This invention relates to a piston for use in an engine. More specifically, the invention relates to a coated piston for use in an engine.
Typical engines, such as internal combustion engines, include at least one piston that reciprocates within a cylinder of the engine. The piston includes a head portion, a skirt, and at least one side panel. The head portion usually includes at least one piston ring groove for receiving a piston ring therein.
The piston is generally sized to be just smaller in overall diameter than the diameter of the cylinder in which the piston reciprocates. This allows the piston to move within the cylinder while minimizing the noise in the engine. When too much space exists between the piston and cylinder, a disruptive noise, commonly known as piston slap, can occur as the piston moves within the cylinder. It is desirable to reduce the amount of piston slap that occurs within the engine.
When the piston moves within the cylinder, some of the piston surfaces can rub against the inner surface of the cylinder, especially when the tolerances between the size of the piston and the diameter of the cylinder are very close. Many engines are cast from an aluminum alloy, which provides a lightweight but strong engine housing. When the piston is cast from the same material as the engine housing (and thus, the same material as the cylinder), scuffing can occur between the surfaces of the piston and the cylinder, thereby decreasing the life of the piston, increasing the piston slap, and also increasing emissions. It is therefore desirable to provide a bearing surface on either the cylinder or the piston that will reduce the wear on the piston.
The piston according to the present invention includes a piston head including at least one ring groove and a piston skirt coated with a first thickness of a bronze coating material. The piston also includes a side panel adjacent the piston skirt that is coated with a second thickness of the bronze coating material such that the first and second thicknesses of bronze coating material are different.
In one embodiment, the bronze coating material includes aluminum-bronze. The aluminum-bronze includes at least about seven percent aluminum and less than or equal to about thirty percent aluminum. In another embodiment, the first thickness of coating is greater than the second thickness. In another embodiment, the second thickness of bronze coating material on the side panel is a non-uniform thickness.
The present invention also includes a method of making a piston. The method includes casting a piston having a piston head, a piston skirt, and a side panel such that the piston skirt has a smaller diameter than the piston head. The method also includes applying a coating material to the piston skirt, and machining the piston only after the coating is applied such that the diameter of the piston skirt after machining is greater than or equal to the diameter of the piston head.
Further constructions and advantages of the present invention, together with the organization and manner of operation thereof, will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like elements have like numerals throughout the drawings.
The present invention is further described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show some embodiments of the present invention. However, it should be noted that the invention as disclosed in the accompanying drawings is illustrated by way of example only. The various elements and combinations of elements described below and illustrated in the drawings can be arranged and organized differently to result in embodiments which are still within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
The piston 10 illustrated in
Coating the aluminum piston 10 with a bronze coating material creates a piston surface that resists scuffing. When an aluminum piston reciprocates within an aluminum cylinder bore of an engine, the piston surfaces can rub against the cylinder bore and scuff, reducing the life of the piston, increasing the noise produced by the engine due to piston slap, and increasing the exhaust emissions of the engine. Adding the aluminum to the bronze coating material softens the bronze and helps the bronze coating material bond to the aluminum piston. However, if too much aluminum is added to the bronze coating material, the bronze coating begins to act more like aluminum, increasing the possibility of scuffing the piston, which can increase engine emissions. In addition, an aluminum-aluminum interface can cause the engine to seize at high temperatures. The aluminum-bronze material used in the present invention includes at least about seven percent aluminum and less than or equal to about thirty percent aluminum. In one embodiment, the aluminum-bronze material includes about fourteen percent aluminum.
The piston 10 is made according to the following method. The piston 10 is cast from an aluminum alloy such that the piston skirt 18 has a smaller diameter than the piston head 14 (see
Once the piston 10 is cast and blasted, a number of pistons 10 are clamped together axially by a clamping mechanism 50, as illustrated in
The spraying apparatus 54 can use between one hundred twenty amps and three hundred sixty amps of current, and preferably uses between two hundred fifty and three hundred amps of current. The more power supplied to the spraying apparatus, the faster the bronze wire can be fed through the spraying apparatus 54, and thus the faster the coating process. However, when more than three hundred amps is used, the spraying apparatus 54 begins to vaporize the bronze wire, reducing the efficiency of the spraying apparatus 54.
