This invention relates to fuel injector assemblies on cylinder heads in internal combustion engines, including but not limited to injector clamps that fasten fuel injectors to the cylinder head.
The assembly of fuel injectors onto a cylinder head and the use of hold down clamps to secure the injector into the cylinder head are well known. Existing devices used to hold down or secure fuel injectors to cylinder heads are often impractical because such devices tend to be bulky, thereby adding to the crowding of components in the limited space on a cylinder head. Also, during disassembly or removal of the fuel injector from the cylinder head, the use of previous clamps typically requires that a tool pries the fuel injector from the cylinder head. Prying the fuel injector from the cylinder head frequently results in a damaged injector. Further, because the space around the fuel injector on the cylinder head is very limited, difficulty is encountered in prying the fuel injector from the cylinder head.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,431,152 titled “Injector Hold Down Clamp” describes a compact clamp assembly that allows for disassembly of a fuel injector from a cylinder head without the need to pry the fuel injector from the cylinder head. This patent describes the use of a bolt with a clamp and a retainer ring that holds the bolt to the clamp during injector removal. Nevertheless, the retainer ring could separate from the bolt, resulting in the need to manually pry the fuel injector from the cylinder head.
Accordingly, there is a need for an injector hold down clamp that provides for removal of the fuel injector from the cylinder head without the need to pry the fuel injector from the cylinder head and providing enhanced retention of the bolt in the clamp.
An apparatus includes a clamp for use with a device, such as a fuel injector, disposed with a platform, such as a cylinder head. The clamp has a passage. A fastener is disposed within the passage of the clamp and has recess bounded by a ledge. A retaining sleeve is at least partially deformed. The deformed retaining sleeve is secured between the clamp and the ledge when the fastener is removed from the platform, such as a cylinder head, to thereby allow the apparatus to be removed together with the device, such as a fuel injector.
The following describes an apparatus for and method of clamping a device, such as a fuel injector, to a platform, such as a cylinder head, and thereafter removing the device from the platform together with the clamp. A retaining sleeve is deformed such that the retaining sleeve is held in place between the clamp and a ledge on a fastener disposed within the clamp. The retaining sleeve secures the fastener to the clamp during removal of the fastener, thereby providing that the clamp assembly and the device, such as a fuel injector, are removed together.
A perspective view of an injector clamp with a cutaway view of a fastener and an interior surface of the injector clamp is shown in
A perspective view of an injector clamp assembly disposed on a fuel injector 201 is shown in
Side views of various embodiments of the fastener for the injector clamp are shown in
The fastener 101 may generally be manufactured utilizing the following process. The fastener 101 is cold rolled. A blanking process provides the shape of the head 301, the neck 303, the cylindrical segment 305 extended at the diameter of the cylindrical segment 305 down to the section where the ledge 311 is to be formed, and a necked-down region 313 that that tapers down to the pitch diameter of the threaded region 315. It is advantageous to locate the ledge 311 as far from the head 301 as possible, while maintaining the threads 315 as close to the head 301 as possible. A channel is rolled into the fastener 101 just above the necked-down region 313, resulting in formation of the tapering section 307, the cylindrical section 309, and the ledge 311. If the fastener 101 elongates when the channel is rolled, such elongation needs to be compensated for when locating the necked-down region 313 in the blanking operation. The displacement of material from the rolling process yields the ledge 311 that borders the channel in which the retaining sleeve 403 engages. After the channel is formed, threads are rolled up as high as possible without interfering with the channel or ledge 311. Optionally, the cylindrical section 309 may extend from the ledge 311 to the neck 303, thus replacing sections 305 and 307. Other manufacturing processes may also be utilized.
The clamp 105 is advantageously comprised of cast metal that is quenched and tempered to Rc 45-55 standards, while the fastener 101 is advantageously comprised of class 12.9 phosphate coated metal. One of skill in the art readily recognizes that other types of materials may be utilized as long as the clamp 105 and fastener 101 secure the injector to the cylinder head while adequately withstanding any forces encountered during operation of the engine.
Cross-sectional views of the fastener 101 disposed within the clamp 105 are shown in
As shown in
A perspective view of a retaining sleeve 403 is shown in
A side view of a deformation tool utilized to deform the retaining sleeve onto the fastener is shown in
A cross-sectional view of the deformation tool in conjunction with the retaining sleeve as positioned on the fastener is shown in
Although the present invention is described above with respect to a fuel injector fastened to a cylinder head, it is possible to utilize the clamp and fastener approach to devices other than a fuel injector and to devices fastened to platforms other than a cylinder head. Thus, the present invention provides a method and apparatus for removing the clamp and device together from the platform.
The present invention provides a method and apparatus for fastening a fuel injector clamp to a cylinder head while providing that the clamp is removed from the cylinder head together with the fuel injector. A retaining sleeve is secured between an extending surface of the clamp and a ledge of a fastener within a passage of the clamp to retain the clamp with the fastener as the fastener is removed. The deformed retaining sleeve is continuous, thereby preventing external objects from dislodging the retaining sleeve. The arrangement utilized to secure the retaining sleeve is more robust, thus separation of the retaining sleeve from the fastener is less likely. If the retaining sleeve should somehow become dislodged from the fastener, the retaining sleeve is too large to fit through the oil intake grate. A deformation tool is also provided to compress at least a part of the retaining sleeve onto the fastener without damaging the threads on the fastener.
The present invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from its spirit or essential characteristics. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrative and not restrictive. The scope of the invention is, therefore, indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040159311 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |