This application claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2018-181719 filed on Sep. 27, 2018, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety including the specification, claims, drawings, and abstract.
The present disclosure relates to a structure of a muffler for a vehicle.
A muffler for a vehicle is used in which sound reduction is achieved by expanding an exhaust gas from the engine which flows in from an inlet pipe. In such a muffler for a vehicle, there may be cases where, when the exhaust gas introduced into an expansion chamber reaches an inner surface of the expansion chamber, the exhaust gas causes vibration of a plate member of the expansion chamber, resulting in generation of a radiation sound. In consideration of this, structures are proposed (for example, JP 2016-217152 A) in which a plate member having projection and recesses is attached to the inner surface of the expansion chamber to increase rigidity of the plate member of the expansion chamber, and to consequently suppress generation of the radiation sound.
In recent years, further reduction of vehicle noise is demanded. In order to increase an amount of sound reduction for the muffler for a vehicle which reduces the sound by expanding the exhaust gas, a configuration may be considered in which a volume of the expansion chamber is increased. However, due to the mounting space of the vehicle, increasing the volume of the expansion chamber is difficult. In light of this, an advantage of the present disclosure lies in increasing an amount of sound reduction without an increase in the volume of the expansion chamber in a muffler for a vehicle.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a muffler for a vehicle, comprising: an expansion chamber in which an exhaust gas which flows in from an inlet pipe is expanded; and a bracket that is placed on an inner surface of the expansion chamber opposing a blow-off port of the inlet pipe into an interior of the expansion chamber, and that has a mountain shape protruding toward a side of the inlet pipe, wherein the bracket includes a top surface which opposes the blow-off port of the inlet pipe, and inclined surfaces which incline from the top surface toward corners of the expansion chamber.
With this structure, the exhaust gas flowing into the expansion chamber from the inlet pipe can be introduced to the corner of the expansion chamber along the inclined surface of the bracket, and, consequently, the exhaust gas can be diffused to an entire region of the expansion chamber and the amount of sound reduction of the muffler for the vehicle can be increased. Because of this, the amount of sound reduction can be increased without increasing the volume of the expansion chamber. In addition, the exhaust gas from the inlet pipe can be caused to contact an end plate in an inclined manner, and thus, it is possible to suppress generation of the radiation sound due to vibration of the end plate caused by a dynamic pressure of the exhaust gas.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, in the muffler for the vehicle, the expansion chamber is formed by a tube portion, and end plates attached to respective ends of the tube portion, the inlet pipe is connected to one end plate, and the bracket is a mountain shape plate member in which a base of the mountain is attached to an inner surface of the other end plate, to form a closed cross-sectional structure with the other end plate.
In this manner, by forming the closed cross-sectional structure by the bracket and the end plate, it is possible to increase the rigidity of the end plate, and to consequently suppress vibration of the end plate and to reduce the radiation sound.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, in the muffler for the vehicle, the inlet pipe is connected at a position which is offset from a center of one end plate toward an outer circumferential side, the top surface of the bracket is placed at a position which is offset from a center of the other end plate toward an outer circumferential side, to oppose the blow-off port of the inlet pipe, and a part of the inclined surfaces of the bracket extends from the top surface, over a virtual line passing through a center in a left-and-right direction on an inner surface of the other end plate or a virtual line passing through a center in an up-and-down direction, and toward the corners of the expansion chamber.
With this structure, even when the inlet pipe is connected to the position which is offset from the center of the end plate toward the outer circumferential side, the exhaust gas can be diffused over the entire region of the expansion chamber, the amount of sound reduction of the muffler for the vehicle can be increased, and the generation of the radiation sound from the end plate can be suppressed.
According to the present disclosure, the amount of sound reduction can be increased without an increase of the volume of the expansion chamber in the muffler for the vehicle.
Embodiment(s) of the present disclosure will be described by reference to the following figures, wherein:
A muffler 100 for a vehicle according to an embodiment of the present disclosure will now be described with reference to the drawings. An arrow FR, an arrow UP, and an arrow RH shown in the drawings respectively show a front direction (direction of travel) of the vehicle, an upward direction, and a right direction. Directions opposite from the arrows FR, UP, and RH respectively show a rear direction of the vehicle, a downward direction, and a left direction. In the following, in the descriptions simply using the directions of front and rear, left and right, and up and down, unless otherwise specified, these directions mean the front and rear of the front-and-rear direction of the vehicle, the left and right in the left-and-right direction of the vehicle (width direction of the vehicle), and the up and down in the up-and-down direction of the vehicle.
As shown in
As shown in
A portion formed by the body 10, the side plate 22 of the front lid 20, and the side plate 32 of the rear lid 30 forms a tube portion 16, and the bottom plates 21 and 31 are attached to respective ends of the tube portion 16. In addition, the bottom plate 21 of the front lid 20 and the bottom plate 31 of the rear lid 30 correspond to one end plate and the other end plate described in the claims.
