This application claims priority on the basis of Japanese patent application 2008-087275, filed Mar. 28, 2008. The disclosure of Japanese application 2008-087275 is hereby incorporated by reference.
The invention relates to a hydraulic tensioner for maintaining proper tension in an endless, flexible transmission medium such as a timing belt or a timing chain in a vehicle engine.
Hydraulic tensioners have been widely used to maintain proper tension in the timing belt or timing chain of a vehicle engine. A typical hydraulic tensioner comprises a housing having a plunger slidably protruding from a plunger-accommodating hole in the housing. The plunger and the housing together form a high pressure oil chamber that is supplied with oil under pressure from the engine's oil pump through a check valve built into the tensioner. Leakage of oil though a small clearance between the plunger and the wall of the plunger-accommodating hole allows the tensioner to exert a damping action, suppressing vibration of the timing belt or timing chain.
As shown in
In the tensioner 500, as shown in
A check valve 540 is press-fit into the housing at the bottom of the plunger-accommodating hole 511 to allow oil to flow into the high pressure oil chamber R while blocking reverse flow of oil.
The check valve 540 comprises seat 541 having an oil passage communicating with an external oil supply (not shown), a check ball 542 which is engageable with an end of the seat 541 facing the interior of the chamber R, a conical coil spring 543, which biases the ball 542 against the ball seat 541, and a retainer 544, which supports the spring 543 and limits the movement of the ball 542.
In the operation of the tensioner, oil in the high pressure oil chamber R leaks through a small clearance between the outer circumferential surface of the plunger 520 and the inner circumferential surface of the plunger-accommodating hole 511, and is discharged to the outside of the housing 510. Impact exerted on the plunger 520 by the timing chain C is damped as a result of the resistance to flow of the viscous oil through the clearance between the plunger and the wall of the plunger-accommodating hole, and vibration of the plunger 520 due to impact is rapidly reduced. Further details concerning the operation of the conventional tensioner can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 7,001,295.
Because oil is supplied to the tensioner by an oil pump driven by rotation of an engine, when the engine is stopped, the supply of oil to the high pressure oil chamber R is also stopped. However, even after the engine is stopped, oil remaining in the high pressure oil chamber R leaks out through the small clearance between the outer circumferential surface of the plunger 520 and the inner circumferential surface of the plunger accommodating hole 511, and is replaced by air. When the engine is re-started after a long interval during which it is not operated, it takes a significant amount of time to replenish oil to the high pressure oil chamber R in order for the damping action of the tensioner to resume. While there is a shortage of oil in the high pressure oil chamber, abnormal vibration noise and backlash of the transmission chain or belt can occur.
The volume of the high pressure oil chamber R can be reduced in order to shorten the time interval between engine-start-up and the resumption of the damping action of the tensioner. However, if the volume of the chamber R is reduced, the plunger biasing spring 530, which is accommodated within chamber R, must either be shortened or its diameter reduced. Consequently, the desirable high load capacity and low spring constant of the plunger-biasing spring are compromised, and the performance of the spring is impaired.
The invention addresses the above-described problems, and provides a hydraulic tensioner in which large elastic force is exhibited during ordinary engine operation, and vibration noise and backlash due to shortage of oil in the high pressure oil chamber on engine start-up are significantly decreased, without the need for a large number of tensioner parts.
The hydraulic tensioner in accordance with the invention comprises a housing having a plunger-accommodating hole formed therein, the hole having an opening and a bottom spaced from the opening. A plunger protrudes slidably from the plunger-accommodating hole through the opening. A spring-accommodating hole is formed in the a plunger. This spring-accommodating hole has an opening facing the bottom of the plunger-accommodating hole in the housing, and a bottom located within the plunger at an end of the spring-accommodating hole remote from the plunger opening. The spring-accommodating hole and the plunger-accommodating hole together cooperatively form a high pressure oil chamber.
A coiled plunger-biasing spring, in compression within the high pressure oil chamber, extends into the spring-accommodating hole in the plunger and biases the plunger in the protruding direction.
A check valve allows oil to flow into the high pressure oil chamber and blocks flow of oil out of the high pressure oil chamber. The check valve comprises a valve seat and a bar-shaped valve element. The valve seat is disposed adjacent the bottom of the plunger-accommodating hole and has a seat opening for flow of oil through the valve seat into the high pressure oil chamber. The bar-shaped valve element is engageable with the seat for closing the seat opening. The bar-shaped valve element extends into the coiled plunger-biasing spring and has a shoulder. A coiled valve element-biasing spring is engaged with the bottom of the spring-accommodating hole within the plunger and with the shoulder on the bar-shaped valve element. The valve element-biasing spring is in compression, and biases the valve-element toward the valve seat.
The hydraulic tensioner according to the invention reduces vibration due to impact on the plunger in the same manner in which a conventional tensioner reduces vibration. That is, the viscosity of the oil in the high pressure oil chamber of the tensioner causes the oil to resist flow through the clearance between the plunger and the plunger-accommodating hole, so that a damping effect is realized.
However, the tensioner of the invention exhibits a number of additional effects. In particular, because the bar-shaped element serves as the movable element of the check valve, it is unnecessary for the check valve mechanism to have a ball retainer surrounded by the plunger biasing spring. The use of the bar-shaped element as the movable element of the check valve provides more space for the coiled plunger-biasing spring, and therefore the wire of the plunger-biasing spring can have a larger diameter, and the spring can exert a greater elastic force than that exerted by a plunger-biasing spring in a conventional hydraulic tensioner of the same size.
Furthermore, because the wire of the plunger-biasing spring has a large diameter, and the plunger-biasing spring, the bar-shaped valve element, and the valve-element biasing spring, occupy a large amount of space within the high pressure oil chamber, the volume of the oil chamber is reduced, and the time required for replenishment of oil in the oil chamber on engine start-up is reduced. Thus, the interval between the time the engine is started until the damping action of the tensioner is exhibited is shortened, and vibration noise and a backlash of the timing chain or timing belt are significantly reduced.
Additionally, since the movable element of the check valve is a bar-shaped element extending into the plunger biasing spring, the tensioner of the invention does not require a retainer to support a conical coil spring and check ball as in the case of a conventional check valve. Thus, the number of parts of the tensioner is reduced, and, with an appropriate choice of parts, a overall reduction in the weight of the tensioner can be realized.
In a preferred embodiment of the tensioner, the coiled valve element-biasing spring is wound in a direction opposite to the direction in which the coiled plunger-biasing spring is wound. Thus, even when the outer diameter of the valve element-biasing spring is nearly the same as the inner diameter of the plunger-biasing spring, the two springs can expand and contract without being interwound, and can operate smoothly.
In another preferred embodiment, a recess is formed in the bottom of the spring-accommodating hole within the plunger, and an end of the coiled valve element-biasing spring is received in the recess and prevented by the recess from moving laterally relative to the protruding direction of the plunger. Here again, even when the outer diameter of the valve element-biasing spring is nearly the same as the inner diameter of the plunger-biasing spring, the springs do not interfere with each other, and reliable operation of the check valve can take place.
Preferably, the bar-shaped valve element is composed of a seat portion engageable with the seat to block flow of oil out of the high pressure oil chamber through the seat opening, a larger diameter portion extending in the protruding direction from the seat portion, the larger diameter portion being positioned to limit contraction of the plunger-biasing spring, and a smaller diameter portion extending in the protruding direction from the larger diameter portion, the smaller diameter portion extending into the coiled valve element-biasing spring. Thus, the plunger-biasing spring can expand and contract while its lateral movement is limited by outer circumference of the large diameter portion of the bar-shaped valve element. Therefore, stable and smooth sliding motion of the plunger can be attained.
Furthermore, since lateral movement of the valve element-biasing spring is limited by the small diameter portion of the valve element, interference by the valve element-biasing spring with the plunger-biasing spring can be avoided.
In a preferred embodiment, the seat portion of the bar-shaped valve element is composed of steel. In this case, repeated seating operation of the check valve can take place without deformation of the valve element, even under conditions of high temperature and pressure, and reverse flow of oil can be blocked reliably.
When the plunger is in its fully retracted condition in the plunger-accommodating hole, the bar-shaped valve element, the valve element-biasing spring, and the plunger-biasing spring preferably take up substantially the entire space within the high pressure oil chamber. The amount of oil required to fill the high pressure oil chamber is reduced, and therefore the time required for replenishment of oil in the high pressure oil chamber can be shortened, and noise and backlash can be significantly reduced.
The features of the invention can be incorporated into various embodiments of a hydraulic tensioner, including a tensioner having a ratchet mechanism for limiting retracting movement of the plunger.
The bar-shaped valve element can be made light in weight, even in the case in which its seating portion is composed of steel.
Preferably, the bar-shaped valve element is composed of a seat portion, a large diameter portion integrally formed with the seat portion to limit the plunger biasing spring, and a small diameter portion integrally formed with the large diameter portion to support the valve element-biasing spring. The large diameter portion and small diameter portion provide support for the springs, preventing the springs from becoming deformed, and ensuring smooth and reliable operation.
As shown in
In the tensioner 100, as shown in
A check valve mechanism 140 allows oil to flow into the high pressure oil chamber R, but blocks reverse flow.
When a force acts on the plunger, urging the plunger in the retracting direction, oil in the high pressure oil chamber R leaks through a small clearance between the outer circumferential surface of the plunger 120 and the inner circumferential surface of the plunger-accommodating hole 111, and is discharged to the outside of the housing 110. The viscosity of the oil causes a resistance to flow through this clearance. Therefore, if an impact acts on the plunger 120, vibration of the plunger 120 is damped.
As shown in
Because the bar-shaped element 141 serves as the movable element of the check valve, it is unnecessary for the check valve mechanism to have a ball retainer surrounded by the plunger biasing spring as in the conventional tensioner of
Since the wire of the plunger-biasing spring has a larger diameter than that of the wire in the plunger-biasing spring of the conventional hydraulic tensioner, and the bar-shaped valve element 141 and its biasing spring 143 are located within in the high pressure oil chamber, the volume available for oil in the high oil chamber R is greatly reduced. Thus, the time required to replenish oil to the chamber R on engine start-up is shortened, and the delay between engine start-up and the time at which the damping action of the tensioner is exhibited is shortened correspondingly. As a result, abnormal vibration noise and backlash of the timing chain C due to a shortage of oil in the high oil chamber R, are significantly reduced.
Additionally, since the hydraulic tensioner 100 does not require a retainer to support a check ball and a conical check ball-biasing spring, the number of parts is reduced, and a weight reduction can be realized.
The coiled valve element-biasing spring 143 can be wound in a direction opposite to the direction in which the plunger-biasing spring 130 is wound. When these two springs are oppositely wound spring 143 can fit closely within spring 130 without having the springs interfere with each other by becoming interwound. Thus, both springs can operate smoothly, and the check valve can operate reliably.
The valve element-biasing spring 143 engages a shoulder 121 formed on the valve element 141 at a location at which its smaller diameter portion 141d meets its larger diameter portion 141b. Because part 141d of the bar-shaped valve element has a reduced diameter, preferably less than the diameter of the larger diameter part 141b by about twice the diameter of the wire of spring 143, a suitable clearance is provided for spring 143, and the inside of the coiled plunger-biasing spring 130 does not interfere with expansion and contraction of the spring 143 during operation of the tensioner. Therefore, the bar-shaped valve element 141 is reliably biased toward the seat 142.
As shown in
As shown in
In summary, in the embodiment shown in
in another embodiment of the invention shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2008-087275 | Mar 2008 | JP | national |