Anti-rotation device for lifter
10082050 ยท 2018-09-25
Assignee
Inventors
- Douglas John Nielsen (Marshall, MI)
- Anthony Leon Spoor (Union City, MI, US)
- Robert D. Hogan (Marshall, MI, US)
Cpc classification
F01L1/181
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01L2307/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01L1/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01L1/146
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01L2305/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
An anti-rotation guide for a lifter in an overhead valve valvetrain. The anti-rotation guide includes a plug having two lobes connected through a neck region. A first lobe of the plug is held within a bore in the lifter. The bore forms an opening at the edge of the lifter through which the neck of the plug emerges. The bore in the lifter accommodates a first lobe of the plug that is wider than the opening in the edge of the lifter, whereby the plug is shaped to prevent its slipping from the lifter through the opening. The lifter reciprocates in a first bore in the cylinder head. The second lobe of the plug extends outward from the lifter into a second bore formed in the cylinder head and adjoining the first bore. The second lobe reciprocates in the second bore and limits rotation of the lifter.
Claims
1. A valvetrain comprising: a lifter having a lifter axis along which the lifter is shaped to reciprocate; a bore that is formed in the lifter, the bore having a cylinder-conforming perimeter the axis of which is parallel to the lifter axis, the perimeter of the bore intersecting an edge of the lifter to form an opening in the edge of the lifter; an anti-rotation guide mounted to the lifter and retained within the bore; wherein the anti-rotation guide maintains a uniform profile over a portion of its length in a direction parallel to the lifter axis; the profile includes a first region and a second region joined by a neck region; the first region is wider than the neck region; the first region is within the lifter; and the second region extends via the neck region outward from the lifter through the opening in the edge of the lifter.
2. A method of forming a valvetrain according to claim 1, comprising: forming a bore in the lifter; inserting a portion of the anti-rotation guide comprising the first region into the bore; and retaining the anti-rotation guide within the bore.
3. The method of claim 2, further comprising cold forming the anti-rotation guide from a slug of metal.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein: cold forming produces a bulge at one end of the anti-rotation guide; retaining the anti-rotation guide within the bore comprises installing a C-clip partially into a groove formed in the lifter; and the bulge restricts rotation of the C-clip.
5. The valvetrain of claim 1, wherein considered along the direction of the axis of the bore in the lifter, the bore has a first end that is open and a second end that terminates within the lifter.
6. An engine comprising: a cylinder head in which first and second bores are formed, wherein the first and second bores are parallel and overlap to form an opening between them; a valvetrain comprising a lifter, wherein the lifter comprises a cylindrical portion having an axis and is threaded through the first bore; a bore formed in the lifter, wherein the bore in the lifter has a cylinder-conforming perimeter the axis or which is parallel to that of the cylindrical portion, and the perimeter of the bore intersects an edge of the cylindrical portion to form an opening in the perimeter of the lifter; and a plug in the bore in the lifter having a protrusion extending through the opening in the edge of the lifter; wherein the protrusion is positioned to reciprocate within the second bore in the cylinder head.
7. The engine of claim 6, wherein the opening in the edge of the lifter has a width less than a width of the bore in the lifter.
8. The engine of claim 6, wherein the portion of the plug that is in the lifter has a greater width than the opening in the edge of the lifter.
9. The engine of claim 6, wherein the cylindrical portion of the lifter has a diameter greater than the width of the opening between the bores in the cylinder head.
10. The engine of claim 6, wherein the plug is retained in the bore in the lifter by a C-clip.
11. The engine of claim 10, wherein the C-clip is held within a groove in the lifter that is formed about the perimeter of the bore in the lifter.
12. The engine of claim 10, wherein the bore in the lifter has an end that terminates within the cylindrical portion of the lifter to form a relatively flat end surface.
13. The engine of claim 10, wherein the C-clip presses against one end of the plug.
14. The engine of claim 13, wherein the plug has a bulge that extends outward between two ends of the C-clip.
15. The engine of claim 14, wherein the bulge has a shape produced by cold-forming the plug.
16. The engine of claim 6, wherein the plug is held to the lifter by a set screw threaded through the plug.
17. The engine of claim 6, wherein the cylindrical portion of the lifter has a groove formed about its perimeter.
18. The engine of claim 17, wherein: an oil rifle is formed in the cylinder head; the oil rifle opens onto the first bore in the cylinder head; the lifter has a range of motion within the first bore; the groove formed about the perimeter of the cylindrical portion of the lifter remains separated from the oil rifle throughout the lifter's range of motion within the first bore.
19. The engine of claim 6, wherein: a roller follower is mounted at one end of the cylindrical portion of the lifter; the bore in the cylindrical portion of the lifter is formed through the end of the cylindrical portion on which the roller follower is mounted.
20. A method of forming the engine of claim 6, comprising: forming the second bore in the cylinder head; then forming the first bore in the cylinder head; and inserting the lifter with the anti-rotation guide attached through the first bore with the anti-rotation guide entering the second bore.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Spatially relative terms, such as beneath, below, lower, above, upper and the like, may be used herein to describe spatial relationships as illustrated in the figures. These relationships are independent from the orientation of any illustrated device in actual use.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(16) According to some aspects of the present teachings, a channel 123 is formed in cylinder head 117 and adjoining bore 119, whereby there is an opening 160 of width 161 between channel 123 and bore 119 (see
(17) Cylindrical portion 143 of lifter 113 may have a diameter 122 nearly equal to but slightly less than the diameter 157 of bore 119 (see
(18) According to some aspects of the present teachings, a channel 135 having a width 171 is formed in cylindrical portion 143 of lifter 113 (see
(19) According to some aspects of the present teachings, anti-rotation guide 125 has a substantially constant profile through a significant portion of its length when viewed along axis 4. A significant portion is, for example, one fourth or more and could be the majority of the length. In some of these teachings, the profile includes a first region 150 having width 145 and a second region 148 of width 146 (see
(20) According to some aspects of the present teachings, first region 150 of anti-rotation guide 125 is mounted within channel 135. First region 150 of anti-rotation guide 125 may fit within and substantially plug a portion of the length of channel 135. Because anti-rotation guide 125 may largely fill a length of channel 135 and, to a lesser extent, a length of channel 123, anti-rotation guide 125 may be described as a plug. According to some aspects of the present teachings, width 145 of first region 150 is greater than the width 173 of opening 172 (see
(21) According to some aspects of the present teachings, second region 148 of anti-rotation guide 125 is mounted to reciprocate within channel 123. Neck region 149 of anti-rotation guide 125 may pass through opening 160 between bores 119 and 123 to join first region 150 and second region 148 of anti-rotation guide 125 (see
(22) In some of these teachings, the width 161 of opening 160 is less than the width 171 of channel 135 in lifter 113. In some of these teachings, first region 150 of anti-rotation guide 125 has a width 145 that is greater than the width 161 of opening 160. In some of these teachings, first region 150 is sufficiently wide to form an interference fit with channel 135. These characteristic may relate to enhanced functioning of anti-rotation guide 125.
(23) According to some aspects of the present teachings, with first region 150 of anti-rotation guide 125 mounted within channel 135 of lifter 113, second region 148 of anti-rotation guide can extend out of bore 119 and into channel 123 formed in cylinder head 117, provided that lifter 113 has a suitable orientation with respect to cylinder head 117. The relative shapes of second region 148 and channel 123 limit rotation of lifter 113. In some of these teachings, second region 148 is shaped to permit lifter 113 to rotate several degrees while remaining within the confines of channel 123. It has been determined that a degree of freedom to rotate does not interfere with the performance of a roller follower 127. Allowing this degree of freedom increases manufacturing tolerances for the engine 110.
(24) According to some aspects of the present teachings, channel 135 in cylindrical portion 143 of lifter 113 is formed only partway through cylindrical portion 143, whereby channel 135 terminates within cylindrical portion 143 to form an end surface 124 (see
(25) In some aspects of the present teachings, first region 150 of anti-rotation guide 125 is retained within channel 135 in lifter 113. First region 150 of anti-rotation guide 125 may be retained within channel 135 in any suitable manner. In some of these teachings, of which lifter 113A of
(26) Anti-rotation guide 125 may be formed in any suitable fashion. In some aspects of the present teachings, anti-rotation guide 125 is cold-formed. Anti-rotation guide 125 may be cold-formed from a cylindrical slug of metal. Cold-forming may include a series of stamping operations. A mold for one or more of these operations may include an opening through which a bulge 139 forms.
(27) In some of these teachings, a groove 141 is formed in the periphery of cylindrical portion 143 of lifter 113 (see
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(29) Method 200 further includes act 205, boring channel 135 in lifter 113. In some of these teachings, channel 135 is formed by milling. Act 207 is inserting anti-rotation guide 125 into channel 135. Act 209 is retaining anti-rotation guide 125 within channel 135. In some of these teachings, act 209 is installing C-clip 137. In some of these teaching, act 209 is tightening set screw 165.
(30) Method 200 continues with act 211, aligning lifter 113 with bore 119 while aligning second region 148 of anti-rotation guide 125 with channel 123. Act 211 enables subsequent act 213, threading lifter 113 through cylinder block 117, which is part of the process of installing rocker arm assembly 112 in engine 110. Anti-rotation guide 125 may then maintain proper orientation of cam follower 127 with respect to cam 131.
(31) The components and features of the present disclosure have been shown and/or described in terms of certain teachings and examples. While a particular component or feature, or a broad or narrow formulation of that component or feature, may have been described in relation to only some aspects of the present teachings or examples, all components and features in either their broad or narrow formulations may be combined with other components or features to the extent such combinations would be recognized as logical by one of ordinary skill in the art.