[0001] This invention relates to a refrigerant compressor having suction and discharge cavities
and a crankcase containing the compressor's mechanism, wherein gaseous refrigerant
with entrained lubricant is admitted under pressure from the discharge cavity to the
crankcase and is vented to the suction cavity, for example as disclosed in U.S. Patent
No. 4,145,163 (Fogelberg et al).
[0002] Lubrication systems for refrigerant compressors with wobble plate (swash plate) drive
mechanisms have advanced from using splash and/or pressurized oil circulation, such
as by a pump. to a simpler and less costly passive type of system using oil entrained
in the refrigerant to lubricate the compressor's critical rotating bearing surfaces,
notably those of the wobble plate. However, the conventional passive type of lubrication
system normally relies on the compressor mechanism being located in a crankcase which
may be formed as part of the compressor's refrigerant circuit, including the compressor's
suction or discharge refrigerant passages, and thus the conventional passive type
of lubrication system is not normally adaptable to compressors of the type in which
refrigerant gas pressure is developed in the crankcase and must be vented to the compressor
suction circuit to maintain optimum compressor performance and/or for crankcase pressure
control to control compressor displacement.
[0003] The present invention is concerned with a refrigerant compressor of the latter type
in which the venting of the crankcase is advantageously utilized to provide adequate
lubrication of the compressor mechanism's critical bearing surfaces under all operating
conditions and in a simple low-cost passive manner not requiring an oil pump or other
form of pressurized oil supply: for this purpose the refrigerant compressor in accordance
with the present invention is characterised in that a passive lubrication system comprises
lubrication-vent passage means for venting the crankcase pressure to the suction cavity
between rotating bearing surfaces of the compressor mechanism to thereby lubricate
the bearing surfaces by entrained lubricant while also causing some of the entrained
lubricant to be separated by centrifugal action at said bearing surfaces and returned
to the crankcase for further compressor lubricant usage, and whereby the amount of
lubricant actually delivered to the compressor suction cavity from the crankcase and
available for discharge from the compressor at the discharge cavity is substantially
reduced so that some amount of lubricant returned to the crankcase by said centrifugal
action is retained therein and always available for such further compressor lubrication.
[0004] In a preferred form of refigerant compressor in accordance with the present invention,
a variable- displacement axial-piston refrigerant compressor has its displacement
arranged to be varied automatically according to demand by control of the refrigerant
gas pressure differential between the crankcase and compressor suction with a demand-responsive
valve which operates to bleed or vent the crankcase to suction to effect the desired
displacement control. In conformity with the present invention, the crankcase-suction
vent is formed with bleed or vent passage means connecting the crankcase to compressor
suction between the critical bearing surfaces of the compressor drive mechanism to
lubricate these bearing surfaces by entrained lubricant in the gaseous refrigerant
while also causing some of the entrained lubricant to be separated by centrifugal
action at the bearing surfaces and returned to the crankcase for further compressor
lubrication usage. As a result, the amount of lubricant actually delivered to the
compressor suction and available for circulation in the refrigerant circuit served
by the compressor is substantially reduced, so that an amount of lubricant returned
to the crankcase by such centrifugal action may be retained therein and always be
available for such further lubrication of the compressor.
[0005] In the drawing:
Figure 1 is a sectional view, with parts in elevation, of a refrigerant compressor
in accordance with the present invention, this compressor being of the varaible-angle
wobble plate type and having incorporated therein a preferred embodiment of a passive
lubrication system in conformity with the present invention, the figure further including
a schematic of an automotive air conditioning system in which the compressor is connected;
Figure 2 is a fragmentary enlarged sectional view generally on the line 2-2 of Figure
1, in the direction of the arrows;
Figure 3 is a fragmentary enlarged sectional view of a displacement control valve
arrangement shown generally in Figure 1, in the direction of the arrows; and
Figure 4 is a fragmentary enlarged view showing portions of the displacement control
valve arrangement of Figure 3.
