1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to valve gears for load-change valves of four-stroke internal combustion engines, in which optional opening of the load-change valve during a different work cycle can take place in addition to opening in accordance with the cycle.
2. The Prior Art
A valve gear of this type, for outlet valves, is described in PCT Application Publication No. WO 03/067067, FIG. 2 and FIG. 4. Outlet valves held in the closed position by spring force are opened according to the cycle, in usual manner, by an outlet cam, by way of a toggle or pivot lever, as well as a pressure plate that acts on the stems of the valves, so that the waste gases can flow out of the cylinder chamber into the waste gas tract via the outlet channel at the end of the expansion cycle and during the movement of the piston to the upper dead point. An intermediate element is articulated onto the toggle or pivot lever, so as to pivot. This element is firmly supported against the toggle or pivot lever by a hydraulic pressure cylinder to which pressure can optionally be applied or, if no pressure is applied to the pressure cylinder, can rotate freely about its articulation point. When pressure is applied to the hydraulic pressure cylinder, the outlet cam stands in engagement with the toggle or pivot lever during the intake process, by way of the intermediate element. This lever is moved exclusively by the highest region of the lifting curve of the outlet cam. The outlet valve is therefore additionally opened during the intake process, but this happens with a significantly lesser time cross-section than during expulsion of waste gas. This is shown in
By means of the additional opening of the outlet valve during the intake process, waste gas gets into the cylinder from the waste gas tract, by way of the outlet channel, and subsequently mixes with air that is drawn in, or with the fuel/air mixture that is supplied, during intake and compression. In order to achieve a slight time cross-section for returning waste gas during the intake cycle of waste gas, only the highest region of the lifting curve of the outlet cam is utilized. This highest region has a lifting characteristic that is configured to be optimal for the return of waste gas. Such a lifting characteristic forms a compromise with regard to an optimal lifting characteristic for the outlet process of waste gases.
It is also disadvantageous that the intermediate element articulated onto the toggle or pivot lever is moved along during all outlet valve movements, i.e., also during the outlet process of the waste gases, without this being functionally necessary.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a a valve gear of the type stated above, which uses a conventional cam, configured for a specific load change, and which creates a transfer device for the movements brought about by this cam, which device permits sensitive adjustment of different time cross-sections in the case of additional opening during a different work cycle.
These and other objects are accomplished by a valve gear for load-change valves of four-stroke internal combustion engines, in which the load-change valves are held in the closed position by means of spring force, and engage a pivot lever moved by a cam, for opening a load-change channel in accordance with the engine cycle. The cam engages an intermediate element, the engagement region of which is positioned on the cam in such a manner that it is additionally moved by the lifting curve of the cam during a different work cycle, and has an adjustable effect on the pivot lever. The load-change valve additionally opens during a different work cycle, but with a lesser time cross-section. The intermediate element is prismatically guided on an element that can pivot in the cylinder head and is adjustable in its position. This element engages the cam and the pivot lever, so that different gear reductions of the stroke movement of the cam for opening the load-change valve with the pivot lever can be adjusted.
The use of an intermediate element, which is guided on an element that can pivot in the cylinder head and is adjustable in its position, makes it possible to set different gear reductions of the stroke movement of the cam, for additionally opening the load-change valve, so that the cam can be guided in an optimized manner, exclusively for the load-change process in question—letting out waste gases or drawing in charge. The stroke movement of the inlet or outlet cam is stepped down adjustably, in accordance with the requirements, by the transfer device described above, with the intermediate element and the element that is adjustable in its position, so that the additional opening of the load-change valve, in each instance—intake or outlet valve—can be regulated in a sensitive manner. This is necessary both for returning waste gas into the cylinder during the intake cycle, by way of an outlet valve, and for returning waste gas into the intake tracts, by way of an inlet valve, during the expulsion of waste gas from the cylinder.
It is advantageous if during opening of each of the load-change valves, in accordance with the cycle, with large opening paths, only the pivot lever is moved, and the intermediate element remains in its resting position. The intermediate element, with its mass, is only moved by the cam for the additional opening.
