The present invention relates to a pressure-effected interconnection of a metal part and a plastic part which is slipped over the metal part with a press fit, in particular in a fuel injector for internal combustion engines.
In a conventional fuel injector, shown in
In order to achieve appropriate clamping between the valve housing and valve body on one side and the plastic filter on the other side, and also reliable mounting, close tolerances of the parts to be interconnected by compression must be observed, and the plastic part must be subjected to special conditioning. If the compression is too high, the plastic base element of the fuel filter may be damaged or destroyed during the pressing-on operation. If the compression force is too low, the filter may detach easily since the base element made of plastic has a different thermal expansion coefficient than the metal of valve housing and valve body. Swelling of the plastic may also cause expansion of the base element so that the water content of the plastic must be adjusted to a specific value by conditioning the plastic base element.
A pressure-effected interconnection of a metal part and a plastic part according to an example embodiment of the present invention may have the advantage that it requires no close manufacturing tolerances between the two parts to be pressed together, and that a reliable press fit of the plastic part on the metal part as well as reliable assembly are guaranteed under all operating conditions, also without special conditioning specifications having to be observed for the plastic part. Shavings possibly peeling off the plastic part during compression are caught in the annular grooves sunk into the wall of the metal part at the foot of the ribs, and are unable to squeeze between the contact surfaces of the pressing pieces, thereby bringing about an undefined pressing surface. The force characteristics during the assembly, i.e., the slide-on force, is constant across a longer production period and exhibit only slight variances, which makes them easy to monitor.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the present invention, the ribs situated one behind the other are formed such that their projection height beyond the wall of the metal part—viewed transversely to the slide-on direction of the plastic part—increases in the slide-on direction of the plastic part, that is to say, the first rib lying closer to the plastic part in the slide-on direction has a lower projection height than the last rib lying at a greater distance from the plastic part in the slide-on direction. This design of the ribs ensures a slow increase in the compression when the plastic part is slipped over the metal part.
A fuel valve, in particular a fuel injector for internal combustion engines, is also provided, where the pressure-effected interconnection according to the present invention is established between the valve body representing a metal part and a fuel filter representing a plastic part.
The present invention is explained in greater detail in the following description on the basis of an exemplary embodiment shown in the figures.
The pressure-effected interconnection of a metal part and a plastic part slid over the metal part with a press fit is described in the following with the aid of a fuel injector for internal combustion engines on whose metallic valve body 22 a fuel filter 23 made of plastic is held with a press fit. The fuel injector shown only in a cutaway view in
Fuel filter 23 has a hollow-cylindrical base element 24 made of plastic whose inside diameter is slightly larger than the outer diameter of valve body 22. Wall cutouts, i.e., traversing wall openings 25 via which inflow ducts 27 are connected to annular chamber 34, are introduced into base element 24. Each wall opening 25 is covered by a filter mesh 26. Fuel filter 23 is slid over valve body 22 in the direction of arrow 33.
To achieve a reliable, tight press fit of fuel filter 23 on valve body 22 without high demands on the manufacturing tolerances of both components, a plurality of circumferential ribs—in this case, three ribs 34, 35, 36—have been formed on cylinder wall 221 of valve body 22, which are arranged one behind the other in the axial direction of valve body 22, i.e., in slide-on direction 33 of fuel filter 23. Each circumferential rib 34, 35, 36 has a back 37 which radially rises in slide-on direction 33 of fuel filter 23, and a flank 38 which sharply falls from the back end, radial flank 38 extending radially in the exemplary embodiment of
During installation fuel filter 23 is pressed over ribs 34 through 36 by its base element 24 made of plastic. The pressing over of ribs 34 through 36 is facilitated by the angled slope of back 37. The stepped increase in the projection measure of ribs 34 through 36 beyond cylinder wall 221 ensures a slow increase in the pressure. The pressure itself acts directly on ribs 34 through 36, as line contact and not across the full pressure path, which causes base element 24 to deform slightly. In addition, base element 24 is subjected to a locally high line pressure, which is more advantageous for the plastic base element than cylindrical loading. When fuel filter 23 is completely pressed onto valve body 22, base element 24 interlocks with ribs 34 through 36. Shavings and scrapings of plastic that may detach when base element 24 is pressed on may collect in annular grooves 39 at the foot of back 37 of ribs 34 through 36 and will not be pushed toward the outside. This also prevents the plastic shavings or splinters from being pushed through the gap between base element 24 and valve body 22 so that they do not become wedged there. They are also unable to reach the area of inflow ducts 27 and be washed into the valve seat region by the fuel via inflow ducts 27.
The present invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiment of a fuel injector shown and described in
The pressure-effected interconnection according to the present invention of a metal part and a plastic part slid over the metal part with a press fit, which was described using the example of a fuel injector, may generally be used for any plastic-metal part interconnection.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 010 174 | Mar 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/050687 | 2/16/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/24/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/085621 | 9/15/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070181713 A1 | Aug 2007 | US |