The present invention relates to valve lifters for internal combustion engines; more particularly, to such valve lifters for variably deactivating valves in an internal combustion engine; and most particularly, to a deactivation valve lifter having means for orienting and minimizing rotation of a pin housing within a lifter body to prevent draining of oil from a plunger chamber during periods of engine shutdown.
It is well known that overall fuel efficiency in a multiple-cylinder internal combustion engine can be increased by selective deactivation of one or more of the engine valves under certain engine load conditions. A known approach to providing selective deactivation is to equip the hydraulic lifters for those valves with means whereby the lifters may be rendered incapable of transferring the cyclic motion of engine cams into reciprocal motion of the associated pushrods. Typically, a deactivation lifter includes, in addition to the conventional hydraulic lash elimination means, concentric inner and outer portions which are mechanically responsive to the pushrod and to the cam lobe, respectively, and which may be selectively latched and unlatched to each other, typically by the selective engagement of pressurized engine oil.
US Patent No. U.S. Pat. No. 6,164,255, issued Dec. 26, 2000 to Maas et al., discloses a deactivation hydraulic valve lifter comprising an outer section which encloses an inner section that is axially movable, the outer section having a pot-shaped configuration and a bottom which comprises an end for cam contact and separates the inner section from a cam whereby, upon coupling of the sections by a coupling means, a high lift of a gas exchange valve is effected, and upon uncoupling of the sections, a zero lift. The disclosed coupling means is a single round pin disposed in a transverse bore in the inner section and biased outwards by a coil spring to engage a mating round bore in the outer section, whereby the two sections may be locked together. The bore in the outer section is matable with an oil gallery in the engine block, whereby pressurized oil may be introduced against the head of the locking pin to urge the pin hydraulically into retraction within the inner section to uncouple the inner and outer sections and thereby deactivate the associated engine valve.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,196,175 B1, issued Mar. 6, 2001 to Church et al. discloses a mechanism similar to that disclosed by Maas et al. A single locking pin is selectively extendable from the pin housing into a round locking bore in the lifter body. In addition, an alignment member extends from the pin housing opposite the locking bore through a slot in the lifter body and engages an axially extending slot in the engine block to prevent rotation of the pin housing relative to the lifter body, thus maintaining alignment of the locking pin with the locking bore.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,513,470 B1, issued Feb. 4, 2003 to Hendriksma et al., discloses an improved mechanism useful in a valve deactivating hydraulic lifter. The mechanism includes a pair of opposed locking pins disposed in a transverse bore in the inner section to engage the outer section in two separate locations 180° apart. Further, the outer section single round bore of Maas et al. and Church et al. is replaced by an annular groove formed in the inner wall of the outer section and defining an annular locking surface such that all rotational alignment requirements are removed, the pins being engageable into the groove at all rotational positions of the inner section within the outer section. The groove communicates, similarly to the round bore in Haas et al., with an oil gallery in the engine block for actuation and deactuation of the locking pins. Since the lifter in Hendriksma, et al. uses two locking pins instead of one, as disclosed in Maas, et al. and Church et al, the force applied through the lifter to open the valve is centralized advantageously along the centerline of the lifter thereby improving the smoothness of operation of the locking feature. Further, the pins are flattened in the portion which engages the locking surface to distribute the load over a broad area of the locking surface.
Hendriksma et al. discloses that complete rotational freedom of the pin housing within the lifter body is an advantage in that wear is distributed over time along the entire length of the annular locking surface. However, such total freedom can also be disadvantageous. When the lifter is used in an application such as a V-style or slant engine where the lifter body can be tipped as much as 45° from vertical, the rotational orientation of the pin housing within the lifter body at the time of engine shutdown can be very important. If the oil supply port through the pin housing and the oil supply port in the plunger element are both on the underside of the pin housing when it comes to rest, oil within the plunger element can leak therefrom via tolerances between the pin housing and the lifter body. Then, when the engine is restarted, air is drawn into the high pressure chamber of the lash adjuster causing noisy engine operation for a period of time after the engine is restarted, before the plunger element can be refilled by engine oil. Such noisy operation is obviously highly undesirable and can lead to premature wear of engine components.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide a deactivation lifter having means for preventing draining of oil from the lifter during periods of engine shutdown.
Briefly described, a valve deactivation lifter in accordance with the invention includes a clocking mechanism for limiting relative rotation between the pin housing and the lifter body. The lifter body is prevented from rotation within the engine block, as is known in the prior art, to maintain alignment of the roller follower with the cam lobe. For use in a V-style or slant engine installation, the pin housing is oriented, and relative rotation between the pin housing and the lifter body is limited, such that the oil feed port in the pin housing is never on the underside of the pin housing. Thus, oil within the plunger element cannot leak therefrom via the pin housing oil feed port during periods of engine shutdown. Rotation may be limited by any of several means. In a first embodiment, a ball is disposed in a dimple in the outer wall of the pin housing and extends into a longitudinal groove in the inner wall of the lifter body, thus permitting unrestricted relative axial motion during deactivation mode of the lifter but limiting relative rotation. The dimple and ball may be installed at any convenient axial location of the pin housing and lifter body. In a second embodiment, a flat is provided on the pin housing, and an engagement means is installed through a port in the lifter body to engage the flat and thus prevent rotation of the pin housing. Such means may include at least a pin and/or a clip.
The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a is an elevational cross-sectional view of the prior art lifter shown in
b is an elevational cross-sectional view similar to that shown in
The benefits of a deactivation hydraulic valve lifter improved in accordance with the invention may be better appreciated by first considering the features of a prior art deactivating lifter.
Referring to
Pin housing 18 has a transverse bore 52 slidably receivable of two opposed locking pins 54 separated by a pin-locking spring 56 disposed in compression therebetween. First axial bore 20 in lifter body 12 is provided with a circumferential groove 58 for receiving the outer ends of locking pins 54, thrust outwards by spring 56 when pins 54 are axially aligned with groove 58. Groove 58 includes an axial surface 60 defining a locking surface for receiving an axial face 62 on pins 54. Groove 58 further defines a reservoir for providing high pressure oil against the outer ends of locking pins 54 to overcome spring 56 and retract the locking pins into bore 52, thereby unlocking the pin housing from the lifter body to deactivate the lifter. Groove 58 is in communication via at least one port 64 with an oil gallery 66 in engine 68, which in turn is supplied with high pressure oil by an engine control module (not shown) under predetermined engine parameters in which deactivation of valves is desired.
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While the most desirable orientation of pin housing 18, shown in
While the invention has been described by reference to various specific embodiments, it should be understood that numerous changes may be made within the spirit and scope of the inventive concepts described. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the described embodiments, but will have full scope defined by the language of the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/689,215, which was filed on Oct. 10, 2003.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10689215 | Oct 2003 | US |
Child | 11023332 | Dec 2004 | US |