The present invention relates to cutting body hair such as beard stubbles of multidays' beard. More particularly, the present invention relates to a cutter system for an electric shaver and/or trimmer, comprising a pair of cooperating cutter blades each having at least one row of comb-like cutting teeth, wherein one of said cutter blades is stationary and the other one is movable relative to the stationary cutter blade in a cutting direction along a cutting surface defined between said cooperating cutter blades, said cutting teeth each having pairs of lateral cutting edges tapering towards a tooth tip, wherein a skin contact surface of the cutter system defined by a surface of the stationary cutter blade facing away from the movable cutter blade or a distance comb attached to the stationary cutter blade has an inclined forward end portion for guiding, in the region of the tooth tips, the cutter blades along the skin of a user and defining an acute angle to said cutting surface. Furthermore, the present invention also relates to an electric shaver and/or trimmer including such cutter system.
Electric shavers and trimmers utilize various mechanisms to provide hair cutting functionality. Some electric shavers include a perforated shear foil cooperating with an undercutter movable relative thereto so as to cut hairs entering the perforations in the shear foil. Such shear foil type shavers are often used on a daily basis to provide for a clean shave wherein short beard stubbles are cut immediately at the skin surface.
On the other hand, other cutter systems including a pair of cooperating comb-like cutting elements with a plurality of comb-like or rake-like cutting teeth reciprocating or rotating relative to each other, are often used for cutting longer beard stubbles or problem hair that is difficult to cut due to, for example, a very small angle to the skin or growing from very resilient skin. The teeth of such comb-like or rake-like cutting elements usually project substantially parallel to each other or substantially radially, depending on the type of driving motion, and may cut hairs entering into the gaps between the cutting teeth, wherein cutting or shearing is achieved in a scissor-like way when the cutting teeth of the cooperating elements close the gap between the finger-like cutting teeth and pass over each other.
Such cutter systems for longer hairs may be integrated into electric shavers or trimmers which at the same time may be provided with the aforementioned shear foil cutters. For example, the comb-like cutting elements may be arranged between a pair of shear foil cutters or may be arranged at a separate, extendable long hair cutter. On the other hand, there are also electric shavers or trimmers or styling apparatus which are provided only with such comb-like cutting elements.
For example, EP 24 25 938 B1 shows a shaver with a pair of long hair trimmers integrated between shear foil cutters. Furthermore, CN 206 287 174 U discloses a beard trimmer having a pair of cooperating comb-like cutting elements each of which is provided with two rows of projecting cutting teeth.
Moreover, EP 3 003 654 B1 discloses a hair clipping device with a pair of cooperating cutting blades having comb-like cutting teeth, wherein the stationary cutter blade forming the skin contact surface of the cutter system should have lateral cutting edges with a wedge-shaped cross section defining a wedge angle of less than 55°, wherein the finger-like cutting teeth should taper towards the tooth tip at an opening angle or scissor angle ranging from 5° to 25°.
US-A-20160229070 discloses a moveable blade of a hair trimmer having a flattened, beveled portion close to the tooth tip at a tooth height level remote from the cutting surface. The tooth tip is provided with a non-beveled but vertical area which extends perpendicular to a cutting surface of the moveable blade.
WO-A1-2018109093 discloses a moveable blade of a hair trimmer having a flattened, beveled tooth tip.
Such beard stubble trimmers need to address quite different and diverging functional requirements and performance issues such as closeness, thoroughness, good visibility of the cutting location, efficiency and pleasant skin feel, good ergonomics and handling. Closeness means short or very short remaining stubbles, whereas thoroughness means less missed hairs particularly in problem areas like the neck. Efficiency means less and faster strokes suffice to achieve the desired trimming result. Pleasant skin feel depends on the individual user, but often includes less irritation in form of nicks, cuts or abrasion and better gliding onto the skin.
So as to achieve smooth and efficient cutting, hairs should be cut at the first contact with the cutter blades when entering into the gaps between the finger-like teeth. However, such first contact cut is difficult to achieve due to the scissor-like, shearing-type cutting action of comb-like cutter blades, since hairs are not cut by touching the cutting edge of one cutter blade only, but by getting caught between the cutting edges of cooperating cutting teeth, i.e. at the shearing point or contact point where the cutting edge of one cutter blade slides over the cutting edge of the other cutter blade.
