This application is the U.S. National Phase of PCT Application No. PCT/DE2021/100058 filed on Jan. 19, 2021, which claims priority to DE 10 2020 104 313.9 filed on Feb. 19, 2020, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein.
This disclosure relates to a tappet for acting on a pump piston of a high-pressure fuel pump of an internal combustion engine.
EP 2 951 435 B1 (
The object is to create a tappet that is suitable for long installation distances between cams and pump pistons and that can also be used variably and is light and simple in construction.
According to the disclosure, this object is achieved in that the spring plate with a sleeve-like inner collar guides the non-stepped pin and runs from an annular end face of the inner collar facing the transverse beam in the direction of the inner casing of the housing with a wedged piece that is bent in the direction of the transverse beam, over the annular tip of which the transverse beam is held opposite the surface and wherein the pin acts as an elongation of the tappet to the pump piston.
Such a tappet therefore essentially uses a short standard tappet, which is advantageously made of sheet steel, and lengthens said tappet with little effort. This means that the large installation distances between the drive (cams/eccentrics) and the output (pump piston) that are found in modern pump drives can be bridged in a simple design. It is possible to keep only one “basic tappet” available for different pump drive types. An adaptation is made only by varying a length of the thin-walled and unstepped pin, which is cleverly guided and held via the spring plate and can be delivered with the tappet installed.
At the same time, the spring plate fixes the bridge piece to the surface from below. Separate supports can therefore be dispensed with.
For a simple angle error compensation in the drive, it is proposed to design the spring plate with its annular tip, which can also be a plateau or the like, at a slight distance from the transverse beam. This allows the transverse beam to “tilt” toward the surface about an axis of the pin with the cam follower roller, which can compensate for inaccuracies in the perpendicular approach of the pump piston to the tappet. The tilting of the transverse beam is ultimately influenced by setting the size of this distance. Equally, however, a fixed contact of the transverse beam on the surface is provided.
According to a further example embodiment of the disclosure, to put it simply, the transverse beam should not be wider than the length of the bowstring-like edges of the surface. Thus, only a small amount of space and mass is required. The transverse beam has an upper end face that nestles against the bulge of the surface. It can consist of sheet steel and can be provided with a wear protection measure such as an applied layer such as a DLC layer on its underside, at least in the contact area of the pin.
A simple attachment of the spring plate to the inner casing of the housing is also proposed. This can be welded to the inner casing via an annular collar or press-fitted/snap-fitted there. In this case, the inner casing i can be smooth-walled and not stepped.
Perforations in the spring plate also ensure that media such as oil and fuel can pass through unhindered and prevent “pumping up”.
Finally, a simple transport lock for the pin using a snap ring connection is also proposed. The snap ring is seated in an annular groove of the pin above the inner collar of the spring plate.
In the drawings:
From
At an upper annular end face 3 of the housing 2, two surfaces 5 indented relative to an outer casing 4 of the housing 2 lie diametrically opposite one another. In these surfaces 5 sits a pin 7, which carries a cam follower roller 6 mounted on roller bearings. A comparatively narrow transverse beam 9 rests with its upper end face 10 on axial, secant-like inner end faces 8 of the surface 5, thus facing away from the upper annular end face 3. As can best be seen from
A pin 13 (see in particular
From an annular end face 17 of the inner collar 16 facing the transverse beam 9, the spring plate 15 is continued radially in the direction of the inner casing 14 of the housing 3 with a wedged piece 19 which has a bent profile in the direction of the transverse beam 9. Radially on the outside, the wedged piece 19 transitions into an annular collar 21 pointing “downward”, which bears against the inner casing 14 of the housing 2 and is welded to it. At the same time, the wedged piece 19 rests via its annular tip 20 against the lower end face 12 of the transverse beam 9 (see
Alternatively, the spring plate 15 with its annular tip 20 can also be slightly spaced apart from the wedged piece 19. In this design, a certain angular mobility of the transverse beam 9 with the pin 13 seated on it is made possible in relation to the surface 5 for the purpose of compensating for perpendicularity errors in the drive.
As shown in
In addition,
It should be noted that the pin 13 is a very simple extension of the tappet 1 and ultimately acts as an adapter piece between the tappet 1 and the pump piston and does not represent the pump piston.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2020 104 313.9 | Feb 2020 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2021/100058 | 1/19/2021 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2021/164807 | 8/26/2021 | WO | A |
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