Information
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Patent Grant
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6675908
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Patent Number
6,675,908
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Date Filed
Thursday, May 2, 200222 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, January 13, 200421 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Smith; Scott A.
- Nathaniel; Chukwura H
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 173 91
- 173 48
- 173 137
- 173 1621
- 173 206
- 173 210
- 173 211
- 173 201
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International Classifications
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Abstract
A drill hammer or riveter, includes a housing (11), in which a hammering mechanism (12) is accommodated that in an axially displaceably supported guide tube (13) has a reciprocating piston (16) and a striker (17), drivable by the piston (16) via an air cushion; the hammering mechanism (12) can be moved out of an idling position into a hammering position by an axial displacement of the guide tube (13); the guide tube (13) is urged by a restoring spring (27) in the direction of the idling position with a restoring force: and between the guide tube (13) and the housing (11), at least one damping and/or spring member (30, 36, 37) is provided, which in the hammering position of the guide tuber (13) has a spring or damping characteristic between the guide tube (13) and the housing (11) that deviates from the restoring spring (27) in the region of the idling position.
Description
PRIOR ART
The invention is based on a drill hammer or riveter as generically defined by the preamble to claim
1
. From European Patent Disclosure EP-A 429 475, a drill hammer or riveter is known which has a guide tube supported axially displaceably in a housing. An axially reciprocating piston, which is coupled via an air cushion to a striker, is accommodated in the guide tube. A restoring spring urges the guide tube with a restoring force in the direction of a front outset position, in which the air cushion is ventilated via an opening in the guide tube, so that the hammering mechanism of the drill hammer or riveter goes into the idling mode and no further axial impacts are exerted on a tool. If the guide tube is forced axially rearward out of this position by the application of the drill hammer or riveter against a machining point counter to the prestressing force of the restoring spring, then the ventilation opening is closed, and the hammering mechanism enters the hammering position. In the riveting mode, via a riveting die the guide tube experiences reverse impacts, which are transmitted to the housing via the restoring spring. To the operator of the drill hammer or riveter, these reverse impacts are irritating, so that the attempt is made to avoid or reduce them as much as possible.
ADVANTAGES OF THE INVENTION
The drill hammer or riveter according to the invention having the characteristics of claim
1
has the advantage that the vibration caused by the hammering mechanism can be reduced in a relatively simple way.
By the provisions recited in the dependent claims, advantageous refinements of and improvements to the drill hammer or riveter according to the invention are possible.
DRAWINGS
Three exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown in the drawing and described in further detail in the ensuing description.
FIGS. 1-3
each show a section through the front part of a drill hammer; in the upper half of each drawing, a half section through the drill hammer is shown in an idling position, while in the lower half of each drawing, a half section through the drill hammer in a hammering position is shown.
DESCRIPTION OF THE EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
In
FIG. 1
, reference numeral
10
indicates a drill hammer, which has a housing
11
in which a hammering mechanism
12
is accommodated. Inside the housing
11
, a guide tube
13
is rotatable in bearing points
14
,
15
and is limitedly displaceable axially. The guide tube, in a known manner, holds a piston
16
, a striker
17
, and a riveting die
18
. The piston
16
can be driven to reciprocate via a connecting rod
19
. The guide tube
13
, on its end remote from the connecting rod
19
, forms a tool holder
20
to receive a tool, not shown in detail.
The riveting die
18
is provided with an encompassing collar
21
, by way of which it can be braced to the rear, toward the piston
16
, via a damping ring
22
and a stop ring
23
as well as a snap ring
24
on the guide tube
13
. Between the piston
16
and the striker
17
, an air cushion space
25
is formed, which can be ventilated via radial through bores
26
in the guide tube
13
. A restoring spring
27
, which is braced toward the housing on a bearing ring
28
solidly connected to the housing and toward the guide tube on a disk
29
, acts upon the guide tube
13
with a restoring force that is oriented forward, toward the tool holder
20
.
In the upper half of
FIG. 1
, the drill hammer
10
is shown in an idling position, in which the guide tube
13
is forced into a forward outset position by the restoring spring
27
, in the direction toward the tool holder
20
. The force of the restoring spring
27
is transmitted first to a damping element
30
via the disk
29
, which forms a first axial stop toward the guide tube, and then to the guide tube
13
, via a retaining disk
31
and a securing ring
34
. The retaining disk
31
forms a second axial stop toward the housing. Toward the front, the axial displacement of the guide tube
13
is limited by an annular disk
32
, which serves the securing ring
34
as a front stop toward the housing. The annular disk
32
is axially braced in turn on the bearing
14
via an O-ring
33
.
In the idling position, the air cushion space
25
is ventilated via the through bores
26
, so that no effective air cushion can build up between the piston
16
and the striker
17
, and as a result the hammering mechanism
12
is not activated.
In the lower half of
FIG. 1
, the drill hammer
10
is shown in the hammering position, in which the through bores
26
are radially covered by the bearing
15
, so that the air cushion space
25
is sealed off. As a consequence of the reciprocating motion of the piston
16
, the result is accordingly a buildup of an air cushion in the air cushion space
25
, by way of which the striker
17
can likewise be driven to reciprocate. The striker
17
then acts upon the riveting die
18
with axial impacts, which the riveting die passes on to the tool, not shown in further detail, in the tool holder
20
, in the course of which the riveting die
18
experiences reverse impacts, as reaction forces, from the tool in the direction of the hammering mechanism
12
. These reverse impacts are transmitted to the guide tube
13
via the damping ring
22
, stop ring
23
, and snap ring
24
.