[0006] In Figure 1 of the drawings. there is shown a variable displacement refrigerant compressor
10 of the variable-angle wobble plate type connected in an automotive air conditioning
system having the normal condenser 12, orifice tube 14, evaporator 16 and accumulator
18 arranged in that order between the compressor's discharge and suction sides. The
compressor 10 comprises a cylinder block 20 having a head 22 and a crankcase 24 sealingly
clamped to opposite ends thereof. A drive shaft 26 is supported centrally in the compressor
at the cylinder block 20 and crankcase 24 by radial needle bearings 28 and 30, respectively,
and is axially retained by a thrust washer 32 inwardly of the needle bearing 28 and
a thrust needle bearing 34 inwardly of the radial needle bearing 30. The drive shaft
26 extends through the crankcase 24 for connection to an automotive engine (not shown)
by an electromagnetic clutch 36 which is mounted on the crankcase and is driven from
the engine by a belt 38 engaging a pulley 40 on the clutch.
[0007] The cylinder block 20 has five axial cylinders 42 extending therethrough (only one
being shown), which are equally angularly spaced about and equally radially spaced
from the axis of the drive shaft 26. The cylinders 42 extend parallel to the drive
shaft 26, and a piston 44 having seals 46 is mounted for reciprocal sliding movement
in each of the cylinders. A separate piston rod 48 connects the rearside of each piston
44 to a non-rotary ring-shaped wobble plate 50 received about the drive shaft 26.
Each of the piston rods 48 is connected to its respective piston 44 by a spherical
rod end 52 which is retained in a socket 54 on the rearside of the piston by a retainer
56 that is swaged in place. The opposite end of each piston rod 48 is connected to
the wobble plate 50 by a similar spherical rod end 58 which is retained in a socket
60 on the wobble plate by a split retainer ring 62 which is a snap fit with the wobble
plate.
[0008] The non-rotary wobble plate 50 is mounted at its inner diameter 64 on a journal 66
of a rotary drive plate 68, and is axially retained thereon against a thrust needle
bearing 70 by a thrust washer 71 and snap ring 72. As is shown in Figure 2, the drive
plate 68 is pivotally connected at its journal 66 by a pair of pivot pins 74 to a
sleeve 76 which is slidably mounted on the drive shaft 26, Lhe pins being mounted
in aligned bores 78 and 80 in opposite sides of the journal 66 and radially outwardly
extending bosses 82 on the sleeve 76 respectively, with the common axis of the pivot
pins intersecting at right angles to the axis of the drive shaft 16, to permit angulation
of the drive plate 68 and wobble plate 50 relative to the drive shaft.
[0009] The drive shaft 26 is drivingly connected to the drive plate 68 by a lug 84 which
extends freely through a longitudinal slot 86 in the sleeve 76. The drive lug 84 is
threadably connected at one end to the drive shaft 26 at right angles thereto, and
extends radially outwardly past the journal 66, where it is provided with a guide
slot 88 for guiding the angulation of the drive plate 68 and wobble plate 50. The
drive lug 84 has flat-sided enagement on one side thereof at 90 with an ear 92 formed
integrally with the drive plate 68 and is retained thereagainst by a cross pin 94
which is at right angles to the drive shaft and is slidable in and guided by the guide
slot 88 as the sleeve 76 moves along the drive shaft 26. The cross pin 94 is retained
in place on the drive plate 68 at its ear 92 by being provided with an enlarged head
96 at one end which engages the lug at one side of the slot 88, and being received
adjacent the other end in a cross-hole 98 in the drive plate ear 92, where it is retained
by a snap ring 100. The wobble plate 50, while being angulatable with the rotary drive
plate 68, is prevented from rotating therewith by a guide pin 102 on which a ball
guide 104 is slidably mounted and retained on the wobble plate. The guide pin 102
is press-fitted at opposite ends in the cylinder block 20 and crankcase 24 parallel
to the drive shaft 26, and the ball guide 104 is retained between semi-cylindrical
guide shoes 106 (only one being shown) which are slidably mounted for reciprocal radial
movement in the wobble plate 50.
[0010] The drive lug arrangement for the drive plate 68 and the anti-rotation guide arrangement,
for the wobble plate 50 are like those disclosed in greater detail in U.S. Patent
Nos. 4,175,915 and 4,297,085 respectively assigned to the present applicants. With
such arrangements, there is provided an essentially constant top-dead-center position
for each of the pistons 44 by the pin follower 94, which is movable radially with
respect to the drive lug 84 along its guide slot or cam track 88 as the sleeve 76
moves along the drive shaft 26 while the latter is driving the drive plate 68 through
the drive lug 84 and drive plate ear 92 in the direction indicated by the arrow in
Figure 2. As a result, the angle of the wobble plate 50 is varied with respect to
the axis of the drive shaft 26 between the solid-line large-angle position shown in
Figure 1, which is full stroke, to the zero-angle phantom-line position shown, which
is zero stroke, to thereby infinitessimally vary the stroke of the pistons and thus
the displacement (capacity ) of the compressor between these extremes. As is shown
in Figure 1, there is provided a split ring return spring 107 which is mounted in
a groove in the drive shaft 26 and has one end that is engaged by the sleeve 76 during
movement to the zero wobble angle position and is thereby conditioned to initiate
return movement.
[0011] The working ends of the cylinders 42 are covered by a valve plate 108 which
.together with an intake or suction valve disk 110 and an exhaust or discharge valve
disk 112 located on opposite sides thereof, is clamped to the cylinder block 20 between
the latter and the head 22. The head 22 is provided with a suction cavity or chamber
114 which is connected through an external port 116 to receive gaseous refrigerant
from the accumulator 18 downstream of the evaporator 16. The suction cavity 114 is
open to an intake port 118 in the valve plate 108 at the working end of each of the
cylinders 42 where the refrigerant is admitted to the respective cylinders on their
suction stroke each through a reed valve 120 formed integrally with the suction valve
disk 110 at these locations. Then on the compression stroke, a discharge port 122
open to the working end of each cylinder 42 allows the compressed refrigerant to be
discharged into a discharge cavity or chamber 124 in the head 22 by a discharge reed
valve 126 which is formed integrally with the discharge valve disk 112 at these locations,
the extent of opening of each of the discharge reed valves being limited by a rigid
back-up strap 128 which is riveted at one end to the valve plate 108. The compressor's
discharge cavity 124 is connected to deliver the compressed gaseous refrigerant to
the condenser 12,from whence it is delivered through the orifice tube 14 back to the
evaporator 16 to complete the refrigerant circuit shown in Figure 1.
[0012] The wobble plate angle and thus compressor displacement is controlled by controlling
the refrigerant gas pressure in the sealed interior 129 of the crankcase behind the
pistons 44 relative to the suction pressure. In this type of control, the angle of
the wobble plate is determined by a force balance on the pistons wherein a slight
elevation of the crankcase-suction pressure differential above a set suction pressure
control point creates a net force on the pistons that results in a turning moment
about the wobble plate pivot pins 74 that acts to reduce the wobble plate angle and
thereby reduce the compressor capacity. For such control one practice is to employ
a control valve which is automatically actuated by a bellows or diaphragm that is
biased by compressor suction pressure and operates when the air conditioning capacity
demand: is:high and the resulting suction pressure rises above the control point so
as to maintain a bleed or vent from .crankcase to suction so that there is no crankcase-suction
pressure differential. As a result, the wobble plate 50 will then angle to its full
stroke large angle position shown in Figure 1,establishing maximum displacement. On
the other hand, when the air conditioning capacity demand is lowered and the suction
pressure falls to the control point, a control valve having suction-pressure bias
then operates to close off the crankcase vent connection with suction and either provide
communication between the compressor discharge and the crankcase or allow the pressure
therein to increase as a result of gas blow-by past the pistons. This has the effect
of increasing the crankcase-suction pressure differential, which on slight elevation
creates a net force on the pistons that results in a turning moment about the wobble
plate pivot pins 74 that reduces the wobble plate angle and thereby reduces the compressor
displacement.
[0013] Another, more advanced control practice is to use the variable displacement control
valve arrangement generally designated as 130 which is responsive to compressor discharge
pressure as well as suction pressure to automatically control the compressor displacement
or capacity according to demand. In the latter control valve arrangement, as in the
former, there is venting of the crankcase to compressor suction to control the crankcase
pressure and thereby the compressor displacement, and such venting is utilized in
conformity with the present invention to provide adequate lubrication of the compressor's
critical bearing surfaces under all operating conditions and in a simple low-cost
passive manner not requiring an oil pump or other form of pressurized oil supply.
[0014] The preferred embodiment of the'passive lubrication system in conformity with the
present invention is shown incorporated in the advanced control valve arrangement
130, and to understand the improved lubrication system it is helpful to also fully
understand this control valving and its operation. As is shown in Figures 1 and 3,
the control valve arrangement 130 comprises a valve housing 132 which in the preferred
embodiment is formed integrally in the head 22 and has a stepped blind bore 133 having
an open external end 134 through the periphery of the head 22 and a closed internal
end 135 with stepped and progressively smaller bore portions designated 136, 138,
140 and 142. The innermost, largest-diameter bore portion 136 is open through a radial
port 144 and a passage 146 in the head 22 to the suction cavity 114, which is also
in the compressor's head.
