Internal combustion engine

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6820583
  • Patent Number
    6,820,583
  • Date Filed
    Monday, December 2, 2002
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, November 23, 2004
    20 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Original Assignees
  • Examiners
    • Argenbright; Tony M.
    • Ali; Hyder
    Agents
    • Crowell & Moring LLP
Abstract
An internal combustion engine includes a crankcase in which a crankshaft is held. An oil guide housing is positioned beneath the crankcase, and an oil pump with a drive sprocket for supplying lubricating oil is positioned in the crankcase. The oil pump supplies lubricating oil to consumers from an oil trap in the oil guide housing. The sprocket is encompassed by a cover, and resources are provided in the sprocket cover for scraping/separating lubricating oil that has been drawn along out of the oil trap in the direction of the crankcase by a chain that drives the sprocket. In this manner, the lubricating oil that is drawn and/or carried along by the drive chain is prevented from entering the crankcase and/or the cylinder head of the internal combustion engine.
Description




This application claims the priority of German application 101 59 087.3, filed Dec. 1, 2001, the disclosure of which is expressly incorporated by reference herein.




Reference is also made to co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/307,525, filed on the same date as the present application, titled “INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE”.




BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to an internal combustion engine including a crankcase in which a crankshaft is held, an oil guide housing positioned beneath the crankcase, and an oil pump equipped with a drive sprocket for supplying lubricating oil positioned in the oil guide housing, and in which the oil pump supplies lubricating oil to consumers from an oil trap in the oil guide housing.




In forced-feed lubrication of an internal combustion engine, the process of positioning a required oil pressure pump underneath the crankshaft in an oil guide housing and/or in an oil pan (see e.g., Fachkunde Kraftfahrzeugtechnik, page 323 ff., Europa—Lehrmittel Publishers, 26


th


Edition), is known. The oil pressure pump is preferably driven via a chain drive that is driven by the crankshaft.




The problem with such a system is that the drive chain and/or the drive gear for the oil pressure pump is partially immersed in the oil trap; hence the oil is drawn along by the drive chain. The lubricating oil carried along by the chain results in undesirable foaming of the oil in the crankcase; this problem is perpetuated within the cylinder head housing when the lubricating oil is further carried forward by a timing chain that drives the camshaft in the cylinder head housing.




It is thus one object of the invention to prevent lubricating oil that is drawn along by the drive chain in the oil pump from escaping from the oil trap in the crankcase and/or entering the cylinder head of the internal combustion engine.




This object is attained by having the sprocket encompassed by a cover, and providing elements on the sprocket cover for scraping, separating, or scraping and separating lubricating oil that is drawn along by a chain, driven by the sprocket, out of the oil trap in the direction of the crankcase.




By providing the oil pressure pump with a sprocket cover that is equipped with a base for stripping and/or separating the lubricating oil being drawn along by the chain, the lubricating oil that is drawn along and/or carried over by the drive chain will be returned to the oil trap and/or will not enter the crankcase or the cylinder head housing.




Further advantageous embodiments of and improvements on the internal combustion engine specified are reflected in dependent claims.




The sprocket cover is advantageously provided with openings in the area of the chain guide, wherein the rims of these openings serve as oil-scraping edges for the lubricating oil.




The sprocket cover is pot-shaped in design and equipped with a circumferential side panel, in which the openings provided with the oil-scraping edges are positioned.




In an advantageous manner, the revolving drive chain is fed through a number of the openings that are equipped with the oil-scraping edges.




One embodiment of the invention is specified in greater detail in the following description and in the drawings.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a perspective view of part of an internal combustion engine containing an oil pump drive,





FIG. 2

is an enlarged view of the oil pump with a sprocket cover, and





FIG. 3

is an inside view of the sprocket cover.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




An oil pressure pump


4


for supplying lubricating oil to the internal combustion engine is mounted on the base


2


of a crankcase. As is apparent from the sectional view in

FIG. 1

, the oil pump


4


is positioned in an oil guide housing


6


, which is itself mounted on the base


2


of the crankcase. An oil trap


7


is provided in the oil guide housing


6


for supplying lubricating oil to the main bearing of the crankshaft


10


, the crankshaft-end bearing, etc. To drive the oil pump, a chain drive


8


is provided, which is comprised of a drive gear


12


attached to the crankshaft


10


, a sprocket


14


mounted on the drive shaft of the oil pump


4


, and a drive chain


16


that loops around both gears


12


,


14


and is designed as a continuous drive. The drive gear


12


is designed as a triple gear, wherein the two gears that do not have the drive chain


