This invention relates to an electrically operated shaver with a longhair cutter unit of the type that is movable into an operable position for cutting long hairs.
German patent publication DE 31 11 871 A1 describes an electric shaving apparatus that includes at its top a shorthair cutter unit and on its front a longhair cutter unit. The longhair cutter unit is comprised of an operating switch and a coupled longhair cutter that has at its free end a comb-type lower blade and upper blade which in operation are in sliding relation to each other, thereby shearing off hairs that have entered the combs. In the position of rest, the longhair cutter unit is embedded in a recess formed on the front face of the housing of the shaving apparatus so that the outer contour of the longhair cutter forms a nearly stepless plane with the outside of the housing. To move the longhair cutter unit into its operating position, it is necessary to slide the operating switch upward, whereby the outside of the lower blade slides along a ramp in the housing of the shaving apparatus, swinging obliquely upwardly out of the housing together with the upper blade. As this occurs, a flap closing the longhair cutter exposes the comb-like end to enable it to be moved into contact with an operator's skin surface.
Similarly, Japanese reference JP 58-32767(2) describes an electrically operated shaving apparatus in which a shorthair cutter unit is provided on the upwardly pointing surface and a longhair cutter unit on the front side. Mounted behind a cover plate is a transversely grooved operating switch as well as a barrel-type longhair cutter. On being turned, the longhair cutter is accessible from outside through a square-shaped window. Otherwise, it is turned into the interior of the housing and concealed. Turning of the longhair cutter is effected by an actuator coupled next to the axis of rotation and connected to the operating switch.
German document DE 195 21 299 C1 also describes an electrically operated shaving apparatus that has at its top a shorthair cutter unit and on its front a longhair cutter unit. The longhair cutter unit is activated by an operating switch provided in a recess on the front side. An actuator connected to the operating switch is displaced from bottom to top and in reverse direction in the housing, so that due to the eccentric mounting of the actuator on the longhair cutter the latter is swung about its pivot axis forwardly out of the housing and back into the housing. Detent elements are provided in order for the actuator to lend the longhair cutter unit a stable position in the latter's extended position so that the longhair cutter withstands the shaving forces acting on it during shaving, without folding shut or wobbling. Although in the retracted condition the comb-type cutting plane of the longhair cutter is embedded in the housing recess of the shaver, it is nevertheless visible from outside, and the comb-type sharp edges of the longhair cutter are at least partially exposed.
According to one aspect of the invention, an electric shaver has a housing carrying a shorthair cutter unit, a longhair cutter unit and an operating switch. The longhair cutter unit is mounted so as to be pivotable with respect to the housing about a pivot axis, between an open position and a closed position. An electric drive is operable to drive the shorthair cutter unit and is mechanically connected to drive the longhair cutter unit in the open position. The longhair cutter unit has a longhair cutter housing carrying a longhair cutter comprised of a lower blade and an upper blade. The longhair cutter unit is connected to the operating switch via an actuator that both pivots the longhair cutter unit toward its open position, and extends the longhair cutter with respect to the longhair cutter housing, in response to a corresponding actuation of the switch.
In some embodiments, the longhair cutter and the actuator are connected via a first rotatable joint, and the actuator is connected to the operating switch via a second rotatable joint. In some configurations, the first joint is disposed outward of the pivot axis with the longhair cutter unit in its closed position. In some arrangements ramps are provided at a free end of the longhair cutter housing as well as at a free end of the actuator, the ramps being configured to slide against one another upon actuation of the actuator, so as to cause a torque that urges the longhair cutter unit toward the open position. In some cases the ramps form an angle with a longitudinal axis of the longhair cutter housing or the actuator which is between 30° and 60°, or about 45°.
In some embodiments the longhair cutter is slidably guided in slide rails extending in the form of grooves provided on the longhair cutter housing.
In some examples the actuating switch is movably mounted on a guide frame that defines opposing guide grooves in which the operating switch is slidably guided on the guide frame. In some cases, the longhair cutter housing is pivotally mounted on the guide frame. In some designs, the guide frame is flange-mounted on the housing of the shaving apparatus such that outer surfaces of both the longhair cutter housing and the operating switch form part of the outer surface of the housing of the shaving apparatus. The actuator may be, for example, a link that is pivotally connected at one end to the longhair cutter through bearing trunnions and is pivotally connected at another end to the guide frame. In some cases the actuator link has angled fork ends.
