The invention relates to a damping device for furniture doors comprising a damping cylinder longitudinally displaceably mounted in a recess of a damper housing, comprising a cylinder housing and a piston rod and forming a stop for the furniture door, said damping cylinder being longitudinally adjustable by means of an adjusting screw on the back end of the recess that points away from the stop.
Different embodiments of damping devices for furniture doors are known. At the end of its closing motion the furniture door makes contact with the damping device and is slowed down until it is completely closed so that there is no undesirable sudden and forceful contact of the furniture door with the body of the piece of furniture or the face frame.
In many cases the damping device is connected to a furniture hinge (EP 1 538 293 B1). The damper housing can form a part of the furniture hinge or it can be fastened to the hinge.
In a known damping device as described in the introduction (DE 20 200 798 U1) the cylinder housing is arranged completely in the recess of the damper housing with said recess being an open recess towards the furniture side.
The piston rod that protrudes from the damper housing forms the stop for the furniture door. Towards the furniture door the cylinder housing of the damping cylinder rests on the damper housing by means of a pressure spring. At the opposite end the adjusting screw extends into the recess of the damper housing and forms a stop against which the cylinder housing is pushed by the pressure spring. When the adjusting screw is adjusted, the piston rod is moved out of the damper housing in varying lengths from its starting position so that the damper path is changed.
Since the piston rod is relatively thin it could get damaged, especially when the force exerted by the furniture door does not rim exactly in axial direction of the damping cylinder. The pressure spring that is required is an additional component that makes the design more complicated and increases the possibility of problems.
It is desirable to provide a damping device as the type described in the introduction that provides a simple design and an especially low susceptibility to problems and that allows for an especially easy adjustment.
In accordance with an aspect of the invention a cylinder housing is mounted longitudinally displaceably in the recess of the damper housing, said recess being formed as a hole, the end thereof protruding from the damper housing forming a stop for the furniture door, in that the piston rod is connected to the adjusting screw and in that the inner diameter of an internal thread receiving the adjusting screw is at least equal to the inner diameter of the hole receiving the cylinder housing.
Using the cylinder housing as a stop for the furniture door and the recess receiving the cylinder housing being formed as a hole, provide for an increase in stability of the damping device in which even additional lateral forces that act on the stop do not result in damage or jamming. By connecting the piston rod with the adjusting screw the damping cylinder is prevented from completely moving out of the hole of the damper housing.
Since the inner diameter of the internal thread into which the adjusting screw is screwed is equal to or larger than the diameter of the hole, the damping cylinder can be inserted through the internal thread into the hole of the damper housing during assembly. It is fixed only with the adjusting screw being screwed into the internal thread. No additional components, such as a pressure spring, are necessary. Even when the damping device is not yet fastened to the body of a piece of furniture, there is no danger that parts of it may fall out or get lost. The assembly of the damping device therefore is rather easy.
Since the adjusting screw is screwed in a longitudinally displaceable manner into the internal thread that runs concentrically to the hole, damping can simply be adjusted by turning the adjusting screw and thus screwing it more or less deep into the internal thread.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention the end of the piston rod is received in a centric hole of the adjusting screw. The end of the piston rod is expediently pressed into the centric hole of the adjusting screw. This provides for a reliable connection of the adjusting screw and the piston rod in a simple manner from a manufacturing point of view.
According to an especially advantageous embodiment of the invention a pressure spring is arranged between the piston rod and the damper housing. The pressure spring therefore is arranged in the flow of force between the damping cylinder on which the door impinges and the damper housing that rests against the body of a piece of furniture. Since the damping force is determined by speed, there is a high peak of force during sudden, forceful operation, i.e. when the furniture door to be dampened shuts close at high speed, which can result in damage to the damping device, especially to the fastening of the damper housing on the body of a piece of furniture.
In such a case the pressure spring that is arranged in series in the flow of force of the damping force and the damping cylinder absorbs the peak of force; the course of force is flattened as long as a deformation trajectory of the pressure spring is available.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention the pressure spring is arranged in an internal hole of the adjusting screw between a pressure body that is arranged on the piston rod and is longitudinally displaceable in the internal thread and a spring stop fixed in the adjusting screw. This results in a rather space-saving arrangement of the pressure spring that additionally is protected against damage and dirt.
Additional advantageous embodiments of the inventive thought are the subject of additional sub-claims.
The invention is explained in more detail with the help of an exemplary embodiment that is shown in the drawing. The following is shown:
The damping device 1 shown in the drawing is attached to a face frame 2 of a piece of furniture that has a so-called “face frame design”. A furniture door 4 is articulated on the face frame 2 by means of at least two furniture hinges 3 that are shown only partially in
The damping device 1 comprises a damper housing 5 that is arranged on the face frame 2. The damper housing 5 may be a separate component as is shown in the drawing. However, it can also he a part of the furniture hinge 3.
