SYSTEM FOR PREVENTING GEAR HOPOUT IN A TOOTH CLUTCH IN A VEHICLE TRANSMISSION
A system is provided for preventing gear hopout in a tooth clutch in a vehicle transmission, the tooth clutch including an engaging sleeve having sleeve clutch teeth. The tangent function for at least one of driving back-taper angle and braking back-taper angle is larger than the average value of clutch coefficient of friction and spline coefficient of friction multiplied by the sum of unity and the ratio of clutch teeth pitch diameter and spline teeth pitch diameter.
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The present invention relates to vehicle transmissions, and more particularly to a system for preventing gear hopout in tooth clutches that are subjected to misalignment due to forces acting on rotating parts they connect.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONTooth clutches are frequently used in stepped vehicle transmissions to engage and disengage the gears. A tooth clutch can rotatably connect a main part with a substantially coaxial connectable part. Normally, an engaging sleeve is used as an interconnecting member between these two parts. This engaging sleeve is often rotatably fixed but axially moveable with respect to said main part by means of, for instance, splines. On the engaging sleeve there are clutch teeth at the end that faces the connectable part. These clutch teeth need to be compatible with corresponding clutch teeth on the connectable part. These two sets of clutch teeth can be brought into mesh with each other by moving the engaging sleeve in axial direction towards the connectable part.
In double-acting tooth clutches, there are clutch teeth at both ends of the engaging sleeve. Thereby, the engaging sleeve can connect the main part to either a first or a second connectable part. These connectable parts must have clutch teeth that are compatible with the clutch teeth at the corresponding end of the engaging sleeve.
Some tooth clutches comprising a main part, an engaging sleeve and connectable parts can be seen in U.S. Pat. No. 2,070,140, U.S. Pat. No. 3,137,376, DE-4319135A1 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,422,105.
In heavy road vehicles, such as heavy trucks, transmissions of range compound type are often used. In such a transmission, a main section, having several selectable gears, is connected in series with a range section. There are two gears in the range section; one low-range gear with a large speed reduction and one high-range gear with no speed reduction, normally referred to as a direct gear. In practice, the range section doubles the number of gears in the main section. A typical state-of-the-art heavy truck transmission of range compound type is shown in FIG. 1 in WO-2004069621, featuring a main section 2 and a range section 3.
Range sections are often embodied as a planetary arrangement that is combined with a double-acting tooth clutch. Due to the design of the planetary arrangement, the main part of the tooth clutch may be fixedly connected to the engaging sleeve and move axially with the sleeve. In such cases, the main part usually is the ring gear of the planetary arrangement. A typical example is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,667,538, where the engaging sleeve 18 is fixedly connected to the ring gear 14. In some embodiments, the engaging sleeve is integrated in the ring gear, for example as shown in EP-0916872 (FIG. 3, items 56 and 58) and, more advanced, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,083,993 (FIG. 1, item 24).
A range shift actuator 125 accomplishes the axial displacement of the ring gearwheel 117. A range shift rod 126 is being pushed or pulled in appropriate direction by the range shift actuator 125. A range shift fork 127 is fixedly attached to the range shift rod 126. The range shift fork 127 extends into a circumferential groove 128 on the ring gearwheel 117. The range shift actuator 125 may be of one of several types, for instance hydraulic, pneumatic, electromagnetic or electromechanical. Normally, the range shift actuator 125 is only activated during a shift. When a shift has been completed, it will be deactivated.
In the range section of
Tooth clutches are normally designed to be self-retaining in engaged state. This means that once the tooth clutch has been engaged, no external force is required to retain the tooth clutch in this engaged state. Different design solutions are used to achieve this self-retaining feature. One common design solution is to have the clutch teeth angled in order to create a nominal axial force that urges the sleeve to retain in engaged position when torque is being transferred in the tooth clutch. This solution is often referred to as back-taper design. An example is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,626,213. There, in FIG. 2 it can be seen that the clutch teeth flanks 21, 26 are angled α, β with respect to the flanks 28 of the spline teeth 11 of the engaging sleeve 8. Thereby, the contact forces will urge the clutch teeth towards fully engaged position when torque is being transferred. Some other design solutions for self-retaining action can be seen in U.S. Pat. No. 2,070,140 and FR-2660723.
