This invention relates to combustion engine carburetors and more particularly to a carburetor having an acceleration fuel pump without external hoses.
In a conventional prior art carburetor 20 as best illustrated in
During cold engine starts, a rich mixture of fuel-and-air is needed. To produce the rich mixture, the throttle valve is substantially open exposing the fuel feed tube or nozzle to the vacuum of the cranking engine, and the choke valve 26 is generally closed to reduce air flow. When the engine is idling at operating temperature, the throttle valve is substantially closed (typically slightly open or closed with a notch or hole therein permitting sufficient mixture flow to support engine idling or low load operation) producing a high vacuum condition downstream of the throttle valve and the choke valve is open. The closed throttle valve reduces air flow through the venturi which reduces liquid fuel flow emitted from the fuel feed tube. The resulting low fuel-and-air mixture flow rate coincides with the needs of the engine running at idle, or low speed or low load. During steady, high speed and full load engine operation, the throttle and choke valves are generally wide open causing a high air flow rate through the venturi which produces a high vacuum for emitting a commensurate amount of fuel through the main fuel feed tube.
For smooth engine acceleration from idle, however, and generally as the throttle valve is opening, the engine requires a richer mixture of fuel-and-air than at hot idle or high speed light load. A diaphragm-type acceleration pump 30 supplies this additional amount of fuel by sensing vacuum pressure changes downstream of the throttle valve. When the engine is idling and the throttle valve is substantially closed, the vacuum pressure downstream of the substantially closed throttle valve is generally high. For example, in a typical four cycle engine application the vacuum can be about ten inches of mercury. An external conduit or hose 32 of the pump 30 communicates this vacuum with a vacuum chamber defined in part by the diaphragm of the pump. When the vacuum is high (i.e. ten inches of mercury), the diaphragm is flexed into the vacuum chamber thus maximizing the volume of a supplemental fuel chamber defined in-part by an opposite side of the diaphragm. When the engine is accelerating, the throttle valve is opening causing the vacuum pressure to drop, for example, down to about one inch of mercury. This drop in vacuum is sensed by the pump 30 through the hose 32 and joining tube fittings 34, 36 causing the diaphragm via the assistance of a compression spring to move into the supplemental fuel chamber which pushes the supplemental fuel through a discharge hose 38 coupled to joining connector tube fittings 40, 42 by clamps 44, 46, and into the fuel-and-air mixing passage 22 immediately upstream of the venturi.
As shown in the illustration of
A combustion engine carburetor with a fuel-and-air mixing passage extending through a body engaged sealably to a fuel float bowl and a vacuum actuated acceleration fuel pump, preferably carried by the float bowl, has a hose-less vacuum channel communicating the fuel-and-air mixing passage downstream of a throttle valve with a vacuum chamber of the acceleration pump. A hose-less fuel discharge channel communicates a supplemental fuel chamber of the acceleration pump with the fuel-and-air mixing passage between a venturi and a choke valve in the mixing passage. Preferably, the discharge channel has a fuel injecting bore portion in the body angled to direct a fuel spray in a downstream direction toward the venturi to promote mixing with air.
Preferably, the hose-less vacuum channel has a cast recess portion in the body and/or float bowl which communicates through the bore directly with the fuel-and-air mixing passage. Preferably the recess is in one of the sealing faces of mating body and float-bowl flanges. Preferably the recess also communicates directly through a bore in the float bowl with the vacuum chamber of the acceleration pump.
Objects, features and advantages of this invention include a carburetor having an acceleration pump which does not require external hoses, tubes, fittings and/or clamps to communicate with a vacuum source or deliver supplemental fuel, reduces the likelihood of fuel leaks, has only internal communication passages, improves fuel and air mixing during acceleration for improved emissions and engine performance, decreases the number of parts required, is rugged, durable, maintenance free, of relatively simple design and economical manufacture and assembly, and in service has a long useful life.
These and other objects, features and advantages of this invention will be apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments and best mode, appended claims, and accompanying drawings in which:
Referring in more detail to the drawings,
Referring to
For reliable cold engine starts, a rich mixture of fuel-and-air is needed. To produce the rich mixture, the throttle valve 66 is substantially open exposing the fuel feed tube 76 to the vacuum produced by the cranking engine, and the choke valve 70 is generally closed to reduce incoming fresh air flow. When the engine is idling at operating temperature, the throttle valve 66 is substantially closed with an opening therethrough or slightly open producing a high vacuum condition downstream of the throttle valve 66, and the choke valve 70 is open. The substantially closed throttle valve 66 reduces air flow through the venturi 74 which reduces liquid fuel flow emitted from the fuel feed tube 76, or substantially eliminates fuel flow from the tube 76 altogether while causing fuel to flow through a separate fuel idle circuit (not shown) opening into the mixing passage 62 immediately downstream of the substantially closed throttle valve 66. The resulting relatively low fuel-and-air mixture flow rate coincides with the needs of the engine running at idle or low speed. During steady, high speed, engine operation, the throttle and choke valves 66, 70 are generally wide open causing a high air flow rate through the venturi 74 which creates a high vacuum for emitting a commensurate amount of fuel through the main fuel feed tube 76.
The carburetor 60 has an acceleration fuel pump 82 (
As best shown in
As previously described, when the engine is running at idle, the throttle valve 66 is substantially closed and the vacuum pressure downstream of the throttle valve 66 is generally high, such as about ten inches of mercury in the intake manifold of a typical four cycle engine application. This high vacuum is communicated through the vacuum channel 102 to the vacuum chamber 84 and the negative pressure placed across the top side 86 of the diaphragm 88 produces an upward force which overcomes a downward force produced by a compression spring 106 disposed in the vacuum chamber 84 and generally compressed between the top side 86 of the diaphragm 88 and the bottom surface 89 of the float bowl 80 (as best shown in
Referring to
A hole 140 located through the gasket 104 provides communication between the port 128 of the bore portion 122 and an end 138 of the recess 130. Communicating between an opposite end of the recess 130 at a port 142 and the vacuum chamber 84 of the pump 82 is a second or inlet bore portion 144 which is substantially vertical and defined in the float bowl 80. For ease of manufacturing, the pocket 119 and blind bore 121 are cast into the body 64, and the recess 130 is cast into the float bowl 80, thus eliminating secondary manufacturing operations. After the casting process, the vertical bore portions 122, 144 require only a single drilling each, typically starting at the respective flanges. The drillings are linear, not of complex angles, and do not require sealing plugs. If desired, these bores 122 and 144 could be formed in the casting by using suitable core pins.
Referring to
When the engine accelerates preferably from idle to wide open throttle, the throttle valve 66 rotates from the closed position to an open position causing the vacuum pressure in the downstream region 68 of the mixing passage 62 or intake manifold to drop, for example, from about ten inches of mercury to about one inch of mercury. This sudden drop in vacuum causes the spring 106 to push downward on the diaphragm 88 flexing the diaphragm into the previously expanded fuel chamber 90. This displaces fuel which is blocked from flowing back into the reservoir 78 by the closed check valve 108 and instead flows upward through the discharge channel 100 and the check valve 110 (as best shown in
Upon completion of acceleration and with continued operation at wide open throttle, the diaphragm 88 remains extended into the fuel chamber 90 and thus remains in an unprimed-condition. Without the hydraulic force of supplemental fuel flow exerted upon a ball 114 of the discharge check valve 110, the valve 110 closes upon the opposite biasing force of the spring 116 and the weight of the ball 114. Both the spring 116 and the ball 114 are seated within the substantially vertical counter-bore portion 118 of the discharge channel 100 preferably defined by the float bowl 80. Once closed, the check valve prevents reverse flow of air and/or fuel through the pump 82 and also prevents disruption of the flow dynamics generally between the venturi 74 and the fuel feed tube 76 during steady state engine running conditions. When the engine is not running and vacuum is non-existent, the acceleration pump 82 remains in the unprimed-condition, as best illustrated in
While the forms of the invention herein disclosed constitute a presently preferred embodiment, many others are possible. For instance, the recess 130 can be cast into the flange 126 of the body 64 instead of the flange 134 of the float bowl 80 and the hole 140 in the gasket 104 relocated to the other end of the recess 130 to communicate with the vertical bore portion 144 of vacuum channel 102. It is not intended herein to mention all the possible equivalent forms or ramifications of the invention. It is understood that terms used herein are merely descriptive, rather than limiting, and that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2551719 | Ball | May 1951 | A |
2660417 | Anderson | Nov 1953 | A |
2768818 | Egerer | Oct 1956 | A |
2775435 | Kommer | Dec 1956 | A |
3017167 | Griffen | Jan 1962 | A |
3404872 | Nutten | Oct 1968 | A |
4076770 | Saito et al. | Feb 1978 | A |
6293524 | Endo et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6382599 | Aihara et al. | May 2002 | B1 |
6481699 | Aihara et al. | Nov 2002 | B1 |
20020163087 | Gerhardy | Nov 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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52-43026 | Apr 1977 | JP |