The present invention is based on a hold-down device for a fuel injection device, as well as to a fuel injection device.
From German Patent Publication No. 29 26 490, a fastening device is known for fastening a fuel injection valve to an intake pipe, in which the axial fixing of the fuel injection valve to the fuel distributor line, or to a plug nipple, takes place via a fastening element constructed as a U-shaped securing bracket having two limbs that are flexible in the radial direction. In the assembled state, the securing bracket engages through corresponding openings in the plug nipple, and is capable of snapping into an opening, fashioned as an annular groove, in a connecting fitting of the fuel injection valve. The axial play between the openings and the securing bracket, as well as between the annular groove and the securing bracket, should be kept small in order to achieve a precise fixing of the fuel injection valve without twisting the seal.
A disadvantage of the fastening device known from German Patent Publication No. 29 26 490 is in particular the twisting effect that the various holding parts have on the fuel injection valve. The flow of force that is produced in the fuel injection valve results in deformations, and thus in changes in the stroke of the valve needle, up to the point of jamming, and to a pressure or bending load on the housing parts, which in general have thin walls and are welded to one another at various points. In addition, each fastening measure, using for example a bearing collar, results in an enlargement of the radial extension of the fuel injection valve, and thus to an increased space requirement during installation.
From German Patent Publication No. 101 08 193, a fastening device is already known for the mutual fastening of a fuel injection valve in a cylinder head of an internal combustion engine, and of the fuel injection valve to a fuel distributor line. The fastening device has a sleeve that is clamped between a shoulder of the fuel distributor line and a shoulder of the fuel injection valve and is made of an elastic material. Due to its tubular structure, the sleeve can transmit the hold-down forces to the fuel injection valve with only limited effectiveness. The surfaces, loaded by the shoulders of the fuel injection valve and the fuel distributor line, of the sleeve that acts as the hold-down device are formed by the cut edges that result from the process of manufacturing the sleeve blank.
The hold-down device according to the present invention for a fuel injection device has the advantage that it has a particularly simple construction, is very easy and economical to manufacture, and nonetheless achieves a very effective holding down of a fuel injection valve in a receptacle bore of a cylinder head or of an intake pipe. Using conventional manufacturing methods, such as stamping, eroding, or laser cutting, blanks for the eventual hold-down device can be detached from sheets of spring steel or high-grade steel, and can be brought into numerous fairly complex desired shapes through bending.
With the hold-down device according to the present invention, which does not have rotational fixing means, a more precise orientation of the fuel injection valve is possible in relation to known hold-down devices having integrated rotational fixing elements, because the component tolerances of the hold-down device for the rotational fixing are omitted as a result of the design according to the present invention. In addition, the hold-down device can compensate greater axial tolerances than is possible with known hold-down devices. The above-indicated advantages result above all in connection with the fuel injection device indicated in claim 14, which has a simple rotational fixing.
It is advantageous to realize the hold-down device as a stamped bent part, and to shape it and to install it in a fuel injection device in such a way that the surfaces of the oblique segments and support segments of the hold-down device that are loaded by bending tension run perpendicular to the cut edges that result when the blank for the hold-down device is detached from the corresponding sheet. In this way, the long-term loading capacity of the segments, loaded to the point of bending, of the hold-down clip of the hold-down device can be increased, and an optimal hold-down force, exerted on the fuel injection valve so as to fix it securely in the receptacle bore, can be achieved.
The fuel injection device according to the present invention, has the advantage that, through simple measures at the fuel injection valve and at the connecting fitting, a direct and therefore very precise rotational fixing is created between the fuel injection valve and the connecting fitting. For this purpose, on the fuel injection valve a pin-shaped raised cog is provided that corresponds to a groove-type recess or opening on the connecting fitting of the fuel distributor line. The cog, extending into the opening, of the fuel injection valve provides, independent of the hold-down device, a rotational securing of the fuel injection valve in relation to the fuel distributor line, and provides a secure allocation of the rotational position of the hold-down device to the fuel injection valve.
It is particularly advantageous to provide the hold-down device, seen in the peripheral direction, with an open area in such a way that the connecting plug of the fuel injection valve protrudes through this area so that an unambiguous installation position for the hold-down device is defined. A rotational fixing of the hold-down device in relation to the connecting fitting is omitted, due to the pairing cog/opening at the fuel injection valve/connecting fitting. Here, the hold-down device is assembled to the fuel injection valve in such a way that a hold-down clip, loaded by bending tension, is oriented away from the connecting plug of the fuel injection valve.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are shown in simplified fashion in the drawing and are explained in more detail in the following description.
In
On its end 3 at the inflow side, fuel injection valve 1 has a plug connection to a fuel distributor line 4, sealed by a sealing ring 5 between a connecting fitting 6 of fuel distributor line 4, shown in section, and an inflow fitting 7 of fuel injection valve 1. Fuel injection valve 1 has an electrical connecting plug 8 for the electrical contacting for the actuation of fuel injection valve 1.
