This application claims the benefit of German Patent Application No. 10 2010 033 087.6, filed Aug. 2, 2010, which is incorporated herein by reference as if fully set forth.
The invention relates to a valve train of an internal combustion engine, with a camshaft that comprises a carrier shaft and a cam part that is locked in rotation on this carrier shaft and is arranged displaceable in the axial direction and has at least one cam group of directly adjacent cams of different elevations for variable actuation of a gas-exchange valve and a groove-shaped axial connecting link with two connecting-link paths crossing its periphery, and with two actuation pins that can be coupled in the connecting-link paths for displacing the cam part in the direction of the two connecting-link paths.
From DE 101 48 177 A1, a valve train with a cam part that can be displaced between two axial positions is known, whose groove-shaped, axial connecting link is composed merely from external guide walls for specifying the crossing connecting-link paths. For this open construction of the axial connecting link, however, there is considerable risk with respect to the functional safety of the valve train in that the displacement process of the cam part along the currently active connecting-link path is closed completely, i.e., free from incorrect switching, only when the inertia of the moving cam part is sufficiently large for the contact change of the actuation pin required in the crossing region of the connecting-link paths between the external guide walls. This is because, during and after this free-flight phase during the contact change, the cam part must be in the position to move into its other axial position also without positive accelerating forced action of the actuation pin. A prerequisite for sufficiently large inertia of the cam part is a minimum rotational speed of the camshaft that increases with friction between the cam part and the carrier shaft. A displacement of the cam part rotating below this minimum rotational speed can lead to the result that the cam part remains standing “halfway,” namely in the crossing region of the connecting-link paths and a cam follower loading the gas-exchange valve is loaded in an uncontrolled manner by several cams of the cam group and simultaneously with high mechanical loads. In addition, in this case there is no longer the possibility to displace the cam part by the actuation pin at a later time into one of the axial positions, because then the axial allocation between the actuation pin and the external guide walls is no longer set.
For remedying this problem, in DE 10 2008 024 911 A1 it was proposed to provide the cam part with a flexible guide mechanism for the actuation pin. The guide mechanism comprises two guide vanes rotating in opposite directions for formation of inner guide walls of the axial connecting link that can move in the axial direction relative to the rigid, outer guide walls. As for a switch point, here according to the position of the guide vanes, the one connecting-link path is freed for the actuation pin and the other connecting-link path is blocked for the actuation pin. Simultaneously, the inner guide walls also cause an axial forced guidance of the cam part on the actuation pin after passing through the crossing region of the connecting-link paths, so that the displacement process of the cam part is completed without incorrect switching along the currently active connecting-link path.
A valve train according to the class with an axial connecting link having two crossing connecting-link paths and two actuation pins is known from DE 10 2007 051 739 A1. The interaction of the groove-shaped axial connecting link with the actuation pins coupled selectively therein allows the presentation of a cam group with three cams, i.e., a three-stage variable valve train. As in the first-cited publication, however, the axial connecting link has only outer guide walls, so that there is also a correspondingly high risk for incorrect switching of the cam part also for this valve train.
For complete clarification it should be noted that the terms before, in, or after the crossing region always relate to the starting position of the actuation pins relative to the axial connecting link rotating with a fixed rotational direction on the cam part.
The present invention is based on the objective of developing a valve train of the type named above so that the named disadvantages are overcome with the simplest possible structural means.
The solution to meeting this objective is provided by the invention, while advantageous refinements and constructions of the invention can be taken from the description and claims. Accordingly, the axial connecting link should be provided with a third connecting-link path that runs essentially equidistant to one of the two crossing connecting-link paths. Here, the actuation pins can be coupled simultaneously in the first connecting-link path and the third connecting-link path, and the actuation pin coupled in the third connecting-link forces a further displacement of the cam part in the direction of the one connecting-link path when passing through the crossing region of the two connecting-link paths. In other words, the invention touches upon the idea of providing the section of the axial connecting link not previously used in the crossing region of the connecting-link paths with an additional connecting-link path that causes a forced displacement of the cam part along the geometrically provided connecting-link path in interaction with the second actuation pin also in and after the crossing region. Thus, on one hand, a successful displacement process is no longer dependent on the minimum rotational speed of the camshaft named above and can also be performed for an internal combustion engine that is virtually at a standstill. On the other hand, for camshaft rotational speeds above this minimum rotational speed, the interaction between the second actuation pin and the additional connecting-link path can be eliminated, when the inertia of the moving cam part is sufficient for a complete displacement process.
