This application claims the benefit of and priority from Japanese Application No. 2005-52578 filed Feb. 28, 2005, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a resin tube having a connecting section and a corrugated section formed alternate parts of peaks and valleys.
2. Description of the Related Art
A conventional resin tube with a corrugated section is described in JP-A 2000-2376, which has been used as a tube employed to supply automobile gas. In addition to basic needs such as fuel pressure resistance and shock absorption, flexibility is required for better disposition in automobile engine compartments. However, when the resin tube is made more flexible, the corrugated section stretches and become considerably bent, meaning into contact with or interfering with peripheral parts. Efforts to overcome such problems by adjusting the thickness of the resin tube to improve the elongation rigidity result in a loss of flexibility and bending difficulties, compromising the disposition. A problem is thus providing such resin tubes with both resistance to stretching caused by fluid pressure and flexibility for better disposition.
An advantage of some aspects of the invention is to provide a resin tube which stretches less under fluid pressure, and has less bending rigidity, improving better disposition.
According to an aspect of the invention, the invention is provides with a resin tube comprising a connecting section and a corrugated section formed alternate parts of peaks and valleys. The corrugated section has a straight portion at the valley along a longitudinal direction of the resin tube. The corrugated section is configured to have a rate Wb/Wa that is expressed by 1.2 to 2.0, where Wa denotes a longitudinal breadth of the peak on a base line, and Wb denotes a longitudinal breadth of the valley on the base line, the base line being defined as a line passing a position midway in an outside diameter direction between the peak and valley and drawn along the longitudinal direction.
In the corrugated section of the resin tube in the invention, the ratio Wb/Wa of the peak longitudinal breadth Wa and the valley longitudinal breadth Wb is expressed by 1.2 to 2.0. The peaks have a cut shape with greater longitudinal curvature than the valleys, and the peak portions have less bending rigidity, so that the configuration of the corrugated section has flexibility making them easier to bend, resulting in better disposition. As the valleys are also formed with straight section that is longer in the longitudinal direction than the peaks and that have less curvature, pressure fluid on this part is less likely to result in longitudinal stretching that would cause significant changes in the disposed passageway, preventing interference with other parts. The resin tube thus has both better disposition due to the flexibility, and less interference with other parts because it is less likely to stretch.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the resin tube can be used to provide fuel pumped up from a fuel tank into a fuel injection valve of an engine. This resin tube has better resistance to fuel penetration because the valley floor portion of the resin tube is a straight portion with less curvature and have less area in contact with the fuel. Here, the straight portions are shaped with the substantial same outside diameter, with less curvature than the peaks.
In another embodiment, the corrugated sections are formed to substantial same thickness. In this embodiment, production is easier than partially modifying the thickness.
These and other objects, features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment with the accompanying drawings.
The corrugated parts 33 are structures with alternate parts of peaks 33a and valleys 33b, and are flexible in the longitudinal and bending directions. The kind and hardness of the resin material are set so that the corrugated tube 30 has satisfactory pressure resistance, flow rate, and the like, and the corrugated configuration is determined to meet the required elongation and bend rigidity. That is, the pitches of the peaks 33a and valleys 33b are different from each other.
The ratio and configuration are set for the following reasons. When the peaks 33a have a cut shape having greater longitudinal curvature than the valleys, the peaks 33a have less bending rigidity, giving the corrugated tube 30 better flexibility and better disposition. Here, a Wb/Wa ratio of less than 1.2 will fail to provide the elongation and bending rigidity effects described above, whereas more than 2.0 will result in longer valleys 33b, that is, a nearly straight tube, which will have high bending rigidity and will be difficult to bend. The Wb/Wa ratio is more preferably 1.3 to 1.5 in order to enhance such effects.
Because the valleys 33b are formed with a straight portion that is longitudinally longer than the peaks and that has a lower curvature, fluid pressure on this part is less likely to result in longitudinal stretching that would cause the disposed passageway to change very much, so that the corrugated tube 30 is prevented from interfering with other parts.
The corrugated tube 30 thus has both better disposition due to the flexibility, and less interference with other parts because it is less likely to stretch.
Any common method for forming the corrugated parts 33 can be used to produce the corrugated tube 30 of the invention. Various methods can be used, such as injection molding corrugation, continuous extrusion blow molding, and single product blow molding, with no increase in costs.
The stretching and bending rigidity of corrugated tubes 30 having such corrugated sections 33 were tested.
The material used in the embodiment and Comparative Examples 1 through 3 was nylon (PA11) 310 mm long and 0.6 mm thick, containing 14 wt % plasticizer (N-n-butyl sulfonamide).
The area in the embodiment was also lower than in Comparative Examples 1 through 3. This means that there is less area in contact with the fuel flowing through the corrugated tube 30, thus resulting in better resistance to fuel penetration.
The invention is not limited to the above embodiment and can be implemented in a variety of embodiments without departing from the spirit thereof The following variants are possible, for example.
In the embodiment above, the valleys have a straight shape of virtually the same diameter, but the shapes may have slightly different curvatures, provided that the action described above is not thereby compromised.
The foregoing detailed description of the invention has been provided for the purpose of explaining the principles of the invention and its practical application, thereby enabling others skilled in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. The foregoing detailed description is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise embodiments disclosed. Modifications and equivalents will be apparent to practitioners skilled in this art and are encompassed within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005-052578 | Feb 2005 | JP | national |