Patent classifications
F01L2013/105
A METHOD FOR CONTROLLING A VALVE ARRANGEMENT
A method for controlling a valve arrangement for an internal combustion engine, the valve arrangement including a piston arrangement comprising a piston having a piston end portion facing an inlet valve of the valve arrangement. The method includes receiving a signal indicative of a temperature level of an exhaust gas after treatment system and when the signal indicates a temperature level below a predetermined threshold level: advancing an exhaust event of the internal combustion engine; and controlling the piston arrangement for reducing the distance between the piston end portion and the inlet valve before the internal combustion engine assumes an air intake event.
MAINTAINING OIL PRESSURE DURING CYLINDER DEACTIVATION OPERATION
Systems, devices, and methods are disclosed that during cylinder deactivation, including skipfire, at low engines speeds and low engine loads maintain adequate oil pressure of valvetrain components or hardware required for CDA and/or skipfire operation.
Engine brake rocker arm having biasing configuration
A rocker arm assembly operable in a first mode and a second mode, the rocker arm assembly selectively opening first and second engine valves based on rotation of a cam shaft having a first cam lobe and a second cam lobe, includes: a rocker shaft; a first rocker arm assembly having a first rocker arm that receives the rocker shaft and rotates around the rocker shaft in the first mode based on engagement with the first cam lobe; a second rocker arm assembly having a second rocker arm that receives the rocker shaft and rotates around the rocker shaft and selectively act on one of the first and second engine valves in the second mode based on selective engagement with the second cam lobe; and a biasing assembly that cooperates with the second rocker arm to bias the second rocker arm to a neutral position.
DYNAMIC CYLINDER DEACTIVATION LIFE FACTOR TO MODIFY CYLINDER DEACTIVATION STRATEGY
Systems and methods to extend a life of a component of a cylinder deactivation system are provided. A method includes generating, by a controller, an initial life factor for the component; initiating, by the controller, a CDA mode for an engine; determining, by the controller, an actual life factor for the component, the actual life factor determined by comparing a number of switching events of a cylinder in the CDA mode to a number of cycles of the cylinder in the CDA mode; comparing, by the controller, the actual life factor to the initial life factor; and modifying, by the controller based on the comparison, operation of the engine in the CDA mode to adjust the actual life factor.
CASTELLATION ASSEMBLY, LASH CAPSULE, AND ROCKER ARM
A castellation assembly comprises a lost motion spring assembly, an upper castellation piece, and a lower castellation piece. A spring hat comprises a crown, a pin hole through the crown, and a brim. A lost motion spring is seated against the spring hat.
Upper castellation piece comprises a tubular body, an upper inner rim adjoining the brim, and upper castellation teeth. Lower castellation piece comprises a spring post extending up from a castellation body, the spring post passing through the lost motion spring, and through the pin hole. Lower castellation teeth extend from the castellation body. The lost motion spring is biased against the castellation body to lift the upper inner rim by the brim. A lash screw can house the spring post so that the spring post terminates inside the lash screw. A rocker arm is an example of a castellation assembly installation.
FULLY VARIABLE ELECTRO-HYDRAULIC VALVE SYSTEM
A fully variable electro-hydraulic valve system, comprising a sliding sleeve (A103, B103), a spiral shaft (A102, B102), a piston (A105, B105), and a reset spring (A104, B104); the sliding sleeve (A103, B103) is fixed relative to an engine; the piston (A105, B105) abuts against a valve assembly (106); the spiral shaft (A102, B102) is axially controlled by a cam surface of a camshaft (101); and the spiral shaft (A102, B102) is provided with a spiral groove (A102D, B102D) and a blockage part (A102G, B102G). When the spiral groove (A102D, B102D) communicates with a limiting oil hole (A118, B118), a sliding sleeve cavity (Q) communicates with a low-pressure oil path of the engine for pressure relief; a spiral shaft axial projection portion (A102C, B102C) is provided at a first end of the spiral shaft (A102, B102); the spiral shaft axial projection portion (A102C, B102C) is provided with a spiral shaft abutting plane (A102B, B102B); a piston axial projection portion (A105A, B105A) is provided at the end of the piston (A105, B105) opposite to the spiral shaft (A102, B102); and the head portion of the piston axial projection portion (A105A, B105A) is provided with a piston abutting plane (A105B, B105B). The present invention solves the problem in which the normal operation of the system is affected due to machine oil loss in a sliding sleeve cavity, and enables the crank angle corresponding to a valve opening moment to remain unchanged, and is particularly suitable for applying to the control of the intake valve variable stroke of an engine having a scavenging process.
Single-valve electrohydraulic control system for engine braking rocker arm control
An engine valve actuation system includes engine braking rocker arms each having a hydraulically actuated switch, and an electrohydraulic control system including an actuation fluid supply, an electrically actuated valve adjustable to vary a pressure of actuation fluid supplied from the actuation fluid supply to the hydraulically actuated switches, and an engine braking control unit. The engine braking control unit is structured to command adjusting the electrically actuated valve to adjust the hydraulically actuated switch in each of the engine braking rocker arms at a switching window timing that is varied from engine braking cycle to engine braking cycle to distribute hard handoffs among the engine braking rocker arms.
TWO-STEP VALVE CLOSING ROCKER ASSEMBLY
A valve actuation system includes a rocker for conveying motion to an engine valve, a motion source arranged to impart motion to the rocker, rocker stop assembly configured to operate in an activated mode, in which the rocker stop assembly maintains the rocker in a position corresponding to partial valve lift, and a deactivated mode, in which the rocker stop assembly allows the rocker to move to a position corresponding to a fully closed valve position, and a rocker stop reset assembly for resetting the rocker stop assembly to the deactivated mode subsequent to a main event peak lift to thereby achieve late valve closing. A damper assembly may interact with the rocker stop assembly to provide a smooth transition of the rocker and valve motion to a late intake valve closing dwell. A valve catch assembly may control the seating velocity of the at least one valve.
Method for manufacturing cylinder head, and semimanufactured cylinder head
The disclosure includes manufacturing a semimanufactured cylinder head (3) having a shielding curtain portion (16g) and spraying metal powder (P) onto an annular valve seat portion (16f) using a cold spray method to form a valve seat film (16b). The shielding curtain portion (16g) projects in an annular shape from an annular edge portion of an opening portion (16a) of an intake port (16) or an opening portion (17a) of an exhaust port (17) toward the center (C) of the port. The annular valve seat portion (16f) is located on an outer side of the port than the shielding curtain portion (16g).
Response time in lost motion valvetrains
Hydraulic systems in an engine valvetrain having lost motion and/or braking hydraulic circuits are provided with a conditioning circuit that may include a supplemental supply passage, which provides continuous and supplemental supply of hydraulic fluid from a supply source to the braking and lost motion circuits, as well as a venting of the circuits to ambient, such that the hydraulic fluid in these circuits is kept in a refreshed and conditioned state without air contamination. A vented three-way solenoid valve may be utilized. The supplemental supply passage may be provided at various locations in the valvetrain and in the engine head environment. The supplemental supply passage may include flow and pressure control devices to control the flow of the supplemental supply of hydraulic fluid.