In a refinement of the invention it is provided that the axial connecting link is provided with a fourth connecting-link path that runs essentially equidistant to and, with respect to the third connecting-link path, on the other side of the first connecting-link path. In an analogous way to the functioning explained above, here the actuation pins can be coupled simultaneously in the first connecting-link path and the fourth connecting-link path, and the actuation pin coupled in the fourth connecting-link path forces a further displacement of the cam part in the direction of the first connecting-link path when passing through the crossing region of the two connecting-link paths. According to one embodiment of the invention explained later, such a construction of the axial connecting link and its interaction with the two actuation pins is the basis for a three-stage valve train variability in which, in one of the displacement directions, the cam part is forcibly displaced from one cam to the next.
With respect to a forced displacement of the cam part also in the other displacement direction, the second of the two crossing connecting-link paths can have a larger groove depth relative to the first connecting-link path. In this case, the second connecting-link path is specified by a closed groove with inner and outer guide walls, so that the actuation pin coupled in the second connecting-link path forces a further displacement of the cam part in the direction of the second connecting-link path after passing through the crossing region of the two connecting-link paths.
In order to prevent, to a large degree, an undesired locking of the actuation pin currently moving along the first connecting-link path in the crossing region of the connecting-link paths in the larger groove depth of the second connecting-link path, the first connecting-link path should have a groove depth that is smaller, directly before the crossing region of the two connecting-link paths, than directly after the crossing region of the two connecting-link paths.
In addition, the third connecting-link path should have a groove depth that is smaller, in the crossing region of the two connecting-link paths, than each groove depth of the two crossing connecting-link paths. The background of this construction is to impart, to an outer guide wall of the connecting-link path running before the crossing region of the connecting-link paths, sufficient mechanical stability against transverse forces of the actuation pin guided along this path. A corresponding situation applies for the construction of the axial connecting link with the additional, fourth connecting-link path, wherein advantageously the groove depths of the third connecting-link path and the fourth connecting-link path are essentially equal in the crossing region of the two connecting-link paths.
Additional features of the invention are given from the following description and from the drawings in which an embodiment of the invention is shown partially schematically or simplified. As long as not otherwise mentioned, components or features that are identical or have identical functions are provided with identical reference numbers. Shown are:
a is a view showing as a development, the axial connecting link according to
b is a view showing the peripheral-related radial stroke profile belonging to this first displacement for the actuation pins in relation to the groove depths of the connecting-link paths;
a is a view analogous to
b is a view analogous to
For better understanding, the invention shall be explained starting from
For the displacement of the cam part 3 for the purpose of switching each of the cams 4b and 5b currently active in the figure to one of the adjacent cams 4a or 4c and 5a or 5c, respectively, the cam part 3 have a groove-shaped axial connecting link 10′ with two crossing connecting-link paths 11 and 12. These are symbolized by dotted center point paths of actuation pins 13 and 14 of an actuator which are traversed for the actuation pins coupled selectively in the axial connecting link 10′ relative to the axial connecting link 10′ and are mirror-inverted to each other.
The average distance of the cylindrical actuation pins 13, 14 and consequently their center point paths 11, 12 at the beginning and at the end of the displacement process of the cam part 3 are essentially identical to each average distance of the cams 4a to 4c and 5a to 5c.
Below, the interaction of the two actuation pins 13, 14 with the axial connecting link 10′ for displacement of the cam part 3 during the common root circle phase of the cams 4a to 4c and 5a to 5c is explained. The starting position should be the shown state in which the actuation pins 13, 14 are located in the retracted state out of engagement from the axial connecting link 10′. A displacement of the cam part 3 toward the left, i.e., a switching of the currently active cams 4b and 5b to the cams 4c and 5c, is initiated by coupling the actuation pin 13 in the one connecting-link path 11. The rotating cam part 3 simultaneously shifted toward the left in the axial direction on the carrier shaft 2 is supported initially with an acceleration flank 15 and then, after passing through the crossing region 16 of the connecting-link paths 11, 12, due to its axial inertia, with a deceleration flank 17 on the actuation pin 13. Shifting the cam part 3 back toward the right, i.e., back into the shown starting position, is performed by coupling the same actuation pin 13 in the other connecting-link path 12, wherein now the cam part 3 is supported on an acceleration flank 18 and then, after passing through the crossing region 16 with corresponding contact change, on a deceleration flank 19 on the actuation pin 13.
A displacement of the cam part 3 from the shown starting position toward the right, i.e., a switching of the currently active cams 4b and 5b to the cams 4a and 5a, is performed in an analogous way, wherein, in this case, the actuation pin 14 is coupled in the connecting-link path 12 and the cam part 3 is supported on the actuation pin 14 via the acceleration flank 18 and the deceleration flank 19. Shifting the cam part 3 back into the shown starting position is performed by coupling the actuation pin 14 in the connecting-link path 11, whereupon the cam part 3 is shifted toward the left supported on the actuation pin 14 with the acceleration flank 15 and the deceleration flank 17.
The necessary resetting of the actuation pins 13, 14 after completion of a displacement process of the cam part 3 into its shown decoupled position can be produced either actively by the actuation pins 13, 14 themselves or by a suitable radial profiling not shown in more detail here of the axial connecting link 10′. For such radial profiling, as known, for example, from DE 101 48 177 A1 cited above, the connecting-link paths 11, 12 are provided in the rotational direction of the cam part 3 before the acceleration flanks 15 and 18, as well as behind the deceleration flanks 17 and 19 with inlet ramps falling in the radial direction or outlet ramps rising in the radial direction. The latter provide for a pushing back of the actuation pins 13, 14 into the shown decoupled position.
The axial connecting link 10′ has an open construction such that the connecting-link paths 11, 12 are limited in the axial direction only by external guide walls, namely the acceleration flanks 15, 18 and the deceleration flanks 17, 19. As previously explained, the axial inertia of the cam part 3 is dependent on its rotational speed and the minimum rotational speed required for the complete displacement process of the cam part 3 is decisively dependent on the teeth friction between cam part 3 and carrier shaft 2. A rotational speed that is too low could prevent the contact change of the current active actuation pin 13 or 14 necessary in the crossing region 16 between the acceleration flank 15 or 18 and the deceleration flank 17 or 19. Independence, to a large extent, from rotational speed of the displacement process is achieved by the interaction of a modified, axial connecting link according to the invention with two actuation pins. This should be explained below with reference to
The groove-shaped construction of all of the connecting-link paths 11, 12, 20, 21 starts from the longitudinal section I-I shown in
The third and the fourth connecting-link path 20 and 21, respectively, have the same and relatively small groove depth T4 in the crossing region 16 and the following relationship applies: T4<T1, T2, T3. This construction causes an increased mechanical stability of the acceleration flanks 15, 18 and the deceleration flanks 17, 19.
The interaction of the actuation pins 13, 14 with the axial connecting link 10 at small camshaft rotational speeds is shown in
Analogous to
The reverse displacement process back into the middle and the first axial position of the cam part 3 is performed by coupling the actuation pin 13 or 14 into the second connecting-link path 12 that represents, due to its closed groove shape with the groove depth T3, a permanent forced guidance for each coupled actuation pin 13 or 14.
1 Camshaft
2 Carrier shaft
3 Cam part
4 Cam
5 Cam
6 Cam follower
7 Cam follower
8 Cylindrical section
9 Camshaft bearing point
10 Axial connecting link
11 First connecting-link path
12 Second connecting-link path
13 Actuation pin
14 Actuation pin
15 Acceleration flank
16 Crossing region of the connecting-link paths
17 Deceleration flank
18 Acceleration flank
19 Deceleration flank
20 Third connecting-link path
21 Fourth connecting-link path
22 Groove wall of the third connecting-link path
23 Outlet ramp
24 Groove wall of the fourth connecting-link path
T1-T4 Groove depth
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
102010033087.6 | Aug 2010 | DE | national |