Dry coupling

Rotary shafts – gudgeons – housings – and flexible couplings for ro – Torque transmitted via flexible element – Nonmetallic element

Patent

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Details

464 99, 464147, 464181, F16D 372

Patent

active

058909656

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a dry coupling for interconnecting a driving shaft and a driven shaft, with two hub parts to be shrunk onto the shafts, each with a hub flange and an intermediate tube interconnecting same with two side flanges, each forming an elastically deformable membrane, which are connected to the hub flanges for the transmitting of torque.


BACKGROUND ART

Couplings of the kind mentioned above are known especially in high speed machines. They serve, thereby, for the transmitting of the torque and of possible additional forces from a steel shaft by means of a known pressurised-oil connection onto a steel hub and from this steel hub via shrunk on plastic hubs and so called membranes of an intermediate tube (torsion tube). In these known designs parts of steel and such of plastic material are used.


BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Object of the present invention is the provision of a dry coupling which improves the vibration-technical behaviour of the machines coupled together with a basically same technical design without giving rise to additional expenditures.
This object is met by a dry coupling of the kind defined above in accordance with the invention in that all important structural parts of the coupling, namely at least the hub parts with the hub flanges belonging thereto and the intermediate tube consist of a plastic material.
Specifically preferred embodiments of the dry coupling in accordance with the invention are defined in the claims.
Such a preferred embodiment consists in that the hub parts and their flanges consist of a high modulus fibre reinforced material (FVW), specifically of a carbon fibre reinforced material (CFK), whereas the intermediate tube with its integrated side flanges is formed of a low modulus plastic material, specifically of a glass fibre reinforced plastic (GFK).
Surprisingly it has been noted that a coupling structured in accordance with the invention has a lower weight and costs less in comparison with the known designs of steel and plastic and significally improves due to the reduced weight the vibration-technical behaviour of the machine which includes the coupling.


BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING

The invention will be explained hereinbelow somewhat more in detail based on an example illustrated in the the single figure of the drawing in which a coupling provided by the invention is shown in side view, in section.


THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

The single figure illustrates a coupling in accordance with the invention for a interconnecting of two shafts (not illustrated), namely a driving shaft and a driven shaft. The hub 1 is shrunk or pressed, resp. onto the shaft at the driving side (by methods known at such couplings), whereas the hub 2 is to be shrunk or pressed, resp., onto the shaft at the driven side. The known shrinking-on proceeds e.g. with a pressurised-oil connection which allows the user the assemble the coupling with the same tools which are used for steel couplings (e.g. tooth couplings, steel membrane couplings).
At the illustrated embodiment the hubs 1 and 2 are of an identical design. Each hub 1,2 consists of a hub part 4 proper and two hub flanges 5, which are bonded via a cylinder shaped tube stub 5' by means of a shrunk adhesive method onto the hub parts 4. The hub parts 4 and also the hub flanges 5,5', as well, consist of a high modulus FVW, specifically of CFK and feature therewith a high rigidity.
A torsion tube 3, the so called intermediate tube, is arranged between the two hubs 1,2, consisting of a cylinder shaped tube section 6 with side flanges 7 arranged at both its sides. Also the two side flanges 7 forming an easily deformable membrane are designed in the same way. The side flanges 7 are designed undulatory (e.g. according to AT-A 395 901 of the Geilinger company) and consist of plastic material, too. As illustrated, the side flanges 7 are integrated into the tube section 6 (integral) and consist as a rule of the same material (GFK) as the tube section 6. It is also possible to use for t

REFERENCES:
patent: 4188800 (1980-02-01), Fujita et al.
patent: 4335587 (1982-06-01), Thomamueller et al.
patent: 4411634 (1983-10-01), Hammelmann
patent: 4708692 (1987-11-01), Weiss
patent: 4747806 (1988-05-01), Krude et al.
patent: 4802882 (1989-02-01), Heidrich

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