US2335252A - Internal combustion engine - Google Patents

Internal combustion engine Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2335252A
US2335252A US403858A US40385841A US2335252A US 2335252 A US2335252 A US 2335252A US 403858 A US403858 A US 403858A US 40385841 A US40385841 A US 40385841A US 2335252 A US2335252 A US 2335252A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
cylinders
cylinder
piston
engine
rods
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US403858A
Inventor
Walter R Appeman
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US403858A priority Critical patent/US2335252A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2335252A publication Critical patent/US2335252A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B75/00Other engines
    • F02B75/28Engines with two or more pistons reciprocating within same cylinder or within essentially coaxial cylinders
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B75/00Other engines
    • F02B75/28Engines with two or more pistons reciprocating within same cylinder or within essentially coaxial cylinders
    • F02B75/287Engines with two or more pistons reciprocating within same cylinder or within essentially coaxial cylinders with several pistons positioned in one cylinder one behind the other
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B75/00Other engines
    • F02B75/02Engines characterised by their cycles, e.g. six-stroke
    • F02B2075/022Engines characterised by their cycles, e.g. six-stroke having less than six strokes per cycle
    • F02B2075/027Engines characterised by their cycles, e.g. six-stroke having less than six strokes per cycle four

Description

Nov. 30,1943.
w. R. APPEMAN INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE 2 Shets-Sheet 1 W. R. APPZiAN ATTORNEY Filed July 24, 1941 a m a, H
Nov. 30, 1943.
w. r. APPEMAN 2,335,252
INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE Filed July 24, 1941 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR. Egg/X P P E rm N ATTORNEY crank shaft, means on the Patented Nov. 30, 1943 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE 2335,23 INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE Walter R. Appeman, St. Louis, Mo. Application July 24, 1941, Serial No. 403,858
. 7 Claims.
This invention relates to internal combustion engines, to provide an engine of simple and efficient form, wherein a power impulse is imparted to the crank-shaft on each throw or half revolution thereof.
Another object of the invention is to provide an internal combustion engine, comprising a pair or pairs of elongate, closed cylinders mounted together in operative formation or alignment as a unit, as side by side, or one above another, or tandem, with pairs of pistons reciprocably mounted in the ends of each cylinder and rigidly connected by piston rods, means for rigidly connecting the rods, so that all the pistons will reciprocate as a unit, means, for operatively connecting the piston unit to the crank pin of a,
cylinders for reproducing in each the conventional charging, compressing, firing and exhausting phases of operation of a four-cycle motor, and means for so timing the said phases of operation that the similar operations in the ends of the cylinders shall 'follow one another in regular sequence, alternately between the cylinder ends, and so as to produce siand the main object of the invention is,
multaneously a charging operation with one pis- J ton, a compressing operation with a second piston, a firing operation with a third piston and anexhausting operation with a fourth piston, whereby a power impulse is imparted to the crank shaft upon each half turn thereof. a
Another object of the invention is to provide in an internal combustion engine, in a unitary form, a pair of elongate engine cylinders closed at their ends and arranged in parallel spaced relation, the same being slotted medially through their inner adjacent sides, in a plane passed axially through the cylinders, pairs of pistons rigidly mounted on the ends of piston rods and reciprocably seated in the ends of the cylinders, a piston carrier in the form of a flat link or yoke extended freely through the side slots of the two cylinders and rigidly anchored at its ends to the said piston rods to form a piston unit, a crank shaft, a connecting rod operatively connecting the piston rod carrier with the crank of the crank shaft, means for operating the four pistons each in accordance with conventional four-cycle engine practice, and
means for timing the several phases of operation of the four pistons, so as to impart a power impulse to the crank-shaft on each reciprocation of the piston unit.
7 another object of the invention is to proa combustion engine, a unitary piston assembly comprismounted in the four the accompanying drawings, wherein:
ing a pair of elongate, closed cylinders mounted in cooperative relation, each cylinder carrying a pair'of pistons reciprocably mounted in its ends and rigidly connected by a common piston rod, means for rigidly connecting the piston rods, and means foroperatively linking the piston assembly to the crank pin of a crank-shaft.
With the foregoing and such other objects in view as may appear from the specification, a preferred embodiment of the invention is shown in Figure 1 is a longitudinal vertical section through a two cylinder engine unit constructed in accordance with this invention.
Figure 2 is a section on the line 2-2 of ,Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a plan view ure 1.
Figure 4 is an end view on the line 4-4 of Figure 1.
Figure 5 is a section on the line 5-5 ure 1.
Figure 6 is a section on the line 6-6 of Figure 1.
The drawings show a single unit of the invenon the line 3--3 of Figof Figtion, referred to generally at 5, and which com-' prises a pair of elongated, two-part cylinders 6-6a, l--'|a, of equal length and diameter, the
' parts being aligned axially end to end and flanged at their ends as at 8. The cylinders are positioned horizontally one over the other and in spaced, parallel relation. An integral rear end casting 9 closes the rear ends of the cylinders,
and separate front end castings Ill close the front ends thereof,. said castings being flanged at H to meet the flanges 8 of the cylinders. Bolts l2 passed freely through one flange and threaded into the other flange, as shown, firmly lock the parts toge er, The end castings 9, I ll, are
formed t ide combusti-on chambers I3 at the outer en T he cylinders, and to receive the spark plug intake valves I 5 and exhaust V are operatively mounted inconventional m nner, and are urged to their seats by the expans springs ll braced between the end castings and the stems l9.
Four pistons 2|, 22, 23, 24, are reciprocably ends of the cylinders B-Ba, 'l-la, the same being rigidly anchoredon the ends of piston rods 25. As here shown this mounting is effected by forming the pistons with internally threadedsockets 28 within the inwardly turned skirts of the pistons, and forming complementally threaded heads 2! on the ends of the stops l8 on the extended valve through the rods 25, as
, desirable-- method;
rods 25, which are then screwed tightly into "the sockets and locked against unturning, or loosening by any conventional means.
The two cylinders 66a l-Ja, are slotted longitudinally and medially of their end portions, through their inner adjacent sides, in a plane passed axially through the two cylinders and shown at 28, and a fiat and substantially wide carrier link or yoke 29 is extended at either end transversely and slidably through these slots. By welding or other thecends of the link 29 are firmly and rigidly anchored medially to the rods 25, as indicated at 30, the pistons at the ends of the rods. The slots 28 are sufliciently-wide and the link 29 of correin equi-spaced relation to r sponding thickness and of such width as to withstand the strains and stresses incident to its function of rigidly joining and supporting all four pistons as afloating and reciprocating unit or assembly. The lengths of the slots 28 conform of course to the required degree of movement or reciprocation of the pistons or of the piston unit as described. V
The forward end of the unit 5 is inclosed in a a deep, rigid housing or casing 3|, the inner side thereof being open and the margins defining this open side being drawn in and flanged as at 32, and thereby anchored in place by means of bolts 33 passed throughthe flanges and threaded into the ends of the cylinders.
A crank-shaft 34 is journaled transversely through the sides of thehousing 3|, in. bearings 35 formed integrally with the housing. The shaft 34 is located forwardly ofthe end of the cylinders comprising the unit 5, and with its axis in a plane extended exactly mid-way between the cylinders 6 -Ba '|-'Ia, and cutting perpendicularly" through a plane passed through the axes of the cylinders. I The shaft 34 is provided with a conventional form of crank 36 and crank-pin 31 adapted to turn nicely between the inner ends of-the bearings35. The carrier link 2915 formed integrally with a medial, forwardly extended drive arm 38, and across-head 40 is welded or,otherwise anchored at 4| to the forward end of this arm and adapted'on its upper and 'lower'jmargins to' reciprocate in parallel slideways or guides 42 formed or separately mounted longitudinally on the inner sides of the cylinders 6-5a, |-|a, in alignment with the direction of movement of 'the'link 29 as it reciprocates in the cylinder guide slots28. The head 43 is formed with an oblon'grectangular socket 43, opening forwardly. A connecting arm or bar 44 is flattened at one end 44a at its sides, and rounded marginally as at44b, so as to fit freely and nicely into the socket'43. The said end is pierced transversely with a large cular eye 44c, and a heavy, rounded stud 45 through this eye and seated at side walls of the socket, serves of mam formedwith a he" marginally at L'flatten''dhaving a transverse semi-circul its forward end adapted to rec tially embrace the crank-pin 3-1: complemental head-plate it, formed with a semicircular socket-i is positioned o'v'e'rthe opposite side of the crank-pin 31 and secured to the half-head e by means of bolts 45 passed marginally" through the opposite sides of the element h, and threadedly into the element e. The
described elements of the driving assembly'a're ofcourse so proportioned, that with the piston unit retracted to its rearmostposition, the crank-pin will be similarly turned, and on a half turn of the shaft 34 the piston unit and crank-pin will i be carried to their forward-most positions.
Upper and lower cam shafts 41, 48, are journaled, transversely through the sides of the housing 3| adjacent its outer closed end, in longitudinally spaced alignment with the ends of the valve stems l9 at that end of the assembly,-each camshaft carrying two pairs .of cams, including an inner pair 50,5l, spaced. apart and directly aligned with the stems l9 of the intake and exhaust valves l5, l6, respectively, at that end, and an outer pair 52, 53, for controlling similar valves at the rear end of the assembly, in manner to be explained. Upper and lower T-shaped brackets 54 are anchored by their central stems, as indicated at 54a to the inner face of the end of the housing 3|, outwardly of the cam shafts 41, 48, with the central stems extending inwardly in a plane cutting the, cylinders axially and with the cross stems 54b. extending perpendicularly to each side of said plane. he stems 54b are bored through from end to end, as at 54c, levershafts 55 are extended through and fixedly seated in these bores. Bell crank rocker levers 56 are formed with bored hubs 56a, whereby they are mounted to oscillate freely 'on the extended ends of the shafts 55. These levers include outer arms 56b, the tips of which are adapted to ride upon the outer cams 52, 53 of the cam shafts 41, 48, and inwardly'oflset arms 56c extending angularly outward and ending inthe socketed extremities 56d disposed slightly beyond, or above and below the outer lines of the cylinders '6-'-5a, '|-|a.
Similar T-shaped brackets 51 are anchored at 58, upon the rear end casting 9, above the ex tended axial line of the upper cylinder Et -5a, and below the axial line of the lower cylinder 'I-la,
and in alignment in the common axial plane of.
ed ends of the shafts 59, with the inner tips 60!) adapted to ride upon the ends of the valve stems l9 controlling the intake and exhaust valves I5,
16, and the outer tips 600 extended beyond, or
above and below, the outer lines of the cylinders 6-6a, 1-111, and formed with sockets 50d, positioned in direct longitudinal alignment with the socketed extremities 56d of the lever arms 550 located at the forward end of the assembly.
The four intake and exhaust valves l5, l5, are operated'at the forward end of the assembly by means. of pairs of short'push rods 6|, formed with sockets 6|a at their inner ends for engaging the ends of the valve stems I9, said rods being slidably passed at their outer ends through guide apertures 54d pierced through fingers 5|e extended from the brackets 54. The outer tips 5 lb of the rods 6| are thus positioned nicely in contact with the cam-shafts 41, 48, and in circumferential alignment with the earns 50, 5|, which on rotation of the said cam-shafts push the rods 5| inward against the tension of the springs l'l, thus alternately opening and closing the valves in accordance with conventional practice. l
Similarly, pairs of long push-rods 52 are e tended horizontally along the upper and lower slidably sides of the cylinders 6-6a, 'l-la, through apertured guides 63 extended from the cylinders and through apertures 3la in the inturned inner margins of the housing 3|, and are seated at their ends in the sockets Std, 60d, of the rocker levers 56, 60, mounted as stated at the ends of the assembly. These rods are sized to nicely span the distances between the levers and to closely fit into the sockets when the lever tips 55b contact the cam-shafts 41, 48, and the valve springs ll at the opposite ends of the assembly are expanded to their limit. Then, as the cam shafts rotate, the cams 52, 53, push the rods 62 rearwardly against the tension of the valve springs H at that end, thus operating alternately the intake and exhaust valves I5, 5, in accordance with conventional practice. Conventional intake and exhaust pipes 66, 61, are provided at each end of the engine, for serving the intake and exhaust valves l5, l6.
A timing gear 64 is rigidly keyed to the crankshaft 34, outwardly of the housing 3!, and is placed in mesh with a pair of larger timing gears 65 similarly keyed to the cam-shafts ll, 48, for operating the described pairs of cams controlling the opening and closing of the intake and exhaust valves l5, l6.
Inasmuch as there are four pairs of these valves, that is to say two pairs at each end of the engine, it follows that the crank-shaft must make two revolutions to one revolution of the camshafts, in the operation of the engine, to accomplish which the gears 65 must be twice the diameter of the gear 64.
The timing of the valves is such, through the setting of the valve control cams on the two cam shafts, that opposed phases of four-cycle engine operation occur simultaneously in the four ends of the two cylinders, thus imparting a power impulse to the crank shaft at each half tum thereof. Thus in practice it will be found that the four sired, in order to lighten it. Since the two pistons of each cylinder support their rods in straightaway axial, reciprocating movement, and laterally oscillating pitmans or. connecting rods inside the cylinders to necessitate long piston skirts are eliminated, these skirts may be substantially shortened (though not here so shown) to lighten the mass of the piston unit. The piston rods themselves may be tubular for the same purpose. Also in this engine there is only one connecting rod to the crank shaft, as against four in the ordinary four-cylinder engine. The engine comprises two cylinders with four pistons working therein and integrally joined to form a floating reciprocating unit, without internal wrist pins or bearings, and with a common exteriorly mounted connecting rod or arm running to and operating the crank-shaft.
Any required number of these engine units may be assembled side by side and connected to a common drive shaft.