In most self-retaining tooth clutch designs at least one of the sets of clutch teeth is made by modifying a set of spline or gear teeth. Returning to U.S. Pat. No. 5,626,213, the angled back-tapered flanks 26 of the engaging sleeve 8 can be regarded as a slight modification of the flanks 28 of the internal spline teeth 11. Similarly, in
There are some applications where conventionally made back-tapered clutch teeth have been shown to have insufficient self-retaining action. One example is shown in
When the retarder unit 230 is in operation, gear mesh forces 240 will act on the retarder driver gearwheel 233. These forces will tend to misalign the output shaft 214. Normally, engine braking is used simultaneously with retarder operation. Thereby, torque will be transferred by the range section, and there will be contact forces in the gear meshes and between the clutch teeth of the range section. These contact forces will urge the parts of the range section towards a substantially coaxial state, as was described earlier. Hence, the contact forces will counteract the tendency of the gear mesh forces on the retarder driver gearwheel 233 to misalign the output shaft 214.
Some retarder operating conditions have shown to cause problems in a planetary range section as in
The ring mesh force 242 and the ring clutch force 243 compose a force couple that tends to misalign the ring gearwheel 217 in counter-clockwise sense as is indicated in
Another example is shown in
In
In operation, there might be an axial gap in the taper roller bearing 358. This axial gap could be the result of for instance thermal expansion and axial force components in gear meshes. In a taper roller bearing, an axial gap always corresponds to a radial gap. In the splitter unit 350 such a radial gap would decrease the radial support and allow a misalignment of the main shaft 355. Then, that misalignment would be counteracted by contact forces between the spline and clutch teeth of the input shaft 352, engaging sleeve 351 and second gearwheel 354. This is similar to what has been described above for planetary range sections. For the second gearwheel 354, the gear mesh force 361 would then be balanced by a gearwheel contact force 362 acting on the clutch teeth that are engaged with corresponding clutch teeth on the engaging sleeve 351. The counter force to the gearwheel contact force 362 is a sleeve clutch contact force 363 that acts on the clutch teeth of the engaging sleeve 351. For the engaging sleeve 351, the sleeve clutch contact force 363 is balanced by a sleeve spline contact force 364. Similar to
Some conclusions can be drawn from the analysis of the systems in
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,066,062 a planetary range section 3 with back-tapered clutch teeth 67, 68, 69, 70 is shown. The gearwheels in the planetary range section 3 have helical gear teeth. In helical gear teeth, the gear mesh forces have axial components. For the ring gearwheel 56, that axial force component must, in general, be balanced by an axial force component in the contacting clutch teeth 67, 68, 69, 70. In addition, a back-taper action is required in order to prevent gear hopouts. Therefore, these clutch teeth have at least one helical flank. In order to handle this, the following general definition of back-taper angle can be used:
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- i) The balanced helix angle of a set of clutch teeth of an axially moveable part of a tooth clutch is the helix angle that would, under friction-free conditions, result in no net axial force from the contact forces acting on gear, spline and clutch teeth of the axially moveable part when torque is being transferred via the set of clutch teeth.
- ii) The back-taper angle of a set of contacting flanks of a set of clutch teeth of an axially moveable part of a tooth clutch is the difference between the actual helix angle for the set of contacting flanks and the balanced helix angle for the set of clutch teeth.
