The present invention relates to bush cutting machines and, more particularly, to an art in reducing the exhaust noise of an engine in a bush cutting machine.
Weeds on ridges in fields, for instance, are likely to be pest nests, and thus need to be cut several times a year. This work is hard, and thus various machines have been proposed for practical use. Of those machines, bush cutting machines are widely used because of their smallness and ease of handling.
A bush cutting machine has a drive shaft inserted through a tubular operating pole and rotated by an engine provided at one end of the operating pole to rotate a cutting blade provided at the other end of the operating pole. An operator hangs the bush cutting machine on his shoulder, grips a bar-shaped handle provided at a middle portion of the operating pole and swings the operating pole right and left and backward and forward, thereby cutting weeds by the cutting blade. Such bush cutting machines are known in various types (e.g., see Japanese Utility Model Laid-Open Publication No. HEI-1-24336).
The above-described conventional bush cutting machine will be described with reference to
A bush cutting machine 200 shown in
As shown in
In recent years, further improvements in agricultural work environment have been required. As for the bush cutting machine 200, a further reduction in the exhaust noise of the engine 201 is increasingly required to reduce an operator's burden.
In view of the workability and operability of the bush cutting machine 200, it is required that the bush cutting machine 200 and the engine 201 thereof be reduced in size and weight. With reductions in size and weight of the engine 201, the exhaust muffler 213 has to be reduced in size. The small exhaust muffler 213 has a small capacity, and has its limitations in reducing exhaust noise. In addition, the engine 201 and the exhaust muffler 213 are located near an operator because of the structure of the bush cutting machine 200, and the arrangement cannot be changed. In order to reduce an operator's burden, it is necessary to make improvements in reduction of the exhaust noise from an engine in a bush cutting machine without increasing the size of the bush cutting machine.
According to the present invention, there is provided a bush cutting machine which comprises a tubular operating pole; a drive shaft inserted through the operating pole; an engine provided at a first end of the operating pole, for rotating the drive shaft; a cutting blade provided at a second end of the operating pole, and rotated by rotation of the drive shaft; and an exhaust muffler provided near the engine, for discharging exhaust gases from the engine; wherein the operating pole is connected to an outlet of the exhaust muffler and doubles as an exhaust passage, whereby the exhaust gases are discharged from the exhaust muffler through the operating pole into the air.
Since the operating pole in the bush cutting machine of the present invention thus doubles as an exhaust passage connected to the outlet of the exhaust muffler, exhaust from the engine can be discharged from the exhaust muffler through the operating pole into the air. That is, exhaust is not directly discharged from the exhaust muffler into the air, but is caused to pass through the operating pole with a certain length and then discharged into the air. This ensures an exhaust passage having an adequate length on the exhaust side of the exhaust muffler. As a result, the substantial capacity of the exhaust muffler is increased, which allows a reduction in the exhaust noise of the engine and a reduction in an operator's burden. In addition, without increasing the size of the bush cutting machine, the simple structure can achieve a reduction in exhaust noise while ensuring sufficient workability and operability of the bush cutting machine.
The operating pole is preferably a double pipe with an inner pipe inserted through an outer pipe; the drive shaft is inserted through the inner pipe; and at least part of a space between the outer and inner pipes constitutes the exhaust passage. The part of the operating pole through which the drive shaft is inserted can be separated from the exhaust passage. Consequently, the drive shaft is not contaminated by exhaust gases, and neither friction nor scoring occurs at a rotating portion of the drive shaft in contact with the operating pole, by fine particles or the like included in exhaust gases. In addition, since the operating pole is constituted by a double pipe, the rigidity of the operating pole can be increased.
The exhaust gases are preferably discharged from the first end side of the operating pole, and more preferably, are discharged from the second end of the operating pole at a distance from an operator.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail below, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
A bush cutting machine 10 shown in
A bar-shaped handle 15 is fixed by a handle holder 16 at a longitudinally middle portion of the operating pole 11 crosswise in a plan view. As shown in
An operator Mn puts a shoulder hanging belt 19 provided at a longitudinally middle portion of the operating pole 11 on his shoulder to hang the bush cutting machine 10, and holds the left and right grips 17 and 18 and swings the operating pole 11 from side to side while rotating the cutting blade 14 by the engine 13, thereby cutting weeds or grass gr.
Next, the structure of and around the engine 13 of the bush cutting machine 10 will be described with reference to
As shown in
A cooling fan 30 is mounted on the output shaft 22. The output shaft 22 is connected to a first end 12a of the drive shaft 12 via a clutch 40. The operating pole 11 and the drive shaft 12 are aligned concentrically with the output shaft 22 of the engine 13. The clutch 40 is a centrifugal clutch and is engaged by centrifugal force when the number of revolutions of the output shaft 22 exceeds a certain level.
As shown in
The engine 13 and the exhaust muffler 51 are covered by an engine cover 52, and the cooling fan 30 and the clutch 40 are covered by a fan cover 60. The fan cover 60 is continuous with the engine cover 52. A mounting boss 23 is extended from the engine case 21 toward the fan cover 60. A flange of the engine cover 52 and a flange 61 of the fan cover 60 are placed on and bolted to the distal end of the mounting boss 23. Thus, the engine cover 52 and the fan cover 60 are removably mounted. The engine cover 52 is a hard resin molding.
As shown in
Of the operating pole mounting portion 63, (1) one half thereof located closer to the engine 13 than a longitudinally substantially middle portion 64 thereof is referred to as an inside half 65, and (2) the other half is referred to as an exposed half 66. The middle portion 64 includes a flexible connecting portion 67 having flexibility (see
In a part of the fan cover 60 located closer to the engine 13 than the middle portion 64, an annular space 68 is formed between the tubular cover body 62 and the tubular inside half 65. In this space 68, the tubular cover body 62 and the tubular inside half 65 are connected by a plurality of stays or partitions 69 arranged radially as shown in
One of these divided spaces 71 is closed off by a partition plate 72 on the engine 13 side as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Specifically, the operating pole 11 has the inner pipe 82 extended through the outer pipe 81, the outer and inner pipes 81 and 82 being connected circumferentially by a plurality of stays, e.g., circumferentially by three stays 83, 84 and 85 in the example shown in
The three stays 83, 84 and 85 are arranged at equal intervals. Hereinafter, the three stays 83, 84 and 85 are referred to, clockwise in
As shown in
At the first end 11a of the operating pole 11, as shown in
On the other hand, at the first end 11a of the operating pole 11, the second space 87 opens into the air through an exhaust hole 94 in the operating role and an exhaust hole 95 in the fan cover 60.
Next, a structure around the cutting blade 14 of the bush cutting machine 10 will be described with reference to
As shown in
The transmission mechanism 102 includes a drive bevel gear 103 connected to a second end 12b of the drive shaft 12, a driven bevel gear 104 meshing with the drive bevel gear 103, and a driven shaft 105 on which the driven bevel gear 104 and the cutting blade 14 are mounted.
Consequently, as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Next, flows of exhaust gases in the bush cutting machine 10 with the above structure will be described with reference to
As shown in
Exhaust from the engine 13 is discharged from the exhaust muffler 51, and then flows through the path of the exhaust line 120 extending in the operating pole 11, changing its direction in a U shape, that is, making a U-turn, and is discharged from the exhaust hole 95 into the air.
As is clear from the above description, the first and second spaces 86 and 87 serve as an exhaust passage. That is, at least part of the space between the outer and inner pipes 81 and 82 constitutes an exhaust passage. Accordingly, the operating pole 11 doubles as an exhaust passage connected to the outlet 51a of the exhaust muffler 51, and exhaust gases are discharged from the exhaust muffler 51 through the operating pole 11 into the air.
Since the operating pole 11 thus doubles as an exhaust passage communicating with the outlet 51a of the exhaust muffler 51, exhaust gases from the engine 13 are discharged from the exhaust muffler 51 through the operating pole 11 into the air. That is, exhaust gases are not directly discharged from the exhaust muffler 51 into the air, but pass through the operating pole 11 with a certain length and then is discharged into the air. This ensures an exhaust passage having an adequate length on the exhaust side of the exhaust muffler 51. As a result, the substantial capacity of the exhaust muffler 51 is increased, and the exhaust noise of the engine is reduced. Consequently, the burden of the operator Mn (see
The operating pole 11 has a double pipe structure including the outer pipe 81 and the inner pipe 82 through which the drive shaft 12 is inserted. At least part of the space between the outer and inner pipes 81 and 82, that is, the first and second spaces 86 and 87 constitute an exhaust passage, whereby the part of the operating pole 11 through which the drive shaft 12 (see
Next, a modification of the above-described bush cutting machine 10 will be described with reference to
A bush cutting machine 10 in the modification shown in
In the modification, exhaust gases from an engine 13 (see
According to the bush cutting machine 10 in the modification, the length of the exhaust passage in the operating pole 11 is reduced by half, as compared to the embodiment shown in
The embodiment of the present invention only needs a structure in which at least part of the space between the outer and inner pipes 81 and 82 of the operating pole 11 constitutes an exhaust passage. In addition to the above-described structure in which air is exhausted from the first end 11a or the second end 11b of the operating pole 11, a structure in which air is exhausted from a longitudinally middle portion of the operating pole 11 is also possible.
Obviously, various minor changes and modifications of the present invention are possible in the light of the above teaching. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-175588 | Jun 2004 | JP | national |
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Number | Date | Country |
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01024336 | Oct 1983 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050274021 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |