[go: up one dir, main page]

WO2000045069A1 - Improvements to piston and connecting rod assemblies - Google Patents

Improvements to piston and connecting rod assemblies Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2000045069A1
WO2000045069A1 PCT/GB2000/000189 GB0000189W WO0045069A1 WO 2000045069 A1 WO2000045069 A1 WO 2000045069A1 GB 0000189 W GB0000189 W GB 0000189W WO 0045069 A1 WO0045069 A1 WO 0045069A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
piston
connecting rod
load bearing
small end
rod assembly
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/GB2000/000189
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2000045069A9 (en
Inventor
Jean-Pierre Pirault
Alireza Veshagh
Original Assignee
Applied Engine Technology Ltd (Aet)
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Applied Engine Technology Ltd (Aet) filed Critical Applied Engine Technology Ltd (Aet)
Publication of WO2000045069A1 publication Critical patent/WO2000045069A1/en
Publication of WO2000045069A9 publication Critical patent/WO2000045069A9/en

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16JPISTONS; CYLINDERS; SEALINGS
    • F16J1/00Pistons; Trunk pistons; Plungers
    • F16J1/10Connection to driving members
    • F16J1/14Connection to driving members with connecting-rods, i.e. pivotal connections
    • F16J1/16Connection to driving members with connecting-rods, i.e. pivotal connections with gudgeon-pin; Gudgeon-pins

Definitions

  • Connecting rods of internal combustion engines are usually linked to their associated pistons by means of a gudgeon pin carried by the piston via pin bosses.
  • a gudgeon pin carried by the piston via pin bosses.
  • all loads to the crankshaft of the engine from the piston are transmitted through the gudgeon pin and the pin bosses of the piston.
  • the gudgeon pin and the pin bosses therefore, have to take the inertia forces of the piston when it moves upwardly during the last half of the exhaust stroke and downwardly during the first half of the induction stroke (of a 4-stroke cycle) , and the much larger loads from the piston when it moves downwardly during the combustion/expansion stroke and upwardly during the compression stroke, which can pose considerable problems for engines with high cylinder pressures.
  • a piston and connecting rod assembly according to the invention are proposed that allow the relatively large downwardly directed piston loads during the combustion/expansion and compression stroke to be transmitted directly through the centreline of the piston and connecting rod axes, thereby reducing bending loads and providing more favourable hydrodynamic load carrying areas in the load transmission path between piston and connecting rod.
  • the invention is a piston and connecting rod assembly.comprising a piston, the lower surface of the crown of which is provided with a concave load bearing area, a connecting rod, the upper surface of the small-end of which is provided with an opposing convex load bearing area, and a gudgeon pin carried by the piston and received in the bore of the small-end, the arrangement being such that when the pin is centrally located in the small-end bore, there is a constant radial all round clearance between the pin and the bore, and a clearance is defined between the load bearing areas, the all round clearance between the pin and the bore being greater than the clearance between the load bearing areas so that when ihe load bearing areas contact, there remains a clearance between the gudgeon pin and the bore of the small-end, and when the gudgeon pin contacts the bore of the small-end, there remains a clearance between the load bearing areas.
  • Figure 1 shows a conventional monolithic piston, gudgeon pin and connecting rod assembly.
  • Figure 2a shows the forces on the gudgeon pin of Figure 1 at top dead centre of the exhaust stroke.
  • Figure 2b shows forces on the gudgeon pin of Figure 1 during the combustion/expansion stroke.
  • Figure 3a shows the bending and resisting load paths for the assembly of Figure 2a at top dead centre of the exhaust stroke. It can be seen that the forces are transmitted from the piston periphery, via the gudgeon pin, to the connecting rod small end and shank. The offset of the applied load from the piston and the resisting load in the connecting rod gives rise to bending forces on the gudgeon pin and only loading is exerted on the pin bosses and the small end of the connecting rod.
  • Figure 3b shows the bending and resisting load paths for the assembly of Figure 2b during the compression and combustion/expansion strokes. It can be seen that the forces are transmitted from the piston periphery, via the gudgeon pin, to the connecting rod small end and shank. The offset of the applied load on the piston crown bosses and the resisting load in the connecting rod gives rise to bending forces on the gudgeon pin. This exerts loading on the piston pin bosses and on the small end of the connecting rod.
  • Figure 4a shows a section through an articulated piston and connecting rod assembly according to the invention; in this figure, the piston is moving downwardly during the induction stroke.
  • Figure 4b shows the assembly of Figure 4a when the piston is moving downwardly during the combustion/expansion stroke or upwardly during the compression stroke or the first half of the exhaust stroke.
  • Figure 5a shows a section at right angles to that shown in Fig.4a of an assembly similar to that of Figure 4a except that the gudgeon pin bosses of the piston crown are split.
  • Figure 5b shows a view of the underside of the crown of the assembly of Figure 5a, without the piston skirt.
  • Figure 5c shows a view of the underside of the crown of the assembly of Figure 5a, with the skirt in position.
  • Figure 6a shows a section through the small-end of a connecting rod forming part of an assembly according to the invention showing oil paths (indicated with arrows).
  • Figure 6b shows a side view of the small end of Figure 6a, the load bearing area of which is provided with oil spreader grooves.
  • Figure 6c shows a view on the top of the small-end of Figure 6a showing an arrangement of oil spreader grooves.
  • Figure 7a shows a monolithic piston and connecting rod assembly according to the invention.
  • Figure 7b shows a view on the underside of the piston shown in Figure 7a
  • Figure 8a is a perspective view of the cradle of the crown part of the assembly in Fig. ⁇ a, 5b & 5c.
  • Figure 8b shows a view at right angles to that shown in Figure 8a.
  • Figure 8c shows a perspective view of the skirt of the assembly of Figures 5a, 5b & 5c.
  • an articulated piston comprises a crown 1 and a separate skirt 2.
  • the crown is provided with bosses 3 which engage a gudgeon pin 4.
  • the skirt is provided with bosses 2a which also engage the gudgeon pin. In this way the crown and skirt are connected together.
  • the gudgeon pin is located with all-round clearance 5 within the bore 5a of the small end 6 of a connecting rod 7.
  • the crown is provided on its undersurface with a concave arcuate load bearing area 8 and the small end is provided with a complementary convex arcuate load bearing area 9. The small end is thus held loosely within the piston with the two load bearing areas in opposition with a clearance 10 between them.
  • the all round clearance between the gudgeon pin and the bore of the small end is larger than the clearance between the load bearing areas of the piston and small-end.
  • Such an arrangement operates in the following manner.
  • the piston inertia resists the downwardly motion of the connecting rod.
  • this causes the upper side of the gudgeon pin to engage the bore of the small end and for an enlarged clearance 5b to be formed at the underside of the gudgeon pin and for an enlarged clearance 10a to be formed between the load bearing areas 8 and 9.
  • the relatively small load A (compared to gas forces during the combustion/expansion strokes) is transmitted from the piston to the gudgeon pin and thus to the connecting rod in essentially conventional fashion involving bending forces.
