Fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6712296
  • Patent Number
    6,712,296
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, December 26, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 30, 2004
    21 years ago
Abstract
A fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines, having a pistonlike valve member, axially movable counter to the closing force of a spring, in the bore of a valve body and that controls at least one injection opening. A control chamber surrounding the valve member is disposed between a guided portion of the valve member and an oil leakage chamber that receives the spring; the valve member communicates with an inlet conduit via a throttling annular gap and with the oil leakage chamber via a control bore. In the closing motion of the valve member away from the valve seat, fuel is positively displaced out of the control chamber into the oil leakage chamber by a pressure face. In a portion of the valve member stroke, the control chamber is closed, except for a throttle gap formed between a cylindrical portion and the control bore, toward the oil leakage chamber, and the fuel pressure in the control chamber rises, since the outflow can now take place only via the throttle gap. As a result, the seating of the valve sealing face on the valve seat is damped, leading to reduced running noise of the engine and reduced wear in the region of the valve sealing face.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The invention is directed to a fuel injection valve and particularly to such a valve for internal combustion engines.




2. Description of the Prior Art




One known fuel injection valve, known from German Published, Nonexamined Patent Application DE 195 08 636 A1, employs a pistonlike valve member disposed in the bore of the valve body and is axially movable counter to the closing force of a spring. On its end toward the combustion chamber, the valve member has a valve sealing face, which cooperates with a valve seat embodied in the valve body, and as a result at least one injection opening is controlled. The inward- or outward-oriented opening stroke motion of the valve member is defined by a stroke stop. In the closing motion of the valve member away from the stroke stop, the valve member is accelerated in the direction toward the valve seat by the force of the spring. The fuel, which is located between the valve sealing face and the valve seat, has to be expelled in the process. Although this fuel does provide a certain damping of the impact of the valve member on the valve seat, nevertheless the force on the valve member upon impact with the valve seat is still so great that relatively loud engine noise results. Furthermore, in long-term operation, wear can occur in the region of the valve seat, along with incomplete sealing of the injection openings from the combustion chamber.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The fuel injection valve of the invention for internal combustion engines has the advantage over the prior art that the seating of the valve member on the valve seat in the closing motion is additionally damped. Between the portion of the valve member guided in the bore and the oil leakage chamber, a control chamber is provided, which surrounds the valve member over its entire circumference. By means of a pressure face embodied on the valve member, upon the closing motion of the valve member, fuel is expelled from the control chamber through the control bore into the oil leakage chamber, which takes place unthrottled at the onset of the closing motion. In a partial stroke of the valve member, a cylindrical portion of the valve member plunges into the control bore, thus forming an annular throttle gap between the control bore and the cylindrical part of the valve member, through which throttle gap the fuel can now flow out of the control chamber only in throttled fashion. As a result, the seating of the valve member on the valve seat is damped, and the maximum impact forces are reduced. The noise caused by the closure of the valve member is thus lessened, leading to quieter engine operation. Furthermore, the damping leads to reduced wear of the valve sealing face and the valve seat.




Another advantage of the invention is that it can be employed in both fuel injection valves that open inward, away from the combustion chamber, and in fuel injection valves that open outward. All that is needed is to transpose the disposition of the control piston and the control bore.




The outflow of fuel from the control chamber need not take place exclusively via the annular throttle gap. In a further version, it can also be provided that additional throttling conduits are embodied in the valve body or in the valve member that connect the control chamber to the oil leakage chamber. This also makes it possible for the throttling action of the control chamber to be regulatable via adjustable throttle connections.




In both versions, the spring loading the valve member is disposed in the oil leakage chamber, which has an outflow conduit through which the fuel is carried back into the tank via an outflow line. The outflow rate of the fuel from the control chamber depends not only the flow resistance of the throttle connection to the oil leakage chamber but also on the pressure difference between the oil leakage chamber and the pressure chamber. If the pressure of the fuel in the oil leakage chamber is relatively high, then the outflow of fuel from the control chamber will proceed more slowly than at low pressure. As a result, a higher pressure can build up in the control chamber, which via the higher pressure on the pressure face damps the seating motion of the valve member more markedly. By the provision of a pressure holding valve in the outflow conduit of the oil leakage chamber or in the outflow line, a previously determined pressure can be maintained in the oil leakage chamber. The outflow rate from the control chamber and thus the damping action of the control chamber can thus be varied by way of the holding pressure. If the pressure holding valve is embodied in regulatable form, then the damping action can be adapted to given requirements as a function of the engine operating state.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




Further advantages and features of the invention will be apparent from the description contained herein below, taken with the drawings, in which:





FIG. 1

is a longitudinal section through the first exemplary embodiment of an inward-opening fuel injection valve;





FIG. 2

is an enlargement of

FIG. 1

in the region of the control chamber;





FIG. 3

is a longitudinal section through the second exemplary embodiment of an outward-opening fuel injection valve; and,





FIGS. 4



a


and


4




b


show two features of the fuel outflow system with a pressure holding valve.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT




Referring to the drawings, in detail, a fuel injection valve of the invention for internal combustion engines is shown in longitudinal section in

FIG. 1

, and first the construction will be described, then the mode of operation of the fuel injection valve will be explained.




A valve body


1


, which can be constructed in multiple parts, is disposed in a receiving bore of the housing of an internal combustion engine, not shown in the drawing; the upper end, remote from the combustion chamber, of the valve body


1


is fixed in the receiving bore, while the lower end, toward the combustion chamber, protrudes into the combustion chamber of the engine. A bore


5


is embodied in the valve body


1


and is subdivided into an upper portion


5




a


and a lower portion


5




b


. The bore


5


ends, on its end toward the combustion chamber, inside the valve body


1


, and the part of the valve body


1


that closes the bore


5


toward the combustion chamber is embodied as an essentially conical valve seat


7


. The valve seat


7


is adjoined toward the combustion chamber by a blind bore


19


, in which at least one injection opening


8


is disposed that connects the blind bore


19


to the combustion chamber. Disposed in the bore


5


is a pistonlike, axially movable valve member


4


, which on its end toward the combustion chamber has a substantially conical valve sealing face


6


, which cooperates with the valve seat


7


embodied in the valve body. The valve member


4


is embodied with a graduated diameter, which subdivides it into an upper portion


4




a


and a lower portion


4




b


. The valve member


4


is guided in the bore


5


by its upper portion


4




a


. The lower portion


4




b


of the valve member


4


is embodied with a smaller diameter than the upper portion


4




a


, so that a pressure face


9


is formed at the transition between the two portions


4




a


,


4




b


. Between the wall of the bore


5


and the lower portion


4




b


of the valve member


4


, an annular conduit


18


is formed, which in the region of the pressure face


9


forms a pressure chamber


3


by means of a radial widening in cross section. An inlet conduit


2


extending within the valve body


1


discharges into the pressure chamber


3


and can be made to communicate on its other end, via a high-pressure inlet line, not shown in the drawing, with a high-pressure fuel pump or some other high-pressure source. The inlet conduit


2


communicates with the valve seat


7


via the pressure chamber


3


and the annular conduit


18


. In the inward-oriented opening stroke motion of the valve member


4


, the valve sealing face


6


opens the communication from the annular conduit


18


to the blind bore


19


, effecting communication of the inlet conduit


2


with the injection opening


8


.




The upper portion


4




a


of the valve member


4


is adjoined by a substantially cylindrical, larger-diameter control piston


11


, and as a result a pressure face


12


is disposed at the transition from the valve member


4


to the control piston


11


. In the region of the upper portion


4




a


of the valve member


4


, a control chamber


10


is formed by means of a radial cross-sectional widening of the bore


5


. The jacket face of the control piston


11


, on the end of the jacket face toward the combustion chamber, has a damping edge


13


, which cooperates with a control edge that is embodied by a portion of the bore


5


embodied as a control bore


40


. The control piston


11


is adjoined by an intermediate pin


17


, disposed coaxially to the valve member


4


in an intermediate bore


26


, and the intermediate pin is connected in turn to a spring plate


22


that protrudes into an oil leakage chamber


20


embodied on the end of the valve body


1


remote from the combustion chamber. Via this intermediate bore


26


, the upper portion


5




a


of the bore


5


communicates with the oil leakage chamber


20


, which in turn communicates with an outflow system


35


via an outflow conduit


30


embodied in the valve body


1


. Between the spring plate


22


and the end of the oil leakage chamber


20


remote from the combustion chamber, a spring


21


is disposed with initial tension; it presses the valve member


4


with the valve sealing face


6


against the valve seat


7


, via the spring plate


22


, the intermediate pin


17


, and the control piston


11


.




