The present invention relates to valve repair and in particular to apparatus and methods for extending the life of an automatic transmission valve by modifying the valve to shift a valve piston from a worn region of a valve sleeve to an unworn region of the valve sleeve.
Automatic transmissions are commonly used in cars and trucks. Such automatic transmissions rely on a pump and system of valves to route a fluid flow to selectively lock and unlock gears to control the overall gear ratio through the transmission. The valves wear over time and eventually fail requiring service. The cost of replacing entire valve bodies can be quite high, and as a result, methods for repairing existing valve bodies have been developed.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,832,632 for “Boost Valve Assembly,” discloses a direct replacement booster valve assembly to replace a worn booster valve. The replacement valve of the '632 patent includes a new hard-anodized booster valve piston and a new aluminum booster valve sleeve. While the repair method of the '632 patent is a solution to the problem of valve wear, the parts are fairly expensive and therefore a need remains for a low cost solution to automatic transmission valve wear. The '632 patent is herein incorporated in its entirety by reference.
The present invention addresses the above and other needs by providing apparatus and method for extending the life of a booster valve in an automatic transmission. The booster valve commonly resides in the pump stator body and is modulated by reverse oil pressure and pressure control solenoid pressure signals. Pressure signals from the reverse oil pressure and the pressure control solenoid force a booster valve piston towards a pressure regulator valve piston also generally residing in the pump stator body. The booster valve piston slides inside a booster valve sleeve, and over time, the booster valve sleeve wears and the performance of the booster valve degrades or fails. The present invention replaces an original inner booster valve (or bumper) spring with a longer (or in some cases shorter) replacement booster valve spring to shift the operating range of the booster valve piston to an unworn portion of the booster valve sleeve to extend the life of the booster valve.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, there is provided a method for extending the life of an automatic transmission booster valve. The method includes the steps of partially disassembling the automatic transmission to access a pump stator body of the automatic transmission and removing a booster valve sleeve and a booster valve piston from the pump stator body. An original inner booster valve (or bumper) spring normally residing between the booster valve piston and a pressure regulator valve piston, inside an outer (or pressure regulator valve) spring is removed and replaced with a replacement inner booster valve spring having a longer length and higher spring rate than the original inner booster valve spring. The replacement inner booster valve spring is configured to shift an operating range of the booster valve piston from a worn portion of a booster valve passage in the booster valve sleeve to an unworn portion of the booster valve passage and thereby extend the life of the original booster valve piston and sleeve.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, there is provided a replacement booster valve inner spring to extend the life of the original booster valve piston and sleeve. The replacement booster valve inner spring is longer and has a higher spring rate than the original booster valve inner spring and thereby extends the life of the original booster valve piston and sleeve. A bumper shim preferably resides inside the replacement booster valve inner spring to prevent contact of the booster valve piston and a pressure regulator valve piston.
The above and other aspects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the following more particular description thereof, presented in conjunction with the following drawings wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding components throughout the several views of the drawings.
The following description is of the best mode presently contemplated for carrying out the invention. This description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of describing one or more preferred embodiments of the invention. The scope of the invention should be determined with reference to the claims.
A prior art automatic transmission pump stator body 10 and exploded booster valve and pressure regulator valve assembly 12 are shown in
The booster valve and pressure regulator valve assembly 12 in a rest position, including a prior art inner booster valve (or bumper) spring 28, is shown in
The booster valve and pressure regulator valve assembly 12 includes an outer (or pressure regulator valve) spring 26 and the inner booster valve (or bumper) spring 28 residing inside the outer spring 26. The inner booster valve spring 28 resides between the booster valve piston 16 and the pressure regulator valve piston 18 and the outer spring 26 resides between the booster valve sleeve 30 and the pressure regulator valve piston 18.
A repaired booster valve assembly 12a according to the present invention with the booster valve piston 16 in a second rest position shifted by a replacement longer inner booster valve spring 28a according to the present invention is shown in
A detailed exploded view of the prior art booster valve and pressure regulator valve assembly 12 is shown in
A preferred application of the present invention is to a General Motors® 4L60E automatic transmission. In this application, the replacement longer inner booster valve spring 28a is preferably made from approximately 0.0625 diameter chrome silicon wire with a free length of approximately 1.12 inches. The spring coil inside diameter is approximately 0.269 inches and the coil outside diameter is approximately 0.394 inches. The spring rate is approximately 70.837 pound-feet/inch. For the General Motors® 4L60E automatic transmission, the bumper shim 32 is preferably made from steel or aluminum and is between approximately 0.258 inches and approximately 0.260 inches in diameter and between approximately 0.12 inches and approximately 0.15 inches in length. The replacement longer inner booster valve spring 28a and the bumper shim 32 may have other specifications for other transmissions, and any method for extending the life of a booster valve assembly using a replacement spring to shift the position of the booster valve piston, in either direction, inside the booster valve sleeve is intended to come within the scope of the present invention.
For comparison to
A method for extending the life of an automatic transmission booster valve assembly is described in
While the invention herein disclosed has been described by means of specific embodiments and applications thereof, numerous modifications and variations could be made thereto by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention set forth in the claims.
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