  • the piston starts to move downwardly relative to the connecting rod. As shown in Figure 4b, this causes the load bearing areas 8 and 9 to move into contact and for a clearance 5 to be re-established around the gudgeon pin.
  • the relatively high gas load C is transmitted directly from the piston to the connecting rod and the bending forces on the piston crown are significantly reduced, and there are no bending forces on the gudgeon pin and small end.
  • the actual load in the connecting rod is the algebraic sum of the downward forces C (from the gas pressures acting on the piston crown) and the inertia forces A + B due to the total piston masses. .
  • the piston is pushed by the connecting rod and the load bearing areas move into contact to transmit the gas loads.
  • the small end is provided with an oil feed passage 11 extending from the bushes 12 in the bore of the small end, to the load bearing area 9 of the small end.
  • the crown has radial apertures 13 in the pin bosses 3, allowing the oil from the small end of the connecting rod to pass unimpeded into a peripheral oil receiving cavity 14 between the pin bosses and the inner radius of the ring carrier 15.
  • the skirt 2 has a closure plate 16 having a central aperture which accommodates the connecting rod small end with some clearance to define a drain path 16a for the oil from the cavity 14. The clearance also allows for connecting rod angularity during piston motion.
  • the closure plate may be provided with apertures to form oil drain paths from the cavity 14.
  • the centres of curvature of the arcuate load bearing areas lie on the central axis of the connecting rod small end, so that the connecting rod can assume its natural motion without imposing any unnatural tipping motion to the piston crown, and the radius 12 ( see Figure 5a ) of the load bearing area 8 of the crown is marginally larger than that of the load bearing area 9 of the small end.
  • each boss 3 of the crown 1 may be split along a major diameter of the bore 5a which receives the gudgeon pin, thereby forming a removable cap 18 which can be retained to the upper boss half 19 by a set bolt 20.
  • the closure plate 16 of the skirt is also visible in this section.
  • this shows the closure plate 16 of the skirt having an aperture for receiving the connecting rod shank.
  • a clearance 21 is formed between the plate and the rod.
  • the pin bosses 22 of the skirt can be seen adjacent to the bosses 3 of the crown 1.
  • this shows an embodiment of a connecting rod small end which may be used in the invention.
  • the small end has a pair of spaced bushes 23, 24 which receive the gudgeon pin. Oil is fed to the space 25 between the bushes by a feeder passage in the shank of the connecting rod and then passes via an oil feed passage 26 in the small end to the load bearing area 9 of the small end and via laterally extending oil passageways 27 to the sides of the small end.
  • the feeder passage 28 in the connecting rod shank is visible.
  • the passage intersects the bore of the small end tangentially at the space 25 between the bushes and is stopped at its upper end by a ball.
  • the load bearing area 9 of the small end may be provided with oil distribution grooves 30, shown in Figures 6b and 6c. Oil distribution grooves may be provided on the load bearing area of the crown.
  • FIGS. 7a and 7b show a monolithic piston, i.e. a piston in which the crown 1 and the skirt 2 are integral.
  • the piston body is provided with bosses 3 which receive the ends of a gudgeon pin 53.
  • the gudgeon pin is received with all round clearance within the bore of the small end of a connecting rod 56.
  • a smaller clearance is defined between the concave arcuate load bearing area 51 of the crown and the convex arcuate load bearing area 52 of the small end.
  • a separate closure plate 54 retained within a groove in the inner surface of the skirt by a circlip 55, is used to form an oil retention gallery, the closure plate being a close fit around the connecting rod .
  • Oil is supplied along the connecting rod shank to the small-end arcuate load bearing areas via a passage 57 and to the cavity 58 behind the ring grooves via lateral passages 59 and 60.
  • the closure plate has a window 61 which allows assembly of the connecting rod small end into the piston body.
  • the closure plate window has the necessary clearance with the connecting rod to allow for the angular swing of the connecting rod.
  • the closure plate may be made of a flexible material and the inner surface of the skirt is provided with a groove which receives the edge of the plate, the plate being held in position by flexure of the plate.
  • the inner surface of the skirt is provided with a screw threaded groove and the edge of the plate is screw threaded for reception by the groove.
  • FIGs 8a - 8c show perspective views of the crown and skirt parts of the assembly shown in Fig5a, 5b & 5c, in particular showing the retaining piston boss cap 18 and upper half 19 and the retaining set screws 20.
  • Fig 8c shows the skirt aperture 195 (for the conrod) in the closure plate 16.
  • piston and connecting rod assemblies or parts of the assemblies previously described, to be made in fibrous materials such as carbon-carbon.
  • Other possible materials for the piston and or connecting rod are described in the following sections.
  • Piston and connecting rod assemblies or parts of the assemblies can be made in fibrous reinforced materials such as carbon fibre reinforced plastics.
  • piston crown portion of piston and connecting rod assemblies can be made in a particular metallic material or metallic alloys such as steel, cast-iron or aluminium alloys, whilst the piston skirt is made in a different metal or metallic alloy material.
  • piston crown portion of piston and connecting rod assemblies can be made in a fibrous material such as carbon- carbon, whilst the piston skirt is made in a metal or metallic alloy material such as steel, aluminium alloy or cast-iron.
  • piston crown portion of piston and connecting rod assemblies can be made in a fibrous material such as carbon- carbon, whilst the piston skirt is made in a fibre reinforced material such as carbon fibre reinforced plastics.
  • the connecting rod of connecting rod/piston assemblies can be made from metallic alloys, carbon-carbon or fibre reinforced plastic composite materials.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Pistons, Piston Rings, And Cylinders (AREA)
  • Shafts, Cranks, Connecting Bars, And Related Bearings (AREA)

