The invention relates to a fuel filter according to the preamble of claim 1.
Such fuel filters are known from the prior art. They have an replaceable filter insert, as well as a cap with which the filter housing can be closed, so that when the cap is open, a so-called filter change can be performed in which the filter insert is replaced. The fuel filter has a water collection chamber in the lower area of its housing or in a suspended cap that faces downward. The specific weight of the water is greater than that of the fuel, so that the water that separates from the fuel can be collected in this water collection chamber.
The increasing precision with which fuel injection systems are manufactured makes components that are used and the cross-sections for fuel lines increasingly sensitive to contaminants in the fuel. It is particularly dangerous, for example, when the filter insert having the filter surface is removed from the fuel filter during a so-called filter change and subsequently, for example, following a pause in operation, the filter housing is reclosed without installing an unused filter insert, or after inserting a non-approved filter insert, whose measurements, for example, are too small, or which has a filter surface that is unsuitable for the type of fuel that is used.
In such cases, insufficiently filtered or completely unfiltered fuel, together with dirt particles and other contaminants, can get into the highly sensitive fuel-injection system.
The undesirable fuel contaminants also include water, which, for example, as a consequence of the temperature change between daytime and nighttime temperatures, forms as condensation from the atmospheric humidity from the volume of air that is in a fuel tank. The operator of an internal combustion engine using the fuel or maintenance personnel can hardly influence or avoid this formation of condensation. For this reason, a water level sensor is provided as a safety measure in a conventional fuel filter. The sensor is formed by two electrical contacts that are spaced apart from one another and arranged high up in the water collection chamber. The electrical conductivity of water differs from that of fuel and, when the water level in the water collection chamber rises above a specified value, the water short-circuits the two contacts, thereby significantly altering the electrical resistance between the two contacts.
The value of the electrical resistance can thus be described as the “short-circuit value” when the two conductors are electrically connected to one another by means of the water found in the fuel filter, and the value of the electrical resistance described as the so-called “insulation value” when the two conductors are separated from one another or are connected to one another only by the fuel or by insulating materials.
The change from the “insulation value”, which corresponds to the normal operation of the fuel filter, to the “short-circuit value”, when the water content in the fuel filter is too high, is measured and evaluated by an electronic switch, whereby the switch, for example, can be part of an electronic motor control unit. In the field of automobile construction, it is well-known to trigger an optical and/or acoustical signal within the driver's perceptual range when water in the fuel filter reaches a defined level.
A more far-reaching measure can also be provided, however, which, in order to protect the internal combustion engine, automatically prevents the motor from being started, for example, when an unacceptably high amount of water in the fuel filter is ascertained, in order to protect, in this way, the fuel injection system of the motor and to prevent water from reaching the clean side of the fuel filter and getting into the fuel injection system. After the water has been drained, when the “short circuit” caused by the water between the two contacts of the water level sensor no longer exists, the electronic control evaluates the higher electrical resistance that now prevails, so that, for example, it now is possible to restart the motor.
It is well-known in the field that, irrespective of the aforementioned water level sensors, temperature sensors or pressure sensors can be provided in the fuel filter. Depending upon the construction of the filter, one, two, or all three of the aforementioned sensor types may be provided in one fuel filter.
The task of the invention is to improve a generic fuel filter and specify a process in a way that enables the fuel filter to provide better protection for the engine associated with the fuel filter, with the least possible technical complexity and expense.
This task is solved by a fuel filter with the features of claim 1 or by a switch element according to claim 11 or by a filter insert according to claim 12 or by a procedure for changing a filter insert according to claim 13 or by a diagnostic procedure according to claim 17.
In other words, the invention proposes using an electrical switch, such as the motor control unit that is customarily provided anyway, to detect the presence or absence of the filter insert in the fuel filter. For this purpose, an electrical conductor is provided the electrical properties of which change as a function of the presence or absence of the filter insert. For example, the electrical resistance values can change when the electrical conductors are interrupted or closed, as a function of the assembly status of the filter insert, or the electrical capacitance values can change, as a function of the assembly status of the filter insert.
Because the electrical conductor is connected to the electrical switch, it can evaluate the electrical resistance or capacitance values and properly assume an “operative” switch state or an “inoperative” switch state. The “inoperative” switch state can, as previously mentioned, result in a signal displayed to the personnel or in an automatic shutdown of the internal combustion engine.
