US3386164A - Compensating for the sintering distortion of arcuate magnetic members and assemblingsame between arcuate rotor members - Google Patents

Compensating for the sintering distortion of arcuate magnetic members and assemblingsame between arcuate rotor members Download PDF

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US3386164A
US3386164A US390421A US39042164A US3386164A US 3386164 A US3386164 A US 3386164A US 390421 A US390421 A US 390421A US 39042164 A US39042164 A US 39042164A US 3386164 A US3386164 A US 3386164A
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radius
magnet
magnet member
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Weitbrecht Gerhard
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Robert Bosch GmbH
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Robert Bosch GmbH
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02KDYNAMO-ELECTRIC MACHINES
    • H02K1/00Details of the magnetic circuit
    • H02K1/06Details of the magnetic circuit characterised by the shape, form or construction
    • H02K1/22Rotating parts of the magnetic circuit
    • H02K1/27Rotor cores with permanent magnets
    • H02K1/2786Outer rotors
    • H02K1/2787Outer rotors the magnetisation axis of the magnets being perpendicular to the rotor axis
    • H02K1/2788Outer rotors the magnetisation axis of the magnets being perpendicular to the rotor axis the rotor consisting of a single magnet or two or more axially juxtaposed single magnets
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49002Electrical device making
    • Y10T29/49009Dynamoelectric machine
    • Y10T29/49012Rotor
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49002Electrical device making
    • Y10T29/4902Electromagnet, transformer or inductor
    • Y10T29/49075Electromagnet, transformer or inductor including permanent magnet or core
    • Y10T29/49076From comminuted material