Abstract

A piston and connecting rod assembly comprises an articulated piston (1, 2) within which the small end (6) of a connecting rod (7) is loosely retained by a gudgeon pin (4). During the compression and combustion/expansion stroke, a concave load bearing area (8) on the undersurface of the piston engages a convex load bearing area (9) on the small end and there is a clearance between the small end and the gudgeon pin. Thus the piston loads are directly transmitted to the connecting rod. During the late exhaust stroke and the early induction stroke of a 4-stroke engine, the gudgeon pin contacts the small end and the load bearing areas move out of contact. Thus the somewhat smaller loads are transmitted via the gudgeon pin. Oil from the connecting rod is directed to an oil receiving cavity (14) via radial passages (13) and drains through a gap 16a around a closure plate (16) forming part of the skirt (2). The relative clearance between the gudgeon pin and small end, is designed to be larger than the clearance between the load bearing areas of the piston and small-end.

Description

IMPROVEMENTS TO PISTON & CONNECTING ROD ASSEMBLIES
Connecting rods of internal combustion engines are usually linked to their associated pistons by means of a gudgeon pin carried by the piston via pin bosses. In this arrangement, all loads to the crankshaft of the engine from the piston are transmitted through the gudgeon pin and the pin bosses of the piston. The gudgeon pin and the pin bosses, therefore, have to take the inertia forces of the piston when it moves upwardly during the last half of the exhaust stroke and downwardly during the first half of the induction stroke (of a 4-stroke cycle) , and the much larger loads from the piston when it moves downwardly during the combustion/expansion stroke and upwardly during the compression stroke, which can pose considerable problems for engines with high cylinder pressures. Moreover, the load transmission paths from the piston to the connecting rod are not direct and during the expansion stroke this leads to considerable bending loads on the piston crown, the pin bosses, the gudgeon pin and the small end of the connecting rod. These bending loads, particularly under the increasing trend of higher gas pressures, can present limitations, both structural and hydrodynamic, in the pin bosses and connecting rod small end. These limitations lead in turn to limitations in cylinder pressure and reduced engine performance in terms of emissions, fuel consumption and torque/power.
Also, some lightweight materials, that offer major weight savings for the piston and connecting rod and hence reduce dynamic loading on the engine structure, have bending load limits that may preclude their use at high gas pressure loading on the piston crown.
Various embodiments of a piston and connecting rod assembly according to the invention are proposed that allow the relatively large downwardly directed piston loads during the combustion/expansion and compression stroke to be transmitted directly through the centreline of the piston and connecting rod axes, thereby reducing bending loads and providing more favourable hydrodynamic load carrying areas in the load transmission path between piston and connecting rod.
In the broadest aspect as set out in Claim 1, the invention is a piston and connecting rod assembly.comprising a piston, the lower surface of the crown of which is provided with a concave load bearing area, a connecting rod, the upper surface of the small-end of which is provided with an opposing convex load bearing area, and a gudgeon pin carried by the piston and received in the bore of the small-end, the arrangement being such that when the pin is centrally located in the small-end bore, there is a constant radial all round clearance between the pin and the bore, and a clearance is defined between the load bearing areas, the all round clearance between the pin and the bore being greater than the clearance between the load bearing areas so that when ihe load bearing areas contact, there remains a clearance between the gudgeon pin and the bore of the small-end, and when the gudgeon pin contacts the bore of the small-end, there remains a clearance between the load bearing areas.
Other aspects of the invention are outlined in the further subordinate claims.
Background explanations and specific embodiments of the invention are now described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 shows a conventional monolithic piston, gudgeon pin and connecting rod assembly.
Figure 2a shows the forces on the gudgeon pin of Figure 1 at top dead centre of the exhaust stroke.
Figure 2b shows forces on the gudgeon pin of Figure 1 during the combustion/expansion stroke.
Figure 3a shows the bending and resisting load paths for the assembly of Figure 2a at top dead centre of the exhaust stroke. It can be seen that the forces are transmitted from the piston periphery, via the gudgeon pin, to the connecting rod small end and shank. The offset of the applied load from the piston and the resisting load in the connecting rod gives rise to bending forces on the gudgeon pin and only loading is exerted on the pin bosses and the small end of the connecting rod.
Figure 3b shows the bending and resisting load paths for the assembly of Figure 2b during the compression and combustion/expansion strokes. It can be seen that the forces are transmitted from the piston periphery, via the gudgeon pin, to the connecting rod small end and shank. The offset of the applied load on the piston crown bosses and the resisting load in the connecting rod gives rise to bending forces on the gudgeon pin. This exerts loading on the piston pin bosses and on the small end of the connecting rod.
Figure 4a shows a section through an articulated piston and connecting rod assembly according to the invention; in this figure, the piston is moving downwardly during the induction stroke.
Figure 4b shows the assembly of Figure 4a when the piston is moving downwardly during the combustion/expansion stroke or upwardly during the compression stroke or the first half of the exhaust stroke. Figure 5a shows a section at right angles to that shown in Fig.4a of an assembly similar to that of Figure 4a except that the gudgeon pin bosses of the piston crown are split.
Figure 5b shows a view of the underside of the crown of the assembly of Figure 5a, without the piston skirt.
Figure 5c shows a view of the underside of the crown of the assembly of Figure 5a, with the skirt in position.
Figure 6a shows a section through the small-end of a connecting rod forming part of an assembly according to the invention showing oil paths (indicated with arrows).
Figure 6b shows a side view of the small end of Figure 6a, the load bearing area of which is provided with oil spreader grooves.
Figure 6c shows a view on the top of the small-end of Figure 6a showing an arrangement of oil spreader grooves.
Figure 7a shows a monolithic piston and connecting rod assembly according to the invention.
Figure 7b shows a view on the underside of the piston shown in Figure 7a
Figure 8a is a perspective view of the cradle of the crown part of the assembly in Fig.δa, 5b & 5c.
Figure 8b shows a view at right angles to that shown in Figure 8a.
Figure 8c shows a perspective view of the skirt of the assembly of Figures 5a, 5b & 5c.
With reference to Figure 4a, an articulated piston comprises a crown 1 and a separate skirt 2. The crown is provided with bosses 3 which engage a gudgeon pin 4. The skirt is provided with bosses 2a which also engage the gudgeon pin. In this way the crown and skirt are connected together. The gudgeon pin is located with all-round clearance 5 within the bore 5a of the small end 6 of a connecting rod 7. The crown is provided on its undersurface with a concave arcuate load bearing area 8 and the small end is provided with a complementary convex arcuate load bearing area 9. The small end is thus held loosely within the piston with the two load bearing areas in opposition with a clearance 10 between them.
The all round clearance between the gudgeon pin and the bore of the small end, is larger than the clearance between the load bearing areas of the piston and small-end. Such an arrangement operates in the following manner. At the beginning of the induction stroke, the piston inertia resists the downwardly motion of the connecting rod. As shown in Figure 4a, this causes the upper side of the gudgeon pin to engage the bore of the small end and for an enlarged clearance 5b to be formed at the underside of the gudgeon pin and for an enlarged clearance 10a to be formed between the load bearing areas 8 and 9. Thus, during the induction stroke, the relatively small load A (compared to gas forces during the combustion/expansion strokes) is transmitted from the piston to the gudgeon pin and thus to the connecting rod in essentially conventional fashion involving bending forces.
At the beginning of the combustion/expansion stroke, the piston starts to move downwardly relative to the connecting rod. As shown in Figure 4b, this causes the load bearing areas 8 and 9 to move into contact and for a clearance 5 to be re-established around the gudgeon pin. Thus during the combustion/expansion stroke, the relatively high gas load C is transmitted directly from the piston to the connecting rod and the bending forces on the piston crown are significantly reduced, and there are no bending forces on the gudgeon pin and small end. The actual load in the connecting rod is the algebraic sum of the downward forces C (from the gas pressures acting on the piston crown) and the inertia forces A + B due to the total piston masses. . Again, during the first half of the exhaust and the compression stroke, the piston is pushed by the connecting rod and the load bearing areas move into contact to transmit the gas loads.
The small end is provided with an oil feed passage 11 extending from the bushes 12 in the bore of the small end, to the load bearing area 9 of the small end. The crown has radial apertures 13 in the pin bosses 3, allowing the oil from the small end of the connecting rod to pass unimpeded into a peripheral oil receiving cavity 14 between the pin bosses and the inner radius of the ring carrier 15. The skirt 2 has a closure plate 16 having a central aperture which accommodates the connecting rod small end with some clearance to define a drain path 16a for the oil from the cavity 14. The clearance also allows for connecting rod angularity during piston motion. Alternatively, or in addition, the closure plate may be provided with apertures to form oil drain paths from the cavity 14.
Preferably, the centres of curvature of the arcuate load bearing areas lie on the central axis of the connecting rod small end, so that the connecting rod can assume its natural motion without imposing any unnatural tipping motion to the piston crown, and the radius 12 ( see Figure 5a ) of the load bearing area 8 of the crown is marginally larger than that of the load bearing area 9 of the small end.
