The present invention relates to a unit for supplying combustion air to the cylinders of an endothermic engine.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 from Italian Patent Application No. BO2003A 000362, filed Jun. 13, 2003. The prior application is incorporated herein by this reference.
In general, an air supply unit comprises a manifold having an air inlet orifice and a plurality of supply ducts, which are in communication with the manifold and have respective outlet orifices, each of which is capable of supplying a respective cylinder of the internal combustion engine. Some supply units are made with supply ducts that have variable geometry. In this specific case, each supply duct communicates with the manifold through a first and a second opening, which are arranged in different zones of the supply duct in such a manner as to define a first complete path of air along the supply duct, which path is delimited by the first opening and the outlet orifice, and a second shorter path that extends between the second opening and the outlet orifice. The second path is thus part of the first path. Moreover, a valve for selectively opening and closing the second opening is fitted in correspondence with second opening. The unit of this configuration has the function of selecting the preferred path depending upon the operation of the endothermic engine: when the rotational speed of the endothermic engine is low and high torque is required, it is preferable for the path followed by the combustion air to be long and the valve is thus in the closed position; when the rotational speed of the endothermic engine is high and high power is required, it is preferable for the path followed by the air to be short and the valve is thus in the open position. From a functional standpoint, the valve of each supply duct is actuated depending on the rotational speed of the endothermic engine.
The unit described above has a number of disadvantages: the first disadvantage is that fitting a valve in each second opening is a complex and costly operation; the second disadvantage is that the unit has no valve in correspondence with the first opening and, although the combustion air is preferably channelled over the second, shorter, path, a certain quantity of combustion air passes through the first path, so reducing the advantage of providing supply ducts having variable geometry.
The aim of the present invention is to provide a unit for supplying combustion air to the cylinders of an internal combustion engine, which unit has none of the disadvantages of the prior art and which, in particular, is particularly efficient and easy to produce.
The present invention provides a unit for supplying combustion air to the cylinders of an endothermic engine which comprises a manifold having an air inlet orifice; and at least one supply duct for each cylinder; each supply duct extends between a first opening communicating with the manifold and an outlet orifice and has a second opening arranged between the first opening and the outlet orifice; the unit being characterised in that it comprises a bulkhead that can move between the first opening and the second opening in order to close alternately the first opening and the second opening.
The bulkhead can preferably be rotated about a specific axis.
According to a preferred embodiment, the first opening is delimited by a first edge resting on a first plane and in that the second opening is delimited by a second edge resting on second plane; the first plane and the second plane intersecting in the vicinity of said specific axis.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the attached drawings, which illustrate some non-limiting embodiments of the invention, in which:
With reference to
The unit 1 comprises a manifold 2 and a series of ducts 3 (
The unit 1 comprises a bulkhead 10, which is arranged within the manifold 2, is fitted on a shaft 11 and can be rotated about an axis 12 parallel to the direction 1.
Each opening 5 is delimited by an edge 13 that rests on a plane A, while each opening 6 is delimited by an edge 14 that rests on a plane B. The axis 12 is arranged in the vicinity of the intersection of the A and of the plane B, such that the bulkhead 10 is capable of coupling both with the openings 5 and with the openings 6. In theory, if the bulkhead 10 were of zero thickness, the axis 12 would coincide with the intersection of the planes A and B.
The bulkhead 10 has a first face 15 capable of coupling with the openings 5 and a second face 16 capable of coupling with the openings 6. The faces 15 and 16 have respective gaskets 17 and 18 capable of co-operating respectively with the edges 13 and 14.
As is shown more clearly in
The gaskets 17 and 18 are radially offset relative to the axis 12, as shown in
In service, each cylinder aspirates the quantity of combustion air required for operation of the engine through the manifold 1. The bulkhead 10 is displaced by a control member, not shown in the attached figures, from the position shown in solid lines in
According to the variant in
According to the further variant in
According to a variant that is not shown, the bulkhead 10 can be replaced by a series of bulkheads, each of which is of dimensions so as to co-operate with a single duct 3 or with a group of ducts 3. In fact, the advantage of using the bulkhead 10 or a series of bulkheads resides in the possibility of closing either the opening 5 or the opening 6 without increasing the complexity of the unit 1. From this standpoint, having a single bulkhead 10 for all the supply ducts 3 is equivalent to having more mutually aligned bulkheads.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2003A 000362 | Jun 2003 | IT | national |