For example, a switch contact can be provided in the fuel filter that is similar to a pushbutton or a door contact switch, whereby the switch contact is depressed when the filter insert is present and two contacts of the electrical conductor open or close, depending upon the construction of the switch contact, and whereas, when the filter insert is missing, the switch contact assumes its other switch position accordingly.
Advantageously, a separate electrical conductor does not have to be provided, but rather, an electrical conductor that is already provided anyway may be used. This can be advantageously a conductor that is continuously connected to a sensor that is provided in the fuel filter or at least is then connected when the filter insert is present in the fuel filter.
In a fuel filter that is known from the prior art and is equipped with a water level sensor, the two electrical conductors that belong to the water level sensor anyway can also be used advantageously to indicate the presence of a fuel filter insert. In this way, the water level sensor can be used to indicate an actual presence in the fuel filter of the replaceable filter insert, which is provided for this fuel filter, completely independently of the monitoring of the water level in the fuel filter. This monitoring is also done by evaluating the electrical resistance between the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor.
According to the proposal, a switch element is provided for this purpose. The switch element is moveable and, on the one hand, can assume a contact position in which it makes contact with the two electrical conductors. On the other hand, the switch element can assume an interrupt position, in which this connection between the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor is interrupted when the switch element is not in contact with at least one of the two conductors.
The switch element provided according to the proposal can be constructed as a component that is separate from the rest of the filter, for example, in the form of a disk, a pin, or something similar. This separate component can, for example, be handled by an assembly worker in the factory during the manufacture of the fuel filter. After the filter has been properly assembled, the assembly worker inserts this separate switch element into the fuel filter, for example, before he closes the filter housing with a cap. By inserting this separate switch element, more or less a type of quality control, the assembly worker confirms that the filter is properly assembled and, if applicable, is properly connected to adjacent components.
If, for example, the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor make contact with each other in the factory, that is, they would create a “short-circuit value”, then the insertion of the switch element into the fuel filter creates a separation of these two conductors. Within the framework of the existing proposal, an electrical resistance that can be measured between the two conductors and that is higher than the “short-circuit value” is referred to as a “separation”. If the switch element is not inserted, then the two conductors are short-circuited, comparable to an unacceptably high water level in the water collection chamber. As a result, regardless of whether or not water is actually in the fuel filter, the electronic control evaluates the electrical resistance of the water level sensor as it would if there were an unacceptably high water level and, in this way, for example, prevents a motor connected to the fuel filter from starting or triggers a warning signal.
If, however, the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor were separated from one another in the factory, for example, that is, would present an “insulation value”, provision can be made for the switch element to represent an electrical bridge that connects the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor.
The construction of the switch element as an electrical bridge can, for example, be provided when the switch element is moveably mounted within the fuel filter and automatically attempts to assume a contact position, for example, is pushed into its contact position by force of gravity or a spring force. The switch element would assume this position, when there is no filter insert in the fuel filter. When the switch element is constructed as an electrical conductor with good conductivity and negligibly low electrical resistance, this position corresponds to the short-circuit situation when the water level in the fuel filter is unacceptably high. Such a switch element is moved against the gravitational force or spring force from its contact position into its interrupt position only when the filter insert is assembled, so that now a short circuit between the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor is avoided and signals are present in the electronic control unit, which signal the proper operation of the fuel filter.
In an embodiment in which the switch element is constructed as an electrical bridge, the switch element may advantageously be intentionally constructed not as an electrical conductor with good conductivity and negligibly low electrical resistance, but rather, as an element with a defined electrical resistance that is different from that of the short-circuit value and also from that of the insulation value. Such a third value, which can take on the electrical resistance between the two conductors, is called the “filter insert value”. Compared to the usual evaluation of the sensor signals of the water level sensor, this provides additional information which can be automatically evaluated, for example, by means of the electronic switch, for example, a motor control unit.
This defined resistance enables automatic recognition of three different states of the fuel filter, assuming that the electronic control is constructed accordingly.
a) First, the occurrence of an unacceptably high water level within the water collection chamber of the filter is recognizable.
In this case, namely, a short circuit exists.
b) Secondly, the presence of a specified filter insert in the fuel filter is recognizable.
In this case, namely, whereby the embodiment of the fuel filter is according to a first alternative, after a filter change, the defined resistance value exists as the “filter insert value”, when the switch element is constructed such, that it is moved into its contact position when the filter insert is inserted, which creates a bridge between the two conductors of the water level sensor with its defined electrical resistance.