Definitions

  • the present invention concerns a magneto rotor and a magnet member incorporated therein as well as a method of manufacturing a magneto rotor, particularly of the type applying to What is known as a flywheel magneto or flywheel magneto lighting generator.
  • an annular soft iron support member is provided for completing the magnetic circuit for permanent magnet members preferably made of oxidic magnetic material attached to the inner surface of the annular support member and equipped with part-cylindrical soft iron pole members attached to the inner face of the magnet members.
  • the curvature of the faces of the magnet member varies also the magnitude of the air gap across the magnetic circuit varies whereby accordingly the magnetic efficiency of such a magnetic system varies.
  • the magnet members are subjected to some pressure when they are assembled with the annular support member, the magnet members frequently break if there is a hollow space between the supporting surface and the adjacent face of the magnet member.
  • a method according to the invention of manufacturing a magneto rotor comprises the steps of manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having a cylindrical outer surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said 3,386,164 Patented June 4, 1968 ice first radius; forming a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly differing from said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, and having substantially in the center portion thereof a thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii while its thickness is smaller in the remaining portions thereof; subjecting said magnet member blank to a treatment during which said blank is slightly deformed in its curvature in such a manner as to obtain a finished magnet member the radius of the outer face of which does not exceed said first radius of said inner
  • a magneto rotor which comprises, in combination, an annular support member having a cylindrical inner surface of a predetermined first radius and having a first axis; a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having a cylindrical outer surface of a predetermined second radius and having a second axis parallel with said first axis; a magnet member of predetermined width and length, curved in longitudinal direction and bounded transversely by a first, cylindrical surface portion having a third predetermined radius not exceeding said first radius and having a third axis parallel with said first and second axis, and by a second cylindrical surface portion having a predetermined fourth radius smaller than said third radius and at least equal to said second radius and having a fourth axis, said third and fourth axes being parallel with each other and spaced from each other a distance of such magnitude that the radial thickness of said magnet member is greater in the center area thereof than on both sides thereof, said pole member being fitted between said inner surface of said support member and said outer
  • a magnet member of predetermined width and length curved in longitudinal direction and bounded transversely by a first cylindrical surface portion having a first predetermined radius and a first axis, and by a second cylindrical face portion having a predetermined radius smaller than said first radius and a second axis, said first and second axes being parallel with each other and spaced from each other a distance of such magnitude that the radial thickness of said magnet member is greater in the center area thereof than in the areas on both sides thereof, so that if the magnet member is fitted with its curved surface portions between adjoining member having each a cylindrical contacting surface, respectively,
  • the magnet member will be engaged by said contacting surfaces of said adjoining members always at least in said center area, and any space that may be left between the cylindrical surfaces of the magnet member and the respectively adjacent contacting surfaces of the adjoining members will be restricted to surface portions spaced from said center area of the magnet member.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 are fractional cross sections of a portion of a magneto rotor illustrating the defects that are likely to occur with a construction according to the prior art
  • FIGS. 3, 4 and 5 are similar fractional cross sections of magneto rotors and magnet members in accordance with the invention, illustrating specifically three different possible cases of engagement between the components of the rotor.
  • FIGS. 1-5 a portion of an annular support member 10 which may be part of a flywheel is shown as having an inner cylindrical surface of a given radius.
  • a pole member 11 is shown being formed substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having a convex outer face having a given radius substantially smaller than the radius of the inner surface of the support member 10.
  • the various elements 12-16 are magnetic members of a shape described further below and interposed between the supporting member 11) and the respective pole member 11. Assuming that the magnet members 12-16 are made of sintered oxidic magnetic material the different shapes of these magnets illustrated in FIGS. lare the result of different amounts or effects of shrinkage as a result of the sintering treatment.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 which represent the old art the magnet members 12 and 13 are both so formed that at least in the blank the outer and inner faces are constituted by concentric cylindrical surfaces so that the radial thickness 1 is uniform over practically the entire circumferential length of the piece.
  • the shrinkage of the magnet member 12. is shown to have the effect that the radius of the outer face of the member 12 is larger than the radius of the adjacent inner surface of the support member 10, while the radius of the inner face of the member 12 is larger than the radius of the outer surface of the pole member 11. Consequently, the center portion of the member 12 is not in engagement with the opposite inner surface of the supporting member leaving a hollow space therebetween.
  • the member 13 is so deformed that the radius of the concave inner face of the member 13 is smaller than the radius of the adjoining outer surface of the pole member 11. Therefore a hollow space remains between these two surfaces. None of this is the case in the examples illustrating the invention in FIGS. 3-5.
  • the construction is such that the inner surface of the supporting member 10 has a predetermined radius of a given magnitude, and the outer convex surface of the pole member 11 has a substantially smaller radius, the axes of these two cylindrical surfaces being parallel and preferably coincident.
  • the radius of the magnet member 14-16, respectively, does never exceed the radius of the inner surface of the supporting member 10, and the smaller radius of the inner concave face of the member 14-16, respectively, is never smaller than the radius of the outer convex surface of the pole member 11.
  • the axes of the outer and inner cylindrical faces of the member 14-16, respectively, are parallel with each other but spaced in such a manner that the thickness 1 in the central region or portion of the magnet member is larger than in the remaining portions thereof on both sides of the central portion as indicated In 12.
  • the thickness 1 is always equal or at least substantially equal to the difference between the radius of the inner surface of the supporting member 10 and the radius of the outer convex surface of the pole member 11. Wherever an empty space remains between one or the other face, or both faces, of the member 14-16, respectively, on one hand, and the opposite outer surface of the pole member 11 and/or the inner surface of the supporting member 10, these spaces are restricted to the portions on the sides of the central portion of the particular magnet member.
  • An additional advantage of the invention resides in the fact that the air gap in the magnet circuit between the pole member 11 and the supporting member 10 is not irregular and unpredictable as in the cases illustrated by FIGS. 1 and 2, but is necessarily of constant magnitude through a series of assembled rotors because this air gap can only have a magnitude 1 -1
  • the radius of the inner concave face of the magnet member blanks can always be made somewhat larger than the radius of the outer convex surface of the pole member 11, but the radius of the outer convex face of the magnet member blank may have to be made in some cases slightly smaller than the inner radius of the supporting member 10, and in other cases it may even be made slightly larger than the last mentioned radius.
  • the essential point to be kept in mind is to arrange matters in such a manner that in the finished magnet member the radius of the outer convex face of the magnet member never exceeds the radius of the inner surface of the supporting member 10, and that the radius of the inner concave face of the magnet member is at least equal to the radius of the outer convex surface of the pole member 11.
  • a method of manufacturing a magnetic rotor comprising the steps of: manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical concave inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having one convex surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said first radius; forming a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly differing from said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, said magnet member blank being composed of a center portion having a radial thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii and two end portions at opposite sides of said center portion and each having a radial thickness which is smaller than the difference between said first and second radii; subjecting said magnet member blank to a treatment during which said blank is slightly deformed in its curvature in such a manner as to obtain a finished magnet memher
  • a method of manufacturing a magneto rotor comprising the steps of: manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical concave inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as asegment of a cylinder and having one convex surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said first radius; forming a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly smaller than said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, said magnet member blank being composed of a center portion having a radial thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii and two end portions at opposite sides of said center portion and each having a radial thickness which is smaller than the difference between said first and second radii; subjecting said magnet member blank to a treatment during which said blank is slightly deformed in its curvature in such a manner as to obtain a finished magnet member the
  • a method of manufacturing a magneto rotor comprising the steps of: manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical concave inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having one convex surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said first radius; forming from sinterable powdered material subject to compacting upon sintering a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly larger than said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, said magnet member blank being composed of a center portion having a radial thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii and two end portions at opposite sides of said center portion and each having a radial thickness which is smaller than the difference between said first and second radii; subjecting said magnet member blank to a sintering treatment during which said blank is slightly
  • a method of manufacturing a magneto rotor comprising the steps of: manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical concave inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having one convex surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said first radius; forming from sinterable oxidic magnetic material subject to compacting upon sintering a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly larger than said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, said magnet member blank being composed of a center portion having a radial thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii and two end portions at opposite sides of said center portion and each having a radial thickness which is smaller than the difference between said first and second radii; subjecting said magnet member blank to a sintering treatment whereby said material of

Description

June 4, 1968 wE|TBREcHT 3,386,164
COMPENSATING FOR THE SINTERING DISTORTION OF ARCUATE MAGNETIC MEMBERS AND ASSEMBLING SAME BETWEEN ARCUATE ROTOR MEMBERS Original Filed Dec. 4, 1962 United States Patent Germany Original application Dec. 4, 1962, Ser. No. 242,247, now Patent No. 3,234,416, dated Feb. 8, 1966. Divided and this application Aug. 18, 1964, Ser. No. 390,421
Claims priority, application Germany, Dec. 9, 1961, R 65,116 4 Claims. (Cl. 29-598) The present application is a division of my copending application Ser. No. 242,247, filed Dec. 4, 1962, now US. Patent 3,234,416 issued Feb. 8, 1966, and entitled, Magneto Rotor and Method of Manufacturing the Same.
The present invention concerns a magneto rotor and a magnet member incorporated therein as well as a method of manufacturing a magneto rotor, particularly of the type applying to What is known as a flywheel magneto or flywheel magneto lighting generator. In rnagnetos or generators of this type an annular soft iron support member is provided for completing the magnetic circuit for permanent magnet members preferably made of oxidic magnetic material attached to the inner surface of the annular support member and equipped with part-cylindrical soft iron pole members attached to the inner face of the magnet members.
In manufacturing or forming the magnet members irregularities in the curvature thereof are likely to occur, particularly if the magnet members are produced by sintering of blanks made of oxidic magnetic material because in the sintering operation the material shrinks in such a manner that the reduction in size of the radii of the curved faces of the magnet member blank varies more than that of the other dimensions thereof. This entails the undesirable result that the thus-formed magnet members do not fit exactly with their curved faces the respectively adjacent inner surface of th annular support member and the outer face of the pole members, or both, so that a hollow space remains either between the magnet members and the support member or between the magnet memher and the pole member.
As the curvature of the faces of the magnet member varies also the magnitude of the air gap across the magnetic circuit varies whereby accordingly the magnetic efficiency of such a magnetic system varies. In addition, since the magnet members are subjected to some pressure when they are assembled with the annular support member, the magnet members frequently break if there is a hollow space between the supporting surface and the adjacent face of the magnet member.
It is therefore one of the objects of this invention to provide for a method of manufacturing magneto rotors of the type set forth wherein the above described difiiculties are overcome.
It is another object of this invention to provide for a magneto rotor of the above type in which solid contact between the magnet members and the supporting member as well as with the pole member is assured.
It is still another object of the invention to provide for a magnet member adapted to be used in a magneto rotor of the above nature which is so shaped that the above mentioned difficulties are eliminated.
With above objects in view a method according to the invention of manufacturing a magneto rotor comprises the steps of manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having a cylindrical outer surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said 3,386,164 Patented June 4, 1968 ice first radius; forming a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly differing from said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, and having substantially in the center portion thereof a thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii while its thickness is smaller in the remaining portions thereof; subjecting said magnet member blank to a treatment during which said blank is slightly deformed in its curvature in such a manner as to obtain a finished magnet member the radius of the outer face of which does not exceed said first radius of said inner surface of said support member and the radius of the inner surface of which is at least equal to said second radius of the outer surface of said pole member; and concentrically assembly said pole member within said annular support member with said finished magnet member, the latter being interposed between said inner surface of said annular support member and said outer surface of said pole member, whereby in the finished magneto rotor assembly the finished magnet member is always in its center portion in direct contact with said inner surface of said supporting member and said outer surface of said pole member, respectively, while any space that may be left between said surfaces and said faces of the magnet member will be restricted to the portions at both sides of said center portion of said magnet member.
In another aspect of the invention it includes a magneto rotor which comprises, in combination, an annular support member having a cylindrical inner surface of a predetermined first radius and having a first axis; a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having a cylindrical outer surface of a predetermined second radius and having a second axis parallel with said first axis; a magnet member of predetermined width and length, curved in longitudinal direction and bounded transversely by a first, cylindrical surface portion having a third predetermined radius not exceeding said first radius and having a third axis parallel with said first and second axis, and by a second cylindrical surface portion having a predetermined fourth radius smaller than said third radius and at least equal to said second radius and having a fourth axis, said third and fourth axes being parallel with each other and spaced from each other a distance of such magnitude that the radial thickness of said magnet member is greater in the center area thereof than on both sides thereof, said pole member being fitted between said inner surface of said support member and said outer surface of said pole member, whereby the magnet member will be engaged by said surfaces of said suport member and of said pole member, respectively, always at least in said center area, and any space left between the cylindrical surfaces of the magnet member and the respectively adjacent surfaces of the support and pole members will be restricted to surface portions spaced from said center area of the magnet member.
In still another aspect of the invention it includes a magnet member of predetermined width and length, curved in longitudinal direction and bounded transversely by a first cylindrical surface portion having a first predetermined radius and a first axis, and by a second cylindrical face portion having a predetermined radius smaller than said first radius and a second axis, said first and second axes being parallel with each other and spaced from each other a distance of such magnitude that the radial thickness of said magnet member is greater in the center area thereof than in the areas on both sides thereof, so that if the magnet member is fitted with its curved surface portions between adjoining member having each a cylindrical contacting surface, respectively,
with axes parallel to said first and second axes, one of said contacting surfaces having a radius at least equal to said first radius and said surface of the magnet member, the other contacting surface having a radius not exceeding said second radius of said surface of the magnet member, the magnet member will be engaged by said contacting surfaces of said adjoining members always at least in said center area, and any space that may be left between the cylindrical surfaces of the magnet member and the respectively adjacent contacting surfaces of the adjoining members will be restricted to surface portions spaced from said center area of the magnet member.
