This application is a 371 of PCT/EP2010/061011 files Jul. 29, 2010, which in turn claims the priority of DE 10 2009 040 6073 filed Sep. 8, 2009. The priority of both applications is hereby claimed and both applications are incorporated by reference herein.
The invention relates to an assembly for a valve train of an internal combustion engine.
The prior art is an assembly, in the supporting element of which the pressure piston is seated in the housing such that it can move freely rotationally. A passage of the pressure piston for hydraulic medium therefore lies at any desired rotational position with respect to the housing during operation and ultimately also longitudinally in the region of tensile or compressive stresses which are introduced via the head of the pressure piston in the case of earn loading of the resting drag lever. In the section of the corresponding passage, the introduced forces 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 the 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 in 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,
Broadly, the present invention relates to an assembly for a valve train of an internal combustion engine, which has a hydraulic supporting element and a drag lever that is seated at one end, via a bearing face which is situated in its underside, on a complementary end face of a pressure piston of the supporting element. The pressure piston runs via its outer shell in a bore of a cup-shaped housing of the supporting element. The housing has a duct for hydraulic medium which can be 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 the latter.
According to the invention, in the section of a direct contact region between the bearing face of the drag lever and the end face of the pressure piston, an anti-rotation safeguard is produced for the pressure piston with respect to the drag lever, and the pressure piston is installed in a manner which is rotationally oriented 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 be expected. The duct in the pressure piston is “compulsorily” positioned outside a region of stress peaks during operation, is therefore positioned laterally and lies in the region of a fiber 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. The anti-rotation safeguard is produced merely by an artful design of the contact region between the drag lever and a head of the pressure piston of the supporting element. Further components can be dispensed with.
It is expedient to hold the housing such that it is rotationally movable with respect to the pressure piston and to produce an annular groove for a hydraulic medium tap on its outer shell. The housing can also optionally be present in a form which is secured against rotation with respect to the pressure piston. Should the annular groove be dispensed with, the receiving hole in the cylinder head optionally has to have an annular groove or an aligned installation has to take place.
It is proposed to configure said contact region with a geometry which differs from a hemisphere (gothic profiles, etc, included) and has up to now been realized in the prior art. The degree of freedom in the joint region is therefore reduced by 1, in order to prevent a rotational movement about its longitudinal axis under the drag lever of the pressure piston which is mounted in an oriented manner.
Examples for geometries in the contact region are, as proposed, cylinder or barrel sections which are simple to manufacture (also sections which are similar to cylinders or barrels) or cylinder sections with end-side, quadrant and cap-like projections.
The invention is valid even in the case of an oblique installation of the supporting element into a respective guide hole of the cylinder head. Here, the passage in the pressure piston can be positioned at a geodetically high point via the anti-rotation safeguard in the contact region.
In order to counteract undesirable wear in the contact region, a wear protection layer can be applied separately to at least one of the contact partners. A special thermal treatment can optionally also be considered.
During mounting of the assembly, ultimately merely the pressure piston of the supporting element has to be mounted in an “aligned” manner with respect to the drag lever.
Simple measures for guiding 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 is shown for a valve train of an internal combustion engine. Said assembly 1 is formed from a hydraulic supporting element 2 and a drag lever 4. The former is disposed in a guide hole 30 in a cylinder head 31 (shown schematically in
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.
A direct contact region 3 between the bearing face 6 under the drag lever 4 and the end face 8 (head) of the pressure piston 9 of the supporting element 2 acts as anti-rotation safeguard 13 for the pressure piston 9 with respect to the drag lever 4. The degree of freedom in the joint region is therefore reduced.
As disclosed in the drawing (
According to
According to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2009 040 607 | Sep 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2010/061011 | 7/29/2010 | WO | 00 | 3/8/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/029666 | 3/17/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5894822 | Speil | Apr 1999 | A |
6314927 | Schnell | Nov 2001 | B1 |
7159551 | Cecur et al. | Jan 2007 | B2 |
7261075 | Hofmann | Aug 2007 | B2 |
20050103300 | Spath et al. | May 2005 | A1 |
20070209623 | Klotz | Sep 2007 | A1 |
20090031977 | Bugescu et al. | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20090145388 | Hiramatsu | Jun 2009 | A1 |
20120042843 | Kubota et al. | Feb 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
23 50 520 | Apr 1975 | DE |
10 2005 010 750 | Sep 2006 | DE |
WO 2009072481 | Jun 2009 | WO |
Entry |
---|
American Heritage Dictionary, 2000. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120167850 A1 | Jul 2012 | US |