[0015] The present passive lubrication system is incorporated in the control valve arrangement
by connecting the adjacent and smaller-diameter bore portion 138 to the interior 129
of the crankcase through lubrication-vent passage means formed by a radial port 148
in the head 22, a port 150 in the valve plate 108, passageways 152 and 154 in the
cylinder block 20, a central axial passage 156 and intersecting radial passage 158
in the drive shaft 26, a central axial passage 160 in one of the drive plate pivot
pins 74, and along the drive plate journal 66 past the wobble plate 50 and through
its thrust needle bearing 70 (see Figures 2 and 3). As will be described in more detail
later, the crankcase vent path thus provided, apart from its crankcase pressure control
function, by such routing ensures lubrication of the wobble plate mechanism's critical
rotating bearing surfaces.
[0016] In the valve itself, the adjacent and smaller-diameter bore portion 140 of the valve
housing is also connected to the interior 129 of the crankcase 24, but in a direct
route through a radial port 162 in'head 22, a port 164 in valve plate 108 and a passage
166 in the cylinder block 20. The adjacent and smallest-diameter bore portion 142
at the closed end 136 of the stepped valve body bore is directly open to the discharge
cavity 124 through a radial port 168 in the head.
[0017] A cup-shaped valve bellows cover 170 having a closed outer end 172 and an open inner
end 174 is sealingly inserted in a fixed position in the open end 134 of the housing's
stepped bore 133 at the large-diameter bore portion 136,with the positioning thereof
determined by a cylindrical flange 176 on the cover engaging a shoulder 178 at the
stepped outer end of the large diameter bore portion 136,as best seen in Figure 3.
Sealing thereof is provided by an O-ring 180 which is received in an internal groove
in the large bore portion 136 and sealingly contacts with a cylindrical land 182 of
the bellows cover 170. Retention of the bellows cover 170 is provided by a snap ring
184 which is received in an interior groove in the bore end 134 and engages the outer
side of the bellows cover flange 176. Thus the bellows cover 170 has its closed end
172 positioned in and closing the open end 134 of the valve housing 132 and its open
end 174 facing inwardly toward the closed end 135 of the valve housing.
[0018] An evacuated bellows 186 is concentrically located within the bellows cover 170 and
is seated against the latter's closed end 172. The bellows 186 has a cup-shaped corrugated
thin-wall metal casing 187 which at its closed and seated end receives a spring seat
member 188. The other end of the bellows casing 187 is sealingly closed by an end
member 190 through which an output rod 191 centrally extends and is sealingly fixed
thereto. The bellows 186 is evacuated so as to expand and contract in response to
pressure changes within a surrounding annular pressure control cell 192 which is formed
by the exterior of the bellows and the interior of the bellows cover 170 and is continuously
open through a radial port 194 in the bellows cover 170 to the suction pressure-communicating
port 144 of the control valve housing 132. A compression coil spring 196 is located
in the bellows and extends between the bellows' two rigid end members 188 and 190.
The thus captured spring 196 normally maintains the bellows in an extended position
producing an outward force on the output rod 191. The output rod 191 is tapered at
its inner end 200 for guided movement in a blind bore 202 in the interior seat member
188 on contraction of the bellows. The exterior and opposite end 206 of the output
rod 191 is pointed and seats in a coupling pocket 208 of an actuating valve pin member
210. The actuating valve pin member 210 is formed at its opposite end with a reduced
valve- needle stem portion 212,and is sealingly slidably supported for reciprocal
movement along an intermediate constant-diameter portion or length 214 thereof in
a central axial bore 216 formed in a stepped spool-shaped cylindrical valve body 218
mounted in the valve housing bore 133 inwardly of the bellows 186.
[0019] The valve body 218 is formed with a cylindrical land 219 which is press-fitted in
the open end 174 of the bellows cover 170, this land extending sufficiently within
the open end of the valve bellows cover to provide an axially adjustable sealed juncture
which is operable to provide calibration of the bellows unit. Moreover, a conical
compression coil spring 220 is concentrically positioned intermediate the bellows
end member 190 and the outer end of the valve body 218 and acts to hold the bellows
186 in seating engagement with the bellows cover 170. With such arrangement, the pointed
exterior end 206 of the bellows forces output rod 191 to automatically align and couple
with the valve pin pocket 208 in the actuating valve pin member 210
7whereby the bellows output rod and the actuating valve pin member are constrained
to move axially in unison.
[0020] The central valve body 218 is sealingly received and positioned in the respective
progressively smaller-diameter bore portions 138, 140 and 142 by progressively smaller-diameter
land portions 221, 222 and 224 formed on the valve body which each have an O-ring
seal 226, 228 and 230 respectively received in an annular groove therein and sealingly
engaging the respective valve body bore portions. The O-ring 226 at the large-diameter
land portion 221 thus seals off the bellows pressure control cell 192,which is open
to suction pressure and also co-operateswith the O-ring seal 228 at the adjacent smaller-diameter
valve body land 222 to seal off an annular chamber 232 at the bore portion 138 which
is indirectly open through the port 148 to the crankcase through the vent passage
provided by the present invention. The O-ring seal 228 also co-operates with the O-ring
seal 230 at the adjacent smaller-diameter valve body land 224 to seal off an annular
chamber 234 extending about the spool valve body at the bore portion 140,which is
directly open to the crankcase through the port 162. The valve body O-ring seal 230
also seals off the closed end 136 of the valve body bore which is directly open at
its smallest-diameter bore portion 142 through the port 168 to the discharge cavity
124.
[0021] The central bore 216 through the mid-portion of the valve body 218 joins at its end
nearest the bellows with a counterbore 236,which in turn joins with a larger counterbore
238 that is open to the bellows pressure control cell 192 and thus to compressor suction.
The counterbore 236 forms an annular crankcase bleed or vent valve passage 240 which
extends about the actuating valve pin member portion 214 and is connected by a pair
of diametrically aligned radial ports 242 to the chamber 232 and thus to the crankcase.
The larger-diameter counterbore 238 is open to the crankcase vent valve passage 240
and slidably supports an enlarged cylindrical head portion 244 formed on the actuating
valve pin member 210 at the bellows end thereof. The enlarged valve pin member head
portion 244 operates to control crankcase venting, and is provided for that purpose
with a tapered step 246 where it joins the long cylindrical pin portion 214. The tapered
step 246 provides a valve face which is engageable with a conical valve seat 248 forming
the step between the valve body counterbores 236 and 238 to close the crankcase vent
valve passage 240, as shown in Figure 4 and described in more detail later. Alternatively,
the valve face 246 is movable off the valve seat 248 to first open the crankcase vent
valve passage 240 to the counterbore 238, and then upon slight further movement the
valve head 244 uncovers an annular groove 249 in the counterbore 238. The groove 249
is open to a pair of longitudinally extending passages 250 also in the counterbore
238, which upon such valve movement are then effective to connect the crankcase vent
valve passage 240 to the bellows pressure control cell 192 and thus to the compressor
suction cavity 114.
[0022] The central bore 216 in the valve body 218 joins at its opposite end with a larger-diameter
valve body bore 252 which is closed at one end by a tapered step 253 extending from
the actuator valve pin member portion 214 and receives at its other end a crankcase
charge valve body member 254. The crankcase charge valve body member 254 is press-fitted
in the valve body bore 252 to form on one side thereof and within the valve body a
cavity 256 which extends about the actuator valve pin member portion 214 and is open
through a radial port 258 in the valve body to the outwardly located chamber 234 and
thus to the crankcase. The crankcase charge valve body member 254 also co-operates
with the small-diameter valve body portion 224 and its O-ring seal 230 to form with
the closed end 135 of the valve housing bore a chamber 260 which is open through the
radial port 168 in the valve housing to the compressor discharge cavity 124.