The inlet pipe 40 is attached via an attachment member 23 to the front lid 20, at a position which is offset from a center 29 of the front lid 20 toward a top left side. A blow-off port 41 at a tip of the inlet pipe 40 penetrates through the partitioning plate 11 and extends into the first expansion chamber 13. Similarly, the outlet pipe 50 is attached via an attachment member 33 to the rear lid 30 at a position which is offset from a center 39 of the rear lid 30 toward a bottom right side. A flow-in port 51 at a tip of the outlet pipe 50 penetrates through the partitioning plate 11 and extends into the second expansion chamber 14. In this manner, the inlet pipe 40 and the outlet pipe 50 are attached to the lids 20 and 30 at positions offset toward the outer circumferential side from the centers 29 and 39 of the lids 20 and 30. In
A bracket 60 is attached on an inner surface of the bottom plate 31 of the rear lid 30. The bracket 60 is a plate member formed in a mountain shape, and includes a top surface 61 and inclined surfaces 62˜65 connected to the top surface 61. Flanges 66 which extend along the inner surface of the bottom plate 31 are provided at bases of the inclined surfaces 62˜65. As shown in
The flange 66 of the bracket 60 is attached by spot welding to the inner surface of the bottom plate 31, and, as shown in
As shown in
As shown by arrows in
The exhaust gas diffused in the first expansion chamber 13 flows through the holes 12 formed on the partitioning plate 11 and into the second expansion chamber 14, and is diffused in the second expansion chamber 14. Thus, the sound is further reduced, and the exhaust gas flows from the flow-in port 51 into the outlet pipe 50 and is exhausted to the outside.
In this manner, in the muffler 100 for the vehicle of the present embodiment, the exhaust gas can be diffused to the entire region of the first expansion chamber 13 including the corners 15a˜15d by the inclined surfaces 62˜65 of the bracket 60. Therefore, the amount of sound reduction of the muffler 100 for the vehicle can be increased without increasing the volume of the first expansion chamber 13.
In addition, because the inclined surfaces 62 and 64 have inclinations of less than or equal to 45 degrees with respect to the bottom plate 31 of the rear lid 30, a dynamic pressure component of the exhaust gas in a direction orthogonal to the bottom plate 31 is reduced, and generation of the radiation sound due to vibration of the bottom plate 31 can be suppressed. In addition, because the dynamic pressure of the exhaust gas in the direction orthogonal to the bottom plate 31 can be received by the top surface 61 connected to the inclined surfaces 63 and 65 having large inclination angles and a level of high rigidity in the direction orthogonal to the bottom plate 31, it is possible to suppress the vibration of the bottom plate 31 and to consequently reduce the generation of the radiation sound.
Further, by forming a closed cross-sectional structure by the bracket 60 and the bottom plate 31, it is possible to increase rigidity of the bottom plate 31, and to consequently suppress vibration of the bottom plate 31 and to reduce the radiation sound.
As described, the muffler 100 for the vehicle according to the present embodiment can reduce the radiation sound from the bottom surface 31 in addition to allowing the increase in the amount of sound reduction of the muffler 100 for the vehicle without increasing the volume of the first expansion chamber 13. Therefore, the noise of the vehicle can be further reduced without increasing the volume of the first expansion chamber 13.
In the muffler 100 for the vehicle of the embodiment described above, the inclination angles of the inclined surfaces 62 and 64 are described to be about 20 to about 30 degrees, but the angles are not limited to these. Alternatively, the inclination angles of the inclined surfaces 62 and 64 may be any angle smaller than 45 degrees, such as, for example, about 10 degrees to about 20 degrees, or about 30 degrees to about 40 degrees. Further, the inclined surfaces 62 and 64 are described to extend to regions near midpoints between the edge of the top surface 61 and the corners 15a and 15c, but the present disclosure is not limited to this configuration, and alternatively, the inclined surfaces 62 and 64 may extend to regions near the corners 15a and 15c. Moreover, so long as the inclined surfaces 62 and 64 extend over the one-dot-and-chain line 18 which is the virtual line passing through the center in the left-and-right direction on the inner surface of the rear lid 30 and the one-dot-and-chain line 19 which is the virtual line passing through the center in the up-and-down direction, and toward the corners 15a and 15c, the inclined surfaces 62 and 64 may alternatively have shapes extending to regions slightly past the one-dot-and-chain lines 18 and 19.
Furthermore, the inlet pipe 40 is described to be attached at a position which is offset from the center 29 of the front lid 20 toward the outer circumferential side, but the present disclosure is not limited to such a configuration, and the inlet pipe 40 may alternatively be placed at the center 29 of the front lid 20. In this case, the top surface 61 is placed at the center 39 of the rear lid 30, and the inclined surfaces 62˜65 are surfaces having the same inclination angle from the center 39 of the rear lid 30 toward the corners 15a˜15d.
In addition, in the embodiment, the body 10 is partitioned by the partitioning plate 11 into the first expansion chamber 13 and the second expansion chamber 14, but alternatively, the partitioning plate 11 may be omitted, and one expansion chamber may be formed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
JP2018-181719 | Sep 2018 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
734878 | Jamison | Jul 1903 | A |
792804 | Williams | Jun 1905 | A |
1839192 | Baits | Jan 1932 | A |
2205899 | Chipley | Jun 1940 | A |
2239549 | Chipley | Apr 1941 | A |
3462947 | Nowak | Aug 1969 | A |
5123502 | Flugger | Jun 1992 | A |
5304749 | Crandell | Apr 1994 | A |
5444197 | Flugger | Aug 1995 | A |
6776257 | Shaya | Aug 2004 | B1 |
7219764 | Forbes | May 2007 | B1 |
20060008397 | Bruck | Jan 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
102207016 | Oct 2011 | CN |
S5332248 | Mar 1978 | JP |
2007-92628 | Apr 2007 | JP |
2016-217152 | Dec 2016 | JP |
201844446 | Mar 2018 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20200102876 A1 | Apr 2020 | US |