The present invention relates to an electric motor with a holder for at least two carbon brushes, which are pressed by spring force in the radial direction against the jacket face of a cylindrical collector fixed to the armature shaft of the motor.
Mechanically commutated electric motors typically have a carbon brush contact, of the kind also described for instance in German Patent Application 101 53 574.0, which was not yet published by the priority date of the present application. In this application cited, whose subject is the rotatable bearing of the holder for the carbon brushes, no provisions that make it as simple as possible to change carbon brushes are disclosed. The carbon brushes of an electric motor, which are exposed to wear, must be replaced after a certain number of hours of operation. Such a change of carbon brushes is often impossible because of tight space conditions in the surroundings of the electric motor, such as in power tools. Therefore the entire holder of the carbon brushes must often be removed so that the carbon brushes can be replaced outside the device. It is therefore the object of the invention to disclose an electric motor of the type defined at the outset in which the holder for the carbon brushes can be removed as simply as possible.
The aforementioned object is attained with the characteristics of claim 1, in that the holder with the carbon brushes can be pulled off the collector in the axial direction of the armature shaft by way of a pivot bearing that holds the armature shaft, and that means which cover the pivot bearing against the entry of dirt are provided, on their side toward the holder with the carbon brushes, with one or more chamfers that extend in such a way that the carbon brushes slide over it as the holder is being pulled off and in the process are thrust radially outward counter to the spring force.
Despite means that protect the pivot bearing against the entry of dirt (such as material abraded from the carbon brushes, or drillings), the invention makes simple removal of the holder with the carbon brushes possible.
Advantageous refinements of the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims.
To protect the pivot bearing against becoming soiled, an armature disk may be disposed between the pivot bearing and the collector, and/or a bearing dome may be placed on the pivot bearing. Unhindered pulling off of the holder with the carbon brushes over the pivot bearing is made possible by providing that the side of the armature disk and/or of the bearing dome oriented toward the collector is provided with a chamfer extending rectilinearly or in curved form.
The invention is described in further detail below in conjunction with two exemplary embodiments shown in the drawing. Shown are:
a is a fragmentary longitudinal section through an electric motor, with a carbon brush holder disposed on its collector and with means of a first embodiment for protecting the armature shaft pivot bearing from soiling;
a-1 through 2e-1 depict various positions of a carbon brush as the holder for the carbon brushes is being pulled off from the armature shaft of the motor;
a-2 through 2e-2 depict magnified portions of the various positions depicted in
a depicts a fragmentary longitudinal section through an electric motor, with a carbon brush holder disposed on its collector and with means of a second embodiment for protecting the armature shaft pivot bearing from soiling; and
b is a magnified portion of the
In
An armature disk 11 is disposed on the armature shaft 2, between the collector 4 and the pivot bearing 3. This armature disk 11 serves to protect the pivot bearing 3 for the armature shaft 2 against the entry of material abraded from the carbon brushes 5 as well as from particles (such as drilling dust and drillings), which are aspirated in the process of operating an electrical power tool. This armature disk 11 has a larger diameter than the collector 4 and therefore protrudes radially past the collector 4, as is readily apparent from the magnified portion of the
As a rule, the pivot bearing 3 of a motor is covered by a bearing dome 12. The bearing dome 12 is a caplike structure, communicating with the housing 8, which covers the pivot bearing 3 and the armature shaft, placed in the pivot bearing, on the face end remote from the collector and which, with a preferably flattened, cylindrical wall 13, coaxially surrounds the pivot bearing 3.
As already described above, the holder 6 with the carbon brushes 5 is releasably secured to the housing 8. If the holder 6 is to be removed from the motor so that the carbon brushes can be changed, then the detent element 9 of the holder 6 is released, and the holder is pulled off the collector 4 in the axial direction (direction of the arrow X) of the armature shaft 2. In
In the view shown in
The enlarged details of the magnified portions shown in
So that it is also possible to slip the holder 6 with the carbon brushes 5 on over the armature disk 11 as far as the collector 4 without hindrance, as well, the armature disk 11 is provided, on its side toward the bearing dome 12, with a chamfer 16, which enables the carbon brushes 5 to be thrust without hindrance from the bearing dome 12 over the armature disk 11 onto the collector 4. This chamfer 16 on the armature disk 11 is actually required only whenever the outer diameter of the bearing dome 12 is less than the outer diameter of the armature disk 11. This is because only for that case would the armature disk 11 be a hindrance as the holder 6, with the carbon brushes 5, is being slipped on in the direction of the collector 4.
In a departure from the exemplary embodiment described above, it is possible for only an armature disk 11 or only a bearing dome 12 to be provided for protecting the pivot bearing 3. In that case, only one chamfer 14 or 15, on the armature disk 11 or on the bearing dome 12, respectively, is necessary.
The exemplary embodiment shown in
The wall 131 of the bearing dome 12, which wall extends in the axial direction and protrudes past the armature disk 11, moreover has the advantage that the gap between it and the armature disk 11 can be kept quite small, which leads to increased leakproofness of the pivot bearing 3. The elongation of the cylindrical wall 131 in the direction of the collector 4 has the effect of carrying cooling air directly to the collector 4 and to the carbon brushes 5.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 28 493 | Jun 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE03/01761 | 5/30/2003 | WO | 00 | 12/5/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/004094 | 1/8/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4293789 | King | Oct 1981 | A |
4311936 | Ozaki et al. | Jan 1982 | A |
5019741 | Fukui et al. | May 1991 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
101 53 574 | Aug 2003 | DE |
0 706 255 | Apr 1996 | EP |
2 384 918 | Aug 2003 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060087196 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |