The invention relates to a cutting device for cutting hair.
Cutting devices of this type are already known from both EP 1 140 437 B1 and DE 26 46 818 A. In these cutting devices, the contact surfaces of the two blades glide relative to each other in such a way that hairs that enter into the tooth gaps of the teeth during the back and forth movement (P) are clamped by the cutting edges that are formed at the transitions of the contact surfaces to the lateral surfaces of the teeth, and subsequently shorn off or cut off. The cutting gaps that are formed by the opposing teeth are constantly widened and narrowed and even closed completely, corresponding to the back and forth movement of the blades, so as to be able to capture and cut the hairs over the entire length of a cutting edge. In both abovementioned cutting devices, the teeth of one cutter are longer than the teeth of the other cutter, such that the comb ends of one cutter project beyond the comb ends of the other cutter to the front.
Furthermore, a shear system is known from DE 103 44566 AI, in which the cutting device consisting of an upper and a lower cutter has a feeding device arranged upstream of the cutting device that is moved back and forth in an oscillatory motion relative to the upper cutter. The feeding device is intended to allow the hair to be removed as thoroughly as possible and with minimum irritation to the user's skin, and also long hairs and/or hairs lying close against the skin to be captured and removed by the shear system with a comparatively high degree of probability. In this embodiment, the feeding device forms an additional unit that is also moved back and forth by the drive unit, and arranged upstream of the actual cutting device.
Lastly, an electric hair cutting device is known from DE 10 2005002895 AI, in which the outer surface of the upper cutter of a center cutting means has raised areas that create the contact to the skin surface of an operator during the shaving process. The raised areas are also intended to capture, and cut by means of the center cutting means, longer hairs lying close against the skin as reliably as possible during the shaving process.
The object of the invention is to create a cutting device, wherein, using particularly simple means, even hairs lying close against the skin can be captured by the teeth in an improved manner, threaded into the tooth gaps and ultimately cut off by the cutting device.
This object is achieved according to the present invention. Because projections are formed on the contact surfaces side on the overlaying sections of the teeth of one blade, these projections are designed in front of or upstream of the teeth of the other blade. During the shaving process, that is during the motion in which the unshaven skin initially comes into contact only with the tips of the longer teeth, the projections result in the hair being better captured, erected, and fed to the cutting gaps more easily, which leads to an improved shaving result. Since the tips of the downstream teeth of the other blade are more protected by the projections, they also are brought into less contact with the skin surface, which results in a shave that is gentler on the skin. According to the invention there is no need for additional components, such as bell cranks or axles, which reduces the amount of work and time involved in the production process.
According to the invention, the edges on the teeth of the other, downstream blade can be designed sharp-edged. Sharp-edged blades in fact improve the erecting and threading-in of the hairs into the cutting gaps, however, it would be more irritating to the skin surface if the downstream tooth tips did not have the projections provided upstream thereof, which is not according to the invention. This, accordingly, results in an improved shaving result while being gentler on the skin.
The blade movement advantageously acts on the outer contour of the toothing and can therefore be straight, arcuate or circular.
According to another embodiment, the blade featuring the projections is energized with the oscillating back and forth movement, which further enhances the threading-in of the hairs into the cutting gap. In this process, the other blade forms the fine-toothed comb, while the blade featuring the projections forms the actual cutter of the cutting device. During the shaving process, the back and forth movement of the projections therefore causes the hair to be erected by the same and fed to the tooth gaps of the other blade, namely the fine-toothed comb, where they are then ultimately aligned, clamped between the teeth and cut off. The projections are rounded off all around, thereby protecting the skin from the sharp edges of the other blade located downstream of the projections, namely the comb. The projections that move on the skin could be utilized via a special design specifically for peeling or loosening the hairs in the hair canals. Studies performed with the embodiment according to the invention have shown that the loosening of the hairs is improved by the projections and, for this reason the closeness of the shave is increased.