Or, in this case, with an embodiment of the fuel filter according to a second alternative, the insulation value exists after a filter change when, namely, the switch element is constructed such that when the filter insert is inserted, the switch element is moved from its contact position into its interrupt position, thereby no longer providing a bridge between the two conductors of the water level sensor.
c) Thirdly, the absence of the filter insert in the fuel filter is recognizable.
In this case, namely, according to the aforementioned first alternative, the insulation value is present, because the switch element is constructed such that it should have been moved into its contact position when the filter insert was inserted. If this does not occur, because no filter insert was inserted into the fuel filter, there is no bridge between the two conductors of the water level sensor.
Or, in this case, according to the aforementioned second alternative, the “filter insert value” is present after a filter change, because the switch element with its defined resistance continues to be in its contact position and has not been moved into its interrupt position by the insertion of the filter insert.
According to the aforementioned first alternative, the fuel filter and the switch element can hereby advantageously be constructed such that the switch element provides a defined electrical resistance between the two conductors of the water level sensor when the filter insert is properly fitted in the fuel filter. If the two conductors had previously been either separated from each other or connected to one another, that is, the electrical resistance between them indicated the insulation value or the short-circuit value, they will be electrically connected to one another by the switch element, and, indeed, with a resistance value that corresponds neither to the insulation value nor to the short-circuit value, but rather is referred to as the filter insert value.
Particularly when the switch element is handled together with the filter insert, for example, is constructed as a part of the filter insert, different filter inserts may automatically be distinguished from one another in this way by using correspondingly different electrical resistances in their switch elements. Thus, for example, it can be advantageous to use basically an identical construction of the fuel filter in a most cost-effect manner for use with several different types of vehicles or motors or fuels.
For example, the construction can be such that basically the same fuel filter is used for either gasoline or diesel engines. Or the fuel filter can be used with either mineral fuel or biodiesel fuel made of vegetable raw materials. Or the fuel filter can be installed in vehicles targeted for delivery to different geographical regions with differing fuel qualities.
With basically an identically constructed fuel filter, it may be intended to use other filter inserts, for example, filter inserts in which the filter surface is made of different materials having different filter meshes or different degrees of durability to certain substances. Depending upon the planned area of application or the planned construction of the motor, the electronic control of the respective motor is adjusted in the factory to a certain filter type, that is, to a certain one of several different filter inserts, so that the switch element must have a predetermined electrical resistance in the fuel filter, in order to enable a proper operation of the motor.
If a non-specified electrical resistance is determined, provision can be made such that either the motor control unit prevents the motor from being started, or that shorter maintenance intervals are specified, so that corresponding warnings that are displayed to the operator of the motor are displayed after a correspondingly shorter period of operation than is normally the case, or an indication may be provided to the operator of the motor that the filter insert is missing or that an incorrect, non-specified filter insert is installed.
For this reason, a procedure according to the proposal for changing the filter insert of a fuel filter is characterized in that the electrical resistance between the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor is altered simultaneously with the assembly or removal of the filter insert.
For a water level sensor with two conductors touching each other, this means that, when a filter insert is removed, a switch element, which had thus far separated the two conductors from one another, is also removed from the fuel filter, so that now the two electrical conductors come into contact with each other and result in the same electrical short-circuit value of the sensor that would result, when the two electrodes of the water level sensor are bridged by water.
For the conventional construction of a water level sensor, in which two electrical conductors are separated from one another, during the process of changing a filter insert according to the proposal, provision may be made for the switch element to be moved into its contact position when the filter insert is removed from the fuel filter, so that now the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor are bridged.
If no new filter insert is inserted into the fuel filter, then in both aforementioned cases, following maintenance work, the same electrical resistance between the two conductors of the water level sensor will prevail, as if the two electrodes of the water level sensor were short-circuited by water standing in the fuel filter, namely, the short-circuit value. The corresponding electronic control, for example, a motor control unit, thus automatically reacts the same as it does to an excessive amount of water in the fuel filter. Therefore, according to the proposal, a procedure is specified for changing a filter insert, which, with the same handling of the filter insert, i.e., without more work required during maintenance, improves the safety for the operation of the filter and the safety for the technical device to be protected by the filter, for example, an internal combustion engine.
Also a diagnostic procedure for checking a fuel filter is characterized according to the proposal, in that the electrical resistance between the two electrical conductors of the water level sensor is altered, depending upon whether or not a filter insert is installed in the fuel filter. In this way, additional information can be gained and the operational safety of the fuel filter, as well as its associated aggregate using the fuel, can be improved with very small changes to existing systems, both with respect to the fuel filter and to the electronic switches that evaluate the signals of the water level sensor.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment, provision can be made during the diagnostic procedure for, as mentioned above, not only two switching states to be considered, but rather three, for example:
The aforementioned switch element can be constructed on the filter insert itself. The filter insert can be conventionally constructed, that is, in the known manner, it can have a filter medium, such as a folded paper filter insert, and mechanically more stable components, made of plastic, such as, for example, a frame, or an upper and a lower end plate, or a so-called interior dome in the form of a tube-like component, which supports the filter medium that is arranged circumferentially around it against the forces exerted on it during the filter operation. In such cases, the switch element can advantageously be provided on the mechanically more stable components of the filter insert, for example, on an end plate or on the interior dome.
The switch element can, however, also be constructed as a separate component. This can, for example, be installed by an assembly worker or a mechanic as a separate component in the fuel filter, as described using the aforementioned disk or pin. Alternatively, provision can be made for such a separate component, also designated “adapter”, to be attached to a filter insert, so that afterwards, when the filter insert is installed, the adapter, which carries the switch element, is also automatically installed into the fuel filter. In this way, the mechanic can easily connect the switch element to the filter insert outside of the fuel filter, for example, outside the confined space of a vehicular engine compartment, and the filter insert can subsequently be installed into the fuel filter in the known manner, so that the handling of the switch element does not unnecessarily complicate the filter change for the mechanic.
Embodiments of the invention are explained in more detail below, based on the purely schematic drawings. Accordingly,
In the embodiment shown, the filter insert is used in a suspended fuel filter, i.e., in a fuel filter whose cap is not arranged on the upper end of the filter housing, but rather on the lower end. The filter insert 1 is accordingly inserted into the filter housing from the bottom up and slid thereby onto a connection piece 5 that has two electrodes 6 on its lower end, which are part of a water level sensor that is indicated as a whole with 7.
Radially inside the lower end plate 3, the filter insert 1 has a rotating, upward-extending collar 8 that is sealed against the connection piece 5 with a gasket 9. The collar 8 is constructed such that, when inserting the filter insert 1 into the fuel filter, it makes contact from below with a sliding sleeve 10. The sliding sleeve 10 surrounds the connection piece 5 and is mounted on the piece so as to slide longitudinally along it. Inserting the filter insert 1 into the fuel filter pushes the sliding sleeve 10 farther upward on the connection piece 5.
The sliding sleeve 10 is pressed downward by a helical spring 11, thereby automatically forcing the sleeve 10 to assume a position that is lower than the one shown in
Gravity also urges the sliding sleeve 10 to automatically take the aforementioned lower position, when there is no filter insert 1 in the fuel filter. Deviating from the embodiment shown, it is also possible that only this gravitational force be used. Advantageously, in the embodiment shown, the force effect of the helical spring 11 is particularly reliable in ensuring the desired movement of the sliding sleeve 10. Furthermore, this arrangement, that is, with the helical spring 11, can also be used for an arrangement of the filter insert 1 in which the filter insert 1 is inserted into the fuel filter from above, and the sliding sleeve 10 should therefore be raised when there is no filter insert 1 in the fuel filter.
The sliding sleeve 10 has a U-shaped flexible tongue 12 inside, which makes contact with the connection piece 5 and will be discussed in more detail below. The flexible tongue 12, or the flexible tongue 12 in conjunction with the sliding sleeve 10, represents the switch element. This switch element uses two electrical conductors 14 of the already provided water level sensor 7, in order to be able to detect the presence of the filter insert 1 in the liquid filter, as will be explained below in more detail.
On its lower end, the connection piece 5 has a stop 15. This can take the form of several projections spaced radially about the connection piece or of a continuous, circular flange. The stop 15 cooperates with the sliding sleeve 10 such that it restricts the downward movement of the sleeve. Under the force effect of the helical spring 11 and gravity, the sliding sleeve therefore moves only so far downward until it makes contact with the stop 15.
The inside of the sliding sleeve 10 receives the flexible tongue 12.
A pin that projects inward on the wall of the sliding sleeve 10, when used in conjunction with a bore in the cross-bar of the flexible tongue 12, can serve to affix the flexible tongue 12 to the sliding sleeve 10. The pin is thus welded onto the sliding sleeve.
An alternative fastening by means of screwing, riveting, and the like is, however, also possible, in order to affix the flexible tongue 12 in the sliding sleeve 10, as illustrated in
With respect to its angular position, the sliding sleeve 10 is arranged on the connection piece 5 such that the two arms of the flexible tongue 12 make contact with the two electrical conductors 14 when the sliding sleeve 10 is placed at the corresponding section of the connection piece 5.
In the case of the embodiment shown, the sliding sleeve 10 is pressed downward and against the stop 15 by the helical spring 11. Because the conductors 14 run along the inside of the connection piece 5 in its lower area, the arms of the flexible tongue 12 do not make contact with the conductors 14, so that the conductors 14 are not bridged by the flexible tongue 12. The switch element that is formed by the flexible tongue 12, or by the sliding sleeve 10 together with the flexible tongue 12, thus assumes its interrupt position when there is no filter insert 1 located in the fuel filter.
By contrast, the switch element assumes its contact position when the filter insert 1, according to
The flexible tongue 12 is made of an electrically conducting substance, for example, a metallic material, but it has a defined electrical resistance. In its contact position, it therefore connects the two electrical conductors 14 with a resistance that can be evaluated by the electronic switch, which also evaluates the signals of the water level sensor 7. By means of the measured electrical resistance, a diagnosis can be made regarding
In one of the embodiments that differs from the embodiment of
The flexible tongue 12 is also constructed differently from the embodiment of
When the filter insert 1 is removed from the fuel filter, the electrical switch assumes the same switching state as it would for an unacceptably high water level in the fuel filter, so that, for example, a warning signal would be triggered or the start of the engine would be prevented. On the other hand, in the embodiment of
Within the framework of another not shown modification of this basic embodiment of
Basically, the sliding sleeve 10 and the helical spring 11, as shown in
As an alternative to this, the switch element can be provided on the replaceable filter insert. In this way, a designation that is typical for different filter inserts can be made possible by means of correspondingly different electrical resistances, which the respective switch elements have.
The embodiment of
The fin 16 can be made of plastic and, for example, be manufactured as a single piece with upper end plate 2 using the injection molding process. Selecting a suitable plastic material allows the fin 16 to insulate the two electrical conductors 14 from each other.
The fin 16 can, however, also be manufactured using another material that has no insulating properties, but has a significantly higher electrical resistance relative to the short-circuit value, so that the electrical resistance between the two conductors 14 assumes a “filter insert value” when the filter insert 1 is inserted in the fuel filter.
Instead of a special material for the fin 16, the fin 16 can also be manufactured from insulating material, that is, electrically conductive surfaces in the form of electrical contacts can be provided on both sides of the fin 16, and these contacts can be connected with a defined electrical resistance, so that, in this case, too, the fin 16 does indeed act as a separator, but does not insulate the two electrical conductors 14 from each other, but instead, separates them by means of a defined electrical resistance, so that, in this case, too, the electrical resistance assumes a “filter insert value” when the filter insert 1 is in the fuel filter.
The embodiment in
In the embodiments in
Two electrodes 6 extend downward on the connection piece 5, the lower ends of which form the water level sensor 7. When, in the embodiment shown, water collects in the lower area of the filter housing 19, particularly in the area of the screw cap 20, due to its higher, specific weight, and the level of this water reaches a corresponding level, then the water can pass through openings that are provided in a downward-projecting cup 22, wherein this cup 22 is formed by the lower end plate 3. The cup 22 has a central pin 23 that extends between the two electrodes 6 of the water level sensor 7 and thereby prevents a short-circuiting of these two electrodes 6. The short circuit is much more frequently caused by the water found in the filter housing 19 when the water level is correspondingly high, so that, in such a case, the water level sensor 7 emits the alarm.
The water level sensor 7 is formed by two electrodes 6, which, similar to the embodiment in
Deviating from the embodiment illustrated in
In the embodiment of
In comparison,
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2007 029 460.5 | Jun 2007 | DE | national |
10 2007 031 382.0 | Jul 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE08/01017 | 6/25/2008 | WO | 00 | 6/10/2010 |