For the clutch teeth of the engaging sleeve 351 in
For the planetary range section 3 in U.S. Pat. No. 6,066,062, the clutch teeth 67, 68, 69, 70 have a smaller diameter than the gear teeth of the ring gearwheel 56. Thereby, to fulfil torque equilibrium the contact forces on these clutch teeth will be larger than the corresponding mesh forces on the gear teeth. This implies that the balanced helix angle of the clutch teeth 67, 68 of the ring gearwheel 56 will be less than the helix angle of the gear teeth.
There are some known methods to prevent gear hopouts of the type described above. In general, radial support devices, such as bearings, have been introduced or improved in order to limit the possible misalignment of the supported shaft. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,839,319 a splitter unit similar to the one in
U.S. Pat. No. 5,083,993 presents a planetary gear 1 that is similar to the planetary range section 101 in
EP-239555B1 discloses a similar planetary gear 2. Therein, with the aid of a ball bearing 18 a clutch ring 16 supports a planet wheel keeper 10 that is fastened to a planet wheel carrier 11 which, in turn, is integrated with an output shaft 4. The clutch ring 16 is non-rotatably mounted on a sun wheel 7 that is non-rotatably mounted on an input shaft 3. In
When studying
363p>363f+364f
This assumes that the back-taper angle 481 is fairly small, for instance, less than 20 degrees. In
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- i) When sliding, the friction component 363f of the sleeve clutch force 363 is equal to a coefficient of friction 363mu multiplied by the normal component 363n:
363f=363mu*363n
-
- ii) When sliding, the friction component 364f of the sleeve spline force 364 is equal to a coefficient of friction 364mu multiplied by the normal component 364n:
364f=364mu*364n
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- iii) Between clutch and spline teeth in contact in a vehicle gearbox, the coefficient of friction typically has a value of about 0.1:
363mu=364mu=0.1
-
- iv) Torque equilibrium, again assuming a small back-taper angle 481, requires that the normal component 363n of the sleeve clutch force 363 is substantially equal to the normal component 364n of the sleeve spline force 364:
363n=364n
-
- v) Now, the right-hand side of the inequality can be written:
363f+364f=0.1*363n+0.1*364n=0.2*363n
-
- vi) The parallel component 363p of the sleeve clutch force 363 is equal to the normal component 363n multiplied by the tangent function of the back-taper angle 481:
363p=363n*tan(481)
-
- vii) For back-tapered clutch teeth manufactured by a rolling process, the back-taper angle is in general not larger than 5 degrees, as was stated earlier:
tan(481)=tan(5 degrees)<0.09
-
- viii) Thus, for conventional prior art back-tapered clutch teeth, the parallel component 363p of the sleeve clutch force 363 is in general limited to:
363p<0.09*363n
-
- ix) By comparing the results in steps v) and viii) it can be seen that the inequality requirement is indeed not fulfilled in
FIG. 4 ; 0.09 is not larger than 0.2. - Thus, the back-taper angle 481 is not large enough to prevent gear hopout, that is, to enforce the relative motion between the clutch and spline teeth.
- ix) By comparing the results in steps v) and viii) it can be seen that the inequality requirement is indeed not fulfilled in
By eliminating the normal component 363n, the inequality requirement for relative motion can be written:
tan(back-taper angle)>(coefficient of friction between clutch teeth)+(coefficient of friction between spline teeth)
Assuming a common coefficient of friction between both clutch and spline teeth, this can be simplified:
tan(back-taper angle)>2*(coefficient of friction between clutch and spline teeth)
Step iv) above assumes that the sleeve clutch force 363 acts on the same diameter as the sleeve spline force 364. This is the case for the tooth clutch in
tan(back-taper angle)>(coefficient of friction between clutch teeth)+(coefficient of friction between spline teeth)*(pitch diameter of clutch teeth)/(pitch diameter of spline teeth)
or, with a common coefficient of friction:
tan(back-taper angle)>(coefficient of friction between clutch and spline teeth)*(1+(pitch diameter of clutch teeth)/(pitch diameter of spline teeth))
According to the invention, the back-taper angle shall be large enough to fulfil the inequality requirement.
Thus, when the back-taper angle 581 is large enough to fulfil the inequality requirement, the self-retaining ability of the tooth clutch is increased significantly. The parallel component 563p of the sleeve clutch force 563 is then large enough to be able to pull the engaging sleeve 551 towards fully engaged state. Thereby, gear hopout is prevented also for conditions of a misaligned engaging sleeve, for instance as shown in
For the case of equal pitch diameters of the clutch and spline teeth along with a coefficient of friction of 0.1, the inequality requirement is:
tan(back-taper angle)>0.1+0.1=0.2
This implies that the back-taper angle shall be at least 11.3 degrees. Furthermore, for an extreme case of the planetary range section 3 in U.S. Pat. No. 6,066,062, the pitch diameter of the inner teeth 57 could be twice as large as the pitch diameter of the clutch teeth 67, 68, 69, 70:
tan(back-taper angle)>0.1+0.1*1/2=0.15
This is equivalent to a back-taper angle of at least 8.5 degrees. This is still significantly more than the above mentioned 5 degrees that can be regarded as an approximate upper limit of the back-taper angle that can be achieved by a cost-efficient rolling operation.
Instead, less cost-efficient manufacturing methods, for instance cutting methods such as shaping, will have to be used for sets of clutch teeth that are made by modifying a set of spline or gear teeth.
In order to keep the costs down, it would be of advantage to keep the use of said less cost-efficient manufacturing methods to a minimum. This is addressed in an embodiment of the invention. Thereby, it is noted that in planetary range sections with a retarder, as in
In general, a retarder unit 230 is optional and is only included on a minority of the gearboxes. Therefore, from a cost point of view it would not be of advantage to have a large back-taper angle 691b on the braking flanks 218b and 219b in all gearboxes. Instead, it would be better to have the large back-taper angle 691b in gearboxes with a retarder unit 230, only. In gearboxes that do not have a retarder unit, both flanks of the clutch teeth 218 and 219 could have conventional, small, back-taper angles. However, if any of the braking flanks 218b and 219b in a gearbox with a retarder unit 230 would have a conventional, small, back-taper angle, the ability to prevent gear hopout is lost. Thus, it is important to, as soon as possible, discover an accidentally assembled ring gearwheel 117 or direct engaging ring 120 with a conventional, small, back-taper angle on the braking flanks in a gearbox with a retarder unit 230.
Although the present invention has been set forth with a certain degree of particularity, it is understood that various modifications, substitutions and rearrangements of the components are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as hereinafter claimed.
Claims
1. System for preventing gear hopout in a tooth clutch in a vehicle transmission, comprising an input shaft that at least in some states of operation is connected to a prime mover, and an output shaft connected to driven wheels of the vehicle, the tooth clutch comprising an engaging sleeve having sleeve clutch teeth that can selectably be brought in and out of an engaged state with mating clutch teeth by axial displacement of the engaging sleeve, the tooth clutch causing in the engaged state a first rotating system to rotate in unison with a second rotating system, the sleeve clutch teeth and the mating clutch teeth having a clutch teeth pitch diameter, the sleeve clutch teeth having sleeve driving tooth flanks in contact, in the engaged state when power is transferred from the input shaft to the output shaft, with mating driving tooth flanks of the mating clutch teeth, the sleeve clutch teeth further having sleeve braking tooth flanks in contact, in the engaged state when power is transferred from the output shaft to the input shaft, with mating braking tooth flanks of the mating clutch teeth, the sleeve driving tooth flanks and the mating driving tooth flanks substantially being back-tapered with a driving back-taper angle, the sleeve braking tooth flanks and the mating braking tooth flanks substantially being back-tapered with a braking back-taper angle, the engaging sleeve having sleeve spline or gear teeth that are in mesh with mating spline or gear teeth on at least one mating rotating part, the sleeve spline or gear teeth and the mating spline or gear teeth having a spline teeth pitch diameter, when meshing, the sleeve clutch teeth and the mating clutch teeth having a clutch coefficient of friction for axial motion of the engaging sleeve, and when meshing, the sleeve spline or gear teeth and the mating spline or gear teeth (110, 210) having a spline coefficient of friction for axial motion of the engaging sleeve, wherein a tangent function for at least one of the driving back-taper angle and the braking back-taper angle is larger than an average value of the clutch coefficient of friction and the spline coefficient of friction multiplied by a sum of unity and a ratio of clutch teeth pitch diameter and spline teeth pitch diameter.