In some embodiments the operating switch and longhair cutter are guided in straight grooves extending parallel to one another and parallel to a central axis of the longhair cutter unit.
In some cases a distal end of the longhair cutter protrudes beyond a distal end of the longhair cutter housing when the longhair cutter unit is in the open position, whereas with the longhair cutter unit in the closed position the distal end of the longhair cutter is retracted into and concealed by the distal end of the longhair cutter housing. In some shavers, a stop is formed on the longhair cutter housing and on the longhair cutter, against which stop the longhair cutter abuts when the longhair cutter unit is in the open position. In some cases, a stop is formed on the longhair cutter housing and on the guide frame in proximity to the pivot axis, said stop limiting a maximum pivot angle of the longhair cutter housing. Such a stop may be formed by lateral boundary surfaces of the longhair cutter housing and the guide frame that extend obliquely to a central axis of the shaver, for example.
In some examples the shaver has a spring that applies a force that acts upon the actuator in a transverse direction.
In some cases, upon moving the switch to pivot the longhair cutter unit to its open position, the operating switch is acted upon by a force that acts initially in opposition to movement and, after a predetermined length of travel, acts to assist movement of the switch. This force may be provided at least in part, for example, by a leg spring having one end secured directly to the operating switch and another end secured to a lever rotatably mounted on the operating switch, the lever having a distal end that engages a groove extending perpendicularly to a longitudinal axis of the shaver.
Various embodiments described herein feature a longhair cutter that can be swung open easily, while also providing that the front of the shaving apparatus can be closed with the longhair cutter in its rest position.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.
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Arranged in the lower part of the front face are an on/off switch 20 and below it a charge indicator 21. A recess 5 provided in the front face 4 of the housing 2 extends from the on/off switch 20 upward to the end of the housing 2. To avoid duplicate description, reference is made to the Braun “Synchro” type shaver which includes a shaving head of the type herein shown and has on its front face an on/off switch and a longhair cutter.
Embedded in recess 5 is a longhair cutter unit 6 that is substantially comprised of a longhair cutter 29 (
The longhair cutter unit 6 is illustrated as a single part in
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The biased second leg spring 86 exerts initially a force F5 on operating switch 22, which force acts in opposition to the opening direction but which, as soon as lever 83 adopts a horizontal position, is reversed and urges operating switch 22 upwardly according to
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The guide frame 60 is provided with fastening devices 105, 106 which enable longhair cutter unit 6 to be held in recess 5 of the shaving apparatus with positional accuracy.
The mode of operation of shorthair cutter unit 3 is as follows:
To activate longhair cutter unit 6, first the operating switch 22 of
While the spring force applied by second leg spring 86 acts in opposition to the displacement force of operating switch 22, the spring forces are nevertheless designed to keep the energy required to move operating switch 22 at a low level. The more longhair cutter housing 9 is swung open, the longer the lever arm ‘c’ and the higher the torque M2. Because of the absence of contact between ramps 98 and 99, torque M1 drops to zero after just a few millimeters of displacement travel ‘d’ of operating switch 22.
Although torque M2 increases as a result of ‘c’ increasing to c1, the displacement force F on operating switch 22 does not increase because the force acting in opposition to operating switch 22 increases due to the increasing biasing force of the second leg spring. Advantageously, the mechanism is well balanced such that the displacement force F remains nearly constant in spite of the increase in torque M2 and the increase in the counteracting force F3 applied by second leg spring 86. The longhair cutter 29 is held against stop 66 in longhair cutter housing 9 by the first leg spring 72.
As soon as lever 83 reaches its approximately horizontal position as shown in
During the swinging-up movement, the coupling end 23 provided on coupling member 8 engages into the pocket-shaped coupling member 11 of lever 24, and lever 24 is caused to move in alternating directions by the reciprocating coupling end 23. Because the lever 24 is rotatably mounted on trunnion 14 through its bore 102, the other end carrying pin 26 moves in just the opposite direction. As a result of the engagement of pin 26 with longitudinal groove 27, the lower blade 13 is reciprocated in the direction ‘s’, closing and opening the slots 56 formed on upper blade 28, so that hairs entering the slots 56 are sheared off between lower blade 13 and upper blade 28.