In the embodiment illustrated in
Depending on how much current is used by the spraying apparatus 54, the piston 10 is heated as the spraying apparatus 54 deposits the molten bronze coating material on the piston surfaces. Moving the spraying apparatus 54 closer to the pistons 10 during spraying can also result in an increase in heating of the pistons 10 as they are coated. If the pistons 10 get too hot during coating, the adhesion between the bronze coating material and the piston 10 decreases. The temperature of the molten bronze material is around 1000 degrees Fahrenheit. It is desirable to keep the temperature of the pistons 10 between one hundred eighty degrees and two hundred thirty degrees Fahrenheit during spraying to ensure a strong bond between the pistons 10 and the coating material. The temperature of the piston 10 can be controlled by adjusting the distance between the spraying apparatus 54 and the pistons 10 during coating, or by adjusting the power to the spraying apparatus 54.
The bronze coating is most useful on the piston skirt 18 because it is the surface of the piston skirt 18 that contacts the cylinder bore surface. Any bronze coating on the side panels 22 or the piston head 14 is thus extraneous and it is desirable in some embodiments to reduce or even eliminate the amount of bronze coating material on the side panels 22. This reduction can be accomplished in several ways. In one embodiment, the pistons 10 clamped so that the piston skirt 18 is fully coated and then the pistons 10 are rotated quickly so that a minimal amount of coating is deposited on the side panel 22, and the rotation is slowed again when the other piston skirt 18 is exposed to the bronze coating material. This results in a greater thickness of bronze coating material on the piston skirt 18 than the side panel 22. In other embodiments, the side panel 22 and/or the piston head 14 could be masked such that no bronze coating material is deposited on the side panel 22 or the piston head 14. The bronze coating material could then be recovered from the masking element and reused by the spraying apparatus 54. However, it is understood that in other embodiments, the layer of bronze coating on the side panels 22 could be greater than or equal to the thickness of bronze coating material on the piston skirt 18. In yet other embodiments, the spray angle of the nozzle of the spraying apparatus 54 could be narrowed, reducing the spray path of the spraying apparatus 54 which would make it easier to control where on the piston the bronze coating material was being sprayed.
Once the piston 10 is coated, the piston 10 is then machined. Machining the piston 10 smoothes the surfaces of the piston 10 and shapes the piston 10 so that it can move within the cylinder bore. The machined piston 10 of the illustrated embodiment is slightly oval in shape. After machining, the diameter of the piston skirt 18 is greater than or equal to the diameter of the piston head. Machining the piston 10 also includes creating at least one ring groove 26 in the piston head 14. When more than one ring groove 26 is created, the machining process also creates lands 30 between the ring grooves 26. The ring grooves 26 are designed to accept piston rings (not shown). Creating the ring grooves 26 after the coating process will remove any bronze coating material from the piston head 14. Machining the piston 10 also removes any bronze coating material from the lands 24 adjacent the side panel 22. In some embodiments, it may be desirable to include some bronze coating material on the surfaces of the piston head 14 or the lands 24. In those embodiments, the machining process does not remove all of the bronze coating material from those surfaces.
In pistons that are gravity cast and/or pistons that are coated with a material using a plating process, the piston is machined before the coating is applied. This may lead to some undesirable results. First, applying the plating to the piston head 14 after machining (and thus after the ring grooves 26 are formed) may allow excess plating to build up on the edges of the ring grooves 26, creating an antenna or “dog-bone” effect (as the edges of the ring grooves 26 act as an antenna, attracting more of the plating material to those positions). This can affect how the piston rings fit into the ring grooves 26, can increase the noise or piston slap within the engine, and can increase the amount of exhaust emissions from the engine. Second, applying the plating to the piston 10 after machining can further increase the noise and exhaust emissions produced by the engine because of greater tolerance variations on the piston. For example, a piston may include a 0.0005 inch tolerance on the pin boss 46, a 0.0005 inch tolerance on the piston skirt, and a 0.0007 inch tolerance due to the plating process, all of which contributes to greater noise and blow by gas generated as the piston 10 moves within the engine cylinder. In the illustrated method, where the coating is done before the machining, the tolerance due to the coating process is eliminated since the coating is machined, thus reducing the noise created by the engine. To reduce this tolerance in the plated piston, an additional machining step after plating is required, increasing the cost of the piston.
Various features of the invention are set forth in the following claims.
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