This application is generally related to a variable camshaft phaser, and is more particularly related to a valve body arrangement for the control valve for hydraulic fluid used to actuate the variable camshaft phaser.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,305,948 B2 discloses a cam phasing system for a double overhead camshaft (DOHC) configuration.
U.S. Pub. 2016/0032790 A1 describes an accessible solenoid valve; however, the spool valve portion is not accessible and the valve body assembly mounts to the engine itself.
U.S. Pub. 2018/0080352, which is by the present inventor and is incorporated herein by reference as if fully set forth, describes a camshaft phaser that is installed on an idler shaft in the drive line between the crankshaft and the camshaft of an internal combustion engine. Here, the control valve is mounted to the front of the idler shaft.
It would be desirable to provide for simplified mounting of a camshaft phaser as well as more flexibility in positioning of the control valve for ease of maintenance as well as to minimize required changes to other engine components and accessories mounted in a front area of an engine.
To address the issues noted above, a variable camshaft timing system for an internal combustion engine is provided. The system includes an idler shaft with a bearing journal, and a camshaft phaser rotatably mounted on the bearing journal. The camshaft phaser includes a driving wheel that drives the camshaft, a driven wheel that is driven by the crankshaft, and a hydraulically driven phasing assembly configured for varying a relative phase of the driving wheel with respect to the driven wheel. First and second pressurized hydraulic medium lines are connected to the hydraulically driven phasing assembly. A valve body is connected to the idler shaft for directing the flow of pressurized hydraulic medium to the first and second pressurized hydraulic medium lines from a control valve mounted to the valve body. The valve body includes a center part with an integral retainer for holding the camshaft phaser on the idler shaft, and mounting openings adapted to receive fasteners that extend through the idler shaft for connection to structure, preferably the engine block, of the internal combustion engine. A radial extension is integrally connected to the center part and extends radially outwardly from an axis of the idler shaft a predefined distance. A control valve receiving part is integrally connected to radial extension and includes a control valve bore that receives the control valve. First and second passages that form parts of the first and second hydraulic medium lines extend through the center part and the radial extension to the control valve bore. A control valve including a valve spool is located in the control valve bore. An engine cover, preferably a timing gear case cover, including an opening for the control valve is provided, and the valve body is located inside the engine cover and at least a part of the control valve extends through the opening.
Preferably, a seal is provided between engine cover and the valve body housing protruding into or through the engine cover. The remainder of the variable camshaft timing system is located within the lubricated area of the engine behind the engine cover.
In one embodiment, at least part of the first pressurized hydraulic medium line and at least part of the second pressurized hydraulic medium line are formed by first and second passages in the idler shaft that are aligned with the first and second passages in the center part of the valve body. A pressurized hydraulic medium feed line comprising a feed passage is also provided in the idler shaft that is connected to an aligned feed passage in the center part that connects to a radial feed passage in the radial extension that leads to the control valve bore. The control valve is adapted to direct pressurized hydraulic medium from the pressurized hydraulic medium feed line to one of the first or second pressurized hydraulic medium lines to cause the camshaft phaser to either advance or retard the driving wheel with respect to the driven wheel.
Preferably, a radial direction and a length of the radial extension are set to locate the control valve receiving part in an accessible space at a front of the engine cover. This is advantageous to allow the control valve to be positioned in an accessible position rather than the typical centered location relative to the camshaft phaser, allowing less impact in the overall design of the front of the engine along with any accessory drives or other components in this area.
In one embodiment, the hydraulically driven phasing assembly includes chambers defined in one of the driving wheel or the driven wheel, and vanes extending from the other of the driving wheel or the driven wheel into the chambers to form an advancing chamber side and a retarding chamber side that are separated from one another. The first pressurized hydraulic medium line is in fluid communication with the advancing chambers, and the second pressurized hydraulic medium line is in fluid communication with the retarding chambers.
In one embodiment, the driven wheel is a first idler gear that is adapted to engage a crankshaft gear and the driving wheel is a second idler gear that is adapted to engage a gear connected to a camshaft. In other types of camshaft timing gear arrangements, an additional camshaft may also be driven using an additional idler gear adapted to engage the driving gear and the gear connected to that camshaft.