Closing of the longhair cutter unit 6 takes place precisely in inverted order. To return longhair cutter housing 9 with longhair cutter 29 from its maximum open position back to its closed position, operating switch 22 of
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Because the longhair cutter is movably mounted in the longhair cutter housing and the actuator is directly coupled to the longhair cutter, the longhair cutter pops up a small amount out of the longhair cutter housing when the latter swings open, so that the comb-type end of the longhair cutter is easily accessible from outside for cutting hair. When the longhair cutter housing is swung back, the actuator retracts the longhair cutter back into the longhair cutter housing until its comb-type end is concealed by the longhair cutter housing and no longer visible from outside.
Because the longhair cutter is completely retracted into the interior of the longhair cutter housing, the shaver is imparted a uniformly closed outer contour which is due to the fact that the longhair cutter housing is able to lie flush with the shaver housing. Dust and other contaminants are thereby prevented from entering the housing interior. Accordingly, the longhair cutter housing serves as a receptacle and mount for the longhair cutter itself on the one hand and, on the other hand, as a protective shield and dust guard in the retracted condition.
The longhair cutter unit is configured to swing out of, and back into, the housing of the shaving apparatus with particular ease. The above-described features enable a particularly low-friction flip-up mechanism in which in the open condition of the longhair cutter the actuator is free to pivot outwards at the free end of the operating switch.
The longhair cutter unit may be opened solely by actuation of the operating switch. The farther the joint between actuator and longhair cutter housing is disposed outward of the pivot point, the greater the ease with which the longhair cutter unit can be opened. However, increasing this dimension can lead to a broader dimension of the shaving apparatus when the longhair cutter unit is to rest flush with the housing. Preferably, this offset distance is small, allowing the longhair cutter unit to be built to the narrowest possible width. By providing ramps at the free ends of the longhair cutter housing and the operating switch, which rest snugly against each other with the longhair cutter housing closed, the lever force necessary on the operating switch for opening the longhair cutter unit is kept at an extremely low level. The ramps, which extend from the front surface of the operating switch obliquely upwardly towards its rear surface as seen looking at the operating switch from the side and with the longhair cutter unit closed, form a ramp angle preferably of 45°. On axial displacement of the operating switch along the ramp of the longhair cutter housing, a counterclockwise acting torque develops. The initial force results from the force applied by an operator's hand to the operating switch. Only later does a force act on the bearing trunnion of the longhair cutter housing, because first a defined bearing clearance has to be used up on the joints of the actuator.
The longhair cutter is movably guided toward and away from the pivot axis in slide rails formed on the longhair cutter housing. In lieu of slide rails it is also possible to select a dovetail guide or some other linear rail guide, such that the longhair cutter is slidably guided on the longhair cutter housing at right angles away from and towards the pivot axis.
The operating switch is also longitudinally guided in slide rails, with the slide rails extending likewise perpendicularly to the pivot axis and lengthwise of the shaver's central axis. With the longhair cutter unit in closed position, the slide rails extend on the longhair cutter housing and on the guide frame for the operating switch substantially parallel and are superimposed. The axes of the first and second joints as well as the pivot axis extend parallel to each other and perpendicularly to the slide rail arrangements, in order to enable a smooth movement of the operating switch and the longhair cutter.
In the open position the comb end of the longhair cutter projects a predetermined amount ‘x’ from the free end of the longhair cutter housing. Given a distance ‘a’ of 0.6 mm between the pivot axis and the first joint, a length ‘l’ of 27 mm between the first and second joint on the actuator, and a pivot angle β of 115° for the longhair cutter housing, a dimension ‘x’ of 0.5 mm, approximately, is obtained. In this case, the operating switch has been moved upwardly by a distance ‘d’ of 6 mm. In the home position of the longhair cutter housing, that is, at an angle β of 0°, the longhair cutter is retracted inside the longhair cutter housing to an extent causing dimension ‘x’ to be smaller than zero, i.e., proceeding in the opposite direction.
