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This truck uses a newly
developed pneumatic valve
in its transmission to replace
electrical switches.
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A repeated glitch in the field performance of its 18-speed electropneumatic transmission systems was causing quality control and product warranty issues for Transmissiones TSP (Transmissions TSP), Quertaro, Mexico. Electrical switches used to indicate the position of steel bars that move gears and send appropriate signal commands had a short service life and triggered low transmission response. Parker Hannifin Corp.’s technical specialists discovered the problem was low electrical shielding and high stress on the steel bars, which allowed dust and grease to penetrate the switch chamber’s body casing.
To increase sales and reduce warranty hassles, an alternative system was needed for the transmission, which would be actuated by pneumatic valves instead of electrical switches.
Pinning down the problem
This particular transmission,
produced by TSP Transmissions,
has s ix manual speed changes
controlled by a steel handle along
with two double-effect pneumatic
pistons controlled by electro-valves. These valves were driven
by three electrical switches in the
shift knob with one of the positions
sited in neutral. The electrical
switches routinely failed as a
result of low electrical protection
level s and high plunger s t res s .
Switches tended to flame in lowtemperatures
due to false contact
between internal plates. The problem
resided in the transmission
housing.
David Jurez, TSP Transmissions developer engineer, contacted his sales representative, Guillermo Rodrguez, Parker Motion Control Mxico, to help relieve the problem. Parker proposed eliminating the electrical switch entirely. They first provided TSP with a pneumatic valve for initial testing purposes and, as an alternative, designed a totally new pneumatic system based on an existing product unrelated to the transportation market.
“It's a dirty environment,” Jurez commented, “with grease, water, and dust penetrating internal mechanisms and wreaking havoc. It needed to operate in the 130° C temperature range at half a million cycles.”
The ultimate mechanism that resolved the performance issues for TSP Transmissions was a totally new pneumatic sensory valve tailored to perform in very hostile operating environments.
Tried, tested, and
true
Rigorous tests conducted
in engineering
labs located i n
Mexico and Australia
demonstrated that
dust and grease entering
the switch housing
unit were the culprit.
Parker Motion & Control
Mxico engineers,
interfacing with Parker
Pneumat ic Sweden,
then developed the
new pneumatic sensing
valve, based on lab
results from Parker’s
Australian Division, to replace the electrical
switches.
The valve system is a 3-way, 2-position unit designed to replace three electrical switches. Used as a pair, the pneumatic sensing valves detect steelbar position inside the transmission housing. The position combination of these valves sends pneumatic signals to slave valves that actuate splitter/ range cylinders in tandem with shift/ speed change knob positions. Parker also supplied slave valves for the TSP Transmissions system.
Under high-temperature test conditions, the newly-engineered pneumatic valve demonstrated rapid response times, easy speed/gear changes, and increased vehicle control while remaining wholly robust in hazardous operating environments. It also enhanced endurance levels and radically improved transmission field performance. These characteristics led to improved driver control and confidence along with dramatically reduced product warranty claims. As an added bonus, transmission production costs were reduced by 7%.
The Parker pneumatic sensing valve proved to be highly stress-resistant, even while functioning at peak performance. Transmission service requirements were also reduced due to easy valve assembly/disassembly. According to Jurez, the defining valve performance characteristic is its ability to function flawlessly under extremely hostile operating conditions.
“We were able to eliminate the repeated failures of the previous electrical components with the new pneumatic system,” Jurez continued, “and in the process, got measurable performance improvements in transmission shifting at a significant production cost reduction.”
For more informat ion, contact Guillermo Rodriguz, automation product manager, Parker Hannifin Mexico, at grodriguez@parker.com, or Paxton Augustine, at Parker’s Transportation Pneumatic Div. at paugustine@parker.com or call (269) 629-5000.