Conventional cutter systems show a tendency to deflect and reject hairs a couple of times before indeed cutting them. The teeth of the movable cutter blade bump into the hairs and kick them away before they get caught between the lateral cutting edges sliding over each other. Due to such bumping action of the cutting teeth, hairs are sort of “dancing” in terms of elastically shaking and deflecting snake-like before getting cut.
Such dancing of the hairs can be found particularly at the entrance of the gaps between the finger-like cutting teeth. Usually, the traveling speed of the cutter system along the skin surface—depending on the user's preferences of manually moving the trimmer along the skin—is usually low in comparison to the cutting speed of the cutter blades transverse to the traveling direction, so a major share of the cutting action occurs at the forward end portions of the cutting teeth close to the tips thereof. As traveling speed is low in comparison to cutting speed, the cutting teeth of the driven cutter blade bump into the hairs entering into the gaps between the finger-like cutting teeth mainly transverse, i.e. with a major moving component in the cutting direction transverse to the traveling direction of the cutter system. Thus, when viewing the cutting scene in the direction of traveling of the cutter-system, hairs are dancing from left to right before getting cut. Due to such dancing, hairs contact the moving teeth of the driven cutter blade a plurality of times before indeed getting to the shearing point where neighboring cutting edges pass over each other to cut the hair.
One issue that makes first contact cutting difficult, is the growing direction of hair which usually is not perpendicular to the skin surface, but the hair grows out of the skin at an acute angle and thus, tends to collide with the protruding cutting teeth before having reached the shearing point where cooperating teeth pass over each other. More particularly, the inclined or oblique hair may be pushed away by the upper contours of the cutting teeth spaced apart from the cutting plane and thus, does not get directly and smoothly to the shearing point where the cutting edges of two cooperating teeth start to overlap each other and cut the hair in a scissor-like shearing action.
Trimmer operates on the principle of scissor cutting, where two comparatively blunt blades such as a stationary blade and moveable blade work against each other and shear off the hairs being in between. Comparatively blunt means that one blade alone is not sharp enough to cut the hairs. Cutting, or rather shearing, takes place because the blades run against each other and act as counter-blades. Cutting takes place in the cutting area or shearing area where the surfaces of the two blades touch and move towards each other so only the cutting edge directly at the cutting plane may affect cutting, whereas more elevated portions of the cutting teeth in terms of spaced apart from the cutting plane effect rejecting rather than cutting the hairs. Typically, the movable blade may be driven by a motor to an oscillating lateral/transverse movement, wherein the speed of the moveable blade is typically high compared to the manual movement of the trimmer across the skin.
Both the stationary blade and the movable blade have a plurality of teeth on the front. The sides of the teeth are formed as cutting edges. The movable blade is typically set back from the stationary blade to avoid skin injuries.
When the trimmer is moved over the skin, the hairs are first threaded between the teeth of the stationary blade. The cutting edge of the stationary blade is relatively blunt and therefore does not cut the hair by itself. Rather, the hairs are guided towards the movable blade. When the hairs come into the area of the moveable blade, they can be first touched by the tip of the moveable blade. As the tip of the moveable blade also has a material thickness above the cutting area, the hairs may be pushed away without cutting them immediately. The thickness of material at the tip of the teeth above the cutting surface does not contribute to cutting but reduces efficiency by pushing away hairs.
This occurs especially when the hairs are inclined towards the moveable blade. This is very common and there are two reasons for this. Firstly, most hairs grow out of the skin at an acute angle significantly different from 90°. And secondly, for good efficiency, the trimmer is usually held at an angle to the skin so that the tips of the stationary blade get under the inclined hairs, lift them, and then feed them to the cutting system. Such inclined positioning of the cutter system with the tooth tips tilted downwards to the skin, is facilitated and to some extent guided, by an inclined forward end portion of the skin contact surface at the bottom of the cutter system which forward end portion may be tilted to the cutting plane defined between the cutter blades at an acute angle thereto. Therefore, a certain portion of hairs are inclined towards the moveable blade and thus, may be kicked away by the moving blade even more easily.
Fulfilling the aforementioned various performance issues at the same time is quite difficult. For example, EP 3 003 654 B1 aims at an efficient cutting action with a rather low contact pressure between the cutter blades, however, tends to leave a non-uniform cut length and to create plucking and picking due to pushing away the hairs when moving the cutter system along the skin surface. Cutting efficiency is detrimentally affected by the aforementioned problem of the movable cutter blade bumping into the hairs and kicking them away what cannot be avoided by the specific structure of the stationary blade suggested by this document. Consequently, no first contact cutting can be achieved.
It is an objective underlying the present invention to provide for an improved cutter system avoiding at least one of the disadvantages of the prior art and/or further developing the existing solutions. A more particular objective underlying the invention is to provide for a highly efficient and, at the same time, reliable and clean cutting action of the cooperating cutting teeth, even when moving the cutter system in fast strokes along the skin contour, without sacrificing a smooth and comfortable cutting action.
A still further objective underlying the invention is to achieve first contact cutting without dancing of the hairs at the entrance portion of the gaps between neighboring cutting teeth.
At least one of these objectives is achieved by the features of claims 1, 17 and 18.
Further advantageous features are set forth by the sub-claims.
To achieve at least one of the aforementioned objectives, it is suggested to give the tooth tips of the cutting teeth a configuration not pushing away or less pushing away hair entering into the gaps between the comb-like teeth and allowing the hair to quickly find the cutting position between cooperating cutting edges. More particularly, the beveled tip surface of the tooth tips of at least the movable cutter blade is inclined, at an acute angle, to a virtual plane extending parallel to the cutting direction and perpendicular to the forward end portion of the skin contact surface of the cutter system and/or to a tangential plane tangential thereto so the tooth tip touches the virtual plane only at the cutting surface with a substantially wedge-shaped void between the flattened beveled tip surface and the virtual plane. The bevels at the tips of the teeth remove sufficient material at the tip portions that could be responsible for pushing hairs out so especially hairs grown out of the skin at an acute angle and thus inclined towards the cutter system, are less likely to be touched and less likely to be pushed out by the tooth tips. At first sight it is somewhat surprising that kicking away the hairs and dancing thereof can be reduced by giving the tooth tips a specific configuration relative to the skin contact surface of the cutter system, as one would suppose, in view of the high transverse cutting speed, it is the lateral side of the teeth that is responsible for kicking away the hairs. However, inclining the tooth tips backwards reduces tooth height at the forward ends thereof and sort of sharpens the lateral cutting edges at their foremost end portions so hairs, even when growing obliquely, have a reduced tendency to touch elevated portions of the teeth before getting into contact with the cutting edge directly at the cutting surface. The foremost or outermost end portion of the lateral cutting edge becomes more effective and first contact cutting there becomes more likely what is quite helpful in reducing dancing of the hairs as a major portion of the cutting action occurs at the entrance of the gaps between neighboring teeth due to the cutting speed being rather high in comparison to forward traveling of the cutter system. The above tooth tip design means that the foremost tooth tip of the cutting teeth of the moveable cutter blade has substantially no vertical plane area orthogonal to the cutting surface (plane) or that such a vertical extension at the foremost tip is smaller than the diameter of a hair (0.1 mm), so that both the tooth tip and the above-mentioned wedge-shaped void are sharp and extend until the cutting surface. In other words, the flattened, beveled tip surface extends to the cutting surface of the cutting teeth.
More particularly, the tooth tip surface is inclined away from the hairs in front of the cutter blades, i.e. the tooth tip surface is inclined rearwardly towards the root portion of the teeth, so hairs entering into the comb-like teeth rows, even when growing obliquely or inclined out of the skin, are less likely kicked away by the tip portion of the cutting teeth and more likely to get cut at first contact with the cutting teeth.
More particularly, since such flattened, beveled tooth tip surfaces are provided to the cutting teeth of at least the movable cutter blade, dancing of the hairs can be significantly reduced because pushing away hairs is mainly caused by the reciprocating or moving cutting teeth of the movable cutter blade which are moving into and out of the gaps between the teeth of the stationary cutter blade. Due to the inclination of the tip surfaces backwards, it is less likely that hairs bump into the tip surface before getting sheared between the cutting edges of the cooperating blades.
So as to achieve first contact cutting without dancing of the hairs and, at the same time, to have sufficient structural stability of the teeth, said acute angle of inclination of the flattened beveled tip surface to the aforementioned virtual plane may range from 10° to 40° or 10° to 20°.
The flattened, beveled tooth tips may have a substantially planar tip surface, wherein in such case the void between the tooth tips and the aforementioned virtual plane may be indeed wedge-shaped. However, the tip surface, still having a flat configuration, may not be exactly planar, but may include some curvature such as slightly convex or concave portions, or some rounding or non-planar portions so the substantially wedge-shaped void may be deemed to be defined between said virtual plane and a tangential plane which is tangential to said tip surface. In other words, the wedge defining the void does not need to have two planar sides. More particular, the wedge-like void, at its side facing the tooth tip, may have a wedge surface which is not exactly planar.
