The invention relates to a piston for an internal combustion engine.
A piston for internal combustion engines is known from EP 0 902 180 A2. In this piston, the bosses are set back in the axial direction of the piston-pin bolt such that the outer boss measurement is 60 to 65% or less of the piston diameter. The boss outer surfaces which interconnect the two running surfaces have a straight (linear) shape when viewed over the height of the running surfaces. In this piston the boss outer surfaces (also called box walls) are not categorically planar but also curved in cross-section both parallel as well as perpendicular to the piston axis. However, the direction of the curvature of the surface in cross-section perpendicular to the piston axis is always constant for the entire surface of the box wall. With the distance between the box walls diminishing in the upward direction (towards the piston head), the result is decreasing width for the load-bearing running surface in the upward direction. The disadvantage is that when the distance of the box walls from each other widens, the potential for weight savings by undercutting the ring zone in the direction of the piston-pin bore cannot be fully utilized. The support for the piston head provided by the box walls is not optimal because of the reduction in piston head tensile strength. When the distance of the box walls narrows in an upward direction (towards the piston head), skirt area which is needed to keep the piston straight and to provide protection against seizing is lost at the skirt upper edge. In addition, because of the lack of support for the ring zone, high stresses result in the transitional area between the piston skirt and the casting around the ring zone.
Connecting walls are also known in pistons which are configured as planes parallel to each other or curved surfaces with only one radius of curvature and only one direction of curvature.
A piston, such as is known from DE 101 45 589 A1, offers an improvement. Said piston has a free casting (undercut) in the piston head which extends radially and peripherally behind the ring zone. This free casting has the advantage of reducing weight but at the same time the disadvantage is that the vicinity of the piston head is weakened as a result.
It would be desirable to provide a piston which eliminates the disadvantages described.
With different piston designs and concerning the shape of the skirt wall sections and their connecting walls (the advantages of which are described in DE 101 45 589 A1), a reinforced section is provided in the vicinity of the piston head running radially behind the ring zone. This reinforced section has the advantage that the piston head area there is reinforced, where the free casting is also located to counteract the stresses resulting from the combustion temperatures and pressures during operation of the piston in the cylinder of an internal combustion engine. Since the free casting (undercut) is located in this area, this reinforcement is of particular advantage since the skirt below the ring zone is disposed to be free-hanging and cannot contribute to the reinforced section (support).
In one aspect, the reinforced section is configured as an insert which is introduced in the casting die before the casting of a piston blank, secured there and surrounded with metal melt. The insert is of the same material as, or a different material than, the material from which the piston blank is cast. Weight savings from the free casting on the one hand and reinforcement from the insert on the other hand can be optimally balanced against each other.
In another aspect, the insert is configured to be one-piece or multi-piece, or an annular one-piece. The multi-piece design has the advantage that the insert can be disposed at the locations behind the ring zone and approximately at the height of the free casting at which special reinforcement should be provided. The insert can be configured annular and in one piece so that it can be handled very easily when inserted into the casting die. In addition, particularly good, consistent reinforcement, above all radial support, is given in the vicinity of the ring zone.
In another aspect, the insert has an outer diameter prior to its insertion into the casting die which is smaller than, or the same as, the inner diameter of the casting die at the location where the insert is secured. The inner diameter of the insert is greater than, or the same as, the outer diameter of the free casting. A space can be provided between the insert and the free casting for the purpose of reinforcement and to avoid problems during the casting. This space should be selected such that, when filling the metal melt into the casting die, sufficient metal melt can distribute itself between the insert and the free casting and gaps are avoided. The free casting (undercut) is formed by a correspondingly shaped molded part (slider) of the casting die which, depending on the shape of the free casting, is extracted perpendicularly, at an angle or at a right angle to the piston stroke axis after the metal melt has hardened. Overall, the insert is shaped such that it acts to reinforce the piston head and, after the piston is manufactured (casting the piston blank which is finish machined), appears at the radial surface of the piston in the vicinity of the ring zone. The axial height of the insert is selected such that it extends above and below at least one ring groove, such as above and below the topmost ring groove, or it may also extend over several ring grooves. It is possible that the insert has a groove to accommodate an oil ring before casting, or the groove (ring groove) is introduced at the time when the piston blank is finish machined.
In another aspect the insert has a single- or multi-piece cooling channel plate formed onto the insert which creates a cooling channel. This allows the piston head to be cooled by a cooling medium circulating in the cooling channel, specifically engine oil, in order to cope with the high stress demands on the piston during operation.
In another aspect, the lower edge of the ring zone in the vicinity of the connecting walls projects beyond the walls (projection) and is at least partially hollowed out there. As a result of this projection, as well as the projection being hollowing out, a further weight reduction is achieved in an area which is not critical to the strength of the piston. The area that is hollowed out is oriented specifically according to the alignment of the piston-pin boss and of the transitional area of the piston head into the piston skirts.
An aspect of a piston, to which the piston is not, however, restricted is described in the following description and using the Figures in which:
There are, in addition, piston-pin bosses 4 which run on a boss axis that is set back from a piston axis and are part of the piston skirt 2. The piston-pin bosses 4 are located in two rear connecting walls 5 which interconnect two oppositely lying skirt sections 7. Further, a ring zone 6 is provided in the piston head 3 with a topmost ring groove 16. The lower edge of the connecting wall 5 is identified with the reference numeral 8, and the lower edge of the piston head 3 or the ring zone 6 with the reference numeral 9. The design of the piston 1 is such that the curvature functions, their relative offset to each other along the piston-pin axis and the type of their interconnection along the longitudinal axis of the piston are selected such that surfaces of the skirt wall sections 7 result with a constant skirt width or a skirt width tapering upward towards or downwards along the longitudinal axis of the piston.
A projection (ring zone projection) of the lower edge of the ring zone beyond the connecting walls 5 is identified with the reference numeral 11, where this area is hollowed out at least partially to realize a further weight savings. This hollowing out of the projection 11 can also extend into the areas in which the skirt wall sections 7 are located and, if necessary into the inner area of the ring zone 6, until just before the end of the piston head 3. The hollowing out can be performed as a free casting 12 (refer to
Furthermore, a reinforced section or reinforcement 15, shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 042 857 | Sep 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/007638 | 8/2/2006 | WO | 00 | 6/13/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/028466 | 3/15/2007 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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Co-pending related U.S. Appl. No. 12/066,890, filed Apr. 21, 2008, entitled “Piston, Especially Cooling Channel Piston, of an Internal Combustion Engine, Comprising Three Friction Welded Zones” assigned to the same assignee as the subject application. |
Co-pending related U.S. Appl. No. 12/066,886, filed Mar. 14, 2008, entitled “Piston, Especially Coling Channel Piston, Comprising Three Friction-Welded Zones” assigned to the same assignee as the subject application. |
International Search Report dated Feb. 11, 2006 for PCT/EP2006/007638. |
English Translation of the International Preliminary Report on Patentability dated Aug. 2, 2006 for PCT/EP2006/007638. |
International Search Report dated Apr. 5, 2008 for PCT/EP2005/010063. |
International Search Report dated Jun. 26, 2006 for PCT/EP2005/010061. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080245229 A1 | Oct 2008 | US |