GB2090941A - Hydraulic Jack with Expanding Piston - Google Patents
Hydraulic Jack with Expanding Piston Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- GB2090941A GB2090941A GB8138741A GB8138741A GB2090941A GB 2090941 A GB2090941 A GB 2090941A GB 8138741 A GB8138741 A GB 8138741A GB 8138741 A GB8138741 A GB 8138741A GB 2090941 A GB2090941 A GB 2090941A
- Authority
- GB
- United Kingdom
- Prior art keywords
- cylinder
- wall
- piston
- jack
- hydraulic jack
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Granted
Links
Classifications
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F16—ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
- F16J—PISTONS; CYLINDERS; SEALINGS
- F16J15/00—Sealings
- F16J15/46—Sealings with packing ring expanded or pressed into place by fluid pressure, e.g. inflatable packings
- F16J15/48—Sealings with packing ring expanded or pressed into place by fluid pressure, e.g. inflatable packings influenced by the pressure within the member to be sealed
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B66—HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
- B66F—HOISTING, LIFTING, HAULING OR PUSHING, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR, e.g. DEVICES WHICH APPLY A LIFTING OR PUSHING FORCE DIRECTLY TO THE SURFACE OF A LOAD
- B66F3/00—Devices, e.g. jacks, adapted for uninterrupted lifting of loads
- B66F3/24—Devices, e.g. jacks, adapted for uninterrupted lifting of loads fluid-pressure operated
- B66F3/25—Constructional features
- B66F3/26—Adaptations or arrangements of pistons
-
- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F16—ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
- F16J—PISTONS; CYLINDERS; SEALINGS
- F16J10/00—Engine or like cylinders; Features of hollow, e.g. cylindrical, bodies in general
- F16J10/02—Cylinders designed to receive moving pistons or plungers
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Geology (AREA)
- Structural Engineering (AREA)
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Architecture (AREA)
- Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
- Actuator (AREA)
Abstract
A hydraulic jack comprises a cylinder (10) and a piston 11 which has at its head a cavity 15, the dimensions of the cavity and the constructional materials of the cylinder and piston being selected so that hydraulic pressure within the cylinder acts to deform the cylinder wall and the parts of the piston defining the cavity in such a manner that, over the normal operating pressures of the jack the clearance between the piston and the cylinder remains within the capacity of the sealing means 17, between the piston and the cylinder. <IMAGE>
Description
SPECIFICATION
Improvements in or Relating to Hydraulic Jacks
The present invention relates to hydraulic jacks such as are used for a variety of purposes in which a large force has to be exerted. An example of such a purpose is in the stressing of cables used in reinforcing concrete in connection with which the forces to be applied may reach many hundreds of tons. The invention while of particular value in that field is of general applicability to hydraulic jacks
particularly to those of a substantial capacity.
The design of hydraulic jacks is usually governed by the deformation, due to the hydraulic pressure, between the outer cylinder and the piston. To seal the hydraulic fluid effectively specific design clearances are required between the inner piston and the outer wall of the hydraulic jack. To maintain these specific clearances the strains in the materials used in the design of the jack are limited to specific values.
As the available working hydraulic pressures have increased so have the radial forces in the jack cylinders and, due to the necessity to control the material strains, the thickness of the materials must increase with a corresponding increase in total weight.
To enable the weight to be reduced the conventional methods are to use lighter basic materials such as alloys of aluminium and/or magnesium. However, these materials are generally very expensive and also usually have similar limitations of strain control for, as the basic weight is reduced, the modulus of elasticity usually also reduces, with a corresponding increase in strain, thus offsetting the benefit gained from the weight reduction.
An alternative principle adopted in the present invention is to use high tensile steels in thin sections to reduce the weight, but in doing so the differential strains between the sliding parts such as the piston and the cylindrical wall and/or the piston and the end caps of the cylinder must be controlled.
Weight reductions in these circumstances are possible as higher tensile materials can be used and controlled, giving reductions in weight of up to 5060%.
Internal jack friction may also be reduced as the general jack clearances may be increased to give lesser sliding friction and the conventional "seals" or "U" cups on the piston may be formed as "blocks" which expand according to the tolerance between the piston and the outer or inner confining cylinder walls, these seals can be used as "rubbing" or lubricating surfaces, thereby reducing internal friction.
The principle underlying the design of hydraulic jacks according to the present invention is to make use of the fluid pressure within the jack to deform both the wall of the piston and the wall of the cylinder to varying extents depending on the geometry of these parts and the physical properties of the materials from which they are made to provide a controlled clearance between the piston wall and the cylinder wall under all conditions in which the hydraulic jack is required to operate. The same design principles may be applied to the design of end caps for hydraulic cylinders.
The invention thus consists in a hydraulic jack comprising a cylinder and a piston movable therein, the piston having in its head a cavity, said cavity being bounded by the inner surface of a peripheral wall of the piston, the outer surface of which is in close proximity to the inner surface of the cylinder, sealing means being provided between the piston and cylinder to seal the clearance between the same, the dimensions of and the constructional materials of the cylinder and of the piston wall being selected so that hydraulic pressure applied within the cylinder acts to deform the cylinder wall and the piston wall in such a manner that, over the normal range of operating pressures of the jack the clearance between the piston and the cylinder remains within the capacity of the sealing means to provide an effective seal between them.In certain forms of the invention the head of the piston is annular in form and the well therein also annular.
In order that the nature of the invention may be better understood a preferred embodiment
thereof is hereinafter described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in
which:
Figure 1 is a longitudinal cross-section of a hydraulic jack constructed according to the invention, the central part of the jack being omitted for convenience of representation;
Figure 2 is a diagram illustrating the deformation of steel under load.
Whereas Figure 1 shows full details of a stressing jack according to the invention it is not
proposed to describe all the features of the jack illustrated in the drawings as many of these are unrelated to the present invention and the description will therefore be confined to those features of construction incorporating the invention.
The main parts of the hydraulic jack are an outer cylinder 10 a piston 11 and an inner tube 12. As is readily seen from the drawings the head of the piston is annular in form consisting of an outer wall 13 and an inner wall 14 separated by an annular cavity 15. Grooves 1 6 are formed on the inner face of the inner wall 14 and grooves 1 7 on the outer face of the outer wall 13, these grooves accommodating
U seals or 0 rings of conventional construction. The outer cylinder piston and inner tube are all made from steel of the specification known as JIS/SNCM 26 particulars of which are given below.
The design of the piston and cylinder arrived at by conventional calculation methods is such that as pressure in the cylinder between the piston head and the nose cone base 18 increases the tendency of the outer cylinder 10 and inner tube 12 to spread apart will be balanced by the tendency of the walls 13 and 14 of the piston head to spread apart whereby the clearances between the outer wall 1 3 of the piston and the outer cylinder 10 and between the inner wall of the piston 14 and the inner tube 1 2 are mainained more or less constant, at any rate to the extent that the U seals will form an effective seal over the full range of working pressures. Also any inclination of the cylinder wall out of parallelism will be matched by a similar inclination of the outer wall of the piston.
The same design principle is applied to the nose cone base 1 8 which is screwed into the space between the outer cylinder 10 and the inner tube 12. As can be readily seen from Figure 1 pressure will cause the nose cone base to expand in the manner described for the piston head thus maintaining the seal at the end of the piston as the pressure in the cylinder increases.
Design considerations in relation to seal clearances are set out below for both 0 rings and U cup seals.
"0" rings Maximum clearance 0.125-200 mm (large diam.)
less ovality 0.075 m
max. design clearance = .05 mm
max. deflection a = 0.10 mm
"U" cup seals Maximum clearance = .200-.25 mm
ovality = .075
max. design clearance = .1 25-.1 75 mm
max. deflection a = .250 mm-O.35 mm (large diam. units)
In a conventional hydraulic jack design the design considerations relating to the maximum
working stresses in the parts of the jack for both 0 rings and U cups is calculated on the following
basis.