More particularly, the tooth tips of the movable cutter blade, in cross-sectional planes parallel to the cutting surface, may define linear contours parallel to the cutting direction so hairs contacting the tip surface may smoothly slide along the tooth tip surface without being subject to bumping forces due to the transverse cutting movements. Due to lack of convex or concave contours when viewed in cross-sectional planes parallel to the cutting surface, the tooth tip surfaces do not effect wedge-like rejection forces onto the hairs even when reciprocating at high speed in the cutting direction, but the tooth tip surfaces of the moving cutting teeth may just smoothly slide along hairs contacting the tip surface.
More particularly, the cutting teeth, at the tooth tips, may define a pyramid-like contour with three inclined, planar surfaces joining each other, one of said inclines, planar surfaces being formed by the flattened, beveled tip surface and the other two inclined, planar surfaces being formed by the lateral cutting edges of the cutting tooth. Such pyramid-like contour may be a sort of partial pyramid and is no complete pyramid as it has only three flattened, inclined surfaces and lacks the fourth side of a pyramid and furthermore, it does not have a rectangular basis like a regular pyramid, but nevertheless it is sort of similar to a part of a pyramid having three flattened side surfaces inclined relative to each other and inclined relative to the basis
To further help hairs getting cut at first contact with the teeth, the flattened beveled tip surface may be substantially planar with an angular transition to the lateral cutting edges of the cutting teeth, said angular transition having a radius of curvature of less than 50 μm or less than 25 μm or less than 10 μm. Such edgy transition from the tip surface to the lateral cutting edges gets hairs passing the tooth tip more or less immediately onto the lateral cutting edge and avoids pushing away hairs as it would be the case with rounded transitions from the lateral cutting edges to the tip portions at rather large radii of curvature.
Hairs which have passed the tooth tips and entered into the gap between a pair of neighboring cutting teeth are basically ready to be cut or sheared by the lateral cutting edges of a pair of cooperating cutting teeth. Although having passed the, so to say, first hurdle in terms of the tooth tips, the hair still might be rejected or pushed out of the gap again when contacting the lateral cutting edges. Usually, the lateral cutting edges do not extend exactly perpendicular to the moving direction of the teeth, but are inclined thereto, wherein usually the teeth are tapering towards the tooth tips so as to avoid cutting all hairs between a pair of cooperating teeth exactly at the same time. Due to the tapered configuration of the teeth, overlapping of the lateral cutting edges starts at the inner end portion or root portion of the teeth and continuously moves outwardly towards the tooth tips due to such tapered configuration when cooperating teeth are driven transversely relative to each other. Thus, a smooth cutting action can be achieved by means of such tapered configuration. On the other hand, however, due to such tapered configuration, the forces applied onto a hair by the contacting lateral cutting edges include a component directed outwardly, i.e. from the bottom portion of the gap between cooperating teeth to the open end of said gap, thereby creating the tendency of deflecting the hair outwardly and/or pushing away the hair towards the tooth tips. The more tapering, the stronger the tendency of pushing hairs outwardly.
So as to address such issue, the opening angle between neighboring teeth and/or the tapering of the teeth could be kept small or even set zero, but this would create high cutting forces which could cause the system to block or the blades to lift off.
So as to allow some tapering of the teeth and an opening angle sufficiently large to keep cutting forces small, but nevertheless avoid the aforementioned problem of pushing hairs back outwardly towards the tooth tips, it is suggested according to another aspect to make the lateral cutting edges rather sharp to reduce the tendency of deflecting hairs towards the tooth tips. More particularly, the lateral cutting edges of the cutting teeth, when viewed in a cross-section taken perpendicular to a longitudinal axis of a respective tooth, may have a wedge-like configuration with a wedge angle smaller than 60° or smaller than 50° or ranging from 35° to 60° or from 45° to 50°.
So as to avoid pushing back hairs at the tooth tips and at the lateral cutting edges, the sum of the aforementioned tip angle (between the beveled tip surface and the cutting surface between the cutting blades) and the wedge angle of the lateral cutting edges may be less than 110° or may range from 60° to 110° or from 90° to 110°.
The opening angle of a gap between two neighboring teeth as defined by the lateral cutting edges of said neighboring teeth facing each other, may range from 10° to 30° to combine smooth cutting with keeping the hairs in the gap. More particularly, said opening angle may range from 15° to 25°.
Said opening angle may be chosen differently for different wedge angles. For example, the larger the opening angle, the smaller the wedge angle. More particularly, the sum of the wedge angle and the opening angle may be smaller than 80° or smaller than 75° or smaller than 70°.
The above objective is also achieved by a cutter system for an electric shaver and/or trimmer, comprising a pair of cooperating cutter blades each having at least one row of comb-like cutting teeth, wherein one of said cutter blades is a stationary cutter blade and the other one of said cutter blades is a movable cutter blade movable relative to said stationary cutter blade in a cutting direction along a cutting surface defined between said cooperating cutter blades, said cutting teeth each having pairs of lateral cutting edges tapering towards a tooth tip, wherein the tooth tips of at least the movable cutter blade are provided with a flattened, beveled tip surface wherein the flattened, beveled tip surface extends to the cutting surface of the cutting teeth with a tip angle (β) between the flattened, beveled tip surface and the cutting surface ranging from 30° to 70° or 50° to 65°, wherein said lateral cutting edges, when considering a cross sectional view transverse to a longitudinal tooth axis of the respective cutting tooth, have a wedge-shaped configuration with a wedge angle (γ) ranging from 35° to 60° or 40° to 55° or 45° to 50° and wherein a sum of the tip angle (β) and the wedge angle (γ) is less than 120° or less than 110°, and/or ranges from 90° to 120° or from 100° to 110°. This cutter system may be combined with any feature of the subclaims
These and other advantages become more apparent from the following description giving reference to the drawings and possible examples.
a cross sectional view of the beard trimmer of
So as to get the hairs smoothly into the cutting zone, it is suggested to give the tooth tips of the cutting teeth a configuration not pushing away or less pushing away hair entering into the gaps between the comb-like teeth and allowing the hair to quickly find the cutting position between cooperating cutting edges.
More particularly, the beveled tip surface of the tooth tips of the movable cutter blade is inclined, at an acute angle, to a virtual plane extending parallel to the cutting direction or reciprocating direction of the movable cutter blade, and perpendicular to the forward end portion of the skin contact surface of the cutter system and/or to a tangential plane tangential thereto so the tooth tip touches the virtual plane only at the cutting surface with a substantially wedge-shaped void between the flattened beveled tip surface and the virtual plane. The bevels at the tips of the teeth remove sufficient material at the tip portions that could be responsible for pushing hairs out so especially hairs grown out of the skin at an acute angle and thus inclined towards the cutter system, are less likely to be touched and less likely to be pushed out by the tooth tips. At first sight it is somewhat surprising that kicking away the hairs and dancing thereof can be reduced by giving the tooth tips a specific configuration relative to the skin contact surface of the cutter system, as one would suppose, in view of the high transverse cutting speed, it is the lateral side of the teeth that is responsible for kicking away the hairs. However, inclining the tooth tips backwards reduces tooth height at the forward ends thereof and sort of sharpens the lateral cutting edges at their foremost end portions so hairs, even when growing obliquely, have a reduced tendency to touch elevated portions of the teeth before getting into contact with the cutting edge directly at the cutting surface. The foremost or outermost end portion of the lateral cutting edge becomes more effective and first contact cutting there becomes more likely what is quite helpful in reducing dancing of the hairs as a major portion of the cutting action occurs at the entrance of the gaps between neighboring teeth due to the cutting speed being rather high in comparison to forward traveling of the cutter system. This means that the foremost tooth tip of the cutting teeth of the moveable cutter blade has substantially no vertical plane area which would be orthogonal to the cutting surface (plane) or that such a vertical extension is smaller than the diameter of a hair, so both the tooth tip and the above-mentioned wedge-shaped void are sharp and extend until the cutting surface. In other words, the flattened, beveled tip surface extends to the cutting surface of the cutting teeth.
More particularly, the tooth tip surface is inclined away from the hairs in front of the cutter blades, i.e. the tooth tip surface is inclined rearwardly towards the root portion of the teeth and/or backwards when considering the advancing direction of the cutter system, so hairs entering into the comb-like teeth rows, even when growing obliquely or inclined out of the skin, are less likely kicked away by the tip portion of the cutting teeth and more likely to get cut at first contact with the cutting teeth.
So as to achieve first contact cutting without dancing of the hairs and, at the same time, to have sufficient structural stability of the teeth, said acute angle of inclination of the flattened beveled tip surface to the aforementioned virtual plane may range from 10° to 40° or 10° to 20°.
