This application claims the priority of DE 10 2009 057 634.7 filed Dec. 9, 2009, which is incorporated by reference herein.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a radial roller bearing according to the precharacterizing features of Patent Claim 1, and can be applied particularly advantageously to needle-roller or cylindrical-roller bearings for the roller bearing mounting of shafts in internal combustion engines in an oil-mist-laden or spray-oil-laden environment.
2. Background of the Invention
To mount various shafts in internal combustion engines, such as crankshafts, camshafts and balancing shafts, use has increasingly been made recently of roller bearings instead of plain bearings in order to reduce friction, said roller bearings usually being formed by radial roller bearings. Aside from cylindrical-roller bearings and needle sleeves and needle bushes, solid needle-roller bearings have proven to be most suitable here, because they have a high load-bearing capacity and have a very low structural height in the radial direction and are therefore particularly suitable for structures with limited radial installation space. Such needle-roller bearings are known inter alia from the applicant's catalog “Wälzlager” [“Roller bearings”] dated January 2006, and are described for example on pages 620 to 655 in various embodiments with and without inner bearing rings. The most frequently used embodiment of such needle-roller bearings 1, which is shown in
It has however been found in practice that a pressurized oil supply to the bearing points in internal combustion engines using the existing engine oil via supply lines and ducts provided specially for the purpose is relatively complex and expensive and also necessitates a corresponding level of power of the existing oil pump, which must otherwise be exchanged for a more powerful version, and this involves further effort. In the case of such a pressurized oil supply to the bearing points, there is likewise the risk of flooding of the roller bearing with lubricating oil, resulting in the desired friction reduction effect being reversed and the bearing friction being increased considerably. As an alternative to this, the utilization of the spray oil from the bearing surroundings in the interior of the internal combustion engine would duly be expedient, but the known roller bearings do not offer the required accessibility for the spray oil into the bearing interior, because the gap between the bearing cage abutting against the radial rims on the outer bearing ring and the inner bearing ring is not large enough to allow a sufficient amount of spray oil to pass into the bearing interior.
Taking the discussed disadvantages of the known prior art as a starting point, the invention is therefore based on the object of designing a radial roller bearing, in particular for the roller bearing mounting of shafts in internal combustion engines, which is supplied with the required lubrication at all times in a simple and cost-effective manner.
According to the invention, in a radial roller bearing according to the preamble of Claim 1, said object is achieved in that the lubricating openings in the outer or inner bearing ring are formed as cutouts which are formed into one or both axial sides of the bearing rings outside the load zone of the bearing rings and which extend into the outer or inner raceway of the roller bodies and in which the roller bodies are arranged so as to be partially freely accessible for receiving spray oil from the bearing surroundings.
The invention is therefore based on the realization that, by means of cutouts, which are simple and cost-effective to produce, on the outer or inner bearing ring, it is possible to partially expose the roller bodies of the roller bearing such that said roller bodies can be supplied with a sufficient amount of spray oil from the bearing surroundings at all times. Here, to prevent a situation in which the roller bodies roll over the cutouts in the load zone of the bearing rings, and therefore to prevent an impairment in bearing function, the position of said cutouts on the bearing rings in the circumferential direction is dependent on the respective load direction in the intended application. At the same time, the respective rotational conditions in the application determine whether the cutouts should be arranged on the outer bearing ring or on the inner bearing ring. Generally, in the case of a fixed outer bearing ring and rotating inner bearing ring and in the case of a point load acting on the inner bearing ring, only the outer bearing ring is formed with the cutouts, on the side opposite the point load. Likewise, in the case of a fixed inner bearing ring and rotating outer bearing ring and in the case of a point load acting on the outer bearing ring, only the inner bearing ring is formed with the cutouts, on the side opposite the point load. However, if a circumferential load generated by an imbalance acts on one of the two bearing rings, as is the case in the mounting of balancing shafts of internal combustion engines, it should be ensured that, in the event of the imbalance being connected to the rotating outer bearing ring, only the outer bearing ring can be formed with the cutouts on the side of the acting imbalance, while in the event of the imbalance being connected to the rotating inner bearing ring, only the inner bearing ring can be formed with the cutouts on the side opposite the acting imbalance. In this way, the full raceway width on both bearing rings is made available to the roller bodies in the respective load zone.
Preferred embodiments and advantageous refinements of the radial roller bearing designed according to the invention are described in the subclaims.
Accordingly, according to Claim 2, it is provided in the radial roller bearing designed according to the invention that the outer bearing ring or the inner bearing ring has, on both axial sides, in each case three lubricating openings formed as cutouts. In this way, the outer or the inner bearing ring has a total of six such cutouts, which have generally proven to be sufficient to enable the roller bodies to receive spray oil for bearing lubrication. Depending on the size of the bearing, the number of cutouts on one of the two bearing rings may however be either increased or decreased. It is likewise possible for the cutouts to be arranged only on one axial side of the outer bearing ring or inner bearing ring if the corresponding bearing point is accessible to spray oil at only one side anyway.
According to Claims 3 and 4, the rolling bearing designed according to the invention is also characterized in that in each case two of the three cutouts on each axial side of the bearing rings are arranged exactly oppositely on a bearing transverse axis, and in that in each case one of the three cutouts on each axial side of the bearing rings is arranged opposite the load zone thereof on a bearing vertical. The two cutouts on the bearing transverse axis therefore have a spacing of 90° from the cutout on the bearing vertical, while the load zone, which is formed without a cutout, of the bearing ring is arranged opposite the cutout arranged on the bearing vertical. Such an arrangement of the cutouts on the bearing rings is however merely one preferred design, and does not rule out the possibility of the cutouts also being arranged with other spacings to one another.
In one expedient refinement of the rolling bearing designed according to the invention according to Claim 5, it is also provided that the cutouts in the bearing rings have in each case a width corresponding approximately to the axis spacing of two adjacent roller bodies. In this way, it is sought to ensure that the spray oil passing into the cutouts can penetrate into the bearing center between two roller bodies, and therefore all the bearing regions are supplied uniformly with oil. It is however also possible here for the width of the cutouts to be varied so as to be made larger or smaller, wherein a variation for making said width smaller, or a narrower design of the cutouts, is limited in that, in the case of too narrow a design of the cutouts, the amount of infiltrating spray oil may be too low for adequate bearing lubrication.
Finally, as an advantageous embodiment of the rolling bearing designed according to the invention, it is also proposed by Claim 6 that the cutouts in the bearing rings are of rectangular shape and have in each case a depth corresponding to approximately one third of the width of the bearing rings. This design has also proven to be ideal for ensuring that the spray oil infiltrating into the cutouts can penetrate into the bearing center, and therefore all the bearing regions are supplied uniformly with oil. However, shapes of the cutouts which differ from this, for example a semi-circular or trapezoidal design, and/or different depths of the cutouts are also possible if this contributes to a further improvement in bearing lubrication.
The radial roller bearing designed according to the invention is explained in more detail below in terms of two preferred embodiments, with reference to the appended drawings in which:
It can also be clearly seen from
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Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 057 634.7 | Dec 2009 | DE | national |