None.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a turbocharger system including not only a turbocharger, but also a mounting pedestal arranged with utilities needed to operate and position the turbocharger. The mounting pedestal is attached to the cylinder block of an engine and is connected with various utilities integrated within a mounting pad associated with the cylinder block.
2. Related Art
Turbocharging has been used for a number of years with internal combustion engines. Although early turbochargers were often cooled primarily by air, as well as by the flow of oil through the turbocharger's bearings, later model turbochargers, especially larger turbochargers and those installed in heavy duty engines, generally utilize coolant circulating from the engine's cooling system through the turbo, and then back to the engine's main cooling system.
Turbochargers also require oil supply and drain utilities to lubricate bearings incorporated within the turbocharger. Needless to say, the provision of a source of coolant and a source of oil, with both being under pressure, as well as draining the oil and coolant from the turbocharger and returning these fluids separately to the engine, has necessitated a good deal of plumbing. Usually, this plumbing takes the form of external hoses and fittings. Unfortunately, external fluid connections and associated pipes and hoses cause problems because hoses and fittings are known to leak and are subject to damage accelerated by the high temperatures prevailing within engine compartments. Moreover, aside from durability issues, the need for external plumbing for turbochargers increases the space required by the turbocharger in an already crowded underhood environment.
Turbochargers mounted on engines typically consume a good deal of space for another reason. Because known mounting arrangements are not susceptible to locating the turbocharger close to the engine block, turbochargers must be spaced away from the engine to permit the insertion of the turbochargers' fasteners. U.S. Pat. No. 6,125,799 discloses a bulky mounting system relying in part upon external utilities to the extent that mounting a turbochargers is recommended only on the extreme front or back of an engine. Moreover, other known turbocharger mounting systems increase radiated noise because of a lack of rigidity and because of the dimensional problems associated with their usage.
It would be desirable to provide a turbocharger, including a mounting system having integral supply and return passages for coolant and lubricating oil and communicating directly with utility passages within a hard point associated with a cylinder block.
According to an aspect of the present invention, a turbocharger system for an internal combustion engine having a cylinder block includes a turbocharger and a utility pedestal extending between the turbocharger and a hard point associated with the cylinder block. The utility pedestal includes a mounting pad for the pedestal and an oil supply passage for conveying lubricating oil under pressure from the cylinder block to the turbocharger. A return oil passage conveys lubricating oil from the turbocharger to a lubrication system incorporated within the engine. A coolant supply passage conveys coolant under pressure to the turbocharger, and a coolant return passage, configured at least in part within the utility pedestal, conveys coolant from the turbocharger to a cooling system incorporated within the engine. According to another aspect of the present invention, the coolant return passage may include a passage configured, at least in part, within the engine's cylinder block, as well as within the utility pedestal.
According to another aspect of the present invention a coolant return passage from the turbocharger may be configured so as to convey the coolant to a mixing chamber within which the coolant from the turbocharger is mixed with coolant flowing from at least one cylinder head.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a return oil passage from the turbocharger conveys waste oil from the turbocharger to a crankcase sump without allowing the waste oil to contact moving parts within the engine.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a hard point associated with the cylinder block for mounting the turbocharger includes a generally planar mounting pad configured on a portion of the cylinder block, with the mounting pad of the utility pedestal having a lower mating surface matched to the generally planar mounting pad. The cylinder block's mounting pad is configured with lubricating oil and coolant utilities.
According to another aspect of the present invention, a turbocharger's generally planar mounting pad may be configured upon a cylinder block within a valley defined by the cylinder banks of a V-block engine.
According to yet another aspect of the present invention, the turbocharger pedestal mounting pad of the utility pedestal comprises a number of mounting bosses having fastener bores extending therethrough at an acute angle with respect to a horizontal plane such that fasteners inserted within the bores pass inboard to threaded bores formed in a hard point associated with the cylinder block.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the return, or waste, oil passage extending from the turbocharger and through the utility pedestal is designed to prevent foamed or frothed oil flowing from the turbocharger from impairing engine lubrication. This is accomplished by preventing the waste oil from contacting moving parts within the engine as the oil flows back to the crankcase sump.
It is an advantage of the present turbocharger system that the turbocharger and pedestal may be assembled at one geographic location and installed upon an engine as a single unit at a second geographic location without the need for making external utility connections for lubricating oil and water feeds and drains.
It is another advantage of a turbocharging system according to the present invention that the present turbocharger system, including the turbocharger, a utility pedestal, and a cylinder block mounting pad communicating oil and coolant utilities to the pedestal, functions as a very compact mounting system for attaching the turbocharger system directly to the cylinder block of an internal combustion engine.
It is yet another advantage of a turbocharging system according to the present invention that the noise signature of the turbocharger will be reduced because of the stiffness inherent with the close mounted utility pedestal and cylinder block mounting pad featured in the present invention.
It is yet another advantage of the present invention that the fasteners used to mount the pedestal to the engine may be accessed without removing portions of the turbocharger.
Other advantages, as well as features of the present invention, will become apparent to the reader of this specification.
As shown in
Utility pedestal 18 has a mounting pad, 48, at its lower extremity. Mounting pad 48 includes mounting bosses 50, which have fastener bores 52. Fastener bores 52 extend through mounting bosses 50 and make an acute angle, α, with a horizontal plane, H (
As seen in
Coolant supply passage 42, which is formed in part as a coolant port within a boss, 29, also communicates with the planar surface of mounting pad 22, as does coolant return 46, which is formed within a third boss, 31.
Because the upper machined surfaces of bosses 27, 29, and 31 corresponding with internal oil supply passage 26, internal coolant supply passage 42, and internal coolant return passage 46, respectively, are all co-planar with the uppermost surface of mounting pad 22, all of these utilities may be sealed to utility pedestal 18 with a single gasket 24, which is shown in
In the event that a separate mounting pad or plate is employed, such as that illustrated at 100 in
Only the uppermost part of return oil isolation passage 34 within cylinder block 30 is shown in
The foregoing invention has been described in accordance with the relevant legal standards, thus the description is exemplary rather than limiting in nature. Variations and modifications to the disclosed embodiment may become apparent to those skilled in the art and fall within the scope of the invention. Accordingly the scope of legal protection afforded this invention can only be determined by studying the following claims.
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