The invention relates to an assembly for a valve drive of an internal combustion engine, having a hydraulic supporting element and a drag lever which is connected to said hydraulic supporting element via a bracket and is seated at one end via a spherical cap in its underside on a spherical head of a pressure piston of the supporting element, which pressure piston runs via its outer shell in a bore of a cup-like housing of the supporting element, which bracket flanks the spherical cap longitudinally with holding strips, the inner sides of which run in a guide zone on the outer shell of the pressure piston, the housing having a duct for hydraulic medium, which hydraulic medium can he guided via a channel between the housing and the pressure piston to at least one passage in the pressure piston to a storage space in said pressure piston.
With respect to the prior art, reference is made to documents DE 196 17 523 C2 (bracket made from longitudinally extending sheet metal strip), DE 102 49 560 A1 (bracket made from transversely extending sheet metal strip) and U.S. Pat. No. 6,543,402 B2 (wire bracket). The pressure piston of the hydraulic supporting element of the respective assembly runs in its housing in a freely rotationally movable manner. A passage in the corresponding pressure piston therefore lies during operation at any desired rotational position with respect to the housing and ultimately also longitudinally in the region of tensile or compressive stresses which are introduced via the head of the pressure piston during cam loading of the resting drag lever. In the section of the corresponding passage, the forces which are introduced can lead to stress peaks which destroy components. In order to counteract the former, the elements optionally have to have thicker dimensions or the maximum rotational speed to be used is to be reduced.
Moreover, in the case of an installation of a respective assembly in a cylinder head with a receptacle for the supporting element, which receptacle extends obliquely with respect to the perpendicular, it occurs that, in the unfavorable case of the latter (passage “lying at the bottom”), the storage space of said supporting element is undesirably emptied of hydraulic medium, with the result that air may be sucked into a high pressure space of the hydraulic play compensation apparatus.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a component of the type mentioned in the introduction, in which component the disadvantages indicated are eliminated.
According to the invention, this object is achieved in that the guide zone on the pressure piston is at the same time configured as an anti-rotation safeguard for said pressure piston, the pressure piston being installed in a rotationally oriented manner in a defined way with respect to the drag lever.
A component is therefore present, in which the disadvantages which are cited in the introduction are no longer to he expected. The duct in the pressure piston is therefore “compulsorily” positioned outside a region of stress peaks during operation and lies in the region of a bevel which is free of stress, as it were. A destruction of components as a result of undesirable stress peaks in the duct region is no longer to be expected.
Inter alia, two flats or depressions which lie diametrically opposite one another and the connecting line of which extends orthogonally with respect to the lever longitudinal axis are considered as guide zone for inner sides of the holding strip of the respective bracket. According to one expedient concrete embodiment of the invention, the flats/depressions can be punched, for example.
During mounting of the assembly, accordingly, the pressure piston of the supporting element has to be mounted/clipped in a “directed” manner with its guide zone behind the holding strips of the bracket, with the result that the corresponding passage lies laterally in the virtually stress-free region. For the “oblique installation variant,” the passage has to assume a geodetically high position during installation. The housing preferably remains rotationally movable with respect to the pressure piston, but can also he rotationally fixed with respect to the latter.
For example, a component made from sheet metal, the end projections of which extend either longitudinally or transversely, is considered as bracket. As an alternative, the bracket with its holding strips can also consist of wire. What is important in this context is a free pivoting movability of the drag lever on the head of the supporting element, which movability is not impaired by the bracket.
Simple measures for feeding the hydraulic medium to the storage space in the pressure piston are the subject matter of a further subclaim. According to said subclaim, starting from at least one duct in the housing, an annular groove tap in the region of an interface between the pressure piston and the housing is preferably considered. The at least one duct and the at least one passage are preferably produced as bores, windows or the like also being considered.
An assembly 1 for a valve drive of an internal combustion engine is shown. it is formed from a hydraulic supporting element 2 and a drag lever 4 which is connected to said supporting element 2 via a bracket 3. Said drag lever 4 is seated at one end 5 via a spherical cap 6 which is situated in its underside 7 on a spherical head 8 of a pressure piston 9 of the supporting element 2. The pressure piston 9 runs via its outer shell 10 in a bore 11 of a cup-like housing 12 of the supporting element 2. At the other end 16, the drag lever 4 has a rest 32 on the underside 7 for a stem of a as exchange valve.
The housing 12 has a duct 17 (bore) for hydraulic medium which can be guided via a channel 18 (annular groove tap) between the housing 12 and the pressure piston 9 to the passage 19 (bore) in the pressure piston 9 and from there to a storage space 20 in said pressure piston 9.
The abovementioned bracket 3 flanks the spherical cap 6 longitudinally with two holding strips 13. Inner sides 14 run in a guide zone 15 on the outer shell 10 of the pressure piston 9. The guide zone 15 consists of two flats 21 which lie transversely opposite one another in the vicinity of the head on the outer shell 10 of the pressure piston 9. The flats 21 have two shoulders 30 which lie opposite one another in the axial direction.
Via the engagement of the holding strips 13 into the guide zone 15, the pressure piston 9 is not only connected in an articulated manner to the drag lever 4 in a simple way, but rather is also secured rotationally with respect to the drag lever 4.
The passage 19 therefore, lies “compulsorily” in the neutral region of the pressure piston 9, which region is stress-free, as it were. A risk of fracture after long term loading during operation is eliminated. Components, which are configured with thinner walls than previously, can optionally be used.
The bracket 3 extends longitudinally with its holding strips 13 on the underside 7 of the drag lever 4. An end projection 23 of the bracket 3 is bent at one end 5 around an end face 24 of the drag lever 4. A further end projection 25 extends around a transverse bar 26 of a cutout 27 of a transverse strut 28 of the drag lever 4 of U-shaped cross section here. A cam roller 31 is accommodated within the cutout 27, a sliding tap also being conceivable and provided.
1) Assembly
2) Supporting Element
3) Bracket
4) Drag Lever
5) One End
6) Spherical Cap
7) Underside
8) Head
9) Pressure Piston
10) Outer Shell
11) Bore
12) Housing
13) Holding Strip
14) Inner Sides
15) Guide Zone
16) Other End
17) Duct
18) Channel
19) Passage
20) Storage Space
21) Flat
22) Annular Groove
23) End Projection
24) End Face
25) End Projection
26) Transverse Bar
27) Cutout
28) Transverse Strut
29) Longitudinal Wall
30) Shoulder
31) Cam Roller
32) Rest
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2009 040 608.5 | Sep 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP10/61012 | 7/29/2010 | WO | 00 | 3/8/2012 |