If E=youngs modulus=200,000 Mpa
E=strain
a=deflection
d=diameter of cylinder
fs=stress
STRESS fs
Then E- - STRAIN E
a Ea
fs=E.E and E =- =
d d
If "0" ring design Ea Then maximum fs= d
200,000x.100 mm
If d=0.100 fs=
.100
The limiting working steel stress fs is 200 Mpa
If d=.200 fs=1 00 Mpa 200,000x.2500 mm
If "U" cup design d=.100 fs=
.100
The limiting working steel stress fs is 500 Mpa
200,000x.35 mm
d=.200, fs=
.200
The limiting working steel stressfs is 350 Mpa
In practice the lower "0" ring values are generally adopted.
Hence stress levels must not exceed the above. Also "0" ring and "U" cup designs should not exceed 75% of manufacturers clearance to allow for material life seal deterioration.
Acceptable Design Stresses are therefore:
"0" rings 200x.75=1 50 Mpa
"U" cup small=500x.75=375 Mpa
"U" cup large=350x.75=265 Mpa
Atypical steel such as JIS/SNCM 5 yield point stress=900 Mpa
The factor of safety at working conditions:
900
"0" ring=----=6.00 150
900
"U" cup large =3.4 265
In accordance with the present invention the above steel stress criteria are not applicable thereby enabling very much higher values to be used as the "0" ring or "U" cup clearance are controlled by the steel strains of the cylinder and piston wall which are such as to maintain the desired clearances throughout the working pressure range.
It is preferred that a jack according to the invention shall be made of steel having no defined YP (yield point) "X" (see Fig. 2) but having sufficient elongation of at least 10 to 12%.
Steels with defined yield point "X" should be so designed to limit maximum performance to less than YP for, if YP is exceeded the cylinder will be permanently deformed OB (Fig. 2) whereas steels with no defined YP recover to a lesser permanent "set"-OA (Fig. 2).
Working stresses in designs according to the invention are calculated as follows:- The stresses are now only governed by the following:
1. Fatigue life
Cyclic stresses should not exceed:
fs=0.45 fs ultimate-0.5 fs ultimate.
i.e. the stress level of maximum working cyclic stresses.
2. Maximum jack capacity (occasional test loads)
Factor of safety on ultimate (1.6)=0.625 fs
3. Maximum rated capacity for a given fatigue life cycle.
Assume steel SNCM 26 (Austenitic Ni Cr Mo)
fs=1300 Mpa
Max. fs working=0.5 fs=650 Mpa
Max. test load=0.625 fs 800 Mpa
These stress/strain levels are independent of diameter.
F.S. test load=1.6 F.S. working load=2.0-2.2 Therefore estimated weight reduction on any specific design is approximately 50-60%.
Recommended Material for Cylinder Walls and Pistons
High tensile steels having
1. No defined yield point.
(Heat treat accordingly)
2. Excellent ductility
3. Excellent fatigue resistance
4. Low movement on heat treatment.
A suitable steel is JIS/SNCM 26 having the following composition: C=.13-0.2
Si=.15-.35 Mm=.8--1.2 1300 Mp Mm 95% greater than Ni=2.8-3.2 H.T. to 1400-1450 Cr=1 .4-1.80
Mo=0.4-0.6
Elongation=10%.
It has been found that a stressing jack as illustrated in the accompanying drawing will have a weight of between 72 to 75 kilograms for a stress of 145 tons that is approximately 1/2 kilogram per ton. Other jacks known to the inventor with the corresponding capacity, weight of the order of 1.0 to 1.5 kilograms weight per ton of capacity. Advantages are achieved with small jacks but these are proportionately less than with larger ones. The greater weight of existing jacks is due to a different design approach in that in these jacks the wall thicknesses of the parts have been increased to provide additional strength and rigidity. This however has led to substantial increases in weight which in turn have given rise to substantial handling problems necessitating the use, for example, of cranes.
While the invention has been particularly described in relation to a jack having an annular piston it will be appreciated that the invention can be readily applied to a simple type of jack in which the piston head is of conventional shape there being a central well in the head of the- piston. While steel is the preferred material due to its lesser cost, the design and constructional principals of the invention can be applied equally to jacks made from light alloys.
Claims (7)
1. A hydraulic jack comprising a cylinder and a piston movable therein, the piston having in its head a cavity, said cavity being bounded by the inner surface of a peripheral wall of the piston, the outer surface of which is in close proximity to the inner surface of the cylinder, sealing means being provided between the piston and cylinder to seal the clearance between the same, the dimensions of and the constructional materials of the cylinder and of the piston wall being selected so that hydraulic
pressure applied within the cylinder acts to deform the cylinder wall and the piston wall in such a
manner that, over the normal range of operating pressures of the jack the clearance between the piston and the cylinder remains within the capacity of the sealing means to provide an effective seal between them.
2. A hydraulic jack as claimed in Claim 1 wherein the cylinder comprises an outer wall and an
inner wall defining between them an annular cavity in which the piston is movable, the piston having
an outer peripheral wall and an inner peripheral wall defining between them an annular cavity, the
outer surface of the outer peripheral wall of the piston being in close proximity to the inner surface of
the outer wall of the cylinder and the inner surface of the inner peripheral wall of the cylinder being in
close proximity to the outer surface of the inner wall of the cylinder.
3. A hydraulic jack as claimed in claim 2 wherein the jack is provided with a nose cone screwed
into one end of the cylinder between said outer wall and said inner wall, the nose cone having inner
and outer walls defining between them an annular cavity, the outer surface of the outer wall of the
nose cone being in close proximity to the inner surface of the outer wall of the cylinder and the inner surface of the inner wall of the nose cone being in close proximity to the outer surface of the inner wall of the cylinder, sealing means being provided between said proximate surfaces the dimension of and the constructional materials of the nose cone and the cylinder being selected so that hydraulic pressure applied within the cylinder acts to deform the cylinder walls and the nose cone walls in such a manner that, over the normal range of operating pressures of the jack the clearance between the nose cone walls and the cylinder walls remains within the capacity of the sealing means to provide an effective seal between them.
4. A hydraulic jack as claimed in any one of the preceding claims wherein the said sealing means consist of grooves accommodating 0 rings or U seals of conventional construction.
5. A hydraulic jack as claimed in any one of the preceding claims wherein the parts are of high tensile steel having no defined yield point, excellent ductility, excellent fatigue resistance and low
movement on heat treatment.
6. A hydraulic jack as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 4 wherein the parts are of high tensile
steel of the specification known as JIS/SNCM 26 or any equivalent steel.
7. A hydraulic jack substantially as illustrated and as described with reference to Figure 1 of the
accompanying drawings. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
AU78679/81A AU553403B2 (en) | 1980-12-24 | 1980-12-24 | Hydraulic jack |
AU706580 | 1980-12-24 |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
GB2090941A true GB2090941A (en) | 1982-07-21 |
GB2090941B GB2090941B (en) | 1984-06-06 |
Family
ID=25612130
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
GB8138741A Expired GB2090941B (en) | 1980-12-24 | 1981-12-23 | Hydraulic jack wiht expanding piston |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
GB (1) | GB2090941B (en) |
Cited By (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB2245681A (en) * | 1990-06-28 | 1992-01-08 | Pilgrim Moorside Ltd | Hydraulic piston/cylinder device |
-
1981
- 1981-12-23 GB GB8138741A patent/GB2090941B/en not_active Expired
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB2245681A (en) * | 1990-06-28 | 1992-01-08 | Pilgrim Moorside Ltd | Hydraulic piston/cylinder device |
GB2245681B (en) * | 1990-06-28 | 1994-01-19 | Pilgrim Moorside Ltd | Improvements in and relating to fasteners |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
GB2090941B (en) | 1984-06-06 |
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Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
732E | Amendments to the register in respect of changes of name or changes affecting rights (sect. 32/1977) | ||
PCNP | Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee |
Effective date: 19981223 |