A hole 6 in the damper housing 5 forms a recess in which a damping cylinder 7 is received. The damping cylinder 7 comprises a cylinder housing 8 and a piston rod 9 that is connected to the damper piston (which is not shown). The cylinder housing 8 together with its end 8a that protrudes from the damper housing 5 forms a stop 10 for the furniture door 4. A buffer is expeditiously fastened to the stop 10, said buffer making contact with a metal surface of the door fitting of the furniture hinge 3 when the furniture door 4 is being closed.
The cylinder housing 8 is received in hole 6 of the damper housing 5 in a longitudinally displaceable manner. The end of the piston rod 9 is connected to an adjusting screw 11. In the exemplary embodiment shown the end of the piston rod 9 is received in a centric hole 12 of the adjusting screw 11. The connection of the piston rod 9 with the adjusting screw 11 is achieved by pressing. Alternatively, the end of the piston rod 9 also may be received in the hole 12 that is a blind hole in a longitudinally displaceable manner.
The adjusting screw 11 is screwed into an internal thread 13 that is concentric with regard to the axis of the hole 6 in the damper housing 5. The inner diameter of the internal thread 13 is at least equal, preferably larger—as shown in the drawing—than the inner diameter of the hole 6 that receives the cylinder housing 8.
The adjusting screw 11 comprises a handle section 14 that protrudes from the damper housing 5, said handle section comprising a knurling or another contour that facilitates the handling of the adjusting screw 11.
In the exemplary embodiment shown the hole 6 in the damper housing 5 has an opening 16 to the outside that rests against the face frame 2.
For assembly purposes the damping cylinder is inserted into the hole 8 with the adjusting screw 11 that is fastened to the piston rod 9, as is shown in
The damping effect is adjusted by turning the adjusting screw 11. As is indicted by the double arrow in
The support of the resulting damping force is provided by a bent 17 of the damper housing 5 on the door side that rests against the face area of the face frame 2. Additional measures for fixing the damper housing 5 on the face frame 2 with screws or other means are possible, but are not shown in the drawing.
The damping device 1 can accordingly be fastened to the face edge of a body of a piece of furniture as well.
The exemplary embodiments shown in
The pressure spring 18 is arranged in an internal hole 19 of the adjusting screw 11′. The pressure spring 18 is received between a pressure body 20 and a spring stop 21 that is pre-stressed and fixed in the adjusting screw 11.
The pressure body 20 that is longitudinally displaceable in the internal hole 19 is fixed to the piston rod 9 that ends in the pressure body 20. In the starting position shown in
When the furniture door 4 hits the damping cylinder 8 abruptly at high speed, the velocity-based damper force is very high. The abrupt force is transmitted almost undiminished onto the piston rod 9 whose end is fixed to the pressure body 20. The resulting peak of force causes the pressure body 20 to move out of the way while the pressure spring 18 is being deformed. This causes the pressure peak to weaken substantially before the pressure body 20 comes to a standstill on the block in the adjusting screw 11′ due to the deformation of the pressure spring 18. This prevents the initial pressure peak to act undiminished on the damper housing 5 and its fastening on the face frame 2 of the body of the piece of furniture.
The partial section of the exemplary embodiment shown in
The pressure body 20 that is received in the internal hole 19 against the force of the pressure spring 18 in a displaceable manner rests against a snap ring 26 that is received in a peripheral groove 27 of the piston rod 9.
When the damping force exerted by the piston rod 9 is higher than the pre-stressing of the pressure spring 18, the piston rod 9 moves the pressure body 20 against the pressure spring 18 by means of the snap ring 26 whereby the end of the piston rod 9 moves out of the end hole 23.
In the embodiment of the damping device according to
In the embodiment shown in
A pressure spring 33 is arranged between the external housing part 31 and the internal housing part 32 and concentrically surrounds the internal housing part 32. The pressure spring 33 is received and pre-stressed between an outside collar 34 of the internal housing part 32 and a collar protruding to the inside 35 of the external housing part 31 and are pre-stressed. A snap ring 36 that is received in a peripheral groove 37 of the internal housing part supports the longitudinally displaceable internal housing part 32 against the force of the pressure spring 33 on the face of the external housing part 31.
If, due to high contact speed of the furniture door a high degree of force acts on the piston rod 9 that is fixed in the adjusting screw 11, the internal housing part 32 is moved against the force of the pressure spring 33 in the external housing part 31 to the right in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2008 006 909.2 | May 2008 | DE | national |
20 2008 014 026.9 | Oct 2008 | DE | national |
present application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 12/993,124, filed Nov. 17, 2010, which is the U.S. National Stage of PCT/EP2009/003123, filed Apr. 30, 2009, which claims priority to DE 20 2008 006 909.2, filed May 21, 2008, and DE 20 2008 014 026.9, filed Oct. 21 2008, all of which are incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12993124 | Nov 2010 | US |
Child | 14306680 | US |