A first stop is formed on the longhair cutter housing, which stop is configured to conform to a stop on the longhair cutter such that, when the longhair cutter housing has been moved through angle β to the outer extreme of its outward travel, the first stop abuts the longhair cutter so that the latter can no longer be displaced outwardly in its guide groove and is thereby held in this maximum advanced position by the force of a snap-action spring.
A second stop for limiting the pivotal movement of the longhair cutter housing is formed in close proximity to the pivot axis, so that the maximum pivot angle β of the longhair cutter housing is accurately maintained. The first and the second stop help to produce a flip-up mechanism which is particularly resistant to bending and wobble-free and ensures that the longhair cutter, in swung-out condition during a shaving operation, always maintains its end position relative to the housing of the shaving apparatus. This enhances the shaving action because the cutters can be guided along the skin surface with great accuracy.
Lateral boundary surfaces extending obliquely to the pivot axis are formed on the longhair cutter housing and the guide frame in order to make sure that in the outer extreme of its outward travel the longhair cutter housing is held locked against sideways movement, being centered on the pivot axis with zero play, in order to thereby lend the longhair cutter a stable, zero-play position also at this point during a shaving operation.
The illustrated longhair cutter unit is a self-contained unit that only needs to be adapted to the housing of a shaving apparatus. The preassembly of the longhair cutter unit inclusive of the operating switch arranged on the guide frame thus can take place prior to the final assembly on the housing. Accordingly, a function test can also be performed prior to assembly with the housing, so that only properly functioning longhair cutter units are mounted on the housing of the shaving apparatus.
The actuator is preferably of a substantially plate-shaped configuration, forming at either end each two fork-shaped arms on which the first and the second joint are provided. As a result of the widely spaced apart fork ends, particularly sturdy joints resisting transverse forces are obtained which are carried in axles or bores of the longhair cutter and actuator. In lieu of bores formed in the joints for engagement by the axles configured as trunnions or as shafts, a possible alternative is to provide trunnions which engage in bores on the longhair cutter and the actuator. If trunnions are provided on the fork ends, during assembly each fork end is expanded until the trunnions resiliently engage the bores provided on the longhair cutter and the actuator, subsequently remaining permanently in the sprung-back position. In the illustrated embodiment, the metallic longhair cutter has plastic arms formed on it which include bores on the sides for engagement with axles provided on the fork ends of the actuator. The fork ends at the other end of the actuator define bores through which a metal axle clipped onto the operating switch extends. A receptacle is formed between the angled fork ends for seating engagement with the longhair cutter when the longhair cutter unit is folded shut. In this manner, the width dimension of the longhair cutter unit can be kept particularly narrow.
A restoring force acting on the actuator in the direction of the pivot axis prevents rattling noise in the unit. At the same time, the restoring force acts to move the longhair cutter back into its initial position when the longhair cutter housing is swung in. The spring is preferably a flexed wire spring which is spirally wound about the axle on the second joint and bears with one end against the operating switch and with its other end against the actuator for producing the restoring force.
The force of a snap-action spring arrangement acts on the operating switch, as a result of which a spring force acts in opposition to the movement of the operating switch up to about half the actuating travel, the spring force acting in the direction of movement of the operating switch after this half of the actuating travel is overcome. As a result, the actuator is moved, and with it the longhair cutter, to its maximum open position. The illustrated snap-action spring arrangement includes a leg spring having its one end secured directly to the operating switch and its other end to a lever rotatably mounted on the operating switch, with the free end of the lever being pivotally secured to the switch housing. The two legs are connected to each other by a spiral spring coil which, on actuation of the operating switch between its fixed points on the housing and on the lever, experiences a displacement relative to the operating switch.
While a number of examples have been described for illustration purposes, the foregoing description is not intended to limit the scope of the invention, which is defined by the scope of the appended claims. There are and will be other examples and modifications within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 028 470.4 | Jun 2006 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation application of and claims priority to PCT Application Serial No. PCT/EP2007/004437, filed on May 18, 2007, through which priority is claimed under 35 U.S.C. § 19(a) from German patent application number 10 2006 028 470.4, filed Jun. 21, 2006. The entire contents of PCT Application Serial No. PCT/EP2007/004437 are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2007/004437 | May 2007 | US |
Child | 12338687 | US |