The novel features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in particular in the appended claims. The invention itself, however, both as to its construction and its method of operation together with additional objects and advantages thereof, will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanyin g drawing, in which:
FIGS. 1 and 2 are fractional cross sections of a portion of a magneto rotor illustrating the defects that are likely to occur with a construction according to the prior art; and
FIGS. 3, 4 and 5, are similar fractional cross sections of magneto rotors and magnet members in accordance with the invention, illustrating specifically three different possible cases of engagement between the components of the rotor.
In FIGS. 1-5 a portion of an annular support member 10 which may be part of a flywheel is shown as having an inner cylindrical surface of a given radius. Similarly, in FIGS. 1-5 a pole member 11 is shown being formed substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having a convex outer face having a given radius substantially smaller than the radius of the inner surface of the support member 10. The various elements 12-16 are magnetic members of a shape described further below and interposed between the supporting member 11) and the respective pole member 11. Assuming that the magnet members 12-16 are made of sintered oxidic magnetic material the different shapes of these magnets illustrated in FIGS. lare the result of different amounts or effects of shrinkage as a result of the sintering treatment.
In FIGS. 1 and 2 which represent the old art the magnet members 12 and 13 are both so formed that at least in the blank the outer and inner faces are constituted by concentric cylindrical surfaces so that the radial thickness 1 is uniform over practically the entire circumferential length of the piece. In the case of FIG. 1 the shrinkage of the magnet member 12. is shown to have the effect that the radius of the outer face of the member 12 is larger than the radius of the adjacent inner surface of the support member 10, while the radius of the inner face of the member 12 is larger than the radius of the outer surface of the pole member 11. Consequently, the center portion of the member 12 is not in engagement with the opposite inner surface of the supporting member leaving a hollow space therebetween. In the case of FIGURE 2 the member 13 is so deformed that the radius of the concave inner face of the member 13 is smaller than the radius of the adjoining outer surface of the pole member 11. Therefore a hollow space remains between these two surfaces. None of this is the case in the examples illustrating the invention in FIGS. 3-5. Here the construction is such that the inner surface of the supporting member 10 has a predetermined radius of a given magnitude, and the outer convex surface of the pole member 11 has a substantially smaller radius, the axes of these two cylindrical surfaces being parallel and preferably coincident. The radius of the magnet member 14-16, respectively, does never exceed the radius of the inner surface of the supporting member 10, and the smaller radius of the inner concave face of the member 14-16, respectively, is never smaller than the radius of the outer convex surface of the pole member 11. The axes of the outer and inner cylindrical faces of the member 14-16, respectively, are parallel with each other but spaced in such a manner that the thickness 1 in the central region or portion of the magnet member is larger than in the remaining portions thereof on both sides of the central portion as indicated In 12.
Thus, it can be seen that even the shrinkage of the magnet member blank differently affecting the curvature thereof can never present the central portion of the thickness 1 from solidly engaging both the inner surface of the supporting member 10 and the outer surface of the pole member 11. The thickness 1 is always equal or at least substantially equal to the difference between the radius of the inner surface of the supporting member 10 and the radius of the outer convex surface of the pole member 11. Wherever an empty space remains between one or the other face, or both faces, of the member 14-16, respectively, on one hand, and the opposite outer surface of the pole member 11 and/or the inner surface of the supporting member 10, these spaces are restricted to the portions on the sides of the central portion of the particular magnet member.
Consequently, in assembling the magneto rotor a breakage of the magnet members is safely avoided.
An additional advantage of the invention resides in the fact that the air gap in the magnet circuit between the pole member 11 and the supporting member 10 is not irregular and unpredictable as in the cases illustrated by FIGS. 1 and 2, but is necessarily of constant magnitude through a series of assembled rotors because this air gap can only have a magnitude 1 -1 In practice, it is advisable to predetermine the magnitude of this air gap namely the difference 1 -1 in such a manner that this difference is of a range of magnitude up to 12% of the central thickness 1 It does not appear to be necessary to describe in detail the steps of manufacture to be carried out in order to produce a magneto rotor. According to experience gathered in manufacturing magnet member blanks from oxidic magnetic material and sintering these blanks so as to obtain a finished magnet member it will be learned whether under all circumstances the radius or radii of curvature of the faces of the magnet member blanks decreases and to what extent. The radius of the inner concave face of the magnet member blanks can always be made somewhat larger than the radius of the outer convex surface of the pole member 11, but the radius of the outer convex face of the magnet member blank may have to be made in some cases slightly smaller than the inner radius of the supporting member 10, and in other cases it may even be made slightly larger than the last mentioned radius. The essential point to be kept in mind is to arrange matters in such a manner that in the finished magnet member the radius of the outer convex face of the magnet member never exceeds the radius of the inner surface of the supporting member 10, and that the radius of the inner concave face of the magnet member is at least equal to the radius of the outer convex surface of the pole member 11. By properly spacing the axes of the faces of the magnet member properly the above mentioned differences in thickness between the center portion and the remaining portion of the magnet member is to be achieved.
It will be understood that each of the elements described above or two or more together, may also find a useful application in other types of a magnet member, a magneto rotor and a method for manufacturing the latter differing from the types described above.
While the invention has been illustrated and described as embodied in a magnet member, a magneto rotor and a method for manufacturing the latter out of an annular support member, a pole member and a magnet member, it is not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made without departing in any way from the spirit of the present invention.
Without further analysis the foregoing will so fully reveal the gist of the present invention that others can by applying current knowledge readily adapt it for various applications without omitting features that, from the standpoint of prior art, fairly constitute essential characteristics of the generic or specific aspects of this invention and, therefore, such adaptations should and are intended to be comprehended within the meaning and range of equivalence of the following claims.
What is claimed and desired to be secured by Letters Patent is:
