The present invention relates generally to internal combustion engines and more specifically to one having multiple pistons in a rotating rotor.
Rotary engines with pistons mounted in a rotating rotor have been in the engine art for some time. See for example, the G. E. Henley, U.S. Pat. No. 1,048,308, and the H. Q. Anderson, U.S. Pat. No. 1,400,255. Through the years the other patents were issued on improvements and changes to the original rotary concept, the most notable of which was the Felix Wankel, U.S. Pat. No. 2,988,065. Other less notorious patents on the subject have been issued, including D. N. Blosser, U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,438,358 and 3,373,723, M. Yokoi et al, U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,793,998 and 5,261,365 and 5,345,905 to Daniel J Edwards.
The most pertinent prior art patents from the standpoint of the present invention are U.S. Pat. No. 7,219,633 to Robert A. McLeod, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,890,462 to Wiamir A, Bassett which describe engines using a process or a method similar to the present invention. In their disclosures both Bassett and McLeod recognize the advantage of using a cam or swash plate operably connected with a follower to create collapsible cylinders within a rotor. The piston is moved by the cam or swash plate to inhale and compress air which can then be compressed into a cylinder, fired and used in a combustion cycle. Both of these designs require a traditional four stoke cycle where air is drawn into the compression device on one downward stroke and air is compressed above the piston on one upward stroke of the piston. Both of the prior engines require several moving parts and complete their given combustion cycles within the compression cylinder created by the pistons and collapsible cylinders.
Accordingly, it is the primary object of the present invention to provide an engine system that is smaller, simpler to build, more durable, more efficient and capable of greater torque and power output, size for size, than any other rotary or reciprocating engine of the prior art.
Another object of the invention is to provide an engine that can inhale, compress and combust large amounts of air with a simple modified two stroke combustion process that will provide momentum, tangent energy and leverage in the combustion cycle to produce more power with greater efficiency then the traditional four stroke piston engine.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a rotary engine having exceptionally good characteristics for purging exhaust gases from the engine without the use of a poppet valve or poppet valve system.
Yet another and further object of the present invention is to provide an engine that uses a combination of rotary motion and the concurrent sliding of pistons together with a novel shape of the pistons to open and close rotary ports on the intake cycle so that the traditional reed valve system associated with the normal two stroke engine is eliminated, increasing volumetric efficiency without the use of reed valves or associated parts.
Additional objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon a reading of the following description of a preferred form of the invention.
The rotary engine of the present invention includes a cylindrical rotor having a plurality of longitudinally extending cylinder-forming bores, each having a sliclable piston disposed therein for simultaneously compressing and inhaling air at the same time, that is, inhaling air on one side of a piston while simultaneously compressing air on the other side of the piston. Each of the pistons are provided with a protruding pin that extends into a fixed elliptically shaped cam track on the interior cylindrical wall of a housing that encircles the rotor. During the combustion cycle of each piston the piston is moved longitudinally in its cylinder. As the piston moves along the cylinder its protruding pin follows the cam track causing the rotor to rotate on a power shaft that extends axially through the rotor and is journaled in the end caps of the rotor housing. While one piston is in its combustion cycle providing the power to turn the rotor, the protruding pins of other pistons are also engaging the cam track causing the pistons to which they are connected to slide back and forth within the rotor creating collapsible compression cylinders on both sides of the piston as the rotor turns within the rotor housing.
Also provided in the engine is a simple transfer port, whose function relies on the rotary motion of the rotor and the position of the sliding pistons, that allows a piston on the compression cycle to transfer compressed air from the back compression side of the rotor into the front compression and combustion cylinder while the piston is in the exhaust cycle. An overlap in the transfer allows the compressed transferring air to assist in pushing out the products of combustion and then closes to allow a transfer of fresh air or air/fuel mixture into the front or combustion side of the compression cylinder. When a piston reaches top dead center on the combustion half of its cycle that piston has compressed an air/fuel mixture and is ready to fire and begin a combustion cycle in the traditional manner. The rear portion of this same piston has completed an intake cycle and has closed the fixed intake port via rotary motion. As the piston fires and begins its combustion cycle the rear side of the same piston begins a compression cycle. As the piston completes the combustion cycle it comes into communication with a fixed exhaust port in the rotor housing allowing the products of the combustion process to escape from the front compression cylinder.
Locating the fixed cam track in the rotor housing produces more applied leverage in the compression and combustion process and allows a longer combustion cycle.
As seen in
The rotor 4 is rotatably disposed within a housing 20 having a cylindrical inner surface which is relieved along an elliptical endless channel to form a cam track 16 to receive and engage the respective piston follower pins 17. An exhaust port 19 in the side of the housing serves to release the products of combustion from the front compression cylinders.
