This U.S. patent application claims priority, under 35 U.S.C. 119, to European patent application No. 16169621.6, filed May 13, 2016, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
The present disclosure relates to a fuel rail assembly for an internal combustion engine and particularly, but not exclusively, to a fuel rail assembly for a multi-cylinder gasoline direct injection engine.
The fuel rail assembly includes an elongate main gallery which forms a fuel reservoir and fuel is supplied at high-pressure into the fuel rail by a fuel pump. Spaced along the fuel rail are a plurality of fuel delivery outlets for hydraulically coupling the main gallery to the individual fuel injectors which are operable to inject fuel into the engine.
Such fuel rail assemblies are typically designed according to the engine packaging and design of the specific internal combustion engine for which the assembly is required. As a result, the design of the fuel rail assembly is specific to a particular engine and is therefore not usable for other engines.
A known example of such a fuel rail assembly is disclosed in EP 2466111 B. The specification discloses a mounting structure for mounting connections for each fuel injector in the form of an injector cup to the main gallery and for securing the injector cup to the main gallery. A fastening arrangement is disclosed for securing the fuel rail to an engine and to secure the fastening arrangement to the injector cup. The fastening arrangement is spaced from the main gallery, so that concentration of stresses due to relative displacements between the parts is distributed through the various components. The mounting structure and the fastening arrangement are formed of complex bodies typically formed by forging or machining from solid which require complex tooling and machining requirements to ensure the accuracy of the components for easy assembly.
One objective of the present disclosure is to provide a fuel rail assembly which is easily configurable for use with engines of different shapes and packaging requirements and which is particularly cost effective to manufacture and assemble.
A further problem associated with gasoline direct injection engines arises because of the high pressure of the fuel in the fuel rail. In a typical design, the inlet end of a fuel injector is located in a fuel injector cup secured to the main gallery and variations in the fuel pressure in the fuel injector cup and in the pressure in the hydraulic passage to the fuel injector are caused by the fuel injection process. This high-pressure and variations in the pressure creates additional stresses on the mounting and the connections between the components.
It is also an objective of the present disclosure to provide a fuel rail assembly in which the stresses imposed on the mounting structure by variations in hydraulic pressure in the injector cup are spread through the injector cup mounting.
According to example embodiments of the present invention, there is provided a fuel rail assembly for an internal combustion engine including an elongated main gallery and a plurality of fuel delivery outlets spaced along the main gallery for hydraulically coupling the main gallery to fuel injectors which are operable to inject fuel into the combustion engine, each fuel delivery outlet having an injector cup for receiving a fuel inlet of a respective one of the fuel injectors, and an injector cup mounting connection arranged between the main gallery and the injector cup for hydraulically and mechanically coupling the injector cup to the main gallery. The fuel rail assembly further includes a fixing bracket adapted to fasten the fuel rail to the engine, the fixing bracket being spaced apart from the injector cup and being secured to the main gallery with a fastening element to secure the fixing bracket to the engine, and a rigid connection member coupled to the fixing bracket and extending between the fixing bracket and one of the injector cup and the injector cup mounting connection, in particular to establish a rigid connection between the injector cup and the fixing bracket.
The main gallery may be a straight tube. In one embodiment, the injector cup and the injector cup mounting connection are separately manufactured and inseparably joined parts. For example, the injector cup mounting connection is a metal part including a fuel channel for leading fuel from the main gallery to the injector cup. In one development, the fuel channel has two sections which extend at an angle, in particular perpendicular to one another, so that the flow direction in which the fuel enters the injector cup mounting connection from the respective fuel delivery outlet is different from the flow direction in which the fuel leaves the injector cup mounting connection into the injector cup.
That “the rigid connection member extends between the fixing bracket and one of the injector cup and the injector cup mounting connection” means in particular that the connection member is fixed to one—and only one—of the injector cup and the injector cup mounting connection, is spaced apart from the other one of the injector cup and the injector cup mounting connection and extends—preferably in the elongation direction of the main gallery—from the injector cup and/or the injector cup mounting connection to the fixing bracket. In embodiments in which the connection member is fixed to the injector cup mounting connection, the rigid connection between the injector cup and the fixing bracket is in particular established by means of a rigid connection between—or integral forming of—the injector cup and the injector cup mounting connection, a rigid connection between the injector cup mounting connection and the connection member, and a rigid connection between—or integral forming of—the connection member or the fixing bracket.
In a preferred embodiment, the fixing bracket includes a U-shaped member in cross-section and defines a channel through which the fastening element passes to secure the bracket to the engine, the bracket having a first leg secured to the fuel rail and a second leg joining the connection member, the lower end of the U-shaped member adapted to abut the engine being shaped outwardly to form a flange to create a wide surface area to provide better contact between the fastening bracket and the engine, and the upper end of the U-shaped member being shaped outwardly to provide a flange to create a larger contact area for a clamping head of the fastening element.
In one embodiment, the connection member is in direct mechanical contact with the fixing bracket, e.g., it abuts the fixing bracket. In another embodiment, the connection member is integral with the fixing bracket. In a further embodiment, the fixing bracket and the rigid connecting member are integrally formed as a one-piece member stamped or pressed from sheet material.
In particular, in the case that the connection member and the fixing bracket are integral or integrally formed as a one-piece member from stamped or pressed sheet material, the expression “the fixing bracket being spaced apart from the injector cup” means in particular that the one-piece workpiece of the fixing bracket and the connection member has a receptacle portion for receiving the fastening element representing the fixing bracket and a connection portion representing the connection member, with the receptacle portion being spaced apart—in particular in the elongation direction of the main gallery—from the injector cup.
In a preferred construction, the fixing bracket is formed of sheet material—in particular of sheet metal—stamped or pressed into the required shape. The connection member may also be formed of sheet material—in particular of sheet metal—stamped or pressed into the required shape.
In a preferred embodiment, the injector cup and the injector cup mounting connection are brazed together and the mounting connection is brazed to the main gallery. In this way, a fluid tight seal in the hydraulic passage between the main gallery and the fuel injector valve is achieved.
The details of one or more implementations of the disclosure are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other aspects, features, and advantages will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring now to
As shown, a metallic injector cup 8 having a generally cylindrical form contains at its downstream end in the direction of fuel flow into the engine, an internal recess 12 adapted to receive a fuel inlet part of a fuel injector (not shown). The fuel injector is secured in the cylinder head of the engine so as to project into the combustion chamber. The injector cup 8 is secured by brazing to a metallic injector cup mounting connection 6 which, in turn, is brazed to the main gallery 2 over a fuel outlet in the main gallery 2 to thus provide a hydraulic connection between the main gallery 2, the injector cup 8 and hence the fuel injector. The use of brazing to connect the injector cup mounting connection 6 to the main gallery 2 and to connect the injector cup 8 to the mounting connection 6 ensures a hydraulic fluid tight seal in the hydraulic passage between the main gallery 2 and the inlet end of the fuel injector.
To fasten the fuel rail to the engine, there is shown a fixing bracket 10, illustrated particularly in FIG. 2, which fastens the main gallery 2 to the cylinder head of an engine shown schematically as reference 14. As shown in
In the present embodiment, the leg 16 by which the bracket 10 is secured to the main gallery 2 has a recess extending completely along its elongation direction. The shape of the recess preferably corresponds to the shape of a portion the external circumferential surface of the main gallery 2. The recess thus may be in full area contact with the main gallery 2. In this way, a particularly reliable connection between the fixing bracket 10 and the main gallery 2 is achievable. Also, a desired orientation of the fixing bracket 10 with respect to the main gallery 2 can be easily and reproducibly set during manufacturing of the fuel rail assembly by means of the matching shapes of the main gallery 2 and the recess.
To ensure a good contact between the underside of the bolt head 24 and the bracket 10, the upper end of the fixing bracket 10 has an outwardly extending flange 26 on which the bolt head 24 sits, which flange extends substantially at right angles to the axis of the channel 20 and the bolt 22. Similarly, at its lower end, the bracket has an outwardly extending flange 30 which extends substantially at right angles to the axis of the channel 20 and which is adapted to sit on the engine to form a good contact surface when the fixing bracket 10 is secured to the engine. These greater contact surfaces serve to spread the clamping forces which provide greater security and tends to reduce the transmission of stress and vibration between the engine and the fuel rail. Nevertheless, the fixing bracket 10 with the outwardly extending flanges 26, 30 can be cost-efficiently produced from sheet-metal, for example.
As shown in
In this way, stresses introduced in the injector cup mounting connection 6 and by vibration of the fuel rail relative to the engine are absorbed both by the mounting connection 6 itself and by the fixing bracket 10. This also has the advantage that stresses caused by the tendency of the injector cup 8 to move relative to the mounting connection 6 caused by variations in the hydraulic pressure within the injector cup are absorbed both by the connection of the mounted connection 6 to the main gallery 2 and by the fixing bracket 10. As shown in
In an alternative embodiment as shown in
By securing the connection member 28 to either the injector cup mounting connection 6 or the injector cup 8 itself, assembly of the components is greatly facilitated. Since the connection member 28 only adjoins one and only one of the injector cup mounting connection 6 and the injector cup 8, the assembly may be particularly insensitive to manufacturing tolerances.
In an alternative embodiment, not shown, the fixing bracket 10 and the rigid connecting member 28 are integrally formed as a one-piece stamping or pressing from sheet material.
The manufacture of the fixing bracket 10 and the rigid connection member 28 from sheet material by a relatively easily produced stamped or pressed process, not only enables these components to be extremely cost effective to produce, it also makes variations to the mounting of a fuel rail to different engine designs economic to achieve merely by redesigning the easily manufactured fixing bracket and/or connection member. This would facilitate the use of a common fuel rail, injector cup and injector cup mounting connection in different engines to achieve economies of scale.
The foregoing embodiments have been shown and described for the purposes of illustrating the structural and functional principles of the present invention, as well as illustrating the methods of employing the embodiments and are subject to change without departing from such principles. Therefore, this invention includes all modifications encompassed within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16169621 | May 2016 | EP | regional |
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20150198128 | Mechi et al. | Jul 2015 | A1 |
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Number | Date | Country |
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203499881 | Mar 2014 | CN |
102014207953 | Nov 2014 | DE |
2466111 | Jun 2012 | EP |
207040249 | Feb 2007 | JP |
2011226425 | Nov 2011 | JP |
2015034533 | Feb 2015 | JP |
20150036209 | Apr 2015 | KR |
Entry |
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EP Search Report dated Jul. 8, 2016, for corresponding European Application 16169621.6. |
Office Action, dated Mar. 15, 2018, for counterpart KR patent application 10-2017-0058319. |
Chinese Office Action dated Jan. 24, 2019 for corresponding Chinese application No. 201710334074.2. |
Korean Notice of Allowance dated Oct. 1, 2018 for corresponding Korean application No. 10-2017-0058319. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170328321 A1 | Nov 2017 | US |