The present invention concerns a single-component cam and a method of manufacturing such a cam as well as a compound engine camshaft or valve-control camshaft manufactured therefrom.
Compound engine camshafts are composed of single-component cams fastened to a core by one of several means. Such shafts are easy to manufacture and light in weight and are accordingly increasingly in demand for motor-vehicle engines.
Single-component cams are almost always disk-shaped. German 3 738 809 C2 proposes further decreasing the weight by recessing the faces of the cams. Recessing, however, is complicated and expensive. Machining the recess requires complicated processing and wear on the bit. Still, even approaches like forging, extrusion, or sintering for example, that do not remove material also result in considerable wear. This strategy has accordingly not proved successful for decreasing the weight of cams for compound camshafts.
The aforesaid field of application, for engine camshafts, also extends to the manufacture of camshafts employed to control variable mechanical valve-drive mechanisms. The cams can in this case be provided with special contours.
The object of the present invention is to further decrease the weight of cams employed in compound engine or valve-control camshafts.
This object is attained in accordance with the present invention in cams and shafts of the aforesaid genera by the characteristics recited in the body of Claim 1. Claims 2 through 4 address practical alternative and advanced embodiments. Claim 15 addresses a method of manufacturing a cam like one of those addressed in Claims 1 through 14. Claim 16 addresses a method of assembling an engine camshaft or valve-control camshaft with cams like one of those addressed in Claims 1 through 14.
Cams in accordance with the present invention are not only lighter and simpler than the known single-component cams employed in this field, but also subject the bits to much less wear than at the state of the art.
Hot-forged or cold-forged cams with the characteristics described in Claims 1 through 14 also have considerably thinner rims than known cams. The radii of the flange at the transition between the outer contour of the cam and its faces can be shorter. The supporting surface of the outer contour will accordingly be larger than those of conventional cams. The cam can accordingly be thinner, conserving considerable material and eliminating more weight. Radii shorter than 1 mm and preferably of 0.2 to 0.5 mm can be attained.
It has always been assumed that the width of the joint, which equals the width of the cam, must be as extensive as possible in order to attain the requisite high strengths. Widths of 10 mm or more have been employed. Experience has demonstrated, however, that widths of less than 6 mm and preferably of 3 to 5 mm can be successfully employed with the innovative cams specified herein.
Another advantage of such cams is that they are essentially easier to heat-treat than known embodiments, especially when, as recited in Claim 9, a bushing is accommodated between the cam and the core as a point of departure for hardening the overall cam if it is not already of a naturally hard and wear-resistant material. This combination of features prevents very hard cams from working into the core during operation and accordingly impairing the strength of the core or loosening the hold between the cam and the core.
The present invention will now be specified with reference to the accompanying drawing, wherein
The core 1 of the camshaft illustrated in
Cams 2 can be fastened to core 1 by any known means.
Core 1 can for instance be rippled, with the diameter of a ripple exceeding the inner diameter of a cam 2, which can then be forced over the ripple, displacing material, and accordingly fastened tight.
Core 1 can alternatively be drummed or knurled in the vicinity of a cam 2. In this event, web 4 will be between 3 and 5 mm thick.
It is also possible to force a cam 2 onto a core 1 by expanding the cam's seat thereon. The core can for example be expanded by hydroforming before or after the cam has been positioned.
Finally, a cam 2 can be welded to core 1, preferably by laser welding.
Cams 2 mounted directly on a core 1 as illustrated in
When the cams are through-hardened or produced from a naturally hard and highly wear-resistant material, the method of fastening illustrated in
Cams 2 can be fabricated as desired by hot or cold forging from a ring or round blank. When, as specified in the foregoing and recited in the claims in conjunction with forged cams, this overall expression is intended to mean deformation of the material or blank by force and by way of tool parts that move toward each other. This can be done hot or cold, depending on the requirements of the particular material.
In special cases, however, the cams can also be fabricated by casting. Even powder-metallurgical fabrication by sintering may be of advantage, especially if the cams are to be of a high-strength and low-friction material. As a further alternative, flange 5 and web 4 can be separately fabricated, in which event the components can be of different materials and fastened together by forging into an individual cam 2.
Bushing 8 can to advantage be fabricated from sheetmetal by punching, stamping, or deep-drawing. It can also be bent round out of structural section, automatically ensuring tolerance between the diameter of bushing 8 and that of core 1.
When, as an alternative or supplement to the tight fastening approach hereintofore specified, an interlocking method of fastening the cams to the core is desired to prevent the cams from sliding around the core, the core passage 7 through cam 2 can have an irregular contour as illustrated in
Still other alternatives are illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 19 195.6 | Apr 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP03/03232 | 3/28/2003 | WO |