The present invention relates to a suction manifold for an internal combustion engine.
An internal combustion engine is provided with a number of cylinders, each of which is connected to a suction manifold by means of at least one suction valve and to an exhaust manifold by means of at least one exhaust valve. The suction manifold receives fresh air (i.e. air from the external environment) through a feeding pipe provided with a butterfly valve and is connected to the cylinders by means of corresponding suction pipes, each of which ends at at least one suction valve.
In modern internal combustion engines, the suction manifold is increasingly of the variable geometry type, i.e. is provided with a choking device, which varies the air introduction section into the suction pipes according to the engine speed (i.e. to the angular speed of rotation of the drive shaft) to increase the engine performances while reducing the polluting emissions thereof. At low speeds, the air introduction section through the suction pipes is decreased so as to generate turbulences in the aspirated air flow which improve the air and fuel mixing in the cylinders; in virtue of the presence of these turbulences which improve the mixing, all the injected fuel is burnt and thus the polluting emissions generated by the combustion are reduced. At high speeds, the air introduction section through the suction pipes is maximized so as to allow a complete filling of the cylinders and thus to allow the generation of the maximum possible power.
For example, the choking devices of the type described above may be either tumble devices or swirl devices. For each suction pipe, a tumble device uses a choking element movable between an active (or choking) position, in which the choking element reduces the cross section of the suction pipe, and a resting (or maximum opening) position, in which the choking element does not determine any reduction of the air introduction section of the suction pipe. A swirl system provides for each suction pipe comprising two channels and, for each suction pipe, uses a choking element inserted in one of the two channels and movable between the active position, in which the choking element completely closes the corresponding channel, and a resting position (or maximum opening position), in which the choking element does not determine a significant reduction of the air introduction section of the corresponding channel.
In marketed choking devices, all the choking elements are fitted to a common shaft to rotate together from and towards the active position under the bias of a common actuator device, which is adapted to simultaneously and synchronously control the position of all the choking elements themselves. The actuator device is made independently from the suction manifold and after being completed it is mechanically fixed to the body of the suction manifold by means of fastening brackets or the like; when mounting the actuator device to the body of the suction manifold, a movable rod of the actuator device must be coupled to the common shaft so as to be able to transmit the motion generated by the actuator device from the movable rod to the common shaft. In the currently marketed suction manifolds, the coupling operation of the movable rod of the actuator device to the common shaft is rather long and laborious to be performed.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a suction manifold of an internal combustion engine, which is free from the drawbacks described above and, specifically, is easy and cost-effective to be manufactured.
According to the present invention, a suction manifold for an internal combustion engine is provided as claimed in the appended claims.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show a non-limitative embodiment thereof, in which:
In
The suction manifold 4 receives fresh air (i.e. air from the external environment) through a butterfly valve 8 movable between a closing position and a maximum opening position, and is connected to the cylinders 2 by means of corresponding suction pipes 9 (only one of which is shown in
A low pressure pump (not shown) feeds the fuel (e.g. gasoline, diesel, methane or LPG) from a tank (not shown) to a high pressure pump 12, which in turn feeds the fuel to a common rail 13; a series of injectors 14 (one for each cylinder 3) is connected to the common rail 13, each of which is cyclically actuated to inject a part of the pressurized fuel present in the common rail 13 into the corresponding cylinder 3.
The suction manifold 4 is of variable geometry and comprises a choking system 15, which varies the air introduction section of the suction pipes 9 according to the speed of the engine 1 itself. According to the embodiment shown in
According to a different embodiment (not shown), the choking system 15 is of the swirl type; in this case, each suction pipe 9 is split into two parallel channels side-by-side and the choking system 15 comprises for each suction pipe 9 a choking valve 16, which is mounted along one of the two channels of the suction pipe 9 and is adapted to vary the air introduction section thorough the channel itself. Specifically, each choking valve 16 is movable between an active (or choking) position in which the choking valve 16 reduces the air introduction section of the suction pipe 9 by completely closing the corresponding channel, and a resting (or maximum opening) position, in which the choking valve 16 does not determine a significant reduction of the air introduction section of the suction pipe 9.
Preferably, a single, common actuator device 19 is provided, which is mechanically connected to all the choking bodies 17 of the four choking valves 16; specifically, the choking bodies 17 of the four choking valves 16 are fitted on a same common shaft 18 which receives the motion from the actuator device 19.
As shown in
As shown in
The fuel common rail 13 displays a metal cylindrical tube 30 from which four cups 31 rise, each of which is adapted to be coupled with a fuel injector 14 of the internal combustion engine 1; the tube 30 of the fuel common rail 13 is supported by the body 21 of the suction manifold 4 by means of four supporting cradles 32, which perpendicularly rise from the wall 25 of the body 21 of the suction manifold 4 and are arranged by the side of the fastening brackets 26 to define, along with the fastening brackets 26 themselves, a housing seat 33 adapted to contain the fuel common rail 13 which is arranged between the fastening brackets 26 and the supporting cradles 32. According to a preferred embodiment shown in the accompanying figures, each supporting cradle 32 faces a corresponding mounting bracket 26; according to a different embodiment (not shown), each supporting cradle 32 is arranged between two corresponding mounting brackets.
According to a preferred embodiment shown in the accompanying figures, the external through holes 28 of the fastening brackets 26 are spaced from the wall 25 of the body 21 of the suction manifold 4 so that the fuel common rail is secured between the wall 25 of the body 21 of the suction manifold 4 and the fastening screws 29.