With reference to Figure 5a, each boss 3 of the crown 1 may be split along a major diameter of the bore 5a which receives the gudgeon pin, thereby forming a removable cap 18 which can be retained to the upper boss half 19 by a set bolt 20. The closure plate 16 of the skirt is also visible in this section.
With reference to Figure 5b, the load bearing area 8 in the under surface of the crown is visible, as are the set bolts 20.
With reference to Figure 5c, this shows the closure plate 16 of the skirt having an aperture for receiving the connecting rod shank. A clearance 21 is formed between the plate and the rod. The pin bosses 22 of the skirt can be seen adjacent to the bosses 3 of the crown 1.
With reference to Figure 6a, this shows an embodiment of a connecting rod small end which may be used in the invention. The small end has a pair of spaced bushes 23, 24 which receive the gudgeon pin. Oil is fed to the space 25 between the bushes by a feeder passage in the shank of the connecting rod and then passes via an oil feed passage 26 in the small end to the load bearing area 9 of the small end and via laterally extending oil passageways 27 to the sides of the small end.
With reference to Figure 6b, the feeder passage 28 in the connecting rod shank is visible. The passage intersects the bore of the small end tangentially at the space 25 between the bushes and is stopped at its upper end by a ball. The load bearing area 9 of the small end may be provided with oil distribution grooves 30, shown in Figures 6b and 6c. Oil distribution grooves may be provided on the load bearing area of the crown.
With reference to Figures 7a and 7b, these show a monolithic piston, i.e. a piston in which the crown 1 and the skirt 2 are integral. The piston body is provided with bosses 3 which receive the ends of a gudgeon pin 53. The gudgeon pin is received with all round clearance within the bore of the small end of a connecting rod 56. A smaller clearance is defined between the concave arcuate load bearing area 51 of the crown and the convex arcuate load bearing area 52 of the small end. In similar fashion to the assembly of Figures 4a and 4b, the load during the compression stroke, the exhaust stroke and the combustion/expansion strokes is transmitted by contact between the load bearing area of the crown and the load bearing area of the small end of the connecting rod, and the load during the induction stroke is transmitted via the gudgeon pin 53.
A separate closure plate 54, retained within a groove in the inner surface of the skirt by a circlip 55, is used to form an oil retention gallery, the closure plate being a close fit around the connecting rod . Oil is supplied along the connecting rod shank to the small-end arcuate load bearing areas via a passage 57 and to the cavity 58 behind the ring grooves via lateral passages 59 and 60. The closure plate has a window 61 which allows assembly of the connecting rod small end into the piston body. The closure plate window has the necessary clearance with the connecting rod to allow for the angular swing of the connecting rod.
Alternatively, the closure plate may be made of a flexible material and the inner surface of the skirt is provided with a groove which receives the edge of the plate, the plate being held in position by flexure of the plate. As a further alternative, the inner surface of the skirt is provided with a screw threaded groove and the edge of the plate is screw threaded for reception by the groove.
With reference to Figures 8a - 8c, these show perspective views of the crown and skirt parts of the assembly shown in Fig5a, 5b & 5c, in particular showing the retaining piston boss cap 18 and upper half 19 and the retaining set screws 20. Fig 8c shows the skirt aperture 195 (for the conrod) in the closure plate 16.
It is possible for the piston and connecting rod assemblies or parts of the assemblies, previously described, to be made in fibrous materials such as carbon-carbon. Other possible materials for the piston and or connecting rod are described in the following sections.
Piston and connecting rod assemblies or parts of the assemblies, as previously described, can be made in fibrous reinforced materials such as carbon fibre reinforced plastics.
Piston and connecting rod assemblies or parts of the assemblies, as previously described, can be made in metallic materials and alloys such as steel, cast-iron or aluminium alloys.
The piston crown portion of piston and connecting rod assemblies, as previously described, can be made in a particular metallic material or metallic alloys such as steel, cast-iron or aluminium alloys, whilst the piston skirt is made in a different metal or metallic alloy material.
The piston crown portion of piston and connecting rod assemblies, as previously described, can be made in a fibrous material such as carbon- carbon, whilst the piston skirt is made in a metal or metallic alloy material such as steel, aluminium alloy or cast-iron.
The piston crown portion of piston and connecting rod assemblies, as previously described, can be made in a fibrous material such as carbon- carbon, whilst the piston skirt is made in a fibre reinforced material such as carbon fibre reinforced plastics.
The connecting rod of connecting rod/piston assemblies, as previously described, can be made from metallic alloys, carbon-carbon or fibre reinforced plastic composite materials.

Claims

1 A piston and connecting rod assembly.comprising a piston, the lower surface of the crown of which is provided with a concave load bearing area, a connecting rod, the upper surface of the small-end of which is provided with an opposing convex load bearing area, and a gudgeon pin carried by the piston and received in the bore of the smajl-end, the arrangement being such that when the pin is centrally located in the small-end bore, there is a constant radial all round clearance between the pin and the bore, and a clearance is defined between the load bearing areas, the all round clearance between the pin and the bore being greater than the clearance between the load bearing areas so that when the load bearing areas contact, there remains a clearance between the gudgeon pin and the bore of the small-end, and when the gudgeon pin contacts the bore of the small-end, there remains a clearance between the load bearing areas.
2. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in Claim 1 in which the piston is an articulated piston having separate skirt and crown.
3. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in Claim 1 in which the piston is monolithic having integral skirt and crown.
4. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in Claim 2 in which the gudgeon pin is located in the crown portion of the articulated piston.
5. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 4 in which both the crown and the skirt are provided with bosses having bores which receive the ends of the gudgeon pin and the gudgeon pin is received with clearance within a bore in the small end.
6. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 3 in which the piston is provided with bosses which receive the ends of the gudgeon pin and the gudgeon pin is received with clearance within a bore in the small end.
7. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in any preceding claim in which the load bearing areas are arcuate and the radius of the load bearing area of the crown is marginally larger than the radius of the load bearing area of the connecting small rod end and the centres of curvature of the load bearing areas lie on the central axis of the gudgeon pin.
8 A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in any preceding claim in which means are provided to feed oil between the two load bearing areas.
9. A. piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 8 in which the means to feed oil comprises an oil feed passage in the small end of the connecting rod, around the gudgeon pin, which passage opens to the small end load bearing area.
10. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 9 in which oil distribution grooves are provided on the load bearing area of the small end, which grooves connect with the oil feed passage.
11. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claims 9 or 10 in which oil distribution grooves are provided on the load bearing area of the piston crown.
12. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in any of claims 8 to 11 in which an oil receiving cavity is defined within the crown by a closure plate carried by the skirt, the plate being provided with an aperture through which the small end of the connecting rod passes.
13. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 12 in which there is a clearance between small end and the closure plate to form a drain path for the oil in the oil receiving cavity.
14. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in 12 in which the closure plate is provided with apertures to form a drain path for the oil in the oil receiving cavity.
15. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 12 in which the closure plate is integral with the skirt.
16. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 12 in which the closure plate is separate from the skirt and is held in place within the skirt by support means.
17. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 16 in which the closure plate is flexible and the support means comprises a retaining groove on the inside of the skirt, which groove receives the outer edge of the closure plate and the plate is held in place by flexure of the plate.
18. A piston and connnecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 12 in which the inside of the skirt is provide with a threaded groove which receives the threaded outer edge of the plate.
19. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 12 in which the inside of the piston skirt is provided with a groove and the outer edge of the closure plate is retained within the groove by a circlip.
20. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in any one of claims 12 to 19 in which the piston crown is provided with radial apertures connecting the load bearing area and adjacent areas of the crown to the oil receiving cavity.
21. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 20 in which the small end of the connecting rod is provided with laterally extending oil passageways which connect the oil feed passage with the lateral external surface of the small end.
22. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 21 in which the parts of the laterally extending oil passageways that exit at the surface of the small end are of larger diameter than the parts adjacent the oil feed passage.
23. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 5 or 6 in which the bosses are split along a diameter of the bore which receives the gudgeon pin, the two sections of each boss so formed being secured together with bolts.
24. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 5 or 6 in which the bore in the small end is lined with a pair of axially spaced bushes, an oil feeder passage is defined within the connecting rod and intersects the gap between the bushes, and an oil feed passage in the small end, opening to the small end load bearing area connects with the gap so that oil can flow from the feeder passage to the small end load bearing area.
25. A piston and connecting rod assembly as claimed in claim 5 or 6 in which the bore in the small end is lined with a bush having a central section of reduced thickness defining a groove, a first passage in the connecting rod connects with the groove , a second passage in the small end also connects with the groove and exits the small end at the load bearing area, and third passages in the small end connect with the second passage and exit at the lateral surfaces of the small end, whereby oil from the first passage is fed to the load bearing area and the lateral surfaces of the small end.
26 A piston and connecting rod assembly substantially as described with reference to Figures 4a to 4c or Figures 5a to 5c or Figures 6a to 6c or Figures 7a and 7b or Figures 8a, b and c.
27 Piston and connecting rod assemblies or parts of the assemblies, as in any of the aforementioned claims, made in fibrous materials such as carbon-carbon.
28 Piston and connecting rod assemblies or parts of the assemblies, as claimed in any of the claims 1-26, made in fibrous reinforced materials such as carbon fibre reinforced plastics. Piston and connecting rod assemblies or parts of the assemblies, as claimed in any of the claims 1-26, made in metallic materials and alloys such as steel, cast-iron or aluminium alloys. Piston and connecting rod assemblies, with the crown portion of the piston assemblies, as in any of the claims 1- 26, made in a particular metallic material/alloys such as steel, cast-iron or aluminium alloys, whilst the skirt is made in a different one of the metallic/alloy materials.
Piston and connecting rod assemblies, with the crown portion of the piston assemblies, as in any of the claims 1- 26, made in a fibrous material such as carbon-carbon, whilst the skirt is made in a metallic/alloy material such as steel, aluminium alloy or cast-iron.
Piston and connecting rod assemblies, with the crown portion of the piston assemblies, as claimed in any of the claims 1-26, made in a fibrous material such as carbon-carbon, whilst the skirt is made in a fibre reinforced material such as carbon fibre reinforced plastics. Piston and connecting rod assemblies, as claimed in claims 1-32, with the connecting rod assemblies made from metallic alloys, carbon-carbon or fibre reinforced plastic composite materials.
PCT/GB2000/000189 1999-01-29 2000-01-24 Improvements to piston and connecting rod assemblies WO2000045069A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9901873.1 1999-01-29
GB9901873A GB2346195B (en) 1999-01-29 1999-01-29 Improvements to piston & connecting rod assemblies

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2000045069A1 true WO2000045069A1 (en) 2000-08-03
WO2000045069A9 WO2000045069A9 (en) 2001-07-26