In order to hold fuel injection valve 1 and fuel distributor line 4 at a distance from one another without radial forces, and to hold fuel injection valve 1 down securely in the receptacle bore of the cylinder head or intake pipe, according to the present invention a hold-down device 10 is provided between fuel injection valve 1 and connecting fitting 6. Hold-down device 10 is realized as a clip-type component; e.g., a stamped bent part. Hold-down device 10 has a partially annular base element 11, which does not have an extension of 360° but rather has an extension of only about 250° to 320°, and is supported on a shoulder 12 of fuel injection valve 1. With a hold-down clip 13 that is bent away from flat base element 11 and is axially resilient, hold-down device 10, in its assembled state, lies against a downstream end surface 14 of connecting fitting 6 on fuel distributor line 4. In the area of electrical connecting plug 8, hold-down device 10 is interrupted, this device forming in itself a closed clip element, as is illustrated in particular in
In the area of transition from electrical connecting plug 8 to the plastic mold at least partly surrounding fuel injection valve 1 in the area of inflow fitting 7, on fuel injection valve 1 a pin-shaped raised cog 15 is provided that corresponds to a groove-type recess or opening 16 on connecting fitting 6 of fuel distributor line 4. Cog 15, extending into opening 16, of fuel injection valve 1 provides a direct and therefore very secure rotational securing of fuel injection valve 1 in relation to fuel distributor line 4, and for a reliable allocation of the rotational position of hold-down device 10 to fuel injection valve 1. On the other hand, hold-down device 10 according to the present invention makes possible a more precise orientation of fuel injection valve 1 in comparison with known hold-down devices having integrated rotational fixing devices, because the component tolerances of hold-down device 10 for the rotational fixing are not present, as a result of the design according to the present invention. In addition, hold-down device 10 can compensate greater axial tolerances than is possible with known hold-down devices.
Opening 16 on connecting fitting 6 of fuel distributor line 4 goes out from end surface 14 and runs in the manner of a slot or groove in the axial direction. Opening 16, which is made for example by machining, here has an axial extension such that cog 15 of fuel injection valve 1 can be accommodated in its complete length. In
The second exemplary embodiment of a fuel injection device, shown in
In
Base element 11 has a clip-type construction, and surrounds fuel injection valve 1 in the area of its end 3 at the inflow side. As already described, connecting fitting 8 of fuel injection valve 1 penetrates through open area 20 of base element 11 of hold-down device 10. Base element 11 can be largely circular (
Hold-down device 10 according to
In contrast to the previously described hold-down device 10, hold-down devices 10 according to
The overall hold-down clip 13, with its oblique segments 22 and support segments 23, or connecting segment 24, has in turn a wall thickness of approximately 1.5 mm, while the width of hold-down clip 13, in particular of support segments 23, is greater.
All described hold-down devices 10 are detached from sheets of spring steel or high-grade steel (having a thickness of approximately 1.5 mm), e.g. by stamping, eroding, or laser cutting, and are subsequently brought into the desired shape by bending. All specific embodiments of hold-down device 10 according to the present invention have in common the feature that the surfaces of hold-down device 10 that are loaded by bending tension, in particular oblique segments 22 and support segments 23, run perpendicular to the cut edges 27 that are defined when the blank for hold-down device 10 is detached from the corresponding sheet.
The individual features of hold-down devices 10 shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2004 048 401 | Oct 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2005/054693 | 9/20/2005 | WO | 00 | 9/26/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/037726 | 4/13/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4993390 | Ono et al. | Feb 1991 | A |
5074269 | Herbon et al. | Dec 1991 | A |
5167213 | Bassler et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
5501195 | Hall | Mar 1996 | A |
5803052 | Lorraine et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
5893351 | Akutagawa et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
5909725 | Balsdon et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
5970953 | Lorraine et al. | Oct 1999 | A |
6053149 | Lorraine | Apr 2000 | A |
6276339 | Shebert et al. | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6457456 | Scollard et al. | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6637411 | Makiyama | Oct 2003 | B2 |
6668803 | McClean et al. | Dec 2003 | B1 |
6705292 | Bugos | Mar 2004 | B2 |
6830037 | Braun et al. | Dec 2004 | B1 |
7373926 | Eckbauer et al. | May 2008 | B2 |
7406946 | Watanabe et al. | Aug 2008 | B1 |
20050161025 | Braun et al. | Jul 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
29 26 490 | Feb 1981 | DE |
19953269 | Jun 2001 | DE |
100 12 759 | Sep 2001 | DE |
101 08 193 | Aug 2002 | DE |
101 51 004 | Jun 2003 | DE |
101 52 421 | Jun 2003 | DE |
101 63 030 | Jul 2003 | DE |
0915253 | May 1999 | EP |
1544 455 | Jul 2005 | EP |
2776025 | Sep 1999 | FR |
9100758 | Apr 1997 | JP |
2000018127 | Jan 2000 | JP |
WO 2005083262 | Sep 2005 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090056674 A1 | Mar 2009 | US |