The invention is based on a dust-collecting receptacle for a hand machine tool, in particular an electric hand grinder, according to the preamble to claim 1.
In electric hand grinders, grinding dust is collected in cloth bags, paper bags, or boxes, which have a protruding intake fitting that is fitted onto a dust output fitting on the machine housing. Whereas the paper bags and cloth bags are designed to be expendables that are discarded along with the dust that has been collected, the boxes have a dust-collecting chamber that can be emptied once the box is opened, which allows the dust-collecting receptacle to be reused. The inlet fitting feeds into the dust-collecting chamber and the dust-collecting chamber communicates with an exhaust opening preceded by a dust filter. In the working position of the electric hand grinder, the inlet fitting, the dust-collecting chamber, the filter, and the exhaust opening are situated one after another in spatial sequence.
The dust-collecting receptacle according to the present invention, with the characteristics of claim 1, has the advantage that the integration of the inlet fitting into the dust-collecting receptacle itself and the spatial placement of the inlet fitting, the dust-collecting chamber, the filter, and the exhaust opening one above the other in the working position of the electric hand grinder achieves a compact embodiment of the dust-collecting receptacle with a short structural length and high dust-collecting efficiency. At the same time, the concealed placement of the inlet fitting makes it possible to produce a more attractive dust-collecting receptacle whose outer contours can be adapted to the machine housing in an optimally designed manner.
Advantageous modifications and improvements of the dust-collecting receptacle according to claim 1 are possible by means of the measures taken in the remaining claims.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the mouth of the inlet fitting is located close to the rear delimiting wall of the dust-collecting chamber, at the end facing away from the connecting opening of the inlet fitting and is situated there so that the axis of the mouth is oriented toward the delimiting wall. Because of this structural measure, the dust advantageously enters into the dust-collecting chamber at its rear delimiting wall and is evenly distributed throughout the dust-collecting chamber by the flow of air. The uniformity of the dust distribution is further improved in that, according to a preferred embodiment form of the invention, the exhaust opening and the preceding dust filter extend across the entire top of the dust-collecting chamber.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the dust-collecting chamber is enclosed by a box-like housing that is open at the top and a cover that seals the housing and can be removed from it. The inlet fitting is integrated into the housing bottom and the exhaust opening is situated in the cover. The dust filter is attached to the underside of the cover, preferably by means of ultrasonic welding, and the dust filter is preferably embodied as a folded filter. The inlet fitting is conical and tapers from the connecting opening to the mouth, which has a positive impact on the air speed in the inlet fitting and on the associated transportation of dust.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention, locking hooks are provided to engage in corresponding locking recesses in the machine housing. These locking hooks are preferably injection molded in one piece onto the side walls of the housing and protrude out from its end surface oriented toward the machine housing. This structural measure permits the dust-collecting receptacle to be quickly and conveniently detached from and reattached to the machine housing again by means of a simple locking action. Elastic sealing rings, which are situated between the inlet fitting of the dust-collecting receptacle and the dust output fitting of the machine housing, provide a reliable dust seal for the dust-collecting receptacle.
According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention, the cover has an elastic edge with an air-sealing function, which can be placed onto the housing. As a result, the cover supporting the dust filter seals the housing in a dust-tight fashion and can be easily removed from the housing in order to empty the dust-collecting chamber and then be reattached to the housing.
The invention will be explained in greater detail below in conjunction with an exemplary embodiment shown in the drawings.
The eccentric grinder, a side view of which is shown in
The dust-collecting receptacle 14 detachably fastened to the machine housing 11—which receptacle is shown a partial side view in
As is clear from
Like the cover 16, the housing 15 is manufactured of plastic using the injection molding process; the inlet fitting 21 extending along the housing bottom 153 is formed onto the housing 15 as it is being manufactured. Two locking hooks 24 (
In order to attach the dust-collecting receptacle 14 to the machine housing 11, the cover 16 with the dust filter 20 underneath it is clamped onto the housing 15 and the complete dust-collecting receptacle 14 thus produced is slid with its bottom inlet fitting 21 onto the dust output fitting 13 of the machine housing 11 until the locking hooks 24 engage in the corresponding locking recesses in the machine housing 11. Annular seals 26, 27 situated in between the inlet fitting 21 and the dust output fitting 13 produce a dust-tight attachment of the dust-collecting receptacle 14 to the dust output fitting 13.
During operation of the electric hand grinder, the dust-laden air flow that the rotating fan in the machine housing 11 sucks through the backing pad 12 and blows out through the dust output fitting 13 is fed into the inlet fitting 21 and enters the dust-collecting chamber 17 close to the rear housing wall 152 of the housing 15. The air flow travels through the dust-collecting chamber 17 and, passing through the dust filter 20, exits the dust-collecting receptacle 14 via the exhaust opening 18. The dust filter 20 retains the dust and the dust settles in the dust-collecting chamber 17. The large-surfaced design of the exhaust opening 18 and the location of the mouth 23 of the inlet fitting 21 assure a largely uniform depositing of the dust in the dust-collecting chamber 17.
As is clear from
The dust-collecting receptacle 14 described above is suitable not only for use with the electric hand grinder described, but also with any electric hand machine tool for material-removing machining of work pieces in which material is removed from the work piece as the work piece is machined. Other examples of such electric hand machine tools include electric hand planes or electric hand saws.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 49 140.2 | Oct 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE03/02240 | 7/4/2003 | WO | 12/8/2004 |