Internal-combustion engines – Frame construction – Horizontal cylinder
Reexamination Certificate
2000-12-07
2002-07-16
Argenbright, Tony M. (Department: 3747)
Internal-combustion engines
Frame construction
Horizontal cylinder
C277S606000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06418903
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to the connection of a crankcase of a reciprocating-piston internal combustion engine to a cylinder housing wherein at least one of the housing parts is made of a light metal material.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In the cylinder housing of an internal combustion engine, the reciprocating piston is guided so as to be longitudinally movable and the combustion chamber is configured wherein the working process of the engine takes place. The longitudinal movement of the reciprocating piston is converted, as known, into a rotary movement in a crank drive. The components of the crank drive are essentially the crankshaft and the piston rod via which the piston is operatively connected to the crankshaft and these components are accommodated in the crankcase of the engine. In the assembly of an engine, the components of the crank drive are seated in the crankcase and, thereafter, the cylinder housing is connected to the crankcase. The cylinder housing and the crankcase have respective housing flanges which lie one against the other and are clamped to each other seal-tight by means of retaining screws. The tension force in the retaining screws must be high enough in order to hold the connection seal-tight and to prevent an escape, for example, of lubricating oil from the interior of the engine.
In modern internal combustion engines, the housing is often manufactured from a light metal material in order to hold the weight of the engine as low as possible. This is especially so for internal combustion engines for handheld portable work apparatus which should perforce be as light as possible. For this reason, cylinder housings made of light metal, such as aluminum, are utilized. In known crankcase/cylinder housing connections, retaining screws made of steel are used in order to press the housing flanges together with sufficient force and to so achieve a sealing of the connection. Often, a sealing insert is provided in addition for the sealing and this sealing insert makes a still higher tension force of the screw connection necessary which the steel screws can provide. Usually, several retaining screws are arranged along the housing flange around the housing parts.
However, in the operation of internal combustion engines, fractures of the housing part made of light metal in the region of the retaining screws occur again and again with advanced operating times. The fractures are caused by excessive tensile stresses in the area of the retaining screws which are caused by uneven higher thermal expansion of the light metal compared to the material of the retaining screws.
An attachment of a component, which exhibits a high thermal expansion, to a component which exhibits a lesser thermal expansion, is known from German patent publication 3,018,014. Here, the component having the higher thermal expansion is connected to the component having lesser thermal expansion by interposing a spring. The spring can be stressed via a screw connection and this screw connection passes through the component having the higher thermal expansion with radial spacing.
Furthermore, a connecting configuration between two components having different coefficients of thermal expansion is known from German patent publication 3,613,754. The surface of one component, which lies opposite the other component, is covered with a layer of coating material and a seal is inserted between the coating material of the one component and the other component. The coating material should have an adhesive action. With increasing temperature, the adhesive force with respect to the seal increases from a value less than the holding force of the other component with respect to the seal to a value greater than this holding force. For this purpose, a binding layer is arranged between the seal and the directly bordering surface of the second component and this binding layer imparts a greater adhesion to the seal relative to the second component than relative to the coating material.
In the known connections for components having different thermal expansion, the connecting screws, however, do not provide for an adequate surface pressing between the flanges which is necessary for the seal of the connection of a crankcase of an engine to a cylinder housing.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide a connection for a cylinder housing having a crankcase and of which at least one housing part is made of light metal. It is a further object of the invention to provide such a connection which permanently withstands the operating loads of the engine and provides a reliable seal.
The connection of the invention is for a crankcase housing of a reciprocating-piston internal combustion engine with a cylinder housing and includes: first and second housing flanges formed on the crankcase housing and the cylinder housing, respectively; the crankcase housing and the cylinder housing being positioned so as to cause the first and second flanges to lie one atop the other thereby conjointly defining an interface; at least one of the crankcase housing and the cylinder housing being made of a light metal; a cured liquid seal disposed between the flanges at the interface; and, a plurality of retaining screws made of light metal and being arranged so as to tightly clamp the flanges together.
According to the invention, retaining screws of light metal are provided which expand substantially more uniformly with the light metal of the housing than steel retaining screws with warming during operation of the engine. The tensile strength of the retaining screws used in accordance with the invention is nominally less than with conventionally used steel screws but an increase of the shank cross section of the light metal screws compared to the shank cross section of a steel screw of comparable tensile strength is unnecessary because of the arrangement according to the invention of a curing liquid seal between the housing flanges. The liquid seal can already, even for lesser tension forces, hold the gap seal-tight between the housing flanges. A reliable connection with simple and cost-effective means is achieved with the combination of light metal retaining screws with a liquid seal between the housing flanges.
The liquid seal comprises a material which can be applied to the housing flange in a liquid or soft state and cures later. The liquid seal is pressed into the sealing form in the soft state and adheres to the two housing flanges to be connected after curing and contributes to the strength of the connection. The material of the liquid seal interlaces increasingly with the curing and becomes structurally solid. Advantageously, the liquid seals are on a silicone basis or modified silicone seals.
Retaining screws are purposefully used which are made of a material having essentially the same thermal expansion characteristics as the light metal material of the housing. Retaining screws of aluminum are seen as especially advantageous. As a material “aluminum”, all technical aluminum alloys are understood in this context of which also commercial aluminum screws for other fastening applications are comprised. The aluminum retaining screws are especially advantageous for threadably fastening cylinder and crankcase housings of aluminum alloy such as cylinder housings which comprise die cast aluminum. The advantages of the connection of the invention become manifest, however, also when using, for example, magnesium die cast housings.
In an advantageous further embodiment of the invention, the retaining screw includes a self-cutting thread and is screwed into a threadless bore in the component to be attached during assembly of the engine. This component is purposefully the cylinder housing made of light metal which, for assembly, is provided simply with bores for accommodating the retaining screw. Advantageously, the threaded shank of the retaining screw is provided with a coating which is harder than the material of the cylinder housing.
It is purposeful to provide one of the housing flanges with a slot in its
Möller Wolfgang
Weissert Wolfgang
Zimmermann Gunther
Andreas Stihl AG & Co.
Ottesen Walter
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