Preferably, the control valve includes a solenoid to move the valve spool in a first direction and a return spring to move the valve spool in a second direction, opposite to the first direction. Preferably, an axis of the control valve is oriented parallel to and offset from an axis of the idler shaft, such that the control valve is located radially spaced apart from the idler shaft in a more accessible location of the engine, for control valve serviceability.
To simplify mounting, the bolts that extend through mounting openings in the center part and in the idler shaft are configured for mounting the variable camshaft timing system to the engine block. This allows for simpler assembly and reduced part count.
Based on the arrangement provided, a drain opening from the control valve opens inside of the engine cover, allowing for a simple return path of the hydraulic medium, which is typically engine lubricating oil, to return to the oil pan.
In another aspect, a method of installing a camshaft phaser assembly on an internal combustion engine is provided. The method includes installing a hydraulically driven phasing assembly located between a driven wheel and a driving wheel on an idler shaft, installing a valve body as described above on the idler shaft using bolts that extend through the center part and the idler shaft and into an engine block, and installing a control valve in the control valve receiving bore.
The method can further provide installing the engine cover over the camshaft phaser assembly, with the engine cover including an opening for the valve body, and installing a seal between the valve body and the opening. This is the only added seal required by the camshaft phaser assembly based on the present disclosure to keep the hydraulic medium, which is preferably engine lubricating oil, within the closed system provided by the original engine design.
Preferred arrangements with one or more features of the invention are described below and in the claims.
The foregoing Summary as well as the following Detailed Description will be best understood when read in conjunction with the appended drawings. In the drawings:
Certain terminology is used in the following description for convenience only and is not limiting. The words “inner,” “outer,” “inwardly,” and “outwardly” refer to directions towards and away from the parts referenced in the drawings. A reference to a list of items that are cited as “at least one of a, b, or c” (where a, b, and c represent the items being listed) means any single one of the items a, b, c or combinations thereof. The terminology includes the words specifically noted above, derivatives thereof, and words of similar import.
A flywheel 14 can be mounted to the front of the crankshaft to help minimize vibration. The camshaft 15 is preferably a single overhead camshaft and includes a camshaft gear 16 connected at the front thereof. The gear train between the crankshaft 12 and the camshaft 15 is preferably located behind an engine cover 17 which allows for a lubrication of the gear train as well as prevents the ingress of outside debris and the leakage of engine oil. The engine cover 17 is shown without fasteners in
In prior known engines without variable camshaft timing, an idler gear could be located between the crankshaft gear 13 and camshaft gear 16 or alternatively, a timing chain could be provided, resulting in a fixed timing between rotation of the crankshaft and rotation of the camshaft. As shown in
As shown in
The camshaft phaser 40 can be provided in accordance with U.S. 2014/0102392, U.S. 2009/0260589, U.S. 2012/0111295, or U.S. 2018/0080352, all of which are incorporated herein by reference as if fully set forth. For the sake of completeness, one exemplary embodiment of the camshaft phaser 40 is shown in detail in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in connection with
A pressurized hydraulic medium feed line is provided including the passage 28 shown in the idler shaft 22 in
As illustrated in
Referring again to
A method for installing a camshaft phaser assembly 40 on an internal combustion engine as part of a variable camshaft timing system 20 is also provided. This is accomplished by installing the hydraulically driven phasing assembly 46 that is located between the driven wheel 42 and the driving wheel 44 on the idler shaft 22. The valve body 64 is then installed on the idler shaft 22 using the fasteners 68 extending through the mounting openings 66 and 34 in the valve body 64 and the idler shaft 22, respectively, that are adapted to receive the fasteners 68. These fasteners 68, preferably bolts, extend through the center part 64a of the valve body 64 and the idler shaft 22 and into the engine block in order to fasten the entire system 20 in position. The control valve 70 can either be previously installed or then installed in the control valve receiving bore 64e. The engine cover 17 can then be installed over the camshaft phaser assembly 40, with the engine cover 17 including the opening 69 for the valve body 64d, and a seal 74 is preferably installed between the control valve 70 and the opening 68. This provides for a simplified assembly of the variable camshaft timing system 20 with fewer potential leak points as well as easier access to the control valve 70.
Having thus described various embodiments of the present variable camshaft phaser system in detail, it will be appreciated and apparent to those skilled in the art that many changes, only a few of which are exemplified in the detailed description above, could be made in the method and variable cam phaser system according to the invention without altering the inventive concepts and principles embodied therein. The present embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore to be embraced therein.
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