Closest prior art: the WO 2007/085649 A2 Opposed piston Pulling Rod Engine (OPRE), the U.S. Pat. No. 6,170,443 Opposed Piston Opposed Cylinder engine (OPOC) and the U.S. Pat. No. 1,679,976 Junkers-Doxford engine. Close prior art is also the U.S. Pat. No. 4,732,115 of Lapeyre and the U.S. Pat. No. 4,115,037 of Milton.
The two connecting rods of the OPRE engine are “pulling rods” or “pullrods” in the sense that the high pressure of the combustion chamber loads them exclusively in tension. On the same reasoning the connecting rods of a conventional engine are pushrods.
The pullrod arrangement increases by some 35% (depending on the connecting rod to stroke ratio) the time the piston remains at the last 15% of its stroke near the combustion dead center, i.e. where the injection, the preparation of the fuel mixture, the delay and the most significant and efficient part of the combustion complete. On the same reasoning, when a pullrod engine revs at 35% higher revs than the conventional, it provides to the fuel similar conditions with the conventional.
The U.S. Pat. No. 4,732,115 of Lapeyre necessitates pairs of cylinders and simultaneous combustion at pairs of combustion chambers.
The U.S. Pat. No. 4,115,037 of Milton involves a crankshaft located necessarily at one side of the cylinder.
Some of the objects of this invention are:
to improve the balancing quality of the Junkers-Doxford engine;
to maintain the advantages of the OPRE engine, like the longer piston dwell around the combustion dead center, the crosshead architecture, the “four stroke like” lubrication, the built-in volumetric scavenging pump etc, while eliminating the second crankshaft, the synchronizing gearing and the loads on the main crankshaft journals;
to provide a full-balanced single-cylinder single-crankshaft two-piston module;
to provide a single cylinder module for multicylinders;
to provide a port-less through-scavenged two-stroke engine having true four-stroke lubrication.
a and 1b show the engine of Junkers-Doxford. The central connecting rod is a pushrod, the side connecting rods are pullrods.
a and 2b show another version of the Junkers-Doxford engine wherein the side connecting rods extend to hold the piston pin.
a and 3b show the OPOC engine: two oppositely arranged Junkers-Doxford engines share the same crankshaft for the sake of a better dynamic balance with asymmetrical port timing.
a and 4b show the OPRE engine comprising two synchronized crankshafts.
a and 6b show an embodiment of this invention wherein all the connecting rods are pushrods.
a and 7b show another embodiment of this invention wherein all the connecting rods are pullrods.
a and 8b show the arrangement of
a and 9b show an embodiment of this invention from two viewpoints. In this embodiment all connecting rods are pullrods. The cylinder is sliced to show more details. The pistons are at the combustion dead center.
a and 10b show the engine of
a and 11b show the engine of
a and 12b show the engine of
a and 13b show the assembly of the pistons, the connecting rods and the crankshaft of the engine of
a, 23b, 23c, 23d, 23e and 23f, like
a, 24b, 24c, 24d, 24e, 24f and 24g show the first prototype made and tested. Two connecting rods for the intake piston and two connecting rods for the exhaust piston are used. All connecting rods are pullrods. The big diameter piston of the scavenging pump is secured, by two “pillars”, to the intake piston and moves below the crankshaft. One-way valves trap the air into the big diameter cylinder and into the transfer “pipes” waiting the intake ports to open.
The piston and the piston rings are lubricated by the crankcase lubricant as in the conventional four-stroke engines, while the working medium is isolated from the crankcase lubricant as the working medium of the conventional four-stroke is isolated from the crankcase lubricant.
The connecting rods are disposed at the two sides of the cylinder, outside the cylinder footprint, to rid the space behind the piston of obstacles like a piston pin and a connecting rod, in order to free the flow of the working medium and to make space for the valve actuator and its mechanism.
The piston comprises valve seats and valve guides. The piston bears intake poppet valves and restoring springs. The exhaust valves are controlled conventionally, for instance by cams secured to the crankshaft. An intake camshaft rotates in synchronization with the crankshaft by means of sprockets, gears etc. A valve actuator, comprising valve lash adjusters, is displaced by the intake camshaft and is restored by restoring springs. During the compression, the combustion and the expansion, the intake valves move together with the piston. The right moment the exhaust valves open and the pressure inside the cylinder drops. At a crankshaft angle, the intake valves land on the valve actuator and start following its motion. Compressed air from the backside of the intake piston enters the cylinder, through the ports/holes on the piston crown, and scavenges the exhaust gas. The right moment the exhaust valves close. Compressed air continuous to enter the cylinder until the intake valves land on the valve seats on the piston crown and start following the piston motion. The compression begins.
Two of the main objectives of a right intake camlobe are: to allow the intake valves to pass smoothly, quietly and reliably from the motion with the piston to the motion with the valve actuator (and vice versa), and to protect the poppet valves of the piston, and their restoring springs, from excessive valve lifts.
By counterweights secured on the two intake camshafts, the even firing opposed cylinder version of this engine is full balanced. In
From bottom-left,
From top-left,
The intake piston skirt has ports that cooperate with the cylinder liner intake ports/niches, eliminating the transfer pipes of the engine of
a and 34b show a variation of the engine of
In a first preferred embodiment,
The pullrod arrangement generates a longer piston dwell around the combustion, as compared to the conventional engine, and a shorter piston dwell during the scavenging.
The pistons (4) and (5) are reciprocably disposed into the same cylinder (6) and seal two sides of the same combustion chamber (7) therein.
The cylinder (6) comprises intake ports (8) and exhaust ports (9) that the reciprocating pistons cover and uncover.
The connecting rod of the upper piston and the connecting rod of the lower piston are, in case of symmetrical timing, always parallel. With equal diameters of the two opposed pistons, the forces applied to the crankshaft are parallel and equal, i.e. the total force on the main crankshaft bearings is zero. The same is true for the inertia forces: in case of equal mass of the two reciprocating assemblies, the total inertia force on the main bearings of the crankshaft is always zero. In case of symmetrical timing, the engine balance can be perfect as regards the inertia forces and the inertia moments.
In case of asymmetrical timing, the pullrod-arrangement enables a smaller offset of the crankpins, thereby lesser spoiling of the dynamic balancing.
In a second preferred embodiment,
In a third preferred embodiment,
In a fourth preferred embodiment,
The crosshead architecture eliminates the thrust loads from the pistons to the cylinder liner. Theoretically, the pistons never touch the cylinder liner. On this reasoning, only the piston rings need lubrication.
In the four stroke engines a lubricant film of about 0.002 mm (actually a dye of oil on the cylinder liner surface) is what actually protects the top compression ring from the dry contact with the liner.
The additional time provided by the pullrod arrangement for the injection and the combustion of the fuel, helps the biofuels and the neat vegetable oils with their longer ignition delays.
The better lubricity of the biofuel and the vegetable oil, relative to the Diesel, enables the lubrication of the compression rings from “inside” as shown in
A variation of the opposed piston arrangements is the case wherein the cylinder comprises two halves.
The two halves may have different bores.
The two halves may be arranged at some wide angle to provide asymmetrical timing etc.
The crankshaft may have some slight offset from the cylinder axis, as in the conventional engines. This also generates an asymmetrical timing.
Although the invention has been described and illustrated in detail, the spirit and scope of the present invention are to be limited only by the terms of the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2011/053569 | 8/10/2011 | WO | 00 | 2/9/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/020384 | 2/16/2012 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1629878 | Mader | May 1927 | A |
2103103 | Waters | Dec 1937 | A |
20090165744 | Pattakos et al. | Jul 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130133627 A1 | May 2013 | US |