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| United States Patent | 4516649 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4516649.html |
| Inventor(s) | Braathen; Thor F. (N-3358 N. Eggedal, NO) |
| Abstract | A terrain-traveling motor vehicle (1) has twin caterpillar tracks and bogie
assemblies (2) pivotally attached to the frame (3) of the vehicle,
comprising a rear pair of drive wheels (5) mounted on the frame (3) of the
vehicle and a pair of front wheels (7) each of which is supported on a
pivotable belt-tensioning arm (9) disposed on the forward end of a bogie
arm (8) found on each bogie assembly (2). The rearward end of the bogie
arm (8) is supported by shaft journals (4) proximate to and in front of
the center axis of the pair of rear wheels (5). The bogie arms (8) are
movable in the vertical plane by hydraulic pressure cylinders (6)
controllable from the cab of the vehicle for upward and downward pivoting
of the bogie assemblies simultaneously or independently of each other, and
for tautening the bogie tracks. The belt-tensioning arms (9) are movable
independently of the bogie arms (8) by means of respective hydraulic
pressure cylinders (10) which are pressurized at a desired adjustable
pressure for maintaining a desired tautness in the belt during the
pivoting movement of the bogie arm (8), as well as during the continual
changes in the configuration of the lower perimeter of the belt which
arise as the track passes over irregular ground terrain. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4516649 |
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Terrain-travelling motor vehicle |
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| Publication Date |
May 14, 1985 |
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| Filing Date |
December 21, 1982 |
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| Priority Data |
May 11, 1981[NO]811604 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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The present invention relates to an assembly on a terrain-traveling motor
vehicle having twin caterpillar tracks and bogie assemblies pivotally
attached to the frame of the vehicle.
A terrain-traveling motor vehicle of this type is known from Swedish Pat.
No. 184,059, which shows a vehicle with a pair of bogie assemblies,
usually known as half-tracks, wherein the rear wheels are supported on the
frame of the vehicle and the bogie arm for the bogie assembly is supported
in front of and somewhat below the central axis of the rear wheels. The
front wheel of the bogie assembly is supported on a belt-tensioning arm
rotatably mounted on the forward end of the bogie arm. Each bogie assembly
is provided with a hydraulic pressure cylinder, which is connected to said
belt-tensioning arm and to the frame of the vehicle. When this pressure
cylinder is pressurized and extended, the belt-tensioning arm is pivoted,
whereby the belt is tautened about the front and rear wheels of the bogie
assembly, and upon further extension of the pressure cylinder the bogie
assembly is pivoted downwardly.
A drawback of the above arrangement is that it is not possible to maintain
a certain desired tautness in the belt if at the same time as the bogie
assembly, by means of the pressure cylinder acting upon the bogie arm, is
pivoted up and down, the forward portion of the vehicle, which is provided
with front wheels, is simultaneously raised by the front wheels lifting up
from the ground. In such circumstances, the tautness of the belt is
completely dependent upon the force that is needed to lift the forward
part of the vehicle up from the ground, so that the degree of tautness may
be greater than desired. In normal driving, on the other hand, where the
bogies operate as half-tracks and the front wheels rest on the ground, it
is possible by means of the pressure cylinder to maintain a desired track
tautness, but it is not possible to pivot the bogie downwardly and thereby
raise the vehicle without increasing the track tautness.
The object of the present invention is to provide a terrain-traveling
vehicle in which the body of the vehicle, and optionally the bogie arms
independently of each other, may be raised and lowered for maintaining a
desired position of the vehicle body as the vehicle traverses irregular
ground surfaces, without this affecting the tautness of the belt.
This object is achieved in accordance with the present invention by means
of a second pressure cylinder which acts upon the belt-tensioning arm, a
certain desired track tautness can be maintained by causing this pressure
cylinder to be pressurized at a desired determined pressure. The track
tautness can at all times be decreased or increased by regulating said
pressure, independently of the ground surface conditions and independently
of the up-and-down pivoting movements of the bogie assembly effected by
means of the first pressure cylinder.
An embodiment example of a terrain-traveling motor vehicle in accordance
with the invention will be described in greater detail in the following
with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIGS. 1 and 2, respectively, show the motor vehicle as seen from the side
and from the top.
The terrain-traveling motor vehicle 1 is provided with twin caterpillar
tracks and bogie assemblies 2, wherein the rear wheel 5 of each bogie
assembly is supported in the frame of the vehicle 1 and the front wheel 7
of each assembly is supported on a respective pivotable arm 9 provided at
the forward end of the bogie arm 8 found on each bogie assembly, the
rearward end of said arm 8 being supported by means of shaft journals 4
proximate to and in front of the center of the rear wheels 5. The arm 9 is
movable by means of a pressure cylinder 10 which is pressurized at a
desired, adjustable pressure for maintaining a desired tautness in the
bogie track during the pivoting movement of the bogie arm 8, as well as
during the continual changes in the lower perimeter of the track as the
vehicle drives over uneven terrain. The bogie assemblies 2 are
independently and/or mutually pivotable and adjustable in relation to each
other in the vertical plane by means of pressure cylinders 6 which are
controlled from the cab of the vehicle. Approximately midway between the
front and rear wheels 7,5, a track support wheel 11 is supported on the
bogie arm 8, said wheel 11 preferably having a smaller diameter than the
front and rear wheels 7,5 and resting against the lower perimeter of the
belt. This means that when the bogie assemblies are in the normal position
shown in FIG. 1, the lower perimeters of all of the wheels will rest
against a level surface, i.e., the front and rear wheels 7,5 and the
belt-supporting wheel 11 in each bogie assembly have a common tangent.
Since the bogie arm 8 is eccentrically supported at 4 in relation to the
central axis of the rear wheel 5, i.e., in front of and somewhat below
said center axis, the bogie track will slacken when the bogie arm 8 is
pivoted upwardly by means of the pressure cylinder 6. The slack is taken
up by the belt-tensioning arm 9 which pivots the front wheel 7 forwardly,
owing to the fact that the pressure cylinder 10 is pressurized at a
desired pressure in a manner known per se; in this manner, the pressure
cylinder 10 which is connected to the extension of the belt-tensioning arm
9 maintains the desired tautness in the track whether the belt slackens as
the bogie arm 8 is pivoted upwardly or tautens as the bogie arm 8 pivots
downwardly, or as the lower perimeter of the track is subjected to changes
in configuration as the track passes over irregularities such as roots and
rocks in the ground terrain.
The front and rear wheels 7 and 5 preferably have the same diameter, so
that the vehicle, in reasonably even terrain, moves equally well forward
or backwards. If the vehicle is driving over very rough terrain, the bogie
assemblies can be provided upwardly and downwardly independently of each
other, and thereby compensate for any disparity in level when traversing
sloping terrain so that the frame and cab of the vehicle are maintained
approximately level, and the bogie assemblies can also be raised and
lowered as required for passing over small hills or depressions in the
ground on one side or the other of the vehicle, as known per se.
In the practical configuration of the bogie arm 8 which is shown in FIG. 1,
the arm is supported at 4 in the frame 3 of the vehicle at a height above
the ground corresponding to the radius of the belt-tensioning wheel 11,
whereby the rearward part of the bogie arm 8 is parallel with the ground
surface in the normal driving position of the bogie assemblies shown in
FIG. 1. From the middle portion of the arm, where the belt-tensioning
wheel is mounted, the bogie arm 8 extends on an upward incline to a height
above the ground approximately corresponding to the sum of the radius of
the front wheel 7 and the length of the belt-tensioning arm 9, which
extends approximately straight down from its support 14 at the forward end
of the bogie arm 8.
The drive member or pressure cylinder 10 for pivoting the belt-tensioning
arm 9 so as thereby to maintain the desired tautness of the belt consists
of a hydraulic cylinder 10' with piston rod 10" arranged on the top side
of the bogie arm 8, the end of the cylinder 10' being supported at 12 on
the forward part 8' of the bogie arm, and the piston 10' piston rod 10"
being supported at 13 on an extension of the belt-tensioning arm 9 which
extends upwardly from the arm support 14 on the bogie arm 8.
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Description  |
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