This invention relates to the field of hand held rotary tools and related accessories.
Hand held rotary tools are widely used by many people, including craftspeople, homeowners, and artists. These rotary tools typically include an outer housing designed to be easily held within a human hand. The housing retains an electric motor which is operable to drive a rotatable chuck of the rotary tool. An accessory may be releasably secured to the chuck thereby enabling the rotary tool to rotatably drive the accessory.
The widespread use of hand held rotary tools is a result, in part, of the wide variety of accessories that may be used with the tools. The accessories include cut-off wheels, polishing wheels, grinding wheels, sanding discs and other cutting bits. In addition to the availability of specialized types of shaping accessories, shaping accessories may further be specifically designed for the particular type of material that is to be shaped. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,758,639 assigned to Credo Technology Corporation discloses a bit that is designed for use with drywall.
To cut sheetrock or drywall, a bit must be capable of first axially penetrating the drywall panel, and then making a lateral cut in the panel. The drywall bit can be used first to drill through the panel directly adjacent to an electrical outlet box, for instance. The bit is then conveyed in a direction perpendicular to the length of the bit, following the contour of the outlet box. The rotary tool is then manipulated to completely encircle the outlet box to cut the preferred opening in the drywall panel. In order to address these specific needs, the '639 patent discloses a bit with a single helical flute having a particular geometry. In one embodiment, the flute defines a cutting edge within a specific range of helix angles relative to the longitudinal axis of the bit. In another feature, the cutting edge of the flute is situated at a particular rake angle relative to the axis of the bit and the fluted portion of the bit has a web thickness that is based upon the cutting diameter of the bit.
In bits such as the bit disclosed in the '639 patent, cutting edges are defined by the junction of a flute and a land. The cutting edges penetrate the material being shaped and carve out a wedge of the material. While this mechanism is useful in relatively soft, ductile materials, it is not effective in harder and/or more brittle materials. For example, it is exceedingly difficult to cut through materials such as ceramics or hard crystalline material wherein the hardness of the material being shaped approaches the hardness of the drill bit. Likewise, it is difficult to achieve a cut that is acceptably smooth when working with brittle materials such as various types of glass.
Typically, two types of drill bits, the spear point drill bit and the core drill bit, are utilized when shaping ceramic materials. The spear point drill is shaped much like a spear point. The core drill has a hollow core with a cylindrical cutting edge surrounding the core. These bits may be modified to include a diamond abrasive on the cutting edge of the bit. While these bits are useful in boring operations such as making a hole through a material, neither bit can be used to cut along a line in the plane of the material such as to provide cutout areas in a tile.
An alternative to the bits set forth above is a frustum shaped bit with diamond grit adhered to the working portion of the bit. These bits provide the benefit of a harder abrasive material. The bits, however, do not cut through the material being shaped. Rather, the coated frustum bits grind material away from the work piece. Thus, the coated frustum bits can be used to provide cutout areas in a tile. The grinding of hard materials, however, generates a substantial amount of heat. The increased heat significantly impacts the longevity of the coated frustum bits. Additionally, the spaces between the grits tend to become blocked with dust, thereby reducing grinding capacity of the bit.
What is needed is a configuration for an accessory that reduces the problems associated with the shaping of hard or brittle materials such as tile. It would be beneficial if the accessory provided an increased rate of material removal. It would be further beneficial if the configuration of the accessory facilitated the reduction of the amount of heat generated during material removal and facilitated the dissipation of any such heat.
In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a rotary tool accessory for shaping hard, brittle material that includes a work portion with a flute extending from one end portion of the work portion toward the other end of the work portion. A land is located adjacent to the flute and a leading edge is between the flute and the land. At least one recess is located in the leading edge and extends into the land and an abrasive material is located on the leading edge.
In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a hand held rotary tool accessory including a shaft with a work portion and a leading edge extending helically about the work portion. A first recess intersects the first flute and an abrasive material is on the work portion.
In yet another embodiment, a hand held rotary tool accessory includes a tool engaging portion and a working portion adjacent to the tool engaging portion. A flute is located in the working portion and a land is adjacent to the flute. A recess extends into the land from the flute and an abrasive material is on the land adjacent to the recess.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the invention, reference will now be made to the embodiments illustrated in the drawings and described in the following written specification. It is understood that no limitation to the scope of the invention is thereby intended. It is further understood that the present invention includes any alterations and modifications to the illustrated embodiments and includes further applications of the principles of the invention as would normally occur to one skilled in the art to which this invention pertains.