[0023] The crankcase charge valve body member 254 is formed with a bell-shaped valve cavity
262 which is exposed through an open end 264 to the discharge pressure-connected chamber
260 and is openable at the other end to a central crankcase charge valve port 266
that receives the smaller-diameter stem portion 212 of the actuating valve pin member
210 and opens to the chamber 256 communicating with the crankcase. Mounted in the
crankcase charge valve body member 254 in the cavity 262 is crankcase charge valving
comprising a large ball segment 268 and a small ball segment 270 which are welded
together and are biased by a conical coil compression spring 272 so that the large
ball segment 268 is held against the end of actuating valve pin member stem portion
212 and normally seats on the complementary-shaped portion of the bell-shaped cavity
262 to close the crankcase charge valve port 266. The spring 272 is seated at its
opposite and enlarged end on a spun-over annular edge 274 of the valve body member
254 which defines the opening 264 to the valve cavity, there being mounted thereover
a screen 275 to filter out foreign matter. The conical spring's smaller end has a
slightly smaller diameter than the smaller ball segment 270,allowing this spring end
to be snap-fastened for capture between the large and small ball segments. This facilitates
the universal movement of the unitary ball valve element 268, 270 with respect to
the spring 272 so that the large ball valve element 268 will mate with its valve seat
sufficiently to ensure their sealing relation when the valve is in its closed position
shown in Figure 3,and so that the ball valve element 268 will remain in alignment
during valve opening movement to its full open position shown in Figure 4,in which
condition the refrigerant gas at discharge pressure is allowed to flow through the
crankcase charge valve port past the actuating valve pin member stem portion 212 to
the crankcase.
[0024] In addition to the spring biasing force acting to close the valve element 268 on
the crankcase charge valve port 266 and also simultaneously open the crankcase vent
valve port 240 by acting through the valve elements 268, 270 on the actuating valve
pin member 210 to effect the open position of its vent valve end 244, there is effected
a gas discharge pressure bias achieved by the discharge pressure in cavity 260 acting
on the unbalanced upstream side of the movable crankcase charge valve segments 268,
270. This discharge:pressure bias at the crankcase charging end of the control valve
arrangement is used to depress the compressor's displacement control point with increasing
discharge pressure,in addition to the discharge pressure being made available through
the opening of the crankcase charge valve port 266 by the controlling charge valve
elements 268, 270 to charge the crankcase to achieve decreased compressor displacement
as described in more detail later.
[0025] The large ball valve segment 268 is caused to move off its valve seat and open the
crankcase charge valve port 266 against the force of spring 272 and the variable discharge
pressure bias by expansion of the suction pressure and spring-biased bellows 186 acting
through the actuating valve pin member 210,which at the same time acts at its valve
head 244 to close the crankcase bleed valve port 240. On the other hand, these crankcase
charge and crankcase vent valve operations are reversed by contraction of the suction
pressure biased bellows 186,assisted by the discharge pressure bias at the crankcase
charge valve 268.
[0026] Describing now the operation of the variable displacement compressor control valve
arrangement 130 in the system, gaseous refrigerant leaving the accumulator 18 at low
pressure enters the compressor's suction cavity 114 and is discharged to the compressor's
discharge cavity 124 and thence to the condenser 12 at a certain rate dependent on
the compressor's wobble plate angle. At the same time, the gaseous refrigerant at
suction pressure is transmitted at the compressor to the bellows cell 192 to act on
the evacuated bellows 186, which tends to expand in response to a decrease in the
suction pressure thus acting thereon to provide a force on the bellows output rod
191 which urges movement of the actuating valve pin member 210 toward the position
shown in Figure 4 closing the crankcase vent valve port 240 and simultaneously opening
the crankcase charge valve port 266. On the other hand, the gaseous refrigerant discharge
pressure at the compressor is at the same time transmitted to the valve chamber 260
to act on the ball valve arrangement 268, 270 in opposition to bellows expansion to
urge closing of the crankcase charge valve port 266 and simultaneous opening of the
crankcase vent valve port 240 as shown in Figure 3. These variable pressure biases
are in addition to the spring biases which act to normally condition the control valve
arrangement 130 so as to close the crankcase charge valve port 266 and simultaneously
open the crankcase vent valve port 240,to thereby normally effect maximum compressor
displacement by establishing zero crankcase-suction pressure differential. The objective
is to match the compressor displacement with the air conditioning demand under all
conditions so that the evaporator 16 is kept just above the freezing temperature (pressure)
without cycling the compressor on and off with the clutch 36,and with the optimum
being to maintain as cold an evaporator as can be achieved at higher ambients without
evaporator freeze,and at lower ambients as high an evaporator temperature as can be
maintained while still supplying some de-humidification. To this end, the control
point for the control valve arrangement 130 determining displacement change is selected
so that when the air conditioning capacity demand is high, the suction pressure at
the compressor after the pressure drop from the evaporator 16 will be above the control
point (e.g. 170-210 k
pal. The control valve arrangement 130 is calibrated at assembly at the bellows 186
and with the spring biases so that the then existing discharge-suction pressure differential
acting on the control valve arrangement is sufficiently high to maintain same in the
condition shown in Figure 3,closing the crankcase charge valve port 266 and opening
the crankcase vent valve port 240. The control valve arrangement 130 will then maintain
a bleed or vent from the crankcase to suction while simultaneously closing off discharge
pressure thereto so that no crankcase-suction pressure differential is developed,and
as a result the wobble plate 50 will remain in its maximum angle position shown in
solid line in Figure 1 to provide maximum compressor displacement. Then when the air
conditioning capacity demand reduces and the suction pressure reaches the control
point, the resulting change in the discharge-suction pressure differential acting
on the control valve arrangement 130 will condition its valving to then open the crankcase
charge valve port 266 and simultaneously close the crankcase bleed port 240 and thereby
elevate the crankcase-suction pressure differential. The angle of the wobble plate
50 is controlled by a force balance on the pistons 44,so only a slight elevation (e.g.
