Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
The present invention relates in general to evaporative fuel recovery systems, and, more specifically, to a mounting system for a vapor blocking valve.
Onboard Refueling Vapor Recovery (ORVR) is a vehicle emission control system that captures fuel vapors from the vehicle fuel tank during refueling. The tank and fill pipe are designed so that when refueling the vehicle, fuel vapors in the tank travel to an activated carbon canister which adsorbs the vapor. When the engine is in operation, it draws the gasoline vapors into the engine intake manifold to be burned.
Vapor lines (i.e., conduits) are used to convey fuel vapor between the fuel tank, carbon canister, engine, and various in-line valves that control the vapor flow. One such valve is the vapor blocking valve (VBV) which is typically a discrete component mounted to the vehicle frame between the fuel tank and the carbon canister. A plastic-molded mounting bracket is typically used with a clip on one side for holding the VBV and attachment pins on the other side for inserting into corresponding holes in a sheet metal support panel of the frame. The bracket and mounting holes in the sheet metal are configured according to a design layout of the vapor system within the vehicle. For example, clamp arms hold the VBV at a particular orientation to align it with the vapor lines to which it attaches.
The development of a design for each new vehicle model involves an iterative engineering process. Preliminary designs are used to create prototype vehicles for testing and evaluation purposes. Based on these results, the designs may be modified. For example, vehicle performance during crash safety testing may dictate repositioning of ORVR components. In order to accommodate a new orientation of the VBV, the bracket and/or the placement of mounting holes in the vehicle frame sheet metal would have to be redesigned. Development of a new design for the mounting system results in added development time and associated costs. It would be desirable to minimize such re-development time and cost and to provide flexibility and reusability in mounting system design and development.
In one aspect of the invention, a mounting system for a vapor blocking valve is comprised of a base member and a clip member. The base member comprises a baseplate having a first surface adapted to bear against a vehicle structure and having an opposed second surface. The base member has a lock pin and an alignment pin extending from the first surface which are adapted to engage holes in the vehicle structure to retain the baseplate. At least two bendable wings extend from the second surface, wherein the wings have a rest position, and wherein the wings are bendable toward one another to a release position. The clip member comprises an adjustment plate engaging the second surface and having an aperture receiving the wings. The clip member further comprises a clamp fixed to the adjustment plate and configured to snap onto the vapor blocking valve. The wings and the aperture have a matching profile for selectably locking the clip member at one of a plurality of rotational orientations when the wings are at the rest position. The clip member is movable between rotational orientations with the wings bent to the release position. Consequently, changes made to a fuel vapor recovery system during development of a vehicle which require re-orientation of the vapor blocking valve can be accommodated without any changes to the mounting bracket or the structural component to which the bracket attaches.
Referring to
VBV 11 may typically be a solenoid valve that is controlled electronically and which is mounted remotely from tank 10 and canister 12 on a frame element or other component of a vehicle body structure.
As shown in
The invention avoids the cost, resource utilization, and time delays by adopting a multi-piece bracket design.
Wings 37 and 38 and aperture 41 have a matching profile for selectably locking clip member 31 at one of a plurality of rotational orientations. In this embodiment, aperture 41 has an inner edge 50 forming a continuous ring of gear-like teeth or spurs. Wings 37 and 38 each comprise profile strips 43 and 45, respectively, extending from surface 34 to outer flanges 44 and 46, respectively. Strips 43 and 45 have arcuate toothed surfaces 47 and 55, respectively, for mating with toothed inner edge 50 of aperture 41. The tooth size and spacing is configured to provide a plurality of different rotational orientations at which clip member 31 can be locked. When the toothed surfaces are mated, flanges 44 and 46 capture adjustment plate 40 as shown in
As shown in
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20170167445 A1 | Jun 2017 | US |