According to another embodiment, the projections are formed by raised areas that are designed cone-shaped, pencil-shaped or pillar-shaped in the longitudinal direction thereof, with the outwardly facing sidewall of said raised areas transitioning steplessly into the lateral surfaces of the respective tooth. The sidewall of a projection thus transitions flush in a straight line into the lateral surface of a tooth and together with the respective tooth forms an elongated tip. The cross section of a projection may be designed circular, oval, polygonal or in some other shape, it is only important that during the shaving process the surface of the skin encounters a projection that is rounded toward the tip, so as not to be injured. The cross sections of the projections as well as the tooth tips of the cutter can also become more blunt toward the margins of the blades, so as to effect the greatest possible skin protection. The projections may also be designed in the form of rounded nubs.
According to another embodiment, the lateral surface of a projection, which terminates flush with lateral surface of a tooth, forms a common plane with the lateral surface of the respective tooth. This prevents stepped transitions from the projections to the lateral surfaces of the teeth on the outwardly facing areas, thereby being gentler on the surface of the skin of an operator during the shaving process.
According to another embodiment, the sidewall of a projection tapers toward the free end thereof. This enables a simplified production of the blade, which is preferably produced by means of a punching and stamping technique. In the process, the projections are preferably shaped upward out of the plane of the teeth during the stamping process. The teeth are subsequently punched out, or cut out using a laser beam.
According to another embodiment, the projections are provided at their front faces with outwardly arched end sections. Due to the outwardly rounded free ends of the projections, the skin is thus treated more gently during the shaving process.
According to another embodiment the cutting device according to the invention is used as a trimmer or contour cutter, i.e. the lateral surfaces formed at the tips of the teeth form the gliding surface with respect to the skin surface of an operator. Such trimmers, which are arranged projecting out perpendicularly, are generally fixed on the front side of a shaver housing, such as, for example, in the case of the “Braun Synchro” being sold by the applicant. However, it is also possible, for example, for the trimmer to be folded out perpendicularly from the sidewall of a shaver housing when it is to be used. However, the cutting device according to the invention can also be designed on a device that is used as a beard trimmer.
According to another embodiment, the blade that is not provided with the projections forms the contact surface to the skin surface, i.e. during the shaving process the outer surface of the fine-toothed comb glides along on the skin surface and therefore forms, in this embodiment, the upper cutter, while the blade provided with the projections forms the lower cutter that can preferably be moved back and forth in an oscillating motion. According to another embodiment, the cutting device is arranged upstream or downstream of a short-hair cutting system, i.e. in the one motion the cutting device according to the invention initially captures the longer hairs, whereas the fine cut subsequently takes place by means of the downstream short-hair cutting system (consisting of a perforated foil and reciprocating lower cutter.)
In another embodiment, the cutting device according to the invention forms a center cutting means that is interposed between two short-hair cutting systems. Therefore, the cutting device according to the invention has teeth that extend freely to both sides, wherein the reciprocating blade has, at the end of the teeth, the projection extending upward toward the comb. In this manner, the teeth of the blade that can be brought into contact with the skin are arranged downstream, protected by the projections during the shaving process in both shaving directions. A center cutting means without the subject matter of the invention is known, for example, from the “Braun 3600 Complete” shaver that has been sold by the applicant for some time, or from the “Braun Pulsonic” shaver. In these shaver types the cutting device according to the invention could be used in lieu of the center cutting means that is known there.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is shown in the drawing and will be described in more detail below. In the drawings:
In
The upper blade 2 forms, according to
As is furthermore apparent from
From the surface 16 of the cutter 3, a projection 17 extends, according to
According to
The cutting device 1 according to
Because the illustration of the cutting device 1 according to
The cutting device 1 depicted in
After hairs enter into the cutting gaps 32 that are formed between the teeth 8, 9, they are captured at the cutting edges 34, 35 bounded by the lateral surfaces 33, 20 toward the contact surfaces 4, 5, or by the edges 30, 31, and with the continued narrowing of the cutting gap 32, cut off by the cutting edges 34, 35. Because of the upstream projections 17 the teeth 9 can have particularly sharp lateral edges 30, 31 at the transition from the lateral surfaces 20 to the top surface 21 and to the contact surface 4, which also applies then for the tips 10 of the upper blade 2 as the comb. This results in an improved threading of the hair into the comb, and thus improves the shaving result.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 023 362 | May 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/003545 | 5/2/2008 | WO | 00 | 10/13/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/141720 | 11/27/2008 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110016727 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |