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| United States Patent | 4650019 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4650019.html |
| Inventor(s) | Yanai; Tokiyoshi (Yokosuka, JP);
Nakayama; Masafumi (Yamato, JP);
Aoyama; Yutaka (Yokosuka, JP);
Nakata; Moritsune (Yokohama, JP) |
| Abstract | An inventive electrical motor-assisted power-steering system is compact
while still providing adequate steering assist force. The system can also
act as a manual steering system in the event of failure of an electrical
motor. The system includes a steering gear with a shaft rotated manually
via a steering shaft, a worm driven by the electrical motor operating in
response to rotation of the steering shaft, and a worm wheel fixed to the
steering gear shaft and meshing with the worm. The lead angle of the worm
is selected to be larger than the friction angle between the worm and the
worm wheel so that the worm wheel can drive the worm freely if the motor
should fail. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4650019 |
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Electrical motor type power-steering system |
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| Publication Date |
March 17, 1987 |
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| Filing Date |
July 29, 1985 |
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| Priority Data |
Jul 30, 1984[JP]59-159999 |
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Title Information  |
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| Market Size |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An electrical motor type power-steering system, comprising:
a steering gear comprising a steering shaft and a pinion shaft rotatably
connected to said steering shaft;
an electrical motor for applying a steering assist force to said pinion
shaft in response to manual rotation of said steering shaft;
a toothed worm having a longitudinal axis and driven by said electrical
motor, the teeth of said worm having a lead angle; and
a toothed worm wheel having a longitudinal axis, said worm wheel being
fixed to said pinion shaft for rotation therewith and for meshing with
said worm, the axis of said worm being oblique to the axis of said worm
wheel so as to form a friction angle between the meshed tooth surfaces of
said worm and worm wheel, and wherein
said lead angle of said worm is larger than said friction angle so that
said worm wheel can drive said worm when said electrical motor is
inoperative.
2. A power-steering system as recited in claim 1, wherein said steering
gear comprises a rack and a pinion meshing with each other, the rack
steering road wheels as it moves and the pinion being integral with said
steering gear.
3. A power-steering system as recited in claim 1, wherein said electrical
motor has a drive shaft and said worm has a worm shaft coupled coaxially
with the drive shaft.
4. A power-steering system as recited in claim 2, wherein said steering
gear includes a gear box with a worm housing for the worm and a rack
housing of the rack, and the worm and the rack lie in planes parallel to a
plane through the axis of said steering shaft.
5. A power-steering system as recited in claim 4, wherein said electrical
motor has a motor housing and a drive shaft and said worm has a worm shaft
coupled coaxially with the drive shaft, the motor housing being fixed to
the worm housing and the worm and the rack lying substantially parallel. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to electrical motor type power-steering systems and
particularly to power-steering systems used in automotive vehicles.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Japanese published unexamined patent application No. 59-77966 discloses a
prior art motor-assisted power-steering system. This system comprises an
electrical motor with a drive gear, a gear reducer comprising a train of
spur gears meshing with the drive gear, a pinion shaft constituting a
lower part of a steering shaft assembly and having a final stage spur gear
of the gear reducer, a rack meshing with the pinion of the pinion shaft
and pivoting road wheels. The motor rotates the pinion shaft and boosts
the steering force exerted by the driver according to the angular
deviation from the neutral position of a steering wheel fixed to an upper
part of the steering shaft assembly. In this system, the dimensions of the
gear reducer necessarily increase as the reduction gear ratio increases.
Japanese published unexamined patent application No. 58-141963 discloses
another prior art electrical motor-assisted power-steering gear. This
power-steering gear comprises an electrical motor with a cylindrical rotor
and metal core, and a planetary gear reducer comprising a sun gear
rotating together with the rotor and a ring gear rotating together with a
steering shaft. The motor and the planetary gear reducer are fitted onto
the steering shaft. The motor rotates the steering shaft and boosts the
steering efforts of the driver. In this power-steering gear, the
arrangement of a planetary gear means the gear reducer will be relatively
complicated and the reduction gear ratio will be relatively low.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of this invention is to provide a compact electrical
motor-assisted power-steering system which can exert a greater steering
assist force.
Another object of this invention is to provide a motor-assisted
power-steering system which can also operate as a manual steering system
in the event of failure of the electrical motor. In order to achieve this
object, the inventive power-steering system includes a steering gear with
a shaft rotated by a steering shaft, a worm driven by an electrical motor
operating in response to a rotation of a steering shaft, and a worm wheel
fixed to the shaft of a steering gear and meshing with the worm. The lead
angle of the worm is selected to be larger than the friction angle between
the worm and the worm wheel so that the worm wheel can drive the worm
freely.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a diagram of an electrical motor-assisted power-steering system
according to an embodiment of this invention.
FIG. 2 is a section taken along the line II--II in FIG. 1.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The preferred embodiment of this invention will be described below with
reference to FIGS. 1 and 2.
A steering wheel 1 is fixed to the upper end of a steering shaft 2 and a
stepped pinion shaft 3 is connected to the lower end of the steering shaft
2. The pinion shaft 3 has a worm wheel 4 and a pinion 5 at its lower end.
The section of the pinion shaft 3 above the worm wheel 4 is journalled
within a bearing 6a in an annular lid 7 of a gear box 8. The section of
the pinion shaft 3 between the worm wheel 4 and the pinion 5 is journalled
within a bearing 6b installed in the gear box 8. The lower end of the
pinion shaft 3 is journalled within a bearing 6c installed in the blind
bottom of the gear box 8.
The lid 7 has a central boss 7a extending downwards and a central
through-hole 7b. The lower half of the through-hole 7b is flat and
featureless and the upper half of the through-hole 7b is threaded. The
lower half of the through-hole 7b retains the bearing 6a. The upper half
of the through-hole 7b threadedly receives the outer threaded surface of a
cylindrical collar 9 which retains the bearing 6a axially. A locknut 10
screws onto the upper surface of the outer threaded surface of the collar
9 to clamp the lid 7 in place. An annular sliding seal 11 fits snugly
between the pinion shaft 3 and the inner wall of the collar 9. The edge of
the lid 7 fits into a shoulder in the upper surface of the gear box 8. A
snap ring 12 engaging a recess in the inner surface of the gear box 8
holds the lid 7 in place axially.
The gear box 8 includes a rack housing 13, the axis of which lies oblique
to and offset from the axis of the pinion shaft 3 as shown in FIG. 2. The
rack housing 13 is fixed to the vehicular body (not shown) by way of a
mounting bumper 14 and a clamp bracket 15 gripping the outer surface of
the rack housing 13, as shown in FIG. 2.
A rack 16 which actuates the road wheels is housed within the rack housing
13 and meshes with the pinion 5 of the pinion shaft 3. As shown in FIG. 1,
the rack 16 has an incomplete-circular cross-section. The smooth rear
surface of the rack 16 is received by a rack retainer 17 housed within the
rack housing 13. The rack retainer 17 is urged into contact with the rear
surface of the rack 16 by springs 18. The outer ends of the springs 18
seat on the inner surface of a plurality of retainer covers 19 (only one
shown in FIG. 1) screwed into the rack housing 13. The retainer covers 19
are arranged along the axis of the rack housing 13. Each retainer cover 19
has an adjusting screw 20 threaded through its center which abuts the rear
surface of the rack retainer 17. Locknuts 21 screwed down against the
retainer covers 19 hold the adjusting screws 20 in place. The adjusting
screws 20 serve to offset bending forces applied to the rack 16.
The gear box 8 also includes a semicylindrical worm housing 22, the axis of
which lies oblique to and offset from the axis of the pinion shaft. The
lower end of the inner wall of the worm housing 22 is threaded and closed
by a threaded cap 22a. The upper end of the worm housing 22 has a flange
24. A housing 25a of an electrical motor 25 such as a pulse motor is fixed
to the flange 24 by means of bolts 26.
The pinion shaft 3, the pinion 5, the gear box 8 and the rack 16 form the
major parts of a steering gear SG.
A worm 23 meshing with the worm wheel 4 is housed within the worm housing
22. The worm 23 is rigidly fixed to its shaft 27, the opposite ends 27a
and 27b of which are journalled by bearings 28a and 28b retained within
the worm housing 22 as shown in FIG. 2. The upper end 27a of the shaft 27
rigidly engages the drive shaft 29 of the motor 25. The lower end 27b of
the shaft 27 is threaded. A nut 30 is screwed onto the lower end 27b of
the shaft 27 to clamp the bearing 28b onto an annular shoulder 31 in the
inner wall of the worm housing 22. A central boss 25b of the motor housing
25a projects into the worm housing 22 and clamps the bearing 28a onto an
annular shoulder 32 in the inner wall of the worm housing 22.
The relationship between the lead angle .alpha. (not shown) the worm 23 and
the friction angle .beta. (FIG. 2) between the tooth surfaces of the worm
23 and the worm wheel 4 is specified to satisfy the expression
.alpha.>.beta. so that the worm wheel 4 can drive the worm 23 if need be.
The output and the direction of rotation of the motor 25 are respectively
controlled by a motor drive signal DS and a rotation direction signal CS,
both from a controller 33. The controller 33 sends the motor drive signal
DS to a motor output control circuit (not shown) in order to move the
motor 25 to a desired position and sends the rotation direction signal CS
to a motor rotation direction switch circuit (not shown) in order to
switch the direction of rotation of the motor 25 in accordance with the
desired steering direction.
The controller 33 is, for example, a microcomputer comprising input and
output interfaces, a central processing unit and memory units. The
controller 33 is connected to a vehicular speed sensor 34 and a steering
condition sensor 35. The vehicular speed sensor 34 monitors vehicular
speed, for example from the rotation speed of an output shaft of a
transmission and sends the controller 33 a vehicular speed signal VS with
a pulse frequency proportional to the vehicular speed. The steering
condition sensor 35 is, in this example, mounted on the steering shaft 2.
The steering condition sensor 35 sends the controller 33 various steering
condition signals such as a steering torque signal TS with a pulse width
related to steering torque and a steering angular deviation signal
.theta.S with a pulse frequency proportional to the angular velocity of
the steering wheel.
The operation of the power-steering system of this invention will be
described in detail below.
While driving straight ahead, the steering wheel 1 and the steering shaft 2
are in their neutral position, so that the steering condition sensor 35
does not output any steering torque signal TS or steering steering angular
deviation signal .theta.S pulses. Thus, the controller 33 does not output
either the motor drive signal DS or the rotation direction signal CS to
the motor 25, so that the motor 25 does not operate.
When the steering wheel 1 is turned slightly to the right or left, the
controller 33 still does not output control signals DS or CS to actuate
the motor 25 since the levels of the steering condition signals from the
steering condition sensor 35 are still very low. The steering shaft 2
transmits a weak manual steering torque to the pinion shaft 3, so that the
rotation of the pinion shaft 3 moves the rack 16 slightly in the direction
corresponding to the desired steering direction without assistance from
the motor 25. During this movement, the worm wheel 4 rotates the worm 23
freely.
When the steering wheel is turned further to the right or left, the
steering condition sensor 35 outputs both a steering torque signal TS and
a steering angular deviation signal .theta.S, so that the controller 33
outputs a motor drive signal DS and a rotation direction signal CS in
response to the steering torque signal TS and the steering angular
deviation signal .theta.S and a vehicular speed signal VS from the
vehicular speed sensor 34, and the steering shaft 2 transmits the manual
steering torque to the pinion shaft 3.
In this case, the motor 25 is driven in the corresponding direction to
rotate the worm 23 and the worm wheel 4. Thus, the motor 25 exerts an
assisting force on the pinion shaft 3 which does most of the work of
steering. The boosted steering torque transmitted to the rack 16 through
the pinion shaft 3 pivots the road wheels in the desired direction.
On the other hand, if the motor 25 becomes inoperative due to failure of
the electrical circuitry of the motor 25, the power-steering system of
this invention can still operates as a manual steering system since the
worm wheel 4 can rotate the worm 23 freely.
In this embodiment of this invention, since the axes of the worm 23 and the
worm wheel 4 are oblique to each other, it is possible to reduce the
diameter of the worm 23 by increasing the lead angle .alpha. of the worm
23 as well as to employ a worm with a greater number of leads in order to
increase the strength and durability of the worm 23.
In addition, since the worm 23 lies essentially parallel to the rack 16,
the motor 25 is more compactly mounted on the gear box 8 than in
conventional power-steering systems, thus allowing the power-steering gear
to be more compact.
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Description  |
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