40-100 kPa) of the crankcase-suction pressure is effective to create a net force on
the pistons that results in a moment about the wobble plate pivot axis that reduces
the wobble plate angle and thereby the compressor displacement. Moreover, in that
the control valve bellows 186 in addition to being acted on by the suction control
pressure has to also overcome discharge pressure in expanding to elevate the crankcase-suction
pressure differential to reduce compressor displacement, the displacement change control
point is thus depressed with increasing discharge pressure (higher ambients) In that
the refrigerant flow rate, and in turn suction line pressure drop, increases with
increasing discharge pressure (higher ambients),the control valve will depress the
control point proportionally to the discharge pressure and likewise suction line pressure
drop. This compressor displacement compensating feature permits controlling at the
compressor suction while maintaining a nearly constant evaporator pressure (temperature)
above freezing which has been found to result in substantially better high load performance
and reduced power consumption at low
[0027] In the above type of compressor as in some other reciprocating piston-type compressors
and engines with crankcase-to-suction venting but without the lubrication-venting
arrangement of the present invention, most if not all the oil that is added to the
crankcase for lubrication will become entrained in the gas therein and be discharged
from the cylinders because of the venting to suction. On the other hand, some of the
oil that is discharged is returned to the crankcase via the piston rings scraping
the cylinder walls and/or the operating pressure differential blowing the.oil past
the piston rings. In conformity with the present invention, the lubrication-vent passage
means formed by the ports and passages 148, 150, 152, 154, 156, 158 and 160 route
the venting of the crankcase 24 to the compressor's suction cavity 114 by way of the
rotating bearing surfaces of the wobble plate 50, i.e. those at the thrust needle
bearing 70 and at the journal 66 which supports the wobble plate at its inner diameter
64. The arrows shown in Figures 1 and 2 depict the circulation of the refrigerant
within the compressor wherein the entrained oil is also made available to lubricate
the drive shaft's two radial needle bearings 28 and 30 and the rubbing or sliding
surfaces of the variable-angle wobble plate mechanism in the crankcase. The venting
path thus provided forces the pressurized gaseous refrigerant with the oil entrained
therein to flow radially inwardly by way of the wobble plate's anti-friction bearing,
i.e. the thrust needle bearing 70, and also along or past the drive plate journal
66 at the inner diameter 64 of the wobble plate 50,to reach the vent passage 160 to
the compressor's suction cavity 114 in the wobble plate pivot at the one pivot pin,
thus ensuring lubrication of these critical rotating bearing surfaces. Moreover, the
entrained oil is caused to separate by centrifugal action at these rotating bearing
surfaces and is returned to the crankcase for further compressor lubrication usage.
As a result, the amount of oil actually delivered with such venting to the compressor
suction cavity and available for discharge from the compressor at the discharge cavity
to the refrigerant circuit is substantially reduced,so that some amount of the oil
returned to the crankcase by the centrifugal action is retained therein and always
available for further lubrication of the compressor mechanism, and particularly its
critical bearing surfaces. This ensures that under all compressor operating conditions
some amount of oil will be retained in the crankcase for lubrication of the mechanism's
critical bearing surfaces. Further, the amount of oil permitted to circulate in the
refrigeration system external to the compressor is minimized,which results in a substantial
improvement in air conditioning performance.