Furthermore, according to a preferred embodiment shown in the accompanying figures, the fastening brackets 26 are arranged at the cups 31 of the fuel common rail 13; in each fastening bracket 26, the internal through hole 27 is arranged between the wall 25 of the body 21 of the suction manifold 4 and the external through hole 28 and is adapted to contain a cup 31 of the fuel common rail 13. According to a different embodiment (not shown), the fastening brackets 26 are arranged between the cups 31 of the fuel common rail 13 and thus the fastening brackets 26 are free from the internal through holes 27.
As previously mentioned, the body 4 of the suction manifold 4 is made of molded plastic material; in order to avoid collapsing under load, the external through hole 28 of each fastening bracket 26 is coated by a metal anti-collapsing bushing 34. According to a preferred embodiment shown in the accompanying figures, the metal anti-collapsing bushing 34 of each fastening bracket 26 protrudes from the external through hole 28 and extends outside the external through hole 28 towards the supporting cradle 32. In this embodiment, the metal anti-collapsing bushing 34 of each fastening bracket 26 has an āLā-shape and is provided with an elbow extension 35 arranged parallel to and facing the supporting cradle 32 to contribute to form the housing seat 33 adapted to contain the common rail 13; furthermore, each fastening bracket 26 displays a tubular extension 36, which is internally coated by the metal anti-collapsing bushing 34, is coaxially arranged to the external through hole 28 and forms an extension of the external through hole 28 on the side opposite to the supporting cradle 32. According to a different embodiment (not shown), each metal anti-collapsing bushing 34 does not protrude from the external hole 28 towards the supporting cradle 32.
The housing seat 33 defined between the supporting cradles 32 and the fastening brackets 26 and further delimited by the metal anti-collapsing bushings 34 is dimensioned to accommodate the fuel common rail 13 with the minimum possible clearance; in this manner, once the fuel common rail 13 has been arranged in the housing seat 33, the fuel common channel 13 itself is firmly coupled to the body 21 of the suction manifold 4.
It is worth noting that in the embodiment shown in the accompanying figures in which the metal anti-collapsing bushings 34 protrude from the external through holes 28 and extend outside the external through holes 28 towards the supporting cradles 32, the metal anti-collapsing bushings 34 themselves may be inserted into the external through holes 28 once the fuel common rail 13 has been arranged in the housing seat 33; in this manner, the insertion of the metal anti-collapsing bushings 34 into the external through holes 28 blocks the fuel common rail 13 in the housing seat 33.
As shown in
According to a preferred embodiment, the mounting element 37 is made of injection-molded plastic material and the annular seals 38 and 39 are overmoulded on the mounting element 37 on the opposite sides of the mounting element 37 itself.
As shown in
According to a preferred embodiment, the mounting element 37 is jointly fixed to the connecting flange 24 of the body 21; in other words, the connecting flange displays a seat 43 which negatively reproduces the shape of the mounting element 37. Once the mounting element 37 is inserted into the seat 43 of the connecting flange 24, the mounting element 37 is sandwiched between the connecting flange 24 and the head 2 of the internal combustion engine 1 as the body 21 of the suction manifold 4 is fixed to the head 2 of the internal combustion engine 1.
According to a preferred embodiment shown in the accompanying figures, the connecting flange 24 of the body 21 displays a number of through holes 44 which are crossed by corresponding fastening screws 29 which are fastened into the head 2 of the internal combustion engine 1; the mounting element 37 displays a number of through holes 45 coaxially arranged to the through holes 44.
As shown in
According to a preferred embodiment shown in
Preferably, the actuator device 19 is of the pneumatic type and comprises an actuating chamber 50 delimited on one side by a flexible membrane 51 which is mechanically connected to the movable rod 47, a three-way solenoid valve 52 for connecting the actuating chamber 50 to a suction source 53 for deforming the flexible membrane 51 and thus biasing the movable rod 47 towards a first stroke end, and a spring 54 which is mechanically coupled to a movable rod 47 to bias the movable rod 47 towards a second stroke end opposite to the first stroke end. According to a possible embodiment shown in
According to the embodiment shown in
According to an alternative embodiment (not shown), the shaft 18 of the choking system 15 is provided with a seal arranged upstream of the toothed wheel 46 for sealing the containing shell 55 of the suction pipes 9; in this embodiment, the solenoid valve 52 of the actuator device 19 alternatively connects the actuating chamber 50 to the external environment and to either the suction or compression source 53.
The above-described suction manifold 4 is particularly easy and cost-effective to be manufactured because the mechanical connection of the fuel common rail 13 to the body 21 is jointly made by only inserting the fuel common rail 13 into the housing seat 33 defined between the supporting cradles 32 and the fastening brackets 26. Accordingly, the fuel common rail 13 is free from the fastening flange 24 which is typically welded to the tube 30 and therefore the manufacturing cost of the fuel common rail 13 is considerably reduced.
The above-described suction manifold 4 is particularly simple and cost-effective to be assembled because coupling the mounting element 37 (integrating the seals 38 and 39 and the retaining elements 42 of the shaft 18 of the choking system 15) is simple and fast and may be easily automated (i.e. performed by a machine tool without any manual intervention by an operator).
The above-described suction manifold 4 is particularly simple and cost-effective to be assembled because coupling the movable rod 47 of the actuator device 19 to the shaft 18 of the choking device 15 is extremely simple and fast, so as to be able to transmit the motion generated by the actuator device 19 to the shaft 18.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
08425502.5 | Jul 2008 | EP | regional |