Said tooth tips, in cross-sectional planes parallel to the cutting surface, may define linear contours parallel to the cutting direction so hairs contacting the tip surface may smoothly slide along the tooth tip surface without being subject to bumping forces due to the transverse cutting movements. Due to lack of convex or concave contours—when viewed in cross-sectional planes parallel to the cutting surface, the tooth tip surfaces do not effect wedge-like rejection forces onto the hairs even when reciprocating at high speed in the cutting direction, but the tooth tip surfaces of the moving cutting teeth may just smoothly slide along hairs contacting the tip surface.
More particularly, the cutting teeth, at the tooth tips, may define a pyramid-like contour with three inclined, planar surfaces joining each other, one of said inclines, planar surfaces being formed by the flattened, beveled tip surface and the other two inclined, planar surfaces being formed by the lateral cutting edges of the cutting tooth.
More particularly, the tooth tips of at least one of the cooperating cutter blades may be provided with a flattened, beveled tip surface with a tip angle, between said flattened beveled tip surface and the cutting surface which is defined between said cooperating cutter blades, ranging from 30° to 70° or 55° to 65°.
Such beveling of the tooth tips helps to reduce pushing out or deflecting hairs trying to enter the gap between neighboring cutting teeth. The bevels at the tips of the teeth remove material at the tip portions that could be responsible for pushing hairs out so especially hairs grown out of the skin at an acute angle and thus inclined towards the cutter system moving forward along the skin contour, are less likely to be touched and less likely to be pushed out.
More particularly, such flattened, beveled tooth tip surfaces may be provided to the cutting teeth of the movable cutter blade to avoid pushing away hairs by the reciprocating or moving cutting teeth which are moving into and out of the gaps between the teeth of the stationary cutter blade.
To further help hairs getting cut at first contact with the cutting teeth, the flattened beveled tip surface may be substantially planar with an angular transition to the lateral cutting edges of the cutting teeth, said angular transition having a radius of curvature of less than 50 μm or less than 35 μm or less than 25 μm or even smaller. Such edgy transition from the tip surface to the lateral cutting edges gets hairs passing the tooth tip more or less immediately onto the lateral cutting edge and avoids pushing away hairs as it would be the case with rounded transitions from the lateral cutting edges to the tip portions at rather large radii of curvature.
Hairs which have passed the tooth tips and entered into the gap between a pair of neighboring cutting teeth are basically ready to be cut or sheared by the lateral cutting edges of a pair of cooperating cutting teeth. Although having passed the tooth tips, the hair still might be rejected or pushed out of the gap again when contacting the lateral cutting edges. Usually, the lateral cutting edges do not extend exactly perpendicular to the moving direction of the teeth, but are inclined thereto, wherein usually the teeth are tapering towards the tooth tips so as to avoid cutting all hairs between a pair of cooperating teeth exactly at the same time. Due to the tapered configuration of the teeth, overlapping of the lateral cutting edges starts at the inner end portion or route portion of the teeth and continuously moves outwardly towards the tooth tips due to such tapered configuration when cooperating teeth are driven transversely relative to each other. Thus a smooth cutting action can be achieved by means of such tapered configuration. On the other hand, however, due to such tapered configuration, the forces applied onto a hair by the contacting lateral cutting edges include a component directed outwardly, i.e. from the bottom portion of the gap between cooperating teeth to the open end of said gap, thereby creating the tendency of deflecting the hair outwardly and/or pushing away the hair towards the tooth tips. The more tapering, the stronger the tendency of pushing hairs outwardly.
So as to address such issue, the opening angle between neighboring teeth and/or the tapering of the teeth could be kept small, but this would create high cutting forces which could cause the system to block or the blades to lift off.
So as to allow some tapering of the teeth and an opening angle sufficiently large to keep cutting forces small, but nevertheless avoid the aforementioned problem of pushing hairs back outwardly towards the tooth tips, it is suggested according to another aspect to make the lateral cutting edges rather sharp to reduce the tendency of deflecting hairs towards the tooth tips. More particularly, the lateral cutting edges of the cutting teeth, when viewed in a cross-section taken perpendicular to a longitudinal axis of a respective tooth, may have a wedge-like configuration with a wedge angle smaller than 60° or smaller than 50° or ranging from 35° to 60° or from 45° to 50°.
So as to avoid pushing back hairs at the tooth tips and at the lateral cutting edges, the sum of the aforementioned tip angle (between the beveled tip surface and the cutting surface between the cutting blades) and the wedge angle of the lateral cutting edges may be less than 110° or may range from 60° to 110° or from 90° to 110°.
The opening angle of a gap between two neighboring teeth as defined by the lateral cutting edges of said neighboring teeth facing each other, may range from 10° to 30° to combine smooth cutting with keeping the hairs in the gap. More particularly, said opening angle may range from 15° to 25°.
Said opening angle may be chosen differently for different wedge angles. For example, the larger the opening angle, the smaller the wedge angle. More particularly, the sum of the wedge angle and the opening angle may be smaller than 80° or smaller than 75° or smaller than 70°. Such wedge angle configuration may be given to the stationary blade and/or to the movable blade, wherein it is particularly advantageous for the movable blade to avoid the problem of kicking hairs away which is mainly caused by the movable blade.
In order to further aid the cutter blades in cutting the hairs in first contact, the cutting teeth may have a rather small tooth width at their tip portions. More particularly, the cutting teeth may have a tip width ranging from ⅙ to ⅔ or ⅙ to ⅓ of a rear width of the cutting teeth at a rear end of the lateral cutting edges which may extend from the rear end to the tooth tip along a straight line. Said tip width may be measured at the forward end of a tooth at a cutting plane which is defined between the stationary and movable blades and along which the movable blade reciprocates relative to the stationary blade.
Basically, the tip width of the cutting teeth may be adjusted to the pitch of the comb-like teeth arrangement. More particularly, said tip width may range from about 1/9 to ⅓ of the toothing pitch, i.e. the distance from tooth to tooth or more particularly, from the center of a tooth to the center of a next tooth. For example, the cutting teeth may have a tip width ranging from ⅙ to ¼ of the pitch.
As can be seen from
The cutter system 3 including a pair of cooperating cutter blades 4 and 5 may be the only cutter system of the cutter head 2 as it is the case with the example shown in
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So as to support the cutter blades 4 and 5 in said position relative to each other, but still allowing reciprocating movement of the teeth 6, 7 relative to each other, the cutter blade 4 may be sandwiched between the other cutter blade 5 and a support structure which may include a frame-like or plate-like support.
More particularly, as can be seen from
Cutter blade 5 may be a stationary cutter blade which nevertheless may be supported in a sort of self-adjusting way at the handle 10 to allow for adaption to the skin contour. For example, the stationary cutter blade 5—and also the movable cutter blade 4—may swivel and/or tilt relative to the handle 10. However, in the alternative, the stationary cutter blade 5 also may be fixedly attached to the handle 10.
The movable cutter blade 4 is driven by motor 18 via drive train 19, cf.
The movable cutter blade 4 may be movably supported by a support structure 22 to move relative to stationary cutter blade 5 such that the teeth 6 of movable cutter blade 4 may reciprocate relative to the cutting teeth 7 of stationary cutter blade 5 so that the cutting teeth 7 repeatedly engage with each other and disengage with each other. A spring mechanism 23 may urge the stationary cutter blade 4 onto the stationary cutter blade 5 to bias the cutter blades 4, 5 onto each other, in particular in the region of the cooperating rows of cutting teeth 6, 7, cf.
The stationary cutter blade 5 may define a skin contact surface 14 at a forward end portion of the cutter system 3, when considering an advancing direction 30 of the cutter system 3. Said contact surface 14 may be defined under and/or at the rows of cutting teeth 6, 7, wherein a bottom side of the cutter blade 5 facing away from the other cutter blade 4, may define said skin contact surface 14, cf.
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As can be seen from
The lateral cutting edges 9 of the cutting teeth 6 may extend substantially parallel to the cutting surface 8 which is defined between the cutter blades 4, 5. Such cutting surface 8 may be a cutting plane, wherein in such case the lateral cutting edges 9 may have a straight configuration. However, the cutting surface 8 also may have a non-planar, e.g. shovel-like configuration, wherein in such case the lateral cutting edges have a curved configuration. The non-planar, shovel-like configuration may have curvature in a plane perpendicular to the reciprocating drive movements and may have a linear or straight configuration in directions parallel to said reciprocating or cutting direction 25.
As can be seen from
Said opening angle α, cf.
As can be seen from
Basically, the smaller the wedge angle γ is, the easier is it for the cutter blade to penetrate the hair, wherein the likelihood that the hair will be cut immediately instead of being pushed out is significantly increased. A small wedge angle γ of the lateral cutting edge 9 also has the advantage of reducing cutting forces in terms of reducing the force acting on the teeth during cutting. Such reduced cutting forces allow the tooth tips 11 to be small without sacrificing the necessary stability. In other words, the tooth tips may become slimmer preventing the hairs from being pushed away by the tooth tips.
As can be seen from
More particularly, said beveled, flattened tip surface 12 of the movable blade 4 may be inclined relative to the aforementioned virtual plane 27 extending parallel to the cutting direction 25 of the movable cutter blade 4 and perpendicular to the inclined forward end portion 14f of the skin contact surface 14 at the bottom of the cutter system, cf.
Relative to said virtual plane 27, the tip surface 12 is inclined, at an acute angle £, backwardly towards the rear portion of the cutting teeth so the tooth tips 11 touch said virtual plan 27 only at the cutting surface 8, whereas the more elevated portions of the tip surface 12 is based apart and inclined away from said virtual plane 27 to form a substantially wedge-like void 29 between the virtual plane 27 and the tip surface 12, cf.
Said acute angle c of inclination of the flattened, beveled tip surface 12 to the virtual plane 27 may range from 10° to 30° or 10° to 20°, cf.
Such range of the acute angle ε may be particularly advantageous for inclination angles φ of the inclined forward end portion 14 of the skin contact surface 14 to the cutting surface 8 ranging from 5° to 25° or from 10° to 20°, but also may be provided for other ranges of said inclination angle φ. Said inclination angle φ allows to reduce the thickness of the teeth towards the tooth tips what allows closer cutting action.
As can be seen from
Consequently, pushing hairs out of the engagement zone of the lateral cutting edges 9 is significantly less likely to occur when the tooth tips 11 are provided with the aforementioned flat, beveled tooth tip surfaces 12 as shown by
As shown by
Said distance comb 15 also may define the skin contact surface 14 of the cutter system 3 with a forward end portion 14f positioned at a forward end portion of the cutter system 3, when considering an advancing direction 30 thereof, and/or basically at the cooperating rows of cutting teeth 6, 7, wherein the skin contact surface 14 and/or the forward end portion 14f thereof defined by the distance comb 15 may basically have an orientation and/or inclination parallel to the skin contact surface 14 and the forward end portion 14f thereof defined by the bottom side of the stationary cutter blade 5.
When considering said skin contact surface 14 defined by the bottom side of the stationary cutter blade 5 or defined by the distance comb 15, the tip surface 12 of the cutting teeth 6 of the movable cutter blade 4 may be inclined at an angle δ to the forward end portion 14f of the skin contact surface 14, cf.
As can be seen from
When the tip surface 12 shows some unevenness, the aforementioned angle c of inclination of the tip surface 12 to the virtual plane 27 may be defined between said virtual plane 27 and a plane 32 tangential to said tip surface 12, cf.
With regard to the aforementioned wedge angle γ of the lateral cutting edges 9, cf.
As can be seen from
As can be seen from
Said flattened beveled tip surface 12 may define a tip width tw ranging from 150 μm to 400 μm or 200 μm to 300 μm, cf.
When considering a rear end 9r of the cutting edges 9, said cutting edges 9 may have a substantially linear straight shape tapering towards the tooth tip. The width tw of the teeth 6 at the tooth tip 11 may range from ⅙ to ⅔ or ⅙ to ⅓ of a rear width tr of the cutting tooth 6 at the rear end 9r of the lateral cutting edge 9, cf.
Said tip width tw may be adjusted to a pitch 31 of the toothing of the blades, wherein such pitch 31 is the distance from a center of a tooth to the center of a neighboring tooth, cf.
The dimensions and values disclosed herein are not to be understood as being strictly limited to the exact numerical values recited. Instead, unless otherwise specified, each such dimension is intended to mean both the recited value and a functionally equivalent range surrounding that value. For example, a dimension disclosed as “40 mm” is intended to mean “about 40 mm.”
Every document cited herein, including any cross referenced or related patent or application and any patent application or patent to which this application claims priority or benefit thereof, is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety unless expressly excluded or otherwise limited. The citation of any document is not an admission that it is prior art with respect to any invention disclosed or claimed herein or that it alone, or in any combination with any other reference or references, teaches, suggests or discloses any such invention. Further, to the extent that any meaning or definition of a term in this document conflicts with any meaning or definition of the same term in a document incorporated by reference, the meaning or definition assigned to that term in this document shall govern.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it would be obvious to those skilled in the art that various other changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is therefore intended to cover in the appended claims all such changes and modifications that are within the scope of this invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
22161474.6 | Mar 2022 | EP | regional |