Family

ID=10846650

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/GB2000/000189 WO2000045069A1 (en) 1999-01-29 2000-01-24 Improvements to piston and connecting rod assemblies

Country Status (2)

Country Link
GB (2) GB2346196B (en)
WO (1) WO2000045069A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US11402020B2 (en) * 2020-02-27 2022-08-02 Cummins Inc. Piston with multiaxial bearing and piston bowl

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3105702A1 (en) * 1981-02-17 1982-08-26 Audi Nsu Auto Union Ag, 7107 Neckarsulm Piston-connecting rod joint for reciprocating piston machines, in particular two-stroke internal combustion engines
GB2165619A (en) * 1984-10-11 1986-04-16 Gkn Technology Ltd Piston/connecting rod bearing assembly

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB288080A (en) * 1927-08-13 1928-04-05 Frank Deschnak Improvements in and relating to pistons
US4459900A (en) * 1981-07-06 1984-07-17 Deere & Company Heat insulated piston assembly and method of assembling
FR2611232B1 (en) * 1987-02-20 1991-08-30 Melchior Jean PISTON FOR INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES AND SIMILAR MACHINES
FR2660698B1 (en) * 1990-04-06 1994-07-08 Melchior Jean PISTON FOR INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES AND SIMILAR MACHINES.
FR2725264B1 (en) * 1994-10-04 1996-12-20 Melchior Jean F DEVICE FOR LUBRICATING AN ASSEMBLY BETWEEN TWO MECHANICAL PARTS MOBILE WITH RESPECT TO THE OTHER, IN PARTICULAR CONNECTING ROD-PISTON
IT241570Y1 (en) * 1996-10-29 2001-05-09 Zanussi Elettromecc REFRIGERATOR COMPRESSORS WITH PERFECTED PISTON

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3105702A1 (en) * 1981-02-17 1982-08-26 Audi Nsu Auto Union Ag, 7107 Neckarsulm Piston-connecting rod joint for reciprocating piston machines, in particular two-stroke internal combustion engines
GB2165619A (en) * 1984-10-11 1986-04-16 Gkn Technology Ltd Piston/connecting rod bearing assembly

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB9907985D0 (en) 1999-06-02
GB2346196A (en) 2000-08-02
GB2346195A (en) 2000-08-02
GB2346195B (en) 2001-01-03
WO2000045069A9 (en) 2001-07-26
GB9901873D0 (en) 1999-03-17
GB2346196B (en) 2001-03-14

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4013057A (en) Piston assembly
EP2606212B1 (en) Piston constructions for opposed-piston engines
EP1419328B1 (en) Monobloc piston for diesel engines
US3943908A (en) One piece piston connected to a connecting rod for high speed four-stroke cycle internal combustion engines
US5653204A (en) Piston assembly retaining device
US4644853A (en) Piston and bearing assemblies
US5307732A (en) Piston assembly having a wrist pin bolted therein
US4635596A (en) Assembly of piston and connecting rod in internal-combustion engine
AU769798B2 (en) Piston and connecting rod retention
US6164261A (en) Internal combustion engine piston assembly and method
US6923153B2 (en) Piston and connecting rod assembly having phosphatized bushingless connecting rod and profiled piston pin
US20180202346A1 (en) Piston bearing assembly for an opposed-piston engine
US4807577A (en) Peristrophic internal combustion engine assembly and multi-part pistons
US20040261752A1 (en) Phosphatized and bushingless piston and connecting rod assembly having an internal gallery and profiled piston pin
WO2000045069A1 (en) Improvements to piston and connecting rod assemblies
US4928578A (en) Pistons with bearing members
WO2000050753A1 (en) Free piston internal combustion engine with piston head having non-metallic bearing surface
US6651607B2 (en) Connecting rod with increased effective length and engine using same
US5701802A (en) Multipart piston for an internal combustion engine
US5009124A (en) Wrist pin
JPS585128Y2 (en) Connecting rods for internal combustion engines
GB2198210A (en) Pistons
GB2361517A (en) Piston and connecting rod retention
WO2001002759A1 (en) Articulated arrangement for piston and connecting rod assemblies with partially spherical contact surfaces
JPS6023670A (en) Assembly structure of internal combustion engine piston and connecting rod

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): JP US

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: C2

Designated state(s): JP US

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: C2

Designated state(s): AT BE CH CY DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE

COP Corrected version of pamphlet

Free format text: PAGES 1-6, DESCRIPTION, REPLACED BY NEW PAGES 1-6; PAGES 7-10, CLAIMS, REPLACED BY NEW PAGES 7-10; PAGES 1/16-16/16, DRAWINGS, REPLACED BY NEW PAGES 1/16-16/16

122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase