This invention is related to a piston for internal combustion engine and more particularly, the invention is directed to a piston for internal combustion engine, having conical openings on the piston skirt sections; each one of said openings being aligned to one oil drain hole located at the crown section of the piston. The alignment between said conical holes at the skirt and said oil drain hole facilitates the piston's lubricant flow while maintaining the required strength and integrity of the piston structure.
The remarkable importance of a piston as essential part of internal combustion engines is well known in the art. In such engines, the combustion process of a fuel, such as gasoline or diesel, is used in combination with an oxidizer in order to generate power. The prior function of the piston is the transferring of energy produced by the combustion process into the rotational motion of the crankshaft, thus facilitating the inter conversion of the chemical energy into mechanical energy. Said energy transferring requires the translational motion of the piston through the cylinder's walls under extremes pressure, stress and temperatures conditions. Therefore, in order to function properly, the piston must maintain the expanded gases produced in the combustion chamber isolated from the crankshaft area, must move at a high speed through the walls of the cylinder, and must be able to transmit the motion from the connecting rod to the crankshaft and to disperse the heat produced in the process in an efficient manner. Said processes require a proper lubrication, particularly between the internal cylinder walls and the piston external surface, which is fundamental in order to increase the maintenance and high performance of the engine. The oil or lubricant assists the piston's performance by decreasing the power required to reduce friction, thus reducing the wear. Similarly, the lubricant also serves as a cooling agent of the piston by carrying away heat front the piston to the oil pan and also works as a dirt removal since it removes unwanted particulates such as carbon. Additionally, other advantages of the proper lubrication are the formation of a sealing interface between the piston rings and the cylinder walls that prevents loss of compression; cushioning of the parts against vibration and impacts; noise reduction and protection against corrosion.
The prior art discloses several examples, wherein particular apertures, openings or grooves on the surface of the piston's skirt are present as alternatives or solutions to increases said lubrication. For instant, U.S. Pat. No. 4,903,580 to Bruni discloses a piston having a series of elongated notches or grooves, located at both skirt surfaces and parallel to one another. Said grooves have an angular extension of 40 degrees since they are extended approximately 40 degrees centered about a lines perpendicular to the piston pin axis and a radial depth in a range of 0.005 to 0.05 mm. The interior side of such grooves is apparently straight, without any inclination or angle. The elongated geometry and the relative position of said grooves—parallel to each other and positioned along the surface of the skirt—present a potential weakness to the structural strength of the piston. Similarly, U.S. Pat. No. 7,415,961 to Chen et al. discloses a piston having different apertures or openings called reservoirs and channels, in diverse the forms of holes, grooves and indentions. Said diverse grooves or indentions have different shapes, depths and sizes and are located on the surface of the piston skirts in an irregular manner, without following a predetermined pattern, and without being limited to a particular section of the skirt or by even any particular quantity. Circular holes, elongated grooves of different sizes and design, cross sectional or I-shaped grooves may be present alone or in combination; giving place to multiple arrangements of possible combinations, thus without considering the potential effects on the particular characteristics of the piston such as strength of the resulting piston's structure.
The prior art however, does not discloses or suggests a piston having a series of conical holes at the piston skirt, horizontally positioned with regard to the piston pin axis and located substantially at the center of each skirt section; wherein each conical hole is aligned with a drain oil hole located at the piston crown and wherein the lubrication of the piston walls is increased by the lubrication flow formed by the coordination of the particular place of said conical openings, its alignment with the oil drain holes and the oil being squirted by the rod bearing.
An object of the instant invention is to provide a piston for an internal combustion engine, which is capable of increasing the lubrication of the internal cylinder walls and the piston surfaces, thus increasing the performance and the power of the engine. Accordingly, it is an object of the instant invention to provide piston that facilitates the oil or lubricant flowing; thus increasing the heat transferring or cooling capacity in the engine, and simultaneously, facilitates the removal of unwanted particles, reduces the noise and extends the life of the engine.
Another object of the instant invention is to provide a piston that increases the protection against corrosion by maintaining a continuous oil or lubricant film on the internal wall of the cylinder and external piston's wall of an internal combustion engine by a series of paired conical openings located at the piston skirt sections. Said conical openings are horizontally oriented one to another with regard to the pin axis of the piston and each one of them is in alignment with an oil drain hole at the piston crown. In yet another object of the invention is to increase the efficient use of fuel and increase a clean combustion process in internal combustion engines by the proper positioning of said conical holes with regard to the position of the piston impacted by the oil being squirted out from the rod bearing or drain from the internal top of the piston.
According to the instant invention, said objects are accomplished by a piston for internal combustion engine, wherein said piston comprises an upper section or crown and two skirt sections located in opposite position and located under said upper section or crown. The crown comprises at least one oil groove having multiple oil drain holes. The skirt sections comprises a skirt walls, at the left and right sides of the pin boss, wherein the only openings at said skirt sections wall are a series of conical openings passing through the skirt wall, each of said openings being aligned with at least one oil drain at the piston crown, each of said conical openings located substantially at the center of the piston skirt wall and horizontally aligned one to another and substantially located at the height of the piston pin axis, thus maintaining the required strength of the piston's structure. Each one of the conical opening in one skirt is also aligned to another conical opening in the opposite skirt section, thus providing aligned pairs of conical openings.
Since the larger diameter of said conical openings is on the external surface of the skirt and the smaller diameter is on the internal surface of the skirt, the side joining such external and internal diameters is angled from the external surface to the internal surface of the skirt sections. In this manner, once the piston is inserted in the cylinder, the internal wall of the cylinder and the external surface of the piston skirt walls create a pocket which area is extended from the external walls of the cylinder to the internal surface of the piston. Said pocket provides a place wherein the lubricant or oil is stored and distributed constantly in the space between the walls of the cylinder and the external surface of the skirt walls, thus creating a constant lubricant film between the internal walls of the cylinder and the external walls of the piston.
The foregoing and additional features and characteristics of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description considered with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following detailed description illustrates the invention by way of example and is not limited to the particular limitations presented herein as principles of the invention. This description is directed to enable one skilled in the art to make and use the invention by describing embodiments, adaptations, variations and alternatives of the invention. Potential variations of the limitations herein described are within the scope of the invention. Although the instant description uses as an example a piston having a diameter of 85 mm crown, the same principles and limitations are applied to pistons having other crown length or sizes.
As illustrated in
Inside the oil ring groove 20, there are present a multiple oil drain holes 21, each of said holes passing through the internal wall of groove 20, thus allowing the communication of fluids from the internal cavity 25 of the piston 10 to the oil ring groove 20 and vice versa. Once there is an excess of oil or lubricant in the internal cavity 25 of the piston 10, it may easily move to the groove 20 via drain holes 21; from where it may drain downwardly to the external walls of piston 10.
Similarly, piston 10 also comprises three conical openings 3, 4, 5; which are substantially located at the center of the skirt sections 14 and three conical openings 6, 7 and 8; which are substantially located at the center of the skirt section 15. Each conical opening is positioned horizontally one to another at the center of the skirt section, in such matter that the structural strength of piston 10 is not debilitated or weaken. Similarly, each conical opening at a given skirt section is aligned to another conical opening at the opposite skirt section, thus creating an aligned conical opening pairs 3-6; 4-7 and 5-8.
Similarly, each conical opening has its larger diameter 26 at the external surface of the skirt while its smaller diameter 27 is on the internal surface of the skirt, thus the angled inner side 28 creates a conical pocket; wherein oil or lubricant is stored and distributed constantly.
In general terms, the internal diameter is at least 25 percent smaller than the external diameter. The particular sizes of the external and internal diameters of said conical openings depend on the particular size of the piston. More specifically, the external diameter may have a length in a range of 16 mm to 10 mm while the internal diameter may have a range of 12.7 to 6.35 mm. For instance, for a piston having a diameter of 85 mm crown length, the external diameter of the conical openings has a preferably length of 12.70 mm while the internal diameter is preferably of 9.52 mm. The inner side 28 has an inclination angle of 30 to 60 degrees.
Preferably, such inclination angle is between 40 to 50 degrees and even more preferably of 45 degrees. Once the piston 10 is inserted in a cylinder, such angled inner side 28 provides the required area for an internal storing unit in order to store oil or lubricant continuously, as mentioned above and explained in details below.
The particular and relative position of each one of the conical openings 3 through 8 are illustrated in
As illustrated in
It should be point out that, even though the skirt sections 14 and 15 of piston 10 are herein illustrated in a rectangular size, the skirt sections 14 and 15 may be of diverse sizes and geometrical design; different to those illustrated herein.
In order to make piston 10, the piston's main body may be obtained by procedures known in the art, such as casting; after which the position of the conical openings 3 through 8 are centralizing in the skirt sections 14 and 15 as illustrated in
Similarly, oil or lubricant squirted out on the internal cavity 25 of piston 10 drains downwardly though the oil drain holes 21, from where it may moves downwardly to the oil groove and from there to the storing units created by said conical openings 3-8. Due to the surface tension of the oil or lubricant, each lubricant molecule is pulled in the same direction by neighboring oil molecules, thus creating the desired oil or lubricant flow route that is channeled in the particular structure of piston 10.
Since the movement of the crankshaft 37 is circular, as illustrated in
On the other hand,
Alternatively, another portion of the oil or lubricant squirted out to the internal cavity of piston 10 drains through the internal walls of piston 10, as illustrated in
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