By improving operating efficiency of an internal combustion engine, fuel efficiency is also improved so that the engine requires less fuel over its operating life. To improve engine efficiency, lightweight materials can be used to manufacture component parts of an engine, including intake and exhaust valves. Even if no other engine component is modified, lightweight engine valves alone can increase engine performance and greatly reduce fuel consumption.
Lightweight engine valves are known that are constructed from ceramic materials, titanium aluminum alloys, as well as thermoplastics. Although material modifications may succeed in reducing the weight of an engine valve, some engine valves, such as those having ceramic valve heads, wear out more quickly from repetitive contact against respective valve seats. To increase valve service life, some composite engine valves employ metal alloy valve heads with valve stems of lightweight material. However, torque, tension, pressure and other forces may greatly wear on a joint between a metal valve head and its lightweight valve stem to limit the life of the composite engine valve prematurely.
What is needed in the engine industry is an intake and exhaust valve having the durability of conventional metal valves and the lightweight characteristics of composite material engine valves. The desired valves should be cost effective, relatively easy to manufacture, and interchangeable with existing engine valves.
The present disclosure is directed in general to a valve for improving efficiency in engines of various types, including but not limited to automobiles, trucks, farm equipment, motorcycles, boats, lawn and garden equipment, and the like. The engine valve broadly includes a solid valve stem having a helical groove inscribed into the stem or material ablated from the stem to form the helical groove. In operation, the helical groove reduces mass and frictional area of the valve to improve overall engine operating efficiency.
For example, in one embodiment according to the present disclosure, an engine valve may include a valve head; a tip portion disposed opposite of the valve head; and a stem interposed between the valve head and the tip portion, the stem having a cylindrically shaped surface and a helical section, the helical section including a plurality of alternating crests and roots, the roots depending inwardly in a direction of a centerline of the engine valve such that the surface is periodically interrupted by the helical section.
A diameter of the stem of one such valve may be about 0.375 inches and one of the roots may have a depth, as measured from the surface, of about 0.075 inches to about 0.078 inches.
In this example, the helical section of the engine valve may be a one start section. The helical section may include from about six crests and six roots to about twelve crests and twelve roots. Alternatively, the engine valve may have a helical section having more than one start. The engine valve may also have more than one helical section, such as two helical sections that may be spaced apart from each other. A sealing element may be inserted between the two helical sections.
In another embodiment, an engine valve may include a valve head; a tip portion disposed opposite of the valve head; and a stem interposed between the valve head and the tip portion, the stem including means for reducing engine valve contact area in an engine valve guide. The means for reducing engine valve contact area may be a helix inscribed in the stem. The helix may have more than one start.
In yet a further embodiment, an engine valve may include a valve head; a tip portion disposed opposite of the valve head; and a stem interposed between the valve head and the tip portion, the stem having a helical groove adapted to move the engine valve from a first position to a second position under a reduced valve seat load to reduce a parasitic loss in engine function. In this example, the helical groove may have at least two crests and one root interposed between the two crests. Further, the helical groove may have more than one start.
According to another aspect of the disclosure, a poppet valve may be provided of a type that carries out the steps of receiving a load and moving from a first position to a second position in an engine, the poppet valve comprising means for improving heat exchange through a cylinder head in the engine and increasing torque and horsepower before valve float occurs, the means for improving including a helical ablation of the poppet valve. In this example, the poppet valve may include a stem, and the helical ablation may be applied to the stem to define a helix. Also, the means for improving heat exchange through a cylinder head in the engine and increasing torque and horsepower before valve float occurs may be a helix in a stem of the poppet valve.
In a further aspect, a method may be provided to reduce contact area of a valve in an engine to reduce valve seat load, to reduce valve spring load, to increase air-fuel mixture under a seat of the valve, and to reduce lifter and camshaft load. The method may include reducing a mass of a valve by forming a helical portion about a stem of the valve; installing the valve in a cylinder head of an engine; and increasing engine efficiency by reducing a coefficient of drag of the valve, wherein the helical portion is configured to have reduced surface contact in the engine. The helical portion according to this method may have one or more starts. Further, the mass removed in this exemplary method may be between about twenty percent to about twenty-five percent of a diameter of the stem.
Additional objects and advantages of the present subject matter are set forth in, or will be apparent to, those of ordinary skill in the art from the detailed description herein. Also, it should be further appreciated that modifications and variations to the specifically illustrated, referred and discussed features and elements hereof may be practiced in various embodiments and uses of the disclosure without departing from the spirit and scope of the subject matter. Variations may include, but are not limited to, substitution of equivalent means, features, or steps for those illustrated, referenced, or discussed, and the functional, operational, or positional reversal of various parts, features, steps, or the like.
Methods of using the engine valve and its associated operation are also disclosed herein. It is to be understood that different embodiments, as well as different presently preferred embodiments, of the present subject matter may include various combinations or configurations of presently disclosed features, steps, or elements, or their equivalents (including combinations of features, parts, or steps or configurations thereof not expressly shown in the figures or stated in the detailed description of such figures). Additional embodiments of the present subject matter, not necessarily expressed in the summarized section, may include and incorporate various combinations of aspects of features, components, or steps referenced in the summarized objects above, and/or other features, components, or steps as otherwise discussed in this application. Those of ordinary skill in the art will better appreciate the features and aspects of such embodiments, and others, upon review of the remainder of the specification.
A full and enabling disclosure of the present subject matter, including the best mode thereof, directed to one of ordinary skill in the art, is set forth in the specification, which makes reference to the appended figures, in which:
Detailed reference will now be made to the drawings in which examples embodying the present subject matter are shown. The detailed description uses numerical and letter designations to refer to features of the drawings. Like or similar designations of the drawings and description have been used to refer to like or similar parts of various exemplary embodiments.
The drawings and detailed description provide a full and written description of the present subject matter, and of the manner and process of making and using various exemplary embodiments, so as to enable one skilled in the pertinent art to make and use them, as well as the best mode of carrying out the exemplary embodiments. However, the examples set forth in the drawings and detailed description are provided by way of explanation only and are not meant as limitations of the disclosure. The present subject matter thus includes any modifications and variations of the following examples as come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
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While the present subject matter has been described in detail with respect to specific embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated that those skilled in the art, upon attaining an understanding of the foregoing may readily produce alterations to, variations of, and equivalents to such embodiments. Accordingly, the scope of the present disclosure is by way of example rather than by way of limitation, and the subject disclosure does not preclude inclusion of such modifications, variations and/or additions to the present subject matter as would be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art.