1. A method of manufacturing a magnetic rotor, comprising the steps of: manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical concave inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having one convex surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said first radius; forming a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly differing from said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, said magnet member blank being composed of a center portion having a radial thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii and two end portions at opposite sides of said center portion and each having a radial thickness which is smaller than the difference between said first and second radii; subjecting said magnet member blank to a treatment during which said blank is slightly deformed in its curvature in such a manner as to obtain a finished magnet memher the radius of the outer face of which does not exceed said first radius of said inner surface of said support member and the radius of the inner surface of which is at least equal to said second radius of the surface of said pole member; and concentrically assembling said pole member within said annular support member with said finished magnet member, the latter being interposed between said inner surface of said annular support member and said outer surface of said pole member so that, due to the radial thickness of said center portion the said center portion in the finished magnetic rotor assembly contacts both said surfaces of said support member and of said pole member, respectively, while any space that may be left between said surfaces and said faces of the magnet member will be restricted to said end portions of said magnet member due to the smaller radial thickness of said end portions.
2. A method of manufacturing a magneto rotor, comprising the steps of: manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical concave inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as asegment of a cylinder and having one convex surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said first radius; forming a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly smaller than said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, said magnet member blank being composed of a center portion having a radial thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii and two end portions at opposite sides of said center portion and each having a radial thickness which is smaller than the difference between said first and second radii; subjecting said magnet member blank to a treatment during which said blank is slightly deformed in its curvature in such a manner as to obtain a finished magnet member the radius of the outer face of which does not exceed said first radius of said inner surface of said support member and the radius of the inner surface of which is at least equal to said second radius of the outer surface of said pole member; and concentrically assembling said pole member within said annular support member with said finished magnet member, the latter being interposed between said inner surface of said annular support member and said outer surface of said pole member so that, due to the radial thickness of said center portion the said center portion in the finished magnetic rotor assembly contacts both said surfaces of said support member and of said pole member, respectively, while any space that may be left between said surfaces and said faces of the magnet member will be restricted to said end portions of said magnet member due to the smaller radial thickness of said end portions.
3. A method of manufacturing a magneto rotor, comprising the steps of: manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical concave inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having one convex surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said first radius; forming from sinterable powdered material subject to compacting upon sintering a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly larger than said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, said magnet member blank being composed of a center portion having a radial thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii and two end portions at opposite sides of said center portion and each having a radial thickness which is smaller than the difference between said first and second radii; subjecting said magnet member blank to a sintering treatment during which said blank is slightly deformed in its curvature as a result of undergoing said compacting caused by said sintering treatment and in such a manner as to obtain a finished magnet member the radius of the outer face of which does not exceed said first radius of said inner surface of said support member and the radius of the inner surface of which is at least equal to said second radius of the outer surface of said pole member; and concentrically assembling said pole member within said annular support member with said finished magnet member, the latter being interposed between said inner surface of said annular support member and said outer surface of said pole member so that, due to the radial thickness of said center portion the said center portion in the finished magnetic rotor assembly contacts both said surfaces of said support member and of said pole member, respectively, while any space that may be left between said surfaces and said faces of the magnet member will be restricted to said end portions of said magnet member due to the smaller radial thickness of said end portions.
4. A method of manufacturing a magneto rotor, comprising the steps of: manufacturing an annular support member having a cylindrical concave inner surface of a predetermined first radius; making a pole member shaped substantially as a segment of a cylinder and having one convex surface of a predetermined second radius smaller than said first radius; forming from sinterable oxidic magnetic material subject to compacting upon sintering a magnet member blank having an outer part-cylindrical curved face of a third radius only slightly larger than said first radius but substantially larger than said second radius, and an inner part-cylindrical curved face having a fourth radius slightly larger than said second radius but substantially smaller than said first radius, said magnet member blank being composed of a center portion having a radial thickness substantially equal to the difference between said first and second radii and two end portions at opposite sides of said center portion and each having a radial thickness which is smaller than the difference between said first and second radii; subjecting said magnet member blank to a sintering treatment whereby said material of said blank is compacted so that said blank shrinks in such a manner that the radii of the curved faces of the blank are deformed to a greater extent than the other dimensions of the blank, whereby there is obtained a finished magnet member the radius of the outer face of which does not exceed said first radius of said inner surface of said support member and the radius of the inner surface of which is at least equal to said radius of the outer surface of said pole member; and concentrically assembling said pole member Within said annular support member with said finished magnet member, the latter being interposed between said inner surface of said annular support member and said outer surface of said pole member so that, due to the radial thickness of said center portion the said center portion in the finished magnetic rotor assembly contacts both said surfaces of said support member and of said pole member, respectively, while any space that may be left between said surfaces and said faces of the magnet will be restricted to said end portions of said magnet member due to the smaller radial thickness of said end portions.
References Cited FOREIGN PATENTS 2/1963 Great Britain. 3/1960 Germany.

Claims (1)

1. A METHOD OF MANUFACTURING A MAGNETIC ROTOR, COMPRISING THE STEPS OF: MANUFACTURING AN ANNULAR SUPPORT MEMBER HAVING A CYLINDRICAL CONCAVE INNER SURFACE OF A PREDETERMINED FIRST RADIUS; MAKING A POLE MEMBER SHAPED SUBSTANTIALLY AS A SEGMENT OF A CYLINDER AND HAVING ONE CONVEX SURFACE OF A PREDETERMINED SECOND RADIUS SMALLER THAN SAID FIRST RADIUS; FORMING A MAGNET MEMBER BLANK HAVING AN OUTER PART-CYLINDRICAL CURVED FACE OF A THIRD RADIUS ONLY SLIGHTLY DIFFERING FROM SAID FIRST RADIUS BUT SUBSTANTIALLY LARGER THAN SAID SECOND RADIUS, AND AN INNER PART-CYLINDRICAL CURVED FACE HAVING A FOURTH RADIUS SLIGHTLY LARGER THAN SAID SECOND RADIUS BUT SUBSTANTIALLY SMALLER THAN SAID FIRST RADIUS, SAID MAGNET MEMBER BLANK BEING COMPOSED OF A CENTER PORTION HAVING A RADIAL THICKNESS SUBSTANTIALLY EQUAL TO THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SAID FIRST AND SECOND RADII AND TWO END PORTIONS AT OPPOSITE SIDES OF SAID CENTER PORTION AND EACH HAVING A RADIAL THICKNESS WHICH IS SMALLER THAN THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SAID FIRST AND SECOND RADII; SUBJECTING SAID MAGNET MEMBER BLANK TO A TREATMENT DURING WHICH SAID BLANK IS SLIGHTLY DEFORMED IN ITS CURVATURE
US390421A 1962-12-04 1964-08-18 Compensating for the sintering distortion of arcuate magnetic members and assemblingsame between arcuate rotor members Expired - Lifetime US3386164A (en)

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US242247A US3234416A (en) 1961-12-09 1962-12-04 Magneto rotor and method of manufacturing the same
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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS4825801A (en) * 1971-08-12 1973-04-04
WO1997013311A1 (en) * 1995-10-04 1997-04-10 Empresa Brasileira De Compressores A rotor with permanent magnets for an electric motor
US20120126639A1 (en) * 2006-10-13 2012-05-24 Black & Decker Inc. Stator housing assembly having overmolded magnets
CN111834116A (en) * 2019-04-23 2020-10-27 西门子歌美飒可再生能源公司 Manufacturing sintered permanent magnets with reduced deformation

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1078679B (en) * 1958-04-26 1960-03-31 Philips Nv Process for the production of stators and rotors for electrical machines with permanent magnets
GB919234A (en) * 1958-04-26 1963-02-20 Philips Electrical Ind Ltd Improvements in or relating to methods of making stators and rotors for electrical apparatus

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1078679B (en) * 1958-04-26 1960-03-31 Philips Nv Process for the production of stators and rotors for electrical machines with permanent magnets
GB919234A (en) * 1958-04-26 1963-02-20 Philips Electrical Ind Ltd Improvements in or relating to methods of making stators and rotors for electrical apparatus

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS4825801A (en) * 1971-08-12 1973-04-04
JPS5513224B2 (en) * 1971-08-12 1980-04-07
WO1997013311A1 (en) * 1995-10-04 1997-04-10 Empresa Brasileira De Compressores A rotor with permanent magnets for an electric motor
US5939809A (en) * 1995-10-04 1999-08-17 Empresa Brasileira De Compressores S/A Embraco Rotor with permanent magnets for an electric motor
US20120126639A1 (en) * 2006-10-13 2012-05-24 Black & Decker Inc. Stator housing assembly having overmolded magnets
CN111834116A (en) * 2019-04-23 2020-10-27 西门子歌美飒可再生能源公司 Manufacturing sintered permanent magnets with reduced deformation

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