While specific forms of valve operating and timing mechanisms are here shown, any other desirable mechanisms or devices for the purpose may be substituted, and the cylinder and piston assembly shown may also be readily adapted for phases incident to the operation of a four cycle engine cylinder-charging, compression, firing and exhausting, will shift about and will alternate between the two ends of each cylinder and then again between the two cylinders themselves, so that any two successive phases of engine operation will occur simultaneously either in the ends of one cylinder or in opposed ends of the two cylinders considered as a unit. It follows that as a firing phase occurs at one end of the engine, a compression phase is taking place at the opposit end, which receives and cushions the piston thrust of the explosion, thus effecting a smooth, resilient and floating engine action analogous to the action of a steam engine. I
Other advantages of this engine structure are relatively great power combined with compactness of form, simplicity and lightness. The two-part structure of the cylinders facilitates manufacture, assembly and repair, although the cylinders may of course be formed integrally if desired. The unitary reciprocating assembly, including the carrier, carrier arm and head, the two parallel piston rods and rod heads, can be made as a an integral casting of aluminum alloy or other suitable material, machined to size, and the piston rods bored through axially to lighten them, and their heads threaded and then screwed into their respective pistons and locked, preparatory to inserting this assembly into the separated cylinders-through the slots, after which the cylinder parts are bolted together end to end, at their flanged ends, as already stated. The carrier may also be bored through at spaced intervals, it deuse with the Diesel type of engine or the like, and while I have here shown and described a certain embodiment of the invention as a whole, and specific structural features thereof, the same may be changed or modified within the scope of the claims.
I claim:
1. In an integral combustion engine embodying a pair of elongate cylinders in parallel relation and pistons in the four cylinder ends connected to reciprocate as a unit for rotating a crank shaft extended medially, transversely and forwardly at one end of the cylinder assembly and operatively connected with the unitary piston assembly,-means for reproducing in sequence in the four cylinder ends the several phases of operation of a four-cycle internal combustion engine, said means comprising spaced intake and exhaust valves in each of the four ends of the cylinder assembly, thesaid valves having outwardly extended stems and being spring-set to close, a pair of cam-shafts journaled outwardly at either side of the crank shaft and parallel therewith, cams positioned inwardly on the cam-shafts aligned with and adapted to operate the intake and exhaust valves at this forward end of the two-cylinder unit, push rods slidably connecting said cams with the stems of the intake and exhaust valves at this forward end, cams positioned outwardly on the cam shafts for operating the intake and exhaust valves at the rear end of the cylinder unit, lever shafts mounted transversely on the ends of the cylinders, those at the forward end being adjacent the cam-shafts andall parallel thereto, rocker levers journaled on the lever shafts, those at the rear end having arms directed inwardly over and in free contact with'the stems of the intake and exhaust valves at that end, with also arms ex- 4- of the cam shafts relative to the crank shaft to eflectuate the required sequence of phases ofwiththe speed of the crank shaft for successively injecting through the intake valves fuel chargesinto the cylinder ends, compressing and exploding the fuel charges and then exhausting the spent gases through the exhaust valves in accordance with four cycle engine practice.
4. In an engine according to claim 1, spark plugs operatively mounted in the cylinder ends for exploding fuel charges therein, and means for timing the operation of the spark plugs to successively-explodethe charges in accordance with four cycle engine practice. 7 i v 5. In an engine according to claim l, means operable by the crank shaft for timing the intake, compression, explosion and. exhausting of fuel charges in the cylinder ends in sequence.
6. In an internal combustion engine. a pair of elongated, two-part cylinders anchored together side by side in spaced and parallel relation, the parts of each cylinder being of equal diameter,
aligned axially end to end and communicating through their inner abutted ends, means for securing the cylinder parts together in said end to end relejliomthe said cylinders being slotted medially through their adjacent sides in their common axial plane for slidably receiving a piston carrier extended transversely through the cylinder slots for rigidly joining piston rodsat their inner ends within 'the cylinders, whereby the piston rods and attached pistons at the ends of the rods may reciprocate within the cylinders as a unit, and the cylinder parts may be assembled or disassembled for facilitating their realignment and the insertion, removal and repair of the piston rods and pistons.
7. In an assembly according to claim 6, the means for securing together the cylinder parts comprising flanges outwardly extended around the inner abutting ends of the cylinder parts, and means utilizing the said flanges for releas-.
ably anchoring the cylinder parts together.
WALTER a. APPEMAN.
US403858A 1941-07-24 1941-07-24 Internal combustion engine Expired - Lifetime US2335252A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US403858A US2335252A (en) 1941-07-24 1941-07-24 Internal combustion engine

