This invention relates to an electric shaving apparatus.
DE-A 103 30 978 discloses an electric shaving apparatus having a linear motor with two rotors. The shaving head of this shaver is connected to the housing in an oscillatory manner by leaf springs, and the linear motor is suspended within the shaving head. At least one rotor is connected to at least one shaving element constructed as under cutter in order to sever hairs in combination with an associated second shaving element constructed as shaving foil. Furthermore, oscillatory motions of under cutter and shaving foil of opposite phase are provided.
One aspect of the invention features an electric shaving apparatus that includes a housing, a shaving head elastically coupled to the housing and including a first shaving element, a second shaving element elastically coupled to the shaving head, and an electric motor arranged in the housing. The electric motor is capable of generating an oscillatory motion of the shaving head and a different oscillatory motion of the second shaving element. The electric motor includes two drive components. One of the drive components is coupled to the second shaving element, and one of the drive components is adapted to be driven to oscillate relative to the other drive component.
The electric motor with its two drive components is arranged in the housing rather than in the interior of the shaving head, which naturally results in a substantial weight reduction and a well balanced weight distribution of the whole shaver. The improved weight distribution of the shaver has a particularly beneficial effect on the handling of the shaving apparatus in cases where shavers are equipped with a pivotal shaving head which, given a substantially reduced weight of the shaving head, is naturally able to follow the skin contours much more easily than a shaving head in which the complete shaver drive mechanism is received. The arrangement of the electric motor in the housing interior facilitates of course also the arrangement and mounting of power and control lines for operating the electric motor. Considering that the elastic connection between the second shaving element or a drive component connected thereto and the shaving head is arranged in the interior of the shaving head, construction and assembly of the shaving head are a particularly simple and economical matter. Only one driven connection is necessary between the housing and the shaving head because the shaving head itself is not driven to oscillate directly by the motor in the housing but by the elastic connection between the shaving element and the shaving head. The oscillatory motions of the two shaving elements (shaving foil and under cutter) of opposite phase are of particular importance for an effective and thorough shave and are described in detail in DE-C 197 36 776 where the movements of the shaving elements in phase opposition to each other are implemented mechanically in a different way and without the use of a linear motor.
According to a preferred embodiment, the electric motor is mounted in the housing by elastic devices. This enables residual vibrations which are not balanced out in the electric motor itself to be isolated relative to the housing. In an embodiment of the electric motor in which the oscillations are particularly well balanced, both drive components are driven to oscillate relative to each other and relative to the housing. This enables the two rotors of the linear motor to oscillate in phase opposition to one another within the housing and, by correspondingly balancing out the moving masses, makes it possible to provide an electric motor which is optimally balanced with regard to disturbing vibrations.
According to another advantageous embodiment, the elastic connection between the at least second shaving element and the shaving head is constructed to include at least one leaf spring. The spring can be configured in particular in the manner of an oscillatory bridge known in the art and can be mounted in the interior of the shaving head with particular ease and in a cost and space saving manner.
Advantageously, the first elastic element is constructed to include a shaving head support connected to the housing and having at its free end at least part of a pivot bearing for pivotally carrying the shaving head. This pivotal mounting provides a particularly flexible shaving unit which conforms itself to the contours to be shaved automatically. As such, it has proven to be particularly advantageous to pivotally mount the shaving head about an axis extending parallel to the longitudinal axis of the shaving elements.
Regardless of whether the pivotal or the fixed type of shaving head is employed, it is advantageous for the electric motor to include a drive pin engaging an oscillatory plate mounted in the shaving head, because such a drive pin can be sealed reliably with relatively little outlay, which is conducive to the construction of a watertight and therefore easy-to-clean housing.
If the oscillatory system formed by the shaving head itself and its elastic mounting on the housing is excited by the second shaving element above its resonant frequency, that is, beyond resonance, it is always ensured that the shaving head and hence the shaving foils secured thereto move in phase opposition to the driven under cutters, which eliminates the need to employ further particular devices. Both the movement of the under cutters and the movement of opposite phase of the shaving head with the shaving foils secured thereto are implemented only by one moving connection between the handpiece and the shaving head. This is accomplished in that the actively driven shaving head, rather than