The present invention relates to a device for fluidtight connection of a fitting to an internal combustion engine fuel injector.
In known technology, the fitting of the injector high-pressure fuel supply conduit has a threaded portion for engaging a threaded seat in the usual hollow body of the injector; and sealing is ensured by a sealing ring normally defined by a metal sealing washer.
In one known injector, the fitting has another portion adjacent to the threaded portion, and which normally has a polygonal section for tightening the fitting inside the threaded seat in the injector; the polygonal-section portion and the threaded portion form a first annular shoulder which, in use, faces another annular shoulder on the hollow body; and the sealing washer is positioned between a bottom surface of the threaded seat and a flat end surface of the threaded portion of the fitting. The two surfaces must therefore be machined accurately so they are flat and perpendicular to the respective axes, with a small amount of surface roughness to ensure high-pressure sealing.
The above known connecting device has various drawbacks. In particular, machining the bottom surface of the seat is extremely difficult on account of its location. Moreover, to achieve a high-pressure fuel seal, a strong fastening torque must be applied to the fitting, thus resulting in a corresponding axial load on the bottom surface of the threaded seat. The bottom surface is located at a thin portion of the hollow body, which also contains the intersection of the holes or conduits supplying high-pressure fuel to the control chamber of the metering valve, and to the injection chamber of the atomizer nozzle of the injector. This portion of the hollow body therefore represents a high stress concentration region, on account of the sharp edges of the hole intersection and the axial stress transmitted by the fitting, so that the fatigue resistance of the hollow body of the injector becomes critical.
The axial load produced by the tightening torque of the high-pressure conduit fitting may also strain the hollow body of the injector in a highly delicate region as regards high-pressure sealing, both on the washer between the hollow body and the fitting, and between the hollow body and the body of the metering valve.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a device for fluidtight connection of a fitting to an internal combustion engine fuel injector, which is highly reliable, cheap to produce, and eliminates the drawbacks of known connecting devices.
According to the present invention, there is provided a device for fluidtight connection of a fitting to an internal combustion engine fuel injector, wherein said fitting comprises a high-pressure fuel supply conduit, and said injector comprises a hollow body having a threaded seat; said fitting having a threaded portion for engaging said threaded seat with the interposition of a sealing ring; and said fitting having another portion forming, with said threaded portion, a first annular shoulder which, in use, faces a second annular shoulder on said hollow body; characterized in that said shoulders are precision machined so as to be parallel in use; and in that said sealing ring is located between said shoulders so machined.
A preferred, non-limiting embodiment of the invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 5 in
A rod 14, guided by sleeve 11, slides inside a hole 15 in hollow body 7, and controls a pin for closing an atomizer nozzle (not shown) carried by hollow body 7. Plug 12 has a calibrated hole 16 for discharging valve 9, and which is normally kept closed by a shutter 17 and a spring 20, under the control of an armature 18 of an electromagnet 19.
Hollow body 7 also has a lateral appendix 21 having a threaded seat 22 engaged by a threaded portion 23 of fitting 6. Threaded portion 23 terminates at one end with an annular end surface 25; and fitting 6 also has an outer portion 24 which is connected in known manner to the usual high-pressure fuel supply conduit (not shown). As is known, the injector is supplied with fuel at at least roughly 1200-bar pressure.
Fitting 6 comprises a through hole 26 forming a fuel supply conduit to injector 5; and a mid-portion 27 located between threaded portion 23 and outer portion 24, and having a polygonal section for engagement by a wrench to tighten fitting 6 inside threaded seat 22.
Threaded seat 22 has a bottom surface 28 perpendicular to the axis of seat 22; a hole 29 extends from bottom surface 28 and comes out inside central cavity 8 of hollow body 7, at an outer annular groove 31 in sleeve 11; and groove 31 communicates, by means of a calibrated hole 32 or inlet conduit of valve 9, with a control chamber 33 of injector 5, defined by the gap between the top end of rod 14 and the calibrated hole 16 in plug 12.
Hollow body 7 also has a substantially longitudinal hole 34 connecting hole 29 to an injection chamber of the usual atomizer nozzle (not shown), so that the intersection of holes 29 and 34 is located at a region 36 (
To activate injector 5, electromagnet 19 (
Mid-portion 27 of fitting 6 forms, with threaded portion 23, a first annular shoulder 37 (
The two shoulders 37 and 38 are also machined appropriately and accurately so they are parallel in use. More specifically, the two shoulders 37 and 38 must be machined so they are perfectly flat and perpendicular to the axis of threaded portion 23 and the axis of threaded seat 22 respectively, so as to ensure perfect sealing of the high-pressure fuel seeping between seat 22 and threaded portion 23.
At least one of the two shoulders 37 and 38, preferably shoulder 37 of fitting 6, has an annular groove 42 for partly housing washer 41, so as to limit deformation of the washer when tightening fitting 6 inside seat 22. Shoulder 38 of appendix 21 is machined externally, and therefore extremely easily, and preferably undergoes so-called circular “spot facing” to obtain a series of minute circular cavities or marks 43 (
Fitting 6 is fitted to injector 5 by first inserting washer 41 (
The advantages—as compared with known devices of the type shown, for example, in FIG. 1—of the connecting device according to the invention will be clear from the foregoing description. In particular, the connecting device according to the invention simplifies machining of shoulder 38, by the machined surface being external as opposed to recessed; it eliminates stress, caused by tightening fitting 6, at the intersection region 36 of holes 29 and 34 in hollow body 7; and, finally, the volume between end surface 25 of fitting 6 and bottom surface 28 of seat 22 is increased, and acts as a reservoir for supplying fuel to injector 5.
Clearly, changes may be made to the connecting device as described herein without, however, departing from the scope of the accompanying claims. For example, washer 41 may be made of material other than soft iron, and may be other than rectangular in section; shoulder 38 may project with respect to surface 39 of shoulder 38; groove 42 for washer 41 may be formed on shoulder 38 of washer 41, or both shoulders 37 and 38 may be provided with appropriate grooves; and, finally, sleeve 11 and plug 12 of the body of metering valve 9 may be formed in one piece, as opposed to two separate parts.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
TO2001A0968 | Oct 2001 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
494801 | Weber | Apr 1893 | A |
959702 | Blanchard | May 1910 | A |
966870 | Stoddard | Aug 1910 | A |
1137113 | Bouchard | Apr 1915 | A |
1523817 | Long | Jan 1925 | A |
1583126 | Crane | May 1926 | A |
1905115 | Lofgren | Apr 1933 | A |
1959068 | Stoll | May 1934 | A |
2050137 | Walsh | Aug 1936 | A |
2926937 | Parsons | Mar 1960 | A |
3012802 | Waite | Dec 1961 | A |
3860178 | Seifert | Jan 1975 | A |
3887140 | Hofmann | Jun 1975 | A |
4315603 | Nakajima et al. | Feb 1982 | A |
4811976 | Yagisawa | Mar 1989 | A |
5011192 | Campo | Apr 1991 | A |
5052724 | Konrad et al. | Oct 1991 | A |
5433454 | Ramberg | Jul 1995 | A |
5669612 | Nicholson | Sep 1997 | A |
5785024 | Takei et al. | Jul 1998 | A |
6070883 | Marto | Jun 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
28 17 438 | Oct 1979 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030102387 A1 | Jun 2003 | US |