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US403858A US2335252A (en) 1941-07-24 1941-07-24 Internal combustion engine

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2335252A true US2335252A (en) 1943-11-30

Family

ID=23597231

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US403858A Expired - Lifetime US2335252A (en) 1941-07-24 1941-07-24 Internal combustion engine

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2335252A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2698603A (en) * 1949-09-03 1955-01-04 Macewka John Hydraulic cylinder
US4274327A (en) * 1979-02-16 1981-06-23 Olsgaard Orin J Expansible chamber device
US20040099229A1 (en) * 2002-11-25 2004-05-27 Vladimir Gelfand Engine with double sided piston
WO2005111374A1 (en) * 2004-05-17 2005-11-24 Badi Bougueroua Double-acting engine with a collector shaft and a sprocket wheel
US20070137596A1 (en) * 2005-12-16 2007-06-21 Brickley Michael D Force Transfer Mechanism for an Engine
US20080035133A1 (en) * 2006-08-14 2008-02-14 Patterson Irvin V Single connecting rod engine

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2698603A (en) * 1949-09-03 1955-01-04 Macewka John Hydraulic cylinder
US4274327A (en) * 1979-02-16 1981-06-23 Olsgaard Orin J Expansible chamber device
US20040099229A1 (en) * 2002-11-25 2004-05-27 Vladimir Gelfand Engine with double sided piston
US6854429B2 (en) * 2002-11-25 2005-02-15 Vladimir Gelfand Engine with double sided piston
WO2005111374A1 (en) * 2004-05-17 2005-11-24 Badi Bougueroua Double-acting engine with a collector shaft and a sprocket wheel
US20070137596A1 (en) * 2005-12-16 2007-06-21 Brickley Michael D Force Transfer Mechanism for an Engine
US7481188B2 (en) * 2005-12-16 2009-01-27 Michael Dennis Brickley Force transfer mechanism for an engine
US20080035133A1 (en) * 2006-08-14 2008-02-14 Patterson Irvin V Single connecting rod engine

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3645239A (en) Rotary piston machine
US1830046A (en) Internal combustion engine
US1374164A (en) Internal-combustion engine
US1410019A (en) Internal-combustion engine
US2335252A (en) Internal combustion engine
US2118804A (en) Internal combustion engine
US1755942A (en) Internal-combustion engine
US928715A (en) Engine.
US1065604A (en) Fluid-motor.
US4553503A (en) Rotary piston machine
US1287797A (en) Internal-combustion engine.
US2254817A (en) Internal combustion engine
US2249951A (en) Energy transmission means
US1594045A (en) Cam engine
US3474768A (en) Internal combustion engine
US1893045A (en) Internal combustion engine
US1940788A (en) Internal combustion engine
US1835138A (en) Internal-combustion engine
US2332056A (en) Engine
US1040716A (en) Rotary motor.
US1574976A (en) Rotary engine
US1690144A (en) Internal-combustion engine
US1283375A (en) Engine.
US1281981A (en) Internal-combustion engine.
US1788259A (en) Cam-driven gear for reciprocating piston engines