A system for separate oil lubrication for internal combustion engines, especially for 2-cycle engines, comprises a tank of oil under pressure and a pump composed of a shaft engaged inside a bore with slight play, at least one of these two elements being threaded and the other being smooth or threaded, these two elements being in relative rotation.
A pump for lubricating oil is mounted on the outer face of the end wall of an internal combustion engine. An oil filter is mounted on a side wall of the engine parallel to the crankshaft, and a substantially straight sub-gallery in the side wall connects the oil pump to the oil filter. A substantially main gallery receives lubricating oil from the oil filter and delivers it to branched oil supply passages to lubricate parts of the engine.
Disclosed herein is an internal combustion engine including first and second adjacent oppositely acting crankcases defined, in part, by a wall intermediate the first and second crankcases, a passageway through the wall and including a central portion and end portions which extends in opposite directions from the central portion, which are outwardly divergent, and which communicate with the first and second crankcases, whereby the central portion acts as a venturi consequent to air passage through the passageway between the crankcases incident to the pressure differential between the crankcases, and a conduit communicating with the central portion of the passageway for alternately supplying lubricating oil to the crankcases.
An internal combustion engine including an engine block defining first and second cylinders with first and second crankcases associated with the first and second cylinders. An oil passageway communicates with each of the crankcases and a conduit is connected to the oil passageway to supply oil to the crankcases. A check valve is located in either the oil passageway or the conduit.
Disclosed herein is an internal combustion engine including first and second adjacent oppositely acting crankcases defined, in part, by a wall intermediate the first and second crankcases, a passageway through the wall and including a central portion and end portions which extends in opposite directions from the central portion, which are outwardly divergent, and which communicate with the first and second crankcases, whereby the central portion acts as a venturi consequent to air passage through the passageway between the crankcases incident to the pressure differential between the crankcases, and a conduit communicating with the central portion of the passageway for alternately supplying lubricating oil to the crankcases.
A crankshaft, and method for distributing lubricant along a crankshaft, are disclosed. The crankshaft includes a crank pin, a crank arm, a main segment, and a flange. The crank arm is coupled between the main segment and the crank pin and has an outer side. A channel extends from within the crank pin to the outer side. The flange has outer and inner edges, is positioned on the main segment so that the outer edge abuts the main segment, and is further positioned so the inner edge abuts the outer side of the crank arm. The flange has first and second grooves along the outer and inner edges of the flange, respectively, and the grooves form a passage extending from the channel to an exterior portion of the main segment, so that lubricant can flow between the exterior portion of the main segment and the channel via the passage.