The guide tube
13
is cushioned from the housing
11
at the back via the restoring spring
27
. In the hammering position, however, the restoring spring
27
is compressed so far that the damping element
30
, which is separate from the restoring spring
27
, is braced toward the housing directly on the bearing ring
28
. In this way, the reverse impacts of the riveting die
18
, transmitted to the guide tube
13
, are absorbed by the housing
11
, bypassing the restoring spring
27
, and effectively damped by the damping element
30
.
The exemplary embodiment of
FIG. 2
differs from the exemplary embodiment of
FIG. 1
only in that a cup spring assembly
36
is used instead of a damping element
30
. All the other parts, as in the third exemplary embodiment in
FIG. 3
that follows, are identified by the same reference numerals. Because of the cup spring assembly
36
, a longer spring travel of the guide tube
13
after a reverse impact by the riveting die
18
can be attained, compared to the damping element
30
of
FIG. 1
, and as a result a damping that differs from that of the damping element
30
is attainable.
In the exemplary embodiment of
FIG. 3
, as the spring and/or damping member between the guide tube
13
and the housing
11
, a helical spring
37
is provided, instead of the damping element
30
of FIG.
1
and the cup spring assembly
36
of FIG.
2
. With the aid of the helical spring
37
, a different spring characteristic can be attained compared to that with cup springs. In this case as well, a reverse impact damping that is independent from the restoring spring
27
is assured in the hammering position.
As an alternative to the exemplary embodiments shown, it is also conceivable to combine a damping element
30
with a cup spring assembly
36
or with a helical spring
37
or with other damping and/or spring members, and this can be done in either a parallel or series connection. The drill hammer
10
can also be embodied purely as a riveter, without a rotational drive of the guide tube
13
. The damping and/or spring member
30
,
36
,
37
, which is in addition to the restoring spring
27
, can also be embodied by the restoring spring itself instead, if the restoring spring has a nonlinear spring or damping characteristic. What is essential is that in the hammering position of the guide tube
13
, the spring and/or damping member between the guide tube
13
and the housing
11
has a spring or damping characteristic that differs from the restoring spring
27
in the region of the idling position of the guide tube.
Claims
- 1. A drill hammer or riveter, comprising a housing (11) wherein a hammering mechanism (12) is accommodated in the housing, wherein, in an axially displaceably supported guide tube (13), the hammering mechanism has a reciprocating piston (16) and a striker (17), drivable by means of the piston (16) via an air cushion, wherein the hammering mechanism (12) is moveable out of an idling position into a hammering position by means of an axial displacement of the guide tube (13), wherein the guide tube (13) is urged by a restoring spring (27) in a direction of the idling position with a restoring force, wherein between the guide tube (13) and the housing (11), at least one damping or spring member (30, 36, 37) is provided, wherein, in the hammering position of the guide tube (13), the at least one damping or spring member has either a spring or damping characteristic between the guide tube (13) and the housing (11) that deviates from the restoring spring (27) in the region of the idling position.
- 2. The drill hammer or riveter or claim 1, wherein the at least one damping spring member (30, 36, 37) is formed by a component embodied separately from the restoring spring (27).
- 3. The drill hammer or riveter of claim 2, wherein the at least one damping spring member (30, 36, 37), in the hammering position of the guide tube (13), rests on a first axial stop (31), toward the guide tube, and on a second axial stop (29), toward the housing.
- 4. The drill hammer or riveter of claim 3, wherein the restoring spring (27) is braced on one of the two stops (31, 29) via the at least one damping spring member (30, 36, 37).
- 5. The drill hammer or riveter of claim 4, wherein the first stop (31), toward the guide tube, is formed by a retaining disk, wherein the retaining disk is secured relative to the guide tube (13) by means of a securing ring (34) against axial displacement frontward in the direction of a tool holder (20).
- 6. The drill hammer or riveter of claim 5, wherein on the side of the at least one damping spring member (30, 36, 37) remote from the tool holder (20), a stop disk, which simultaneously acts as an abutment toward the guide tube for the restoring spring (27), is provided as the second stop (29).
- 7. The drill hammer or riveter of claim 6, wherein in the hammering position of the guide tube (13), the stop disk (29) is braced at the back via a bearing ring (28) toward the housing.
- 8. The drill hammer or riveter of claim 2, wherein an elastomer element (30) is provided as the at least one damping spring member.
- 9. The drill hammer or riveter of claim 2, wherein a cup spring assembly (36) is provided as the at least one damping spring element.
- 10. The drill hammer or riveter of claim 2, wherein a helical spring (37) is provided as the at least one damping spring member.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
199 33 972 |
Jul 1999 |
DE |
|
PCT Information
Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
PCT/DE00/01549 |
|
WO |
00 |
Publishing Document |
Publishing Date |
Country |
Kind |
WO01/05558 |
1/25/2001 |
WO |
A |
US Referenced Citations (13)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0 429 475 |
Sep 1993 |
EP |
90 01400 |
Feb 1990 |
WO |