2. A system as in claim 1, wherein the clutch teeth pitch diameter and the spline teeth pitch diameter are substantially equal, and the tangent function for at least one of the driving back-taper angle and the braking back-taper angle is larger than twice the average value.
3. A system as in claim 1, wherein at least one of the driving back-taper angle and the braking back-taper angle is larger than 8 degrees.
4. A system as in claim 1, wherein at least one of the driving back-taper angle and the braking back-taper angle is larger than 10 degrees.
5. A system as in claim 1, wherein at least one of the driving back-taper angle and the braking back-taper angle is larger than 12 degrees.
6. A system as in claim 1, wherein the vehicle transmission comprises a supporting shaft that is rotatably supported by a transmission housing system in two bearing arrangements and a supported shaft that is rotatably supported by the transmission housing system in a first support system by a bearing arrangement; the supported shaft being substantially coaxial with the supporting shaft.
7. A system as in claim 6, wherein the first rotating system comprises at least one of the supporting shaft and a gearwheel that is arranged on the supporting shaft, and the second rotating system comprises at least one of the supported shaft and a gearwheel that is arranged on the supported shaft.
8. A system as in claim 7, wherein the supported shaft under a set of operating conditions is supported radially by the supporting shaft in a second support system that is located axially apart from the first support system.
9. A system as in claim 8, wherein a substantial part of the radial support in the second support system is provided by contact forces acting between teeth in the tooth clutch.
10. A system as in claim 8, wherein the set of operating conditions comprises cases when the supported shaft is being urged by external loads towards misaligned state in relation to the supporting shaft, the external loads acting on the supported shaft or on a part arranged on the supported shaft.
11. A system as in claim 10, wherein the external loads are caused by operation of an auxiliary brake system.
12. A system as in claim 11, wherein the braking back-taper angle is included in the at least one of the driving back-taper angle and the braking back-taper angle.
13. A system as in claim 12, wherein the driving back-taper angle is not included in the at least one of the driving back-taper angle and the braking back-taper angle.
14. A system as in claim 12, wherein on the engaging sleeve, the braking back-taper angle on the sleeve braking tooth flanks is made in an additional machining operation from an intermediate flank having a back-taper angle less than 6 degrees.
15. A system as in claim 12, wherein the vehicle transmission is made at least in a retarder variant having the auxiliary brake system and a standard variant not having the auxiliary brake system and the at least one of the driving back-taper angle and the braking back-taper angle is only on parts that are used in the retarder variant and are not used in the standard variant.
16. A system as in claim 15, wherein for the retarder variant the mating clutch teeth having has space width that is smaller than a tooth thickness of the sleeve clutch teeth for the standard variant, thereby preventing engagement.
17. A system as in claim 15, for the standard variant the mating clutch teeth have a root diameter that is larger than an internal tip diameter of the sleeve clutch teeth for the retarder variant, thereby preventing engagement.
18. A system as in claim 1, wherein the tooth clutch is part of a compound section of range type and/or splitter type in the vehicle transmission.
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 11, 2005
Publication Date: Jul 21, 2011
Applicant: VOLVO LASTVAGNAR AB (Göteborg)
Inventors: Anders Hedman (Marstrand), Hans Erharo (Kungalv), Bengt Karlsson (Goteborg)
Application Number: 12/093,333