Claims
- 1. A fuel injection system for a two-stroke spark ignited internal combustion engine having a cylinder, a piston received for reciprocation in the cylinder, a crankshaft driven to rotate by the piston, a crankcase communicating with the piston and in which the crankshaft is received, a primary air intake port communicating with the crankcase, a transfer passage communicating with the crankcase and having a transfer port communicating with the cylinder, an exhaust port communicating with the cylinder, and an engine intake port communicating directly with the cylinder, the fuel injection system comprising:a body; a primary air intake passage in the body and having an inlet port communicating with atmosphere and an outlet port constructed and arranged to communicate with the primary air intake port of the engine; a separate fuel-and-air mixing passage in the body and having an inlet communicating with the atmosphere and an outlet constructed and arranged to communicate with the engine intake port; a rotary throttle valve having a valve chamber, a cylindrical rotary member, and a needle, the valve chamber carried by the body and communicating transversely through the air intake passage, the rotary member disposed rotatably and vertically movably within the valve chamber, the rotary member having a throttle bore communicating laterally through the member, the throttle bore being aligned to the air intake passage when the rotary throttle valve is rotated to a wide open throttle position and partially mis-aligned to the air intake passage when the rotary throttle valve is rotated to an idle position, wherein the needle projects concentrically from the rotary member; a fuel metering assembly carried by the body and having a fuel metering chamber at a substantially constant pressure; a fuel feed tube defining a fuel feed passage communicating between the metering chamber and the fuel-and-air mixing passage for supplying a majority of fuel flow of a rich fuel-and-air mixture to the cylinder through the engine intake port; and a fuel nozzle carried by the fuel feed tube and communicating with the fuel-and-air mixing passage, the needle of the rotary throttle valve extending axially into the fuel feed passage, wherein the needle is constructed and arranged to move axially into and out of the nozzle in response to rotation of the throttle valve to vary the degree of opening of the nozzle and thus fuel flow entering the fuel-and-air mixing passage from the metering chamber.
- 2. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 1 which also comprises a fuel bleed passage communicating between the fuel metering chamber and the air intake passage.
- 3. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 2 wherein the fuel bleed passage communicates with a bleed nozzle disposed in the air intake passage between the inlet port and the throttle bore of the rotary throttle valve, the bleed nozzle being sized to flow a minority of fuel into the air intake passage from the metering chamber during high engine speed conditions for engine lubrication and hardly any fuel during engine idle conditions.
- 4. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 3 comprising:a tuned injector tube communicating with the combustion chamber through the intake port when the piston is near BDC and with a crankcase port communicating with the crankcase when the piston is near TDC; and a connecting tube communicating the fuel-and-air mixing passage with the tuned tube near the intake port.
- 5. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 4 which also comprises a fuel pump carried by the body and actuated by pressure variations produced by the operating engine to supply fuel to the fuel chamber.
- 6. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 5 wherein the rotary throttle valve has a shaft projecting rigidly and concentrically from the rotary throttle valve in an opposite direction than the needle and through a lid engaged to the body.
- 7. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 6 wherein the shaft is hollow and contains a threaded bore and wherein the needle has a threaded upper end engaged threadably to the shaft within the threaded bore.
- 8. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 7 wherein the rotary throttle valve has a guideway communicating concentrically from the threaded bore, through the rotary member, and to the fuel feed passage, and the needle extends through the guideway.
- 9. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 8 comprising:an upper body of the section carrying the air intake passage, the air and fuel mixture passage, the rotary throttle valve chamber, and the fuel feed passage; a separate intermediate section of the body engaged to the upper section from below, the fuel pump defined between the upper and intermediate sections; and a bottom plate of the body, the intermediate section being engaged between the upper section and the bottom plate, and wherein the fuel metering assembly is carried between the intermediate section and the bottom plate.
- 10. A fuel injection system for a two-stroke spark ignited internal combustion engine having a cylinder, a piston received for reciprocation in the cylinder, a crankshaft driven to rotate by the piston, a crankcase communicating with the piston and in which the crankshaft is received, a primary air intake port communicating with the crankcase, a transfer passage communicating with the crankcase and having a transfer port communicating with the cylinder, and an exhaust port communicating with the cylinder, the fuel injection system comprising:a tuned injector tube extending between an engine intake port communicating directly with the cylinder and a crankcase port communicating with the crankcase; a connecting tube communicating with the tuned injector tube near the engine intake port; and a charge forming device having: a body, a primary air intake passage in the body and having an inlet communicating with atmosphere and an outlet constructed and arranged to communicate with the primary air intake port of the engine, a separate fuel-and-air mixing passage in the upper body and having an inlet communicating with the atmosphere and an outlet constructed and arranged to communicate with the connecting tube, a rotary throttle valve having a valve chamber, a cylindrical rotary member, and a needle, the valve chamber carried by the body and communicating transversely through the air intake passage, the rotary member disposed rotatably and vertically movably within the valve chamber, the rotary member having a throttle bore communicating laterally through the member, the throttle bore being aligned to the air intake passage when the rotary throttle valve is rotated to a wide open throttle position and partially mis-aligned to the air intake passage when the rotary throttle valve is rotated to an idle position, wherein the needle projects concentrically from the rotary member, a fuel metering assembly carried by the body and having a fuel metering chamber at a substantially constant pressure, a fuel feed tube defining a fuel feed passage communicating between the metering chamber and the fuel-and-air mixing passage for supplying a majority of fuel flow of a rich fuel-and-air mixture to the cylinder through the engine intake port; and a fuel nozzle carried by the fuel feed tube and communicating with the fuel-and-air mixing passage, the needle of the rotary throttle valve extending axially into the fuel feed passage, wherein the needle is constructed and arranged to move axially into and out of the nozzle to vary the degree of opening of the nozzle and thus fuel flow entering the fuel-and-air mixing passage from the metering chamber.
- 11. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 10 wherein a fuel bleed passage of the charge forming device communicates between the air intake passage and the fuel metering chamber.
- 12. The fuel injection system set forth in claim 11 wherein the fuel bleed passage has a bleed nozzle disposed in the air intake passage between its inlet and the throttle bore of the rotary throttle valve, the nozzle being constructed and arranged to flow a minority of fuel during high engine speed conditions and hardly any fuel during engine idle conditions.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2001-061752 |
Mar 2001 |
JP |
|
REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
Applicant claims priority of Japanese patent application, Ser. No. 2001-061752, filed Mar. 6, 2001.
Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry |
John Deere Consumer Products—Two-Stroke Engine Technology Overview—Feb. 1999, pp. 1-7. |
Deere Technology Breakthrough Reduces Small Engine Emissions, John Deere Website Feb. 4, 1999, pp. 1-2. |
Basic Design of Two-Stroke Engines, Gordon P. Blair, Chapter 7, p. 333. |