A rear end cap 22 is attached by bolts or similar devices to the rear side of the housing 20. As shown in
Closing the front end of the housing 20 is a front end cap 33 which is bolted or similarly attached to the front of the housing. The center of the front end cap contains an aperture and included bearing 35 for journaling the front end of the drive shaft 8. A spark plug 37 is carried by the front end plate and extends through the plate to expose the spark plug gap to the front of a cylinder 10 as it passes the spark plug in the rotation of the rotor. The spark plug is located at top dead center or the 0 degrees point of the engine, the angular orientation being based on the positions of the slots 25 and 28 as seen in
The preferred form of the engine shown in
The fundamental concept of the engine's operation is a simple two stroke process with the front sides of the engine's pistons 15 completing a combustion cycle while the back side of the pistons are completing an intake, compression and transfer of compressed air into the front side of the engine. Once the combustion process begins three pistons in front half of the engine are in some phase of the 180 degree combustion cycle. Combustion causes the pistons to move longitudinally in their respective cylinders 10 causing followers 17 to interact with the fixed cam track 16 in the rotor housing 20 using the applied leverage to turn the rotor counter clockwise within the rotor housing. During the combustion cycle of the cylinders on the front side of the pistons, the cylinders 10 on the rear side of the pistons are in a compression cycle and in communication with the compression port 28. The air is compressed in the rear portion of the cylinders and ducted out of the cylinders through the transfer manifold 30 and introduced into the cylinder in front of a piston at properly timed intervals (between 180 and 0 degrees). Once the front compression cylinders complete their combustion process and reach bottom dead center (180 degrees) the rear portion of the cylinders comes into communication with the air intake port 25 on the rear end cap 22 and the rear compression cylinders begin an intake cycle inhaling ambient air which fills the space in the cylinders at the rear of the pistons while the front side of the pistons receive an intake of air from the transfer manifold to begin the compression cycle between 180 and 0 degrees. When the front of a piston reaches its top dead center position at 0 degrees the compressed fuel-air mixture is ignited and that piston's combustion/compression cycle begins with combustion occurring in front of the piston and compression occurring in the rear of the same piston. This arrangement of pistons and cylinders permits a longer two stroke combustion process and when used with a direct injection system placed in the front cap there is no loss of combustible fuel in the exhaust cycle.
The operation of the engine is further illustrated in diagrammatic
Referring now to
In
In
a depict the piston's position just ahead of bottom dead center. The combustion cycle is very near completion. The leading longitudinal edge of the cylinder is beginning to uncover the intake transfer port 21 to admit the compressed air in the manifold 30 into the front of the cylinder ahead of piston No. 1. Simultaneously, the cylinder is beginning to cover and close the exhaust port 19. However, as shown in
In
Examining
a represent the rotor and pistons in a position 47 degrees from its position in
In
Pursuant to the provisions of 35 U.S.C. § 119(e), this application claims the benefit of a U.S. provisional application filed pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 111(a) by the same inventor entitled Rotary Piston Engine, filed May 26, 2016, application No. 62/342,027.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1048308 | Hendley | Dec 1912 | A |
1312234 | Carlson | Aug 1919 | A |
1400255 | Anderson | Dec 1921 | A |
1569525 | Owens | Jan 1926 | A |
1614476 | Hutchinson | Jan 1927 | A |
1762650 | Boughton | Jun 1930 | A |
2227853 | Turner | Jan 1941 | A |
2949100 | Petersen | Aug 1960 | A |
2983264 | Herrmann | May 1961 | A |
2988065 | Wankel | Jun 1961 | A |
3068709 | Petersen | Dec 1962 | A |
3373723 | Blosser | Mar 1968 | A |
3405641 | Coberly | Oct 1968 | A |
3438358 | Blosser | Apr 1969 | A |
3793998 | Yokoi | Feb 1974 | A |
4022167 | Kristiansen | May 1977 | A |
4287858 | Anzalone | Sep 1981 | A |
5016580 | Gassman | May 1991 | A |
5209190 | Paul | May 1993 | A |
5261365 | Edwards | Nov 1993 | A |
5345905 | Edwards | Sep 1994 | A |
6601547 | Al-Hawaj | Aug 2003 | B2 |
6601548 | Al-Hawaj | Aug 2003 | B2 |
6986328 | Huettlin | Jan 2006 | B2 |
7721685 | Page | May 2010 | B2 |
20100236522 | Page | Sep 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
10133497 | Jan 2003 | DE |
0137621 | Apr 1985 | EP |
362721 | Dec 1931 | GB |
WO-9514156 | May 1995 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20170356334 A1 | Dec 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62342027 | May 2016 | US |