The invention relates to improvements in fuel injectors for diesel engines.
A common arrangement for diesel injector assemblies has a needle valve immediately upstream of the injector orifices biased closed by a spring. The needle valve is cyclically opened by an impulse of high pressure fuel operating on an area of the needle valve that opposes the biasing spring. The spring resides in a space, typically in a part of the injector assembly referred to as a spring cage that is exposed to fuel at low pressure levels. Exposing the spring space to fuel is done to avoid a need and the practical difficulty to completely seal it from the necessarily high injection pressures. A persistent and seemingly complex problem in an electronically controlled injector is cavitation in the valve spring space. This cavitation can lead to degradation of the spring and ultimate failure.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,811,092 is directed to the problem of cavitation in the spring cage of an electronic fuel injector. Experience has shown the solution proposed in this patent is not effective, at least in certain applications, in satisfactorily eliminating cavitation in the spring cage. The patent indicates an earlier described arrangement of a fuel injector assembly with a spring cage vented to a low pressure region of the injector to avoid a hydraulic lock had a potential for cavitation.
The invention relates to the discovery that cavitation in a spring cage of an electronic fuel injector can be effectively eliminated by affording a sufficient, positive supply of fuel to a critical area of the spring cage. Where the spring cage, as is conventional, is a hollow cylinder, it has been found effective to port the cage walls with an area that is at least a significant fraction of the area of the spring seat and, preferably, to provide this port area in an arrangement generally surrounding the spring seat. Additionally, it is desirable to provide a port area adjacent the end of the spring cage remote from the spring seat. By porting the spring cage at opposite ends, fuel more readily circulates in and out of the spring cage area thereby improving heat transfer, lowering temperature of fuel in the spring cage and reducing the risk of cavitation.
In the disclosed embodiment, the spring cage is arranged to be used with an original equipment manufactured nozzle nut or a duplicate thereof. As such, in its preferred embodiment, the spring cage of the invention is a hollow cylindrical body with an outside diameter sized to provide a large functional clearance with the inside diameter of the surrounding portion of the nozzle nut. The spring cage can be concentrically located on the axis of the nozzle nut bore, for example, by indexing it to a spray tip at a lower end and at an upper end to a spacer fitted to the nozzle nut bore. In their assembled state, the spring cage and nozzle nut form an annular fuel plenum surrounding the spring cage which freely communicates with all of the ports in the spring cage wall. The annular plenum serves as a local reservoir that can supply fuel and thereby reduce the tendency for cavitation to occur within the spring cage.
An injector assembly 10 for introducing fuel to the cylinder of a diesel engine such as used in a railroad locomotive is illustrated in
Most of the components of the injector 10 are centered about an axis indicated at 11. At an upper end, the assembly 10 includes a plunger socket 12 that receives a lever mechanically operated in synchronization with the engine's crankshaft. The socket 12 drives a cylindrical plunger 13 down into a fuel pressurizing chamber 14 formed in a main body or housing 16 of the injector 10. A spring 17 encircling the top of the plunger 13 and operating through a retainer 18 returns the plunger from its fuel pressurizing stroke. Fuel is delivered into the chamber 14 by a distribution rail fed by a fuel supply pump in a known manner. The supply pressure of the fuel is relatively low, being typically in the range of about 105 psi. An electronically operated control valve 21 on the housing 16 is normally open and allows fuel being displaced from the chamber 14 by downward movement of the plunger 13 to be vented at low pressure to a return circuit. When the control valve 21 is closed by electrically energizing the coil of its armature, downward movement of the plunger 13 is immediately reflected in high pressurization of the fuel remaining in the chamber 14.
The lower end of the cylindrical bore or chamber 14 is closed by a cylindrical spacer 22. Below the spacer 22 is a cylindrical spring cage 23 and below that is a circular spray tip 24. The spacer 22, spring cage 23, and spray tip 24 are held together and against the housing 16 by a nozzle nut 26 threaded onto the bottom of the housing. Aligned drilled passages 27, 28 and 29, through the spacer 22, spring cage 23, and circular spray tip 24 communicate with one another to deliver fuel from the pressure chamber 14 to a cavity 31 in the spray tip. While only one passage in each of these components is illustrated in
The spring cage 23 is a cylindrical tube having an outer cylindrical surface 46 and an inner cylindrical surface 47 forming a boundary of the interior space 48 of the spring cage. Assembled in the space 48 are a helical compression spring 51, a spring seat 52 at the lower end of the spring, and a shim 53 at its upper end. The spring seat 52 has a blind bore in which a reduced diameter stub of the needle valve fits. At its upper side, the spring seat 52 has a cylindrical shank 54 sized to fit into the inside diameter of the helical spring 51. When the spray tip 24, spring cage 23, and spacer 22 are held in place by the nozzle nut 26, the spring 51 is compressed to hold the needle valve 36 closed on the seat 39 with a predetermined force.
An annular chamber 56, formed between the nozzle nut 26 and body 16 receives pressurized fuel from the supply rail, e.g. at about 105 psi. This pressurized fuel communicates with an annular chamber 57 around the spacer through a flat 58 on a threaded area at the bottom of the housing 16. Similarly, flats 59 on diametrally opposite outer sides of the spacer communicate rail pressure fuel to the outer periphery of the spring cage 23.
Both the spray tip 24 and spacer 22 have outside diameters that produce a close fit with respective surrounding internal surfaces of the nozzle nut 26 so as to hold these elements concentric with the axis 11. The outside diameter of the spring cage 23, however, is significantly smaller than the inside diameter of the respective part of the nozzle nut 26. The axial locating pins 34 serve to hold the spring cage concentric with the axis 11.
In operation, the plunger 13 is driven downwardly with the force developed on the socket 12 by the engine's camshaft. Fuel in the chamber 14 below the plunger 13 is discharged through a side port in the chamber wall and through an internal passage to the control valve 21 and beyond to a return to the fuel tank. When the control valve 21 closes, fuel in the chamber 14 is immediately pressurized. This pressure is transmitted through the passages 27-29 to the cavity 31. The resulting high fuel pressure in the cavity 31 lifts the needle valve 36 against the force of the spring 51 whereupon fuel is injected into the engine cylinder through the spray tip orifices 41. A shoulder 64 on an upper end of the needle valve 36 abuts the spring cage 23 to limit opening movement of the needle valve. When the control valve 21 opens, the fuel pressure in the injector assembly 10 drops, the needle valve 36 closes and injection stops. This process repeats cyclically as the engine operates.
As a practical matter, pressurized fuel migrates along the needle valve 36 from the cavity 31 into the interior space 48 of the spring cage 23. The very rapid movement of the needle valve 36 and the spring seat 52 has been found to result in destructive cavitation producing erosion and failure of the needle valve spring in prior art electronic unit injectors. With reference to
It should be evident that this disclosure is by way of example and that various changes may be made by adding, modifying or eliminating details without departing from the fair scope of the teaching contained in this disclosure. The invention is therefore not limited to particular details of this disclosure except to the extent that the following claims are necessarily so limited.
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5937520 | Earhart et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
5992768 | Beatty et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6543706 | Hutchings et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
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7044400 | Luedicke | May 2006 | B2 |
7124966 | Schlairet | Oct 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100051723 A1 | Mar 2010 | US |