Rotary Piston Engine
20170356334 ยท 2017-12-14
Inventors
Cpc classification
F02B55/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01B3/0035
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B53/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B53/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01B3/0041
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B55/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B55/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F02B53/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B53/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B55/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F02B55/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A rotary piston engine comprising, a cylindrical rotatable rotor with an output shaft and a plurality of longitudinally extending cylinder-forming bores, each having a slidable piston disposed therein, where the rotor is contained in a housing whose interior contains a cam track that interacts with the pistons to move them back and forth within their respective cylinders in response to rotation of the rotor. A rear end cap on the housing contains an arcuate opening for admitting ambient air into the cylinders on the rear side of the pistons and an arcuate port for delivery the air driven by the rear side of the pistons into a transfer manifold that directs the air to an intake port in the side of the housing where, in response to the angular position of the rotor, the air is admitted to the front side of a piston for compression with injected fuel. A spark plug ignites the compressed fuel-air mixture and an exhaust port in the side of the housing opens to discharge the products of combustion in response to the angular position of the rotor.
Claims
1. A rotary piston engine comprising, a cylindrical rotor, an output shaft axially extending through the rotor, a plurality of longitudinally extending cylinder-forming bores each having front and rear portions and each having a slidable piston disposed therein, an engine housing having a cylindrical interior encompassing the rotor and having, means for engaging the pistons to move them back and forth in their respective cylinders in response to rotation of the rotor, means for admitting ambient air into the rear portion of the cylinders, means for transferring compressed air from the rear portion of the cylinders to the front portion of the cylinders where the air is compressed for combustion, in response to the angular position of the rotor, means for injecting fuel into the compressed air, means for causing combustion of the fuel-air mixture in the front portion of the cylinders, and means for exhausting the products of combustion from the front portion of the cylinders in response to the angular position of the rotor.
2. The engine of claim 1 where the means for engaging the pistons is an elliptical cam track carried on the cylindrical interior of the engine housing.
3. The engine of claim 2 and further including a rear end cap attached to the engine housing and where the means for admitting ambient air into the rear portion of the cylinders comprises a first arcuate slot in the rear end cap.
4. The engine of claim 3 where the means for transferring compressed air from the rear portion of the cylinders comprises, a second arcuate slot in the rear end cap, an intake manifold attached to the rear end cap and covering the second arcuate slot, an air transfer manifold and an air intake port disposed in the engine housing in a position to communicate with the front portions of the cylinders.
5. The engine of claim 4 and further including a front end cap attached to the engine housing and where the means for causing combustion of the fuel-air mixture comprises at least one spark plug carried by the front end cap and in communication with the front portion of the cylinders.
6. The engine of claim 5 where the means for injecting fuel comprises a fuel injector carried by the front end cap and in communication with the front portion of the cylinders.
7. The engine of claim 6 where the means for exhausting the products of combustion from the front portion of the cylinders includes an exhaust port disposed in the engine housing in a position to communicate with the front portions of the cylinders.
8. A rotary piston engine comprising, a rotatable cylindrical rotor having a plurality of longitudinally extending cylinder-forming bores, each having a slidable piston disposed therein, an engine housing encompassing the rotor, and means interconnecting the housing and the pistons for causing rotation of the rotor.
9. The rotary piston engine of claim 8 where the engine housing includes a cylindrical interior surface and where the means interconnecting the housing and the pistons for causing rotation of the rotor includes, an elliptical cam track disposed on the cylindrical interior surface of the housing, a follower pin extending from each of the pistons and slidingly engaged with the cam track.
10. The rotary piston engine of claim 8 where the cylinders include front and rear portions, and further including, means for inhaling ambient air into the rear portion of the first half of the plurality of cylinders in response to sliding movement of the pistons in the first half of the plurality of cylinders toward the front portion of those cylinders and the angular position of the rotor, and means for exhausting products of combustion from the front portion of the second half of the plurality of cylinders in response to sliding movement of the pistons in the second half of the plurality of cylinders toward the rear portion of those cylinders and the angular position of the rotor.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0026] As seen in
[0027] The rotor 4 is rotatably disposed within a housing 20 having a cylindrical inner surface which is relieved along an elliptical endless channel to form a cam track 16 to receive and engage the respective piston follower pins 17. An exhaust port 19 in the side of the housing serves to release the products of combustion from the front compression cylinders.
[0028] A rear end cap 22 is attached by bolts or similar devices to the rear side of the housing 20. As shown in
[0029] Closing the front end of the housing 20 is a front end cap 33 which is bolted or similarly attached to the front of the housing. The center of the front end cap contains an aperture and included bearing 35 for journaling the front end of the drive shaft 8. A spark plug 37 is carried by the front end plate and extends through the plate to expose the spark plug gap to the front of a chamber 10 as it passes the spark plug in the rotation of the rotor. The spark plug is located at top dead center or the 0 degrees point of the engine, the angular orientation being based on the positions of the slots 25 and 28 as seen in
[0030] The preferred form of the engine shown in
[0031] The fundamental concept of the engine's operation is a simple two stroke process with the front sides of the engine's pistons 15 completing a combustion cycle while the back side of the pistons are completing an intake, compression and transfer of compressed air into the front side of the engine. Once the combustion process begins three pistons in front half of the engine are in some phase of the 180 degree combustion cycle. Combustion causes the pistons to move longitudinally in their respective chambers 10 causing followers 17 to interact with the fixed cam track 16 in the rotor housing 20 using the applied leverage to turn the rotor counter clockwise within the rotor housing. During the combustion cycle of the chambers on the front side of the pistons, the chambers 10 on the rear side of the pistons are in a compression cycle and in communication with the compression port 28, causing air to be compressed out of the rear compression chambers and ducted out of the cylinders through the transfer manifold 30 and introduced into the chamber in front of a piston at properly timed intervals (between 180 and 0 degrees). Once the front compression chambers complete their combustion process and reach bottom dead center (180 degrees) the rear portion of the chambers comes into communication with the air intake port 25 on the rear end cap 22 and the rear compression chambers begin an intake cycle inhaling ambient air which fills the space in the cylinders at the rear of the pistons while the front side of the pistons receive an intake of air from the transfer manifold to begin the compression cycle between 180 and 0 degrees. When the front of a piston reaches its top dead center position at 0 degrees the compressed fuel-air mixture is ignited and that piston's combustion/compression cycle begins with combustion occurring in front of the piston and compression occurring in the rear of the same piston. This arrangement of pistons and cylinders permits a longer two stroke combustion process and when used with a direct injection system placed in the front cap there is no loss of combustible fuel in the exhaust cycle.
[0032] The operation of the engine is further illustrated in diagrammatic
[0033] Referring now to
[0034] In
[0035] In
[0036]
[0037] In
[0038] Examining
[0039]
[0040] In