said splines having a first end, a second end and a center portion longitudinally intermediate said first and said second end;
- a plurality of splines on said member intercalated with the splines on said shaft in driven relationship, said splines on said member having one end and another end and a middle portion longitudinally intermediate said one end and the another end, whereby said splines on said shaft are external splines and said splines on said member are internal splines, and
- wherein at least said external splines or said internal splines are cut with a crowned involute configuration.
2. An automobile as set forth in claim 1, wherein said shaft is an input shaft for a gearbox and said member is a clutch disc hub.
3. An automobile as set forth in claim 1, wherein said shaft is an axle and said member is a bevel wheel of a differential.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 30, 2009
Publication Date: Aug 20, 2009
Inventor: Charles G. Rankin (Smithville, MO)
Application Number: 12/433,516
International Classification: F16D 1/06 (20060101);