The intermediate pin


17


is embodied with a smaller diameter than the control piston


11


, and thus a stop shoulder


24


is formed at the transition from the control piston


11


to the intermediate pin


17


. At the transition from the bore


5


to the intermediate bore


26


, a stop ring


23


is disposed coaxially to the axis of the valve member


4


. The stop ring


23


is fixed in the intermediate bore


26


, and the side of the stop ring


23


toward the combustion chamber is embodied as a stroke stop


25


; the axial spacing of the stroke stop


25


from the stop shoulder


24


in the closed state of the fuel injection valve defines the opening stroke h of the valve member


4


. The overlap s of the damping edge


13


and the control edge


14


in the closing position of the valve member


4


is always dimensioned such that it is less than the opening stroke h of the valve member


4


. Preferably, the overlap s amounts to from 10-50% of the opening stroke h.




In

FIG. 2

, the region of the control chamber


11


of the fuel injection valve is shown again, enlarged. In the closed state of the fuel injection valve, the damping edge


13


and the control edge


14


overlap, so that the control chamber


10


communicates with the oil leakage chamber


20


only via an annular throttle gap


15


. The second opening of the control chamber


10


is defined via the throttling annular gap


16


embodied between the upper portion


4




a


of the valve member and the bore


5


; the flow resistance of the fuel through the throttling conduit or gap


15


is less than that of the annular gap


16


. The control chamber


10


is embodied in

FIG. 2

as radial widening of the upper portion of the bore


5


, so that the volume of the control chamber


10


decreases in the closing motion of the valve member


4


when the control piston


11


plunges into it.




The mode of operation of the first exemplary embodiment of the fuel injection valve of

FIG. 1

is as follows: Through a high-pressure fuel pump, via a fuel inlet line, fuel is introduced at high pressure into the inlet conduit


2


. As a result, the fuel pressure also increases in the pressure chamber


3


and the annular conduit chamber


18


. Because of the pressure face


9


disposed in the region of the pressure chamber


13


, there is a resultant force acting on the valve member


4


, oriented in the axial direction away from the combustion chamber, that counteracts the closing force of the spring


21


. If this resultant force exceeds the closing force of the spring


21


, then the valve member


4


moves axially away from the combustion chamber, and the valve sealing face


6


lifts from the valve seat


7


. As a result, the injection opening


8


is made to communicate with the pressure chamber


3


via the blind bore


19


and the annular conduit


18


, and fuel is injected into the combustion chamber.




At the onset of the opening stroke motion of the valve member


4


, the control edge


14


overlaps the damping edge


13


, and the control chamber


10


communicates with the oil leakage chamber


20


via the throttle gap


15


. In the course of the opening stroke motion, the throttling edge


13


overtakes the control edge


14


and moves past it, until the valve member


4


with its stop shoulder


24


contacts the stroke stop


25


. Because of the high fuel pressure in the pressure chamber


3


, some of the fuel is also expelled through the annular gap


16


into the control chamber


10


.




The closing motion of the valve member


4


is initiated when the fuel pressure in the inlet conduit


2


and thus also in the pressure chamber


3


drops. As soon as the resultant force on the pressure face


9


becomes less than the closing force of the spring


21


, the valve member


4


is accelerated in the direction of the valve seat


7


. When the pressure face


12


plunges into the control chamber


10


, the fuel located in that chamber is positively displaced and expelled out of the control chamber


10


into the oil leakage chamber


20


. As long as the damping edge


13


has not yet reached the control edge


14


, this takes place with a comparatively slight flow resistance of the fuel, so that the pressure in the control chamber


10


is largely equal to that in the oil leakage chamber


20


. As soon as the damping edge


13


reaches the control edge


14


, the control chamber


10


is closed toward the oil leakage chamber


20


, except for the throttle gap


15


. The fuel pressure in the control chamber


10


thereupon rises and is decreased only slowly by the outflow of the fuel via the throttle gap


15


. Because of the increased fuel pressure in the control chamber


10


, a force on the pressure face


12


and thus on the valve member


4


results which force is counter to the closing force of the spring


21


. The motion of the valve member


4


in the direction of the valve seat


7


is slowed down as a result; the valve sealing face


6


does not sit down as hard on the valve seat


7


, and the high-frequency oscillations in the injection pressure and of the valve member


4


that occur upon impact are damped. A marked calming of the pressure course occurs at the fuel injection valve, and because of the softer seating of the valve member


4


on the valve seat


7


, the maximum forces on the valve member


4


are reduced sharply, which in turn contributes to reduced engine noise. The wear of the valve member


4


caused by the valve seat


7


and of the valve sealing face


6


is reduced markedly as a result, and thus the service life of the fuel injection valve is prolonged.




In

FIG. 3

, as a second exemplary embodiment, a longitudinal section through an outward-opening fuel injection valve is shown. The valve member


4


is again subdivided into an upper portion


4




a


, guided in the bore


5


, and a lower portion


4




b


, which protrudes freely into the bore


5


. The lower portion


4




b


of the valve member


4


is embodied with a smaller diameter than the upper portion


4




a


, so that an upper pressure face


50


is formed at the transition between the two portions


4




a


,


4




b


. A closing head


53


is disposed on the lower end of the valve member


4


, and in this closing head at least one injection conduit


52


with an injection opening


108


is formed. The closing head


53


is embodied with a larger diameter than the upper portion


4




a


, so that a lower pressure face


51


is formed on the side of the closing head


53


remote from the combustion chamber. On the end toward the combustion chamber, the closing head


53


has a closing plate


54


, whose annular end face toward the valve body


1


is embodied as a valve sealing face


106


. The end face of the valve body


1


toward the combustion chamber is embodied as a valve seat


107


and cooperates with the valve sealing face


106


. In the closed state of the valve member


4


, the opening of the injection conduit


52


is closed by the valve body


1


, and the valve sealing face


106


and the valve seat


107


assure secure sealing off of the injection opening


108


from the combustion chamber.




The bore


5


is adjoined, on the end of the valve member


4


remote from the combustion chamber, by a control bore


40


, which is adjoined in turn by an oil leakage chamber


20


. On the end toward the combustion chamber, the valve member


4


changes over into a control piston


111


, which is embodied with a smaller diameter than the guided portion


4




a


of the valve member


4


. As a result, a pressure face


112


is formed at the transition from the valve member


4


to the control piston


111


, and the tapered embodiment of the control piston


111


forms a control chamber


10


between the control piston and the bore


5


. The control piston


111


is adjoined by a spring tappet


44


, which protrudes into the inside of the oil leakage chamber


20


, and the spring tappet is adjoined by a valve plate


122


. The spring tappet


44


is embodied with a smaller diameter than the control piston


111


. In the control bore


40


, a stroke stop


125


embodied as an annular shoulder is formed, which cooperates with a stop ring


123


shaped like an annular collar and disposed on the spring pin. The axial spacing of the lower face of the stop ring


123


and the upper face of the stroke stop


125


determines the opening stroke h of the valve member


4


. A spring


21


, preferably embodied as a helical compression spring, is disposed between the spring plate


122


and the end of the oil leakage chamber


20


toward the combustion chamber. This spring braces the spring plate


122


away from the combustion chamber, so that via the spring tappet


44


and the control piston


111


, the valve member


4


is pressed with its valve sealing face


106


against the valve seat


107


.




On the end remote from the combustion chamber of the jacket face of the control piston


111


, a damping edge


113


is formed, which cooperates with a control edge


114


formed by the transition from the control bore


40


to the bore


5


. In the closed state of the fuel injection valve, the control piston


111


plunges with the overlap s into the control bore


40


. Since the control piston


111


has a diameter that is only slightly smaller than that of the control bore


40


, a throttle gap


115


is formed between the control piston


111


and the control bore


40


, and by way of the throttle gap, the control chamber


10


communicates with the oil leakage chamber


20


. The overlap s of the edges


113


and


114


is less than the opening stroke h of the valve member


4


, so that when the fuel injection valve is fully open, the control piston


111


emerges from the control bore


40


.




The outward-opening fuel injection valve shown in

FIG. 3

has the following mode of operation: The fuel introduced into the annular conduit


18


through the inlet conduit


2


acts upon both the upper pressure face


50


and the lower pressure face


51


. Since the lower pressure face


51


has a larger surface area operative in the axial direction, the force on the valve member


4


toward the combustion chamber predominates. If the fuel pressure is equal to an opening pressure, then the resultant force exceeds the closing force of the spring


21


. The valve sealing face


106


moves away from the valve seat


107


, and the injection opening


108


emerges from the bore


5


, until the stop ring


123


rests on the stroke stop


125


. In the open position of the valve member


4


, the control piston


111


is located outside the control bore


40


. By means of a pressure drop in the annular conduit


18


to below the opening pressure, the valve member


4


is accelerated in the closing direction by the spring


21


. As a result, the pressure face


112


moves into the control chamber


10


, and fuel is thus expelled into the oil leakage chamber


20


via the control bore


40


. Initially, this occurs with only a slight flow resistance; not until the damping edge


113


reaches the control edge


114


does the passage into the control bore


40


narrow down to the throttle gap


115


. The pressure in the control chamber


10


rises, and by the resultant force on the pressure face


112


, this causes a braked motion of the valve member


4


and thus a damped seating of the valve sealing face


106


on the valve seat


107


.




In

FIG. 4



a


, one exemplary embodiment of the outflow system


35


of the fuel from the oil leakage chamber


20


is shown schematically. In the course of the outflow line


31


, a pressure holding valve


32


is provided, which opens in the outflow direction toward the fuel tank


34


only at a certain pressure in the outflow line


31


. As a result, a certain holding pressure is maintained in the outflow line between the fuel injection valve and the pressure holding valve


32


and thus in the oil leakage chamber


20


as well. In

FIG. 4



b


, an alternative disposition of the pressure holding valve


32


is shown, which is disposed here in the outflow conduit


30


of the valve body


1


. In this arrangement, it is unnecessary for assembly purposes to adapt the existing outflow system


35


to the altered fuel injection valve. The holding pressure of the fuel injection valve in both embodiments amounts to approximately 0.15 to 1.0 MPa. By means of the holding pressure in the oil leakage chamber


20


, the outflow of the fuel from the control chamber


10


into the oil leakage chamber


20


during the closing motion of the valve member


4


is varied, since the outflow rate depends not only on the cross section of the throttle gap


15


but also on the pressure difference between the oil leakage chamber


20


and the control chamber


10


.




It can also be provided that the holding pressure is regulatable at the pressure holding valve


32


. This makes it possible to control the holding pressure as a function of the engine operating state and thus to adapt it in a purposeful way to various requirements.




The foregoing relates to preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the claims.



Claims
  • 1. In a fuel injection valve for internal combustion engines, having a bore (5) embodied in the valve body (1), in which bore a pistonlike valve member (4) is disposed that is axially movable counter to the closing force of a spring (21) and that on its end toward the combustion chamber controls at least one injection opening (8) and that has a portion (4b) toward the combustion chamber, which portion is disposed in an annular conduit (3, 18) filled with fuel at high pressure, and on which portion (4b) of the valve member (4) a pressure face (9) is embodied, and the pressure of the fuel acts on the pressure face (9) counter to the closing force of the spring (21), wherein the valve member (4) has a second pressure face (12, 122), by which a control chamber (10) surrounding the valve member (4) can be defined, so that upon the closing motion of the valve member (4) the volume of the control chamber (10) can be decreased, and the control chamber (10) is in constant communication, via a throttle gap (16), with the annular conduit (3, 18) and a further communication with an oil leakage chamber (20), which beyond a certain stroke of the closing motion of the valve member (4) is throttled via an annular gap (15, 115) which is formed between a control bore (40), disposed between the control chamber (10) and the oil leakage chamber (20), and a control piston (11, 111) of the valve member (4), the control piston plunging into the control bore (40) upon closure.
  • 2. The fuel injection valve of claim 1, wherein the flow direction of the fuel from the control chamber (10) is oriented substantially counter to the closing direction of the valve member (4).
  • 3. The fuel injection valve of claim 1, wherein the flow direction of the fuel from the control chamber (10) is oriented substantially in the closing direction of the valve member (4).
  • 4. The fuel injection valve of claim 2, wherein the valve member (4) has an opening stroke motion oriented away from the combustion chamber.
  • 5. The fuel injection valve of claim 4, wherein the control chamber (10) is disposed between the portion (4b) of the valve member (4) and the control piston (11).
  • 6. The fuel injection valve of claim 5, wherein the piston (11) has a jacket face on the end of the piston (11) which is toward the combustion chamber, and has a damping edge (13), which cooperates with a control edge (14) embodied on the end of the control bore (40) remote from the combustion chamber.
  • 7. The fuel injection valve of claim 6, wherein the damping edge (13), when the fuel injection valve is closed, has an overlap (s) with the control edge (14) that amounts to from 10-50% of the total opening stroke (h) of the valve member (4).
  • 8. The fuel injection valve of claim 3, wherein the valve member (4) has an opening stroke motion oriented toward the combustion chamber.
  • 9. The fuel injection valve of claim 8, wherein the control piston (111) has a jacket face on which, remote from the combustion chamber, a damping edge (113) is formed, which cooperates with a control edge (114) embodied on the end of the control bore (40) toward the combustion chamber.
  • 10. The fuel injection valve of claim 9, wherein the damping edge (113), when the fuel injection valve is closed, has an overlap (s) with the control edge (114) that amounts to from 10-50% of the total opening stroke (h) of the valve member (4).
  • 11. The fuel injection valve of claim 1, wherein the oil leakage chamber (20) has an outflow bore (30), which communicates with an outflow system (35) that discharges into a fuel tank (34).
  • 12. The fuel injection valve of claim 11, wherein a pressure holding valve (32) is disposed in the outflow bore (30) and maintains a holding pressure in the outflow system (35).
  • 13. The fuel injection valve of claim 12, wherein the pressure holding valve (32) is disposed in an outflow line (31) of the outflow system (35).
  • 14. The fuel injection valve of claim 11, wherein the holding pressure is adjustable by the pressure holding valve (32).
  • 15. The fuel injection valve of claim 12, wherein the holding pressure amounts to from 0.15 to 1.0 MPa.
  • 16. The fuel injection valve of claim 1, wherein at least one further throttle connection is embodied between the control chamber (10) and the oil leakage chamber (20).
  • 17. The fuel injection valve of claim 16, wherein the further throttle connection is embodied as a conduit embodied in the valve member (4).
  • 18. The fuel injection valve of claim 16, wherein the further throttle connection is embodied as a conduit embodied in the valve body (1).
  • 19. The fuel injection valve of claim 4, wherein the oil leakage chamber (20) has an outflow bore (30), which communicates with an outflow system (35) that discharges into a fuel tank (34).
  • 20. The fuel injection valve of claim 6, wherein the oil leakage chamber (20) has an outflow bore (30), which communicates with an outflow system (35) that discharges into a fuel tank (34).
  • 21. The fuel injection valve of claim 9, wherein the oil leakage chamber (20) has an outflow bore (30), which communicates with an outflow system (35) that discharges into a fuel tank (34).
  • 22. The fuel injection valve of claim 10, wherein the oil leakage chamber (20) has an outflow bore (30), which communicates with an outflow system (35) that discharges into a fuel tank (34).
  • 23. The fuel injection valve of claim 20, wherein a pressure holding valve (32) is disposed in the outflow bore (30).
  • 24. The fuel injection valve of claim 22, wherein a pressure holding valve (32) is disposed in the outflow bore (30).
  • 25. The fuel injection valve of claim 22, wherein the pressure holding valve (32) is disposed in an outflow line (31) of the outflow system (35).
  • 26. The fuel injection valve of claim 13, wherein the holding pressure is adjustable by the pressure holding valve (32).
  • 27. The fuel injection valve of claim 13, wherein the holding pressure amounts to from 0.15 to 1.0 Mpa.
  • 28. The fuel injection valve of claim 14, wherein the holding pressure amounts to from 0.15 to 1.0 Mpa.
  • 29. The fuel injection valve of claim 2, wherein at least one further throttle connection is embodied between the control chamber (10) and the oil leakage chamber (20).
  • 30. The fuel injection valve of claim 4, wherein at least one further throttle connection is embodied between the control chamber (10) and the oil leakage chamber (20).
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
199 47 194 Oct 1999 DE
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a 35 U.S.C. 371 application of PCT/DE 00/03269 filed on Sep. 20, 2000.

PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/DE00/03269 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO01/25622 4/12/2001 WO A
US Referenced Citations (5)
Number Name Date Kind
4784102 Igashira et al. Nov 1988 A
4875658 Asai Oct 1989 A
5176115 Campion Jan 1993 A
5868317 English Feb 1999 A
6029628 Oleksiewicz et al. Feb 2000 A