As shown in
A number of recesses 124 are formed in the leading edges 116 and 118 and extend into the lands 120 and 122. In the embodiment of
The bit 104 may be formed from a suitable metallic blank of cold rolled steel or other material. The material is selected to provide the bit 104 with toughness. To provide the desired hardness, abrasive portions 126 are located on the leading edges 116 and 118 and extend into the flutes 110 and 112 and the lands 120 and 122 adjacent to the recesses 124. In this embodiment, the abrasive portions 126 are made from a diamond grit that is affixed to the leading edges 116 and 118 and a portion of the lands 120 and 122. The use of diamond grit is preferred when the bit 104 is used to machine hard materials such as ceramic. For other working materials, abrasives that are softer than diamond grit may be used. Other abrasives may include cubic boron nitride, silicon carbide grit and tungsten carbide grit.
Affixation of the abrasive portions 126 to the leading edges 116 and 118 may be accomplished by the use of an adherent mixed with the diamond grit. By way of example, but not of limitation, electroplating may be used to adhere abrasives to the bit 104, particularly when a cooling fluid is used to remove heat generated from use of the bit 104 such that the binding material utilized to adhere the abrasive material to the bit 104 would not be thermally degraded. Alternatively, the abrasive portions 126 may be adhered to the leading edges and/or the lands using a brazing process.
The flutes 110 and 112 and the recesses 124 also aid in the removal of heat thereby reducing temperature increases in a material being worked and the bit 104. The flutes 110 and 112 and the recesses 124 provide a channel for heated fluids to escape along with the debris generated during the grinding process. Accordingly, as fluid flows into the grinding areas to replace the heated fluids, the bit 104 and the work piece are cooled. Of course, the cooling provided by naturally occurring air flow may be enhanced with forced fluid flow, either gaseous or liquid.
The leading edges 116 and 118 are shaped to facilitate the flow of fluids and debris into the flutes 110 and 112 as shown in
In addition to their other functions, the flutes 110 and 112 and the recesses 124 are believed to assist in the shaping of a work piece. Specifically, the mechanism involved with shaping hard materials such as ceramic with an abrasive grit is brittle fracture. Brittle fracture can occur in the form of flakes when large grit sizes are used or powder when smaller grit sizes are used. In either case, material removal is believed to result from the generation of micro-fractures in the work piece as a grain of abrasive strikes the work piece. The flutes 110 and 112 and the recesses 124 are configured to enhance the brittle fracture of the material being shaped.
As discussed above, the configuration of the flutes 110 and 112 and the recesses 124 result in a gap between the material being shaped and the bit 104 as these areas rotate over a location on the work piece. Consequently, with reference to
Because the abrasive portions 126 effect the removal of the work material, the useful life of the bit 104 is dependent upon the amount of abrasive material located outward (away from the central longitudinal axis of the bit 104) of the leading edges 118 and 116. As evident from consideration of
The bit 138 shown in
The bit 138 thus provides semicircles of abrasive material 152 outward of the leading edges 144 and 146, substantially increasing the amount of abrasive material available for shaping a work piece when compared to the bit 104. When a large portion of a bit is to be coated such as with the bit 138, the abrasive material may be adhered to the bit through a process such as diamond plating, wherein the abrasive grit is suspended in a solution containing an appropriate metal ion such as nickel, which is plated to the substrate metal of the bit. Of course, the curved leading edges 144 and 146 may alternatively be coated with an abrasive material in a manner similar to the methods discussed above with respect to the bit 104. In another alternative embodiment, the leading edge is chamfered to provide for additional abrasive material.
The recesses in the leading edges of a bit may be extended so as to extend completely across the land adjacent to a particular flute. Referring to
The recess 184 thus intersects the flute 178 a number of times so as to divide the land 180 into a plurality of curved rhomboid lands 188.
In the embodiment of
Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the number and size of the rhomboid lands 188 may be altered by changing the pitch of the flute 178. Moreover, increasing the number of flutes and/or recesses increases the number of rhomboid lands 188 and the width of the recess and the width of the flute may be modified to control the amount of heat and debris generated and the rate of heat and debris removal. Additionally, in contrast to the configuration of the flutes 110 and 112, of the bit 104, the flute 178 extends in a clockwise direction about the bit 170. Thus, the leading edge of the rhomboid land 188 formed by the flute 178 is on the side of the rhomboid land 188 closest to the tool-engaging portion 174.
Moreover, the pitch of the recess in a bit may be altered to modify the angle of the second leading edge with respect to the direction of rotation. By way of example,
The recess 210 thus intersects the flutes 202 and 204 a number of times so as to divide the work portion 198 into a plurality of curved rhomboid lands 214.
While the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, the same should be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character. It is understood that only the preferred embodiments have been presented and that all changes, modifications and further applications that come within the spirit of the invention are desired to be protected.
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20080014033 A1 | Jan 2008 | US |