Method of increasing the safety of a power plant, and a power plant suitable for implementing the method
US-9206739-B2 · Dec 8, 2015 · US
US2017191388A1 · US · A1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-2017191388-A1 |
| Application number | US-201715399409-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | A1 |
| Filing date | Jan 5, 2017 |
| Priority date | Jan 6, 2016 |
| Publication date | Jul 6, 2017 |
| Grant date | — |
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A lubricating structure for a four-stroke engine includes a first oil groove and a second oil groove. The engine includes a crankcase, a cylinder, a cylinder head and an oil pan. The crankcase makes up a crank chamber. The cylinder head is equipped with a valve chamber housing valve driving mechanism. The oil pan is provided on a bottom of the crank chamber. The first oil groove leads mist of the lubricating oil in the crank chamber to the valve chamber by communicating the crank chamber and the valve chamber with each other. The second oil groove leads surplus lubricating oil in the valve chamber to the oil pan in the crank chamber by communicating a lower part of the valve chamber with a neighborhood of the oil pan in the crank chamber. The first oil groove is set smaller in flow path cross-sectional area than the second oil groove.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1 . A lubricating structure for a four-stroke engine, the four-stroke engine including a crankcase, a cylinder, a cylinder head and an oil pan, the crankcase making up a crank chamber, the cylinder with a piston slidably disposed therein being installed extending horizontally in the crankcase, the cylinder head being installed consecutively with the cylinder and being equipped with a valve chamber configured to house valve driving mechanism, and the oil pan configured to accumulate lubricating oil being provided on a bottom of the crank chamber, the lubricating structure comprising: a first oil groove configured to lead mist of the lubricating oil in the crank chamber to the valve chamber by communicating the crank chamber and the valve chamber with each other; and a second oil groove configured to lead surplus lubricating oil in the valve chamber to the oil pan in the crank chamber by communicating a lower part of the valve chamber with a neighborhood of the oil pan in the crank chamber, wherein the first oil groove is set smaller in flow path cross-sectional area than the second oil groove. 2 . The lubricating structure for the four-stroke engine according to claim 1 , wherein: the four-stroke engine includes a breather apparatus configured to lead blow-by gas in the crank chamber to a breather chamber, separate oil from the blow-by gas, and then supply the blow-by gas to an intake system; the breather chamber includes a blow-by gas introduction hole configured to lead the blow-by gas in the crank chamber to the breather chamber and configured to be opened and closed by a one-way valve, and a breather oil return passage configured to return the oil separated in the breather chamber to the crank chamber; and in terms of flow path cross-sectional area, the first oil groove, the second oil groove, the blow-by gas introduction hole, and the breather oil return passage are set to satisfy a relationship: the breather oil return passage≦the first oil groove<the second oil groove<the blow-by gas introduction hole. 3 . The lubricating structure for the four-stroke engine according to claim 1 , wherein: the four-stroke engine is an engine for an outboard motor, in which a crankshaft housed in the crank chamber is placed in a vertical direction and the cylinder is installed extending rearward in a horizontal direction from the crankcase; and openings in the first oil groove and the second oil groove on a side of the crank chamber are positioned above an oil level of the lubricating oil accumulated in the oil pan during normal operation of the outboard motor. 4 . The lubricating structure for the four-stroke engine according to claim 2 , wherein: the four-stroke engine is an engine for an outboard motor, in which a crankshaft housed in the crank chamber is placed in a vertical direction and the cylinder is installed extending rearward in a horizontal direction from the crankcase; and openings in the first oil groove and the second oil groove on a side of the crank chamber are positioned above an oil level of the lubricating oil accumulated in the oil pan during normal operation of the outboard motor. 5 . The lubricating structure for the four-stroke engine according to claim 1 , wherein: the four-stroke engine is an engine for an outboard motor, in which a crankshaft housed in the crank chamber is placed in a vertical direction and the cylinder is installed extending rearward in a horizontal direction from the crankcase; and the second oil groove is formed in a protruding portion along a protruding direction of the protruding portion which protrudes forward of the outboard motor from inner rear part of the crankcase, the inner rear part facing the crank chamber. 6 . The lubricating structure for the four-stroke engine according to claim 2 , wherein: the four-stroke engine is an engine for an outboard motor, in which a crankshaft housed in the crank chamber is placed in a vertical direction and the cylinder is installed extending rearward in a horizontal direction from the crankcase; and the second oil groove is formed in a protruding portion along a protruding direction of the protruding portion which protrudes forward of the outboard motor from inner rear part of the crankcase, the inner rear part facing the crank chamber. 7 . The lubricating structure for the four-stroke engine according to claim 3 , wherein: the four-stroke engine is an engine for an outboard motor, in which a crankshaft housed in the crank chamber is placed in a vertical direction and the cylinder is installed extending rearward in a horizontal direction from the crankcase; and the second oil groove is formed in a protruding portion along a protruding direction of the protruding portion which protrudes forward of the outboard motor from inner rear part of the crankcase, the inner rear part facing the crank chamber. 8 . The lubricating structure for the four-stroke engine according to claim 4 , wherein: the four-stroke engine is an engine for an outboard motor, in which a crankshaft housed in the crank chamber is placed in a vertical direction and the cylinder is installed extending rearward in a horizontal direction from the crankcase; and the second oil groove is formed in a protruding portion along a protruding direction of the protruding portion which protrudes forward of the outboard motor from inner rear part of the crankcase, the inner rear part facing the crank chamber.
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