The present invention relates to a gasoline direct injection rail.
Direct injection gasoline engines have started to come back into widespread use since 2005 in Europe, and many gasoline direct injection rails in recent years are made of stainless materials that have excellent corrosion resistance. However, gasoline direct injection rails made of stainless materials may result in stress corrosion cracking when placed in a chlorine atmosphere or when a corrosive medium such as chlorine is contained in fuel.
On the other hand, steel materials are available in a wide variety of strengths and are inexpensive, and therefore steel materials attract attention as materials having better mechanical properties and greater cost advantages than stainless materials for higher-pressure systems of the future. Thus, recently, there are increasing demands for gasoline direct injection rails made of steel materials.
Patent Literature 1: JP 2012-97690A
However, in the case of using a steel gasoline direct injection rail, the surface needs to be plated to prevent rust and corrosion. An inlet part provided in a gasoline direct injection rail is often given an orifice as shown in Patent Literature 1 to reduce pressure fluctuations resulting from the injections of a fuel pump and an injector. In such a case, because the inner diameter of a commonly used orifice is as small as about 1 to 2 mm, a plating solution when performing plating treatment is unlikely to enter inside, and is also unlikely to come out, through the orifice. Therefore, it is difficult to reliably perform plating treatment on the inner circumferential surface of the orifice and the inner circumferential surface of the rail body.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to solve the above-described problem and to obtain a gasoline direct injection rail that enables plating treatment to be easily and reliably performed on the inside of the rail body and the inlet part, that also includes an orifice, and that has excellent mechanical properties.
The present invention has solved the above-described problem, and is a gasoline direct injection rail comprising:
a steel rail body;
an inlet part provided integrally with or separately from a first end of the rail body and comprising therein a communication passage in communication with a fuel passage of the rail body; and
a plurality of injector holders in communication with the fuel passage, wherein
a stainless orifice member formed separately from the rail body is securely disposed in the communication passage of the inlet part.
The orifice member may be screw-fixed to the communication passage of the inlet part. Screw-fixing the orifice member to the inlet part makes it possible to firmly fix the orifice member to the inlet part. Unlike in the case of merely fixing the orifice member to the inlet part by insertion, it is not necessary to precisely adjust the dimensions of the outer diameter of the orifice member and the inner diameter of the inlet part, it is easy to position the orifice member relative to the inlet part, and it is thus easy to securely dispose the orifice member in the inlet part. Furthermore, in comparison to the case where the orifice member is fixed to the inlet part with an adhesive, there is no concern of dirt derived from the adhesive and, moreover, the problem of contamination between the adhesive and fuel does not arise.
As described above, in the present invention, the stainless orifice member that is formed separately from the inlet part is screw-fixed to the communication passage of the inlet part provided in the steel rail body. Therefore, performing plating treatment on the rail body provided with the inlet part before securely disposing the orifice member in the inlet part makes it possible to cause a plating solution to easily flow into and flow out of the inside of the inlet part and the rail body because the orifice is not present inside the inlet part and the rail body, and makes it possible to easily perform plating treatment. Since the orifice member is made of a stainless material, it is not necessary to perform plating treatment, and therefore the problem of conventional art concerning plating treatment on a small-diameter orifice does not arise. Since the rail body is made of steel, products can be obtained that are available in a wide variety of strengths and have better mechanical properties than stainless materials for high-pressure systems of the future.
Embodiment 1 of the present invention will now be described in reference to
On the other hand, in a rail body (4) of the gasoline direct injection rail, an inlet part (6) that is formed separately from the rail body (4) is securely disposed at a first end (5) thereof. In this embodiment, the inlet part (6) is formed separately from the rail body (4) and is securely disposed at the first end (5) of the rail body (4) as described above, but the inlet part (6) may be formed integrally with the rail body (4) in another embodiment. The rail body (4) and the inlet part (6) are made of steel. A plurality of injector holders (not shown) that are in communication with the fuel passage of the rail body (4) are disposed so as to be connected to the rail body (4) of the present embodiment at equal intervals in the length direction.
A communication passage (7) is provided in the inlet part (6), and by attaching the inlet part (6) to the rail body (4) as shown in
Since the rail body (4) and the inlet part (6) are made of steel, it is necessary to perform plating treatment. Accordingly, before screw-fixing the orifice member (1) to the inlet part (6), plating treatment is performed on the rail body (4) to which the inlet part (6) has been attached. At this time, unlike in conventional products, no orifice is provided in the inlet part (6) of the rail body (4), and it is thus possible to cause a plating solution to reliably flow into and flow out of the rail body (4) and the inlet part (6). Therefore, it is possible to easily and reliably perform plating treatment on the inner circumferences of the rail body (4) and the inlet part (6).
Then, the orifice member (1) is screw-fixed to the attachment part of the inlet part (6) on which plating treatment has been performed as described above. Screw-fixing the orifice member (1) to the inlet part (6) in this way makes it possible to firmly fix the orifice member (1) to the inlet part (6). Unlike in the case of fixing the orifice member (1) to the inlet part (6) by insertion, it is not necessary to precisely adjust the dimensions of the outer diameter of the orifice member (1) and the inner diameter of the inlet part (6), it is easy to position the orifice member (1) relative to the inlet part (6), and it is thus easy to securely dispose the orifice member (1) in the inlet part (6). Furthermore, in comparison to the case where the orifice member (1) is fixed to the inlet part (6) with an adhesive, there is no concern of dirt derived from the adhesive and, moreover, the problem of contamination between the adhesive and fuel does not arise.
A screw stopper (13) that does not form the inner circumferential thread (12) is provided on the communication passage (7) side of the attachment hole (11) of the inlet part (6). Therefore, when screw-fixing the orifice member (1) to the inlet part (6), the screwing of the orifice member (1) is stopped by the screw stopper (13), thus making it possible to smoothly carry out the work without worrying about where to stop screwing at the time of attaching the orifice member (1). While the screw stopper (13) as described above is provided in Embodiment 1, it is also possible in other embodiments that, as shown in
Since the orifice member (1) is formed of a stainless material as described above, it is not necessary to perform plating treatment on the orifice member (1). Therefore, the problem of conventional art that a plating solution is unlikely to flow in and flow out when performing plating treatment on the orifice (2) does not arise. Since the rail body (4) and the inlet part (6) are made of steel, products can be obtained that are available in a wide variety of strengths and have superior mechanical properties to stainless materials for high-pressure systems of the future.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2015-083009 | Apr 2015 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2016/000493 | 2/1/2016 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2016/166923 | 10/20/2016 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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H08-114160 | May 1996 | JP |
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2012-097690 | May 2012 | JP |
2014-047671 | Mar 2014 | JP |
Entry |
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International Search Report for PCT/JP2016/000493 dated Mar. 1, 2016. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180051665 A1 | Feb 2018 | US |