16


looped around them serve to drive camshafts positioned in the cylinder head housing of the internal combustion engine via a double roller chain (components are not illustrated in the diagrams). The drive chain


16


is limited in its load-bearing side (crankshaft rotating in a clockwise direction) by a chain guide rail


18


, while a chain adjuster rail


20


is positioned on the idle side. The sprocket


14


that drives the oil pump


4


is provided with a sprocket cover


22


, which extends essentially up to the flange surface of the oil pump


4


—crankcase base


2


. The sprocket cover


22


, which may be made of an aluminum diecast component, for example, is equipped with a circumferential side panel


24


, the end surface


26


of which lies adjacent to a housing surface of the oil pump


4


when mounted. The housing surface (not illustrated here) is provided with a circumferential groove, into which the end face


26


of the side panel, which is provided with a tongue, becomes engaged in accordance with the tongue and groove principle. To fasten the sprocket cover


22


to the oil pump housing, two mounting eyes


28


and


30


are provided. An upper wall panel


24




a


of the circumferential side panel


24


is equipped with two rectangular openings


32


and


34


, wherein the load-bearing side of the drive chain


16


is fed through the opening


32


, and the idle side of the drive chain


16


is fed through the opening


34


. A portion of the chain adjuster rail


20


is also taken up in the opening


34


. Between the two openings


32


and


34


, a central tongue


36


is provided, the left and right edges


36




a


and


36




b


of which are provided as oil-scraping edges for the lubricating oil that is drawn along by the drive chain


16


out of the oil guide housing


6


and/or the oil trap


7


.




Two additional rectangular openings


38


and


40


in the side panel


24


are provided in the area of the mounting eye


28


. The two openings


38


,


40


are separated from each other by a tongue


42


, wherein especially the lower terminating edge


42




a


of the tongue


42


also acts as an oil-scraping edge for the lubricating oil that is drawn along by the drive chain


16


in the direction of the crankcase


2


. The lubricating oil that is scraped off by the oil-scraping edges


36




a


,


36




b


, and


42




a


is returned to the oil trap


7


or is once again taken up by the drive chain


16


, where it is again “shaved off,” and hence does not reach the crankcase or the cylinder head of the internal combustion engine.




The foregoing disclosure has been set forth merely to illustrate the invention and is not intended to be limiting. Since modifications of the disclosed embodiments incorporating the spirit and substance of the invention may occur to persons skilled in the art, the invention should be construed to include everything within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereof.



Claims
  • 1. An internal combustion engine comprising:a crankcase in which a crankshaft is held, an oil guide housing positioned beneath the crankcase, and an oil pump equipped with a drive sprocket for supplying lubricating oil positioned in the oil guide housing, said oil pump supplying lubricating oil to consumers from an oil trap in the oil guide housing, wherein the sprocket is encompassed by a cover, wherein elements are provided on the sprocket cover for scraping, separating, or scraping and separating lubricating oil that is drawn alone by a chain, driven by the sprocket, out of the oil tray in the direction of the crankcase, and wherein the sprocket cover is equipped with openings having the elements, and wherein said elements are oil-scraping edges.
  • 2. The internal combustion engine according to Claim 1, wherein the openings that are provided with the oil-scraping edges are positioned in a circumferential side panel of the sprocket cover.
  • 3. The internal combustion engine according to claim 1, wherein the chain is a revolving drive chain extending through some of the openings.
  • 4. The internal combustion engine according to claim 2, wherein the chain is a revolving drive chain extending through some of the openings.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
101 59 087 Dec 2001 DE
US Referenced Citations (5)
Number Name Date Kind
5000142 Aruga et al. Mar 1991 A
5078106 Matsuo et al. Jan 1992 A
5190005 Saito et al. Mar 1993 A
5191859 Fujiwara Mar 1993 A
5791311 Ozeki Aug 1998 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
19630545 Feb 1997 DE
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry
Fachkunde Kraftfahrzeugtechnik, p. 323, Europa-Lehrmittel Publishers, 26th Edition.
European Search Report mailed Dec. 5, 2003.