Other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in connection with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed as an illustration only and not as a definition of the limits of the invention.
In the drawings, wherein similar reference characters denote similar elements throughout the several views:
Referring to the drawings,
A guided stroke transfer arrangement 3, fixed in place, having a pivot lever 30 is assigned to load-change valve 2 disposed in cylinder head ZK, in each instance, which valve closes by means of spring force. Only the end part of the valve stem is shown in
Pivot lever 30 is mounted adjustably on an axle 34 guided in cylinder head ZK, with the interposition of an eccentric bushing 35. An intermediate element 5 is positioned relative to cam 11 with a roller 53 mounted on it, in such a manner that roller 53 comes into engagement with the lifting curve of cam 11 during the intake process, in other words only after expulsion of the waste gases. By means of this arrangement, intermediate element 5 is moved by cam 11 exclusively during the intake process. An element 40 that is fixed in place in cylinder head ZK, but can be adjusted in its position about a rigidly positioned pivot axle, and intermediate element 5 together form a transfer device 6, which is actually known (see
Intermediate element 5 engages element 40, which is changeable in its position, in a non-positive lock, on the controlling cam segment 42 of element 40, by way of roller 54 mounted on it, as well as with line contact on a supporting cam segment 41, by slide supports 55. The outer contour of the supporting cam segments 41 forms an arc about the pivot axle of element 40 in cylinder head ZK. This arrangement forms a prismatic support of intermediate element 5 on element 40 that is changeable in its position, and thereby assures guidance of intermediate element 5 in every phase of a movement brought about by cam 11.
Under the effect of force F of a spiral spring 51 counter-mounted and guided on cylinder head ZK in a fixed position, intermediate element 5 is constantly forced both against changeable element 40 with its roller 54 and its slide supports 55, and against cam 11 with its roller 53, and held in engagement.
Intermediate element 5 furthermore has an outer contour 52 that engages a second roller 32 on pivot lever 30. Roller 32 therefore forms a second engagement surface on pivot lever 30, which comes into engagement exclusively for opening load-change valve 2 during the intake process, see
By means of transfer device 6, sensitively controlled opening of load-change valve 2 with lesser time cross-sections can be achieved, for returning waste gas from the waste gas tract into the cylinder, during the intake process.
Fundamentally, the structure of transfer device 6—see FIGS. 2 and 3—and its function for varying the valve stroke is already previously known from German Patent No. DE 202 20 138 U1, the disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference.
Eccentric bushing 35 disposed between axle 34, which is fixed in place, and the bearing bore of pivot lever 30, adjusts the engagement play between outer contour 52 on intermediate element 5 and roller 32 on pivot lever 30. The eccentric bushing 35 is clamped in place in the bearing bore of pivot lever 30 after the aforementioned engagement play has been adjusted, by means of a clamp screw arrangement 36 in pivot lever 30.
The device according to the invention functions as follows:
In
According to the functional position shown in
In
After the highest lifting of cam 11 on roller 53 has gone by, the force F of spiral spring 51 and the return force of the valve spring forces pivot lever 30 and intermediate element 5 back in the direction of the base circle of cam 11, by way of play equalization element 33. Finally, roller 31 mounted on pivot lever 30 comes back into non-positive-lock engagement with the base circle of cam 11.
In
Accordingly, while only a few embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it is obvious that many changes and modifications may be made thereunto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 035 314 | Jul 2005 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5603292 | Håkansson | Feb 1997 | A |
7207311 | Chmela et al. | Apr 2007 | B2 |
20030226530 | Werler | Dec 2003 | A1 |
20040221831 | Chmela et al. | Nov 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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306 146 | Mar 1955 | CH |
411 706 | Apr 1925 | DE |
27 28 259 | Jan 1979 | DE |
32 18 507 | Dec 1982 | DE |
69414386 | Apr 1999 | DE |
103 48 366 | May 2004 | DE |
20220138 | Jun 2004 | DE |
WO 03067067 | Aug 2003 | WO |
WO2004088096 | Oct 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070022990 A1 | Feb 2007 | US |