Variable valve timing

4694789
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Inventors

Frost, Derek

Application #

796661

Filed

Nov-8-1985

Published

Sep-22-1987

Current US Class

074/604
123/192.2
123/90.17
123/90.31
123/90.6

International Classes

F01L 001/34; F16F 015/26

Field of Search

123/90.15 123/90.17 123/90.6 123/90.2 123/90.31 123/192 74/603 74/604 74/69

Assignee

Ford Motor Company (Dearborn, MI)

Examiners

Lazarus; Ira S.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

McCollum; Robert E., Sadler; Clifford L.

US Patent References

4440123   Half speed balancer
4480607   Balancer for 90 de...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
The invention relates to a drive mechanism for connecting an input shaft to an output shaft and superimposing on the output shaft a variable oscillatory motion determined by the position of a reaction member. The drive mechanism comprises an input disc fast in rotation with the input shaft, and defining a slideway transverse to the axis of the input shaft. A sliding member is made to slide along the slideway by a block journalled within a pivotable yoke, the block being itself slidable in a second slideway defined by the sliding member. A crank pin fixed to the output shaft is connected slidably to the sliding member such that as the sliding member slides along the slideway, the phase of the output shaft is varied with respect of the phase of the input shaft. A second similar mechanism drives a weight with opposite phase in order to cancel out the reaction torque on the input shaft.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. A drive mechanism for connecting an input shaft to an output shaft for rotation at the same speed while superimposing on the output shaft a variable oscillatory motion determined by the position of a reaction member, the drive mechanism comprising means fast in rotation with one of the input and output shafts defining a slideway transverse to the axis of said one of the shafts, a sliding member slidable along said driveway, means for sliding the sliding member along the slideway in synchronism with the rotation of the input shaft, the amplitude of the sliding movement varing as a function of the position of the reaction member, the oscillation of the sliding member being symmetrical about a central position, and a crank pin fixed to the other of said input and output shafts and connected slidably to the said sliding member whereby as the sliding member slides along the slideway, the phase of the output shaft is varied with respect to the phase of the input shaft.



Description
The present invention relates to variable valve timing.

In an internal combustion engine the optimum performance that can be obtained at a given engine speed depends on the angles at which the inlet and exhaust valves open and close. These angles vary as a function of speed and when designing an engine it is usual to arrive at a compromise whereby performance or efficiency is optimised at only one engine speed.

A proposal which has been made to overcome this problem is fully shown and described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,616,606 to vary the valve timing by superimposing upon the angular rotation of the cam shaft an oscillatory motion in order to advance then retard rotation of the cams within each cycle so as effectively to alter both the opening times of the associated valves and the rate at which the valves are opened and closed at any given engine speed.

It would be possible, but not commercially viable, to control each pair of valves of a cylinder individually but it is clearly more economical to operate on a single camshaft to vary the valve timing of all the cylinders of an engine. This however dictates that the frequency of oscillation must be a multiple of the camshaft speed, the factor depending on the number of cylinders in a block. Superimposing such a rapid oscillation on the camshaft, having regard both to the inertial mass of the camshaft and the spring forces of the individual valves, gives rise to very considerable loading and severe problems have been encountered in the past in designing a suitable drive mechanism capable of withstanding the stresses reliability.
 
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