1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a lubricating device for a motorcycle combustion engine having a lower center of gravity.
2. Description of the Prior Art
The conventional lubricating device for a multicylinder combustion engine generally employed in motorcycles is of a design in which journal oiling passages for supplying a lubricant oil from a main gallery, formed in a lower portion of the engine casing, towards bearings for a crankshaft are so formed as to branch off from the main gallery. Lubrication for a valve mechanism and a transmission is carried out through oil supply passages that are separate from the journal oiling passages. See, for example, the Japanese Laid-open Patent Publication No. 2001-227317.
However, the prior art lubricating device has a problem. Specifically, since the main gallery is formed to extend straight horizontally in a lower portion of the engine casing in a transverse direction, that is, in a left to right direction of the motorcycle, opposite end portions of the lower portion of the engine casing, which correspond to opposite end portions of the main gallery, extend horizontally in the transverse direction, resulting in no sufficiently great banking angle secured, which angle represents the angle of tilt of the motorcycle with respect to a road surface during, for example, cornering. Because of this, the prior lubricating device has a difficulty allowing the position of the motorcycle combustion engine to be lowered in an attempt to lower the center of gravity of the motorcycle as a whole.
In view of the foregoing, the present invention is intended to provide an improved lubricating device for a motorcycle combustion engine, which allows the motorcycle to exhibit a desired banking angle and also to have a lower center of gravity.
In order to accomplish the foregoing object of the present invention, a lubricating device for a motorcycle combustion engine in accordance with the present invention for supplying a lubricant oil to an in-line multicylinder combustion engine having a crankcase and mounted on a motorcycle frame structure with cylinders disposed in-line along a transverse direction of the motorcycle frame structure, which includes a main gallery formed in a lower portion or region of the crankcase and journal oiling passages branched off from the main gallery for supplying the lubricant oil towards crank journals of a crankshaft of the engine. The main gallery has opposite end portions inclined to extend outwardly upwardly.
According to the above structure, since the opposite end portions of the main gallery are so inclined as to extend outwardly upwardly, the lower portion of the crankcase, in which the main gallery extends, can have its opposite end portions so cut as to follow the shape of the opposite end portions of the main gallery. This feature allows the opposite end portions of the lower region of the crankcase to be positioned above a substantially intermediate portion of the lower region and, therefore, the motorcycle combustion engine as a whole can be arranged at a lower position of the motorcycle frame structure as compared with that in the prior art motorcycle frame structure so that the center of gravity of the motorcycle frame structure can advantageously be lowered, while allowing the motorcycle to exhibit a relatively large desired banking angle.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the crankcase has a lower surface formed with opposite end portions which may be inclined to extend outwardly upwardly in correspondence with the inclination of the opposite end portions of the main gallery.
In another preferred embodiment of the present invention, the opposite end portions of the main gallery referred to above may be inclined to extend outwardly upwardly from substantially transverse intermediate positions of left and right crank chambers for two of engine cylinders, which are positioned leftmost and rightmost in the engine.
In a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, crank webs of the crankshaft in two of engine cylinders, which are positioned leftmost and rightmost in the engine, may be cut so as to extend outwardly upwardly in correspondence with the inclination of the opposite end portions of the main gallery.
In a still further preferred embodiment of the present invention, an imaginary plane containing an axis of the crankshaft and an axis of an input shaft engageable with the crankshaft may lie substantially horizontally, and an axis of an output shaft engageable with the input shaft is positioned above the imaginary plane.
According to the last mentioned feature of the present invention, where such imaginary plane is applied to the motorcycle, the crankshaft, the input shaft and the output shaft are so positioned as to represent a generally triangular geometry with the crankshaft and the input shaft lowered in position and, therefore, the center of gravity of the motorcycle combustion engine can advantageously be lowered to result in lowering of the center of gravity of the motorcycle frame structure.
In any event, the present invention will become more clearly understood from the following description of preferred embodiments thereof, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. However, the embodiments and the drawings are given only for the purpose of illustration and explanation, and are not to be taken as limiting the scope of the present invention in any way whatsoever, which scope is to be determined by the appended claims. In the accompanying drawings, like reference numerals are used to denote like parts throughout the several views, and:
Hereinafter, a preferred embodiment of the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
A crankshaft 23 is supported within the crankcase CR by bearings 24 and has a plurality of crank webs 29 formed thereon as shown by a phantom line. This crankshaft 23 extends substantially in the transverse direction and, hence, the four cylinders of the combustion engine E are arranged in line with each other in a direction substantially transverse to the longitudinal sense of the motorcycle frame structure FR. An oil reservoir or pan 13 is fixedly secured to a lower surface of the lower casing component C2. As indicated above, the engine casing EC, the cylinder head 11, the cylinder head cover 12 and the oil pan 13 altogether constitute the engine body 1.
Referring still to
The oil supply pump 18 and the oil filter/cooler unit U are fluid-connected with each other by means of a first oil supply passage 20 defined in the lower casing component C2 and, on the other hand, the oil filter/cooler unit U is fluid-connected with a main gallery 21, which is so defined in a lower portion of the lower casing component C2 or a lower region of the crankcase CR as to extend in a direction of an axis of the crankshaft 23, by means of a second oil supply passage 22. The main gallery 21 is in turn fluid-connected with journal oiling passage 25 that are branched off from the main gallery 21 for supplying a lubricant oil to crank journals 23b of the crankshaft 23 through the bearings 24.
The gear case GE accommodates a transmission TM for transmitting a rotatory drive of the crankshaft 23 to a rear wheel (not shown) through a suitable drive transmitting member (not shown) such as a chain or a shaft. This transmission TM includes an input shaft 26, engageable with the crankshaft 23 by means of a clutch (not shown), and an output shaft 27 drivingly engageable with the input shaft 26 through a transmission gear train (not shown) for transmitting the rotatory drive to the drive transmitting member.
It is to be noted that, in the illustrated embodiment, an imaginary plane H containing an axis 23a of the crankshaft 23 and an axis 26a of the input shaft 26 lies substantially horizontally, while an axis 27a of the output shaft 27 is positioned at a level above the imaginary plane H. In other words, the three shafts including the input shaft 26, the output shaft 27 and the crankshaft 23 are so arranged as to represent a generally triangular geometry, in which the imaginary plane M containing the respective axes 23a and 27a of the crankshaft 23 and the output shaft 27 is inclined forwardly downwardly with respect to the direction of forward run of the motorcycle, with the axis 26a of the input shaft 26 positioned below the inclined imaginary plane M. With the triangular geometry, the crankshaft 23 and the input shaft 26 are disposed at a lower level. The inclined imaginary plane M coincides with an interface at which the upper casing component C1 and the lower casing component C2 of the engine casing EC are jointed together.
Referring now to
Since the intermediate portion 21b of the main gallery 21 is laid horizontally with the left and right end portions 21a and 21a inclined outwardly upwardly, opposite left and right end portions C2a and C2a of the lower surface of the lower casing component C2 are cut so as to incline outwardly upwardly along the left and right end portions 21a and 21a of the main gallery 21. Accordingly, the two journal oiling passages 25 positioned respectively at the opposite end portions of the lower casing component C2 are shorter than the three remaining journal oiling passages 25 positioned at the major portion of the main gallery 21 and, at the same time, the opposite end walls 28B have a length, as measured in a direction up and down, which is smaller than that of the partition walls 28A positioned between the opposite end walls 28B. In correspondence with the above design of the main gallery 21, respective tips 29a of the crank webs 29 associated with the leftmost and rightmost engine cylinders are cut so as to incline outwardly upwardly as clearly shown in
With the lubricating device having the main gallery 21 so constructed as hereinabove described, a lubricant oil contained in the oil pan 13 shown in
As hereinbefore described, the main gallery 21 is of a design in which the left and right end portions 21a and 21a thereof are so inclined as to extend outwardly upwardly from substantially intermediate positions of the leftmost and rightmost crank chambers 19 and 19 and, in correspondence with the design of the main gallery 21, the left and right end portions C2a and C2a of the lower surface of the lower casing component C2 are so shaped as to incline outwardly upwardly. Accordingly, acute angled portions C2b and C2b, shown by the phantom lines in
Also, since the three shafts including the crankshaft 23, the input shaft 26 and the output shaft 27 are so arranged as to represent the generally triangular geometry as hereinabove described, the front-to-rear length or the longitudinal dimension of the motorcycle combustion engine E can advantageously be reduced, as compared with the conventional motorcycle engine of the arrangement in which those three shafts are laid in line with each other in a direction conforming to the longitudinal sense of the motorcycle combustion engine, and, accordingly, the motorcycle combustion engine E can be manufactured compact in size.
Furthermore, positioning the crankshaft 23 and the input shaft 26 below the output shaft 27 as hereinbefore described allows the motorcycle combustion engine E to have a lower center of gravity, resulting in further lowering the center of gravity of the motorcycle frame structure FR as a whole.
Although the present invention has been fully described in connection with the preferred embodiments thereof with reference to the accompanying drawings which are used only for the purpose of illustration, those skilled in the art will readily conceive numerous changes and modifications within the framework of obviousness upon the reading of the specification herein presented of the present invention. Accordingly, such changes and modifications are, unless they depart from the scope of the present invention as delivered from the claims annexed hereto, to be construed as included therein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003-327999 | Sep 2003 | JP | national |