The present invention is directed to apparatus for achieving staggered firing of spark plugs in a dual-plug spark internal combustion ignition engine, and more particularly to a low-cost control implementation that requires only a single output from the engine control module.
In general, a dual-plug engine is a spark-ignition internal combustion engine that is equipped with two spark plugs per cylinder in order to achieve improved performance and/or exhaust emission control. Although these improvements can be optimized when the two spark plugs are fired in staggered relation, the expense associated with individual spark plug control can be considerable because the number of coil driver circuits (ignitors) and engine control module (ECM) outputs is doubled. The cost impact is particularly high in applications where the ignitors are up-integrated into the ECM due to packaging difficulties and increased heat dissipation in the ECM. Accordingly, what is needed is a more cost effective control apparatus that achieves staggered spark plug firing without increasing the number of ECM outputs, and without requiring additional up-integrated ignitors in the ECM.
The present invention is directed to an improved control apparatus for achieving staggered spark plug firing in a dual-plug spark ignition engine wherein first and second spark plugs for any given engine cylinder are controlled by a single ECM output. The ECM output initiates firing of the first spark plug, and a detection and delay circuit packaged with an ignition coil and ignitor for second spark plug initiates delayed firing of the second spark plug relative to the first spark plug. In a preferred embodiment, the detection and delay circuit also detects engine speed based on the firing frequency of the first spark plug, and adjusts the firing delay time so that the firing of the second spark plug is delayed with respect to the firing of the first spark plug by a calibrated angle of engine rotation.
The present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to the drawings, and particularly to
In general, the ECM 16 determines an ignition dwell time Tdwell based on various inputs 26, and the ignitors 22 and 24 energize the respective primary windings 18′, 20′ for the determined dwell time by establishing a conduction path between the respective primary windings 18′, 20′ and battery ground 28. When the primary winding energization is interrupted at the end of the dwell period, the stored inductive energy is coupled to the respective secondary windings 18″, 20″, producing a spark discharge at the respective spark plug 12, 14. The dwell and ensuing spark discharge periods Tdwell and Tdisch are designated in Graph A of
The present invention achieves staggered firing of the spark plugs 12 and 14 with a single EMC output through the use of a delay control circuit 30 responsive to the single ECM output on line 32. Essentially, the ECM 16 directly triggers the ignitor 22, which causes the delay control circuit 30 to trigger the ignitor 24 following a delay period. As a result, the spark discharge at spark plug 14 is time-delayed or staggered relative to the spark discharge at spark plug 12. In the embodiment of
In summary, the apparatus of the present invention achieves staggered spark plug firing in a dual plug spark ignition engine without impacting the design or functionality of ECM 16. The modest cost of the delay control circuit 30 is incurred in place of the relatively high costs associated with increasing the number of ECM outputs and integrating additional ignitors into ECM 16, in the case of the up-integrated ECM of
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10669914 | Sep 2003 | US |
Child | 10981326 | Nov 2004 | US |