The present invention relates to phasers for varying the phase of valving with respect to a crankshaft in an internal combustion engine; more particularly, to such a phaser employing a spring for biasing the rotational position of a phaser rotor with respect to an associated phaser stator through at least a portion of the rotor range of authority; and most particularly, to such a phaser wherein a pre-loaded bias spring is active through only a portion of the range of authority of rotor rotation.
Camshaft phasers for varying the timing of combustion valves in an internal combustion engine transmit crankshaft torque to the engine camshaft, allowing varied timing of the camshaft relative to the crankshaft position. Traditionally, intake phasers have authority to only advance this timing from their locked position. When insufficient oil pressure is available for controlled phasing, cam torque and the available oil pressure are used to drive the rotor to the fully retarded position where a lock pin in the rotor aligns with a seat in the stator. As engine speed decreases, oil pressure drops below the retraction pressure for the lock pin and the pin's bias spring urges the pin to move into engagement with its seat, preventing undesired phase angle changes until sufficient oil pressure is again available.
Phasers requiring an intermediate lock pin position between full rotor advance and full rotor retard cannot rely on the contract between the rotor and stator to realign the lock pin to its seat. Therefore, when oil pressure is low, some form of assistance is needed to advance the rotor away from full retard to align the lock pin to the seat at the intermediate rotor position. If the assistance were torque from a simple spring-arm system, the bias spring would cause the phaser to advance the rotor through the entire range of rotor authority and past the point where the lock pin aligns with its seat when resistive torque through the phaser system from the camshaft was less than the applied spring torque.
What is needed in the art is an improved bias system for a modern phaser having a rotor lock position intermediate in the rotor range of authority wherein the rotor is biased toward the lock position from all retard positions but is not biased toward the lock position from any advance position.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide an improved phaser bias system.
Briefly described, the invention uses an applied torque between a phaser cover plate, mounted to the stator/sprocket, and phaser rotor to assist in aligning a lock pin to a seat in the stator at an intermediate position in the rotor range of authority. During assembly of the phaser, the bias spring is captured and guided by a spring retainer that is fitted or formed into the cover. The spring retainer allows the bias spring to be installed into the cover in its pre-load position and to be conveniently retained therein as both the grounded and active legs are captured in separate slot features in the spring retainer. This sub-assembly (cover, retainer, bias spring) is then readily attached to the remaining phaser components to complete the full assembly.
A pocket within the rotor receives the active leg of the bias spring extending from the spring retainer. The rotor pocket preferably has a tapered bottom face (ramp) that lifts the active leg of the bias spring off the axial slot wall in the spring retainer and locates the active leg against the wall of the rotor pocket when the rotor moves from the locked position in a retarding direction. Lifting the active tang of the bias spring removes any friction between the bias spring and the retainer slot wall that would occur as the rotor moves in a retarded direction from its intermediate locked position.
As the rotor moves in an advancing direction and the phase angle approaches the angle where locking would occur, the bias spring's rotation stops when the active tang contacts the end of the spring retainer slot. Contact between the active tang of the bias spring and the end of the slot in the spring retainer removes spring torque that otherwise would bias further advancement of the rotor. This permits the rotor to self-align to its locking position when oil pressure is removed during engine shut down or stall.
Further rotor motion in an advancing direction causes the tapered face in the bottom of the pocket in the rotor to lose contact with the bias spring tang, removing any axial contact between the bias spring active leg and the bottom face of the pocket in the rotor, and therefore prevents friction that otherwise would occur between the bias spring active tang and the rotor during rotor advance.
Without the spring retainer slot wall capturing the active tang of the bias spring, the spring would tip from axial alignment within the phaser and would continue to make contact with the bottom of the pocket in the rotor, creating frictional drag on the rotor as the rotor advances from the locking position.
The features of the invention therefore serve two purposes: easing phaser assembly, thus reducing cost and improving safety; and eliminating unwanted friction between the bias spring and rotor, thus improving performance and durability.
The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. The exemplification set out herein illustrates one preferred embodiment of the invention, in one form, and such exemplification is not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
Referring to
During assembly of phaser 10, bias spring 34 is captured and guided by spring retainer 32 that is press fit or formed into cover plate 28 with first slot 40 aligned with notch 50. Referring to
Subassembly 52 is then attached by binder screws 30 to the remaining phaser components to complete the full phaser assembly 10. An annular well 54 in rotor 20 receives the portion of subassembly 52 extending beyond cover plate 28. A pocket 56 within the rotor and outboard of well 54 receives active tang 38 and preferably has a tapered bottom face defining a ramp 58. Ramp 58 extends angularly across the lower wall 60 of second slot 42 and receives active tang 38 as spring 34 is torsionally actuated by rotation of rotor 20.
In operation, when the rotor moves in a retarding direction (
As rotor 20 moves in an advancing direction from a retard position and approaches the phase angle at which locking can occur (
Further motion of rotor 20 past the locking position in an advancing direction toward a full advanced authority position (
Without slot wall 64 capturing active tang 38, the spring would tip from axial alignment within the phaser and would continue to make contact with bottom face 66 as the rotor advances from the intermediate position.
The present invention has been described above in terms of a novel camshaft phaser being applied to an intake valve camshaft and biasing the rotor in the advance direction from retard positions. However, those of ordinary skill in the phaser art will realize that the disclosed invention is not so limited and may be applied to exhaust valve camshafts as well as to biasing the rotor in the retard direction from advanced positions as may be desired.
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.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090069097 A1 | Mar 2009 | US |