Claims
- 1. A valve train for an internal combustion engine having an engine block with cylinders and a cylinder head, a piston operatively disposed in each of said cylinders to define one end portion of a respective combustion chamber, said cylinder head operatively disposed on said engine block and having curved recesses therein aligned with said cylinders to define respective second end portions of said combustion chambers, at least two intake valves and two exhaust valves provided in said cylinder head per cylinder for opening and closing the cylinders, valve seats for each of said intake and exhaust valves, each of said valves having an enlarged head portion for sealing engagement with an associated one of said valve seats and each of said valves further having an elongated stem portion extending from said head portion through associated stem openings in said cylinder head and terminating at an upper end portion, each of said stem portions defining an axis and each axis of said stem portions being inclined so as to diverge away from the axis of any other of said stem portions, an inverted bucket tappet for each of said valves and being supported by said cylinder head adjacent said upper end portion for movement along an axis which is angulated with respect to the axis of said associated valve stem portion, a spherical swivel joint disposed between said upper end portion of said valve stem and said inverted bucket tappet to accommodate angularity between the axis of said tappet and the axis of said valve stem portion by sliding motion between said upper end portion and said tappet, one elongated finger follower with an end portion operatively disposed to contact a respective one of said tappets and being mounted in a plane transversal to the camshaft, said camshaft having a cam lobe for each of said finger followers and adapted to engage said finger follower to move the finger follower against said tappet.
- 2. The valve train mechanism as set forth in claim 1 in which said valve train has means between said finger follower and said tappet to locate said finger follower with respect to said tappet comprising a pair of flanges which extend along the major axis of said finger follower, said tappet having a protrusion extending upwardly into operative engagement with said flanges to inhibit rotation of said finger follower and dislocation of its end portion relative to a desirable centralized position against said tappet.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application is a division of application Ser. No. 08/416,245, filed Apr. 4, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,570,665, by the same inventor as the present application.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (4)
Entry |
"Automotive Handbook", 2nd Edition.COPYRGT. Robert Bosch GmbH, pp. 318-319. Sep. 1986. |
Philip H. Smith, "Valve Mechanisms for High-Speed Engines: Their Design and Development", pp. 64-69. |
"Automotive Engineering", Jan. 1995, pp. 23-25. |
"MTU Mgazine", Jul.-Aug. 1993 edition, Die Neuen Vierventil-Dieselmotoren von Mercedes-Benz, p. 329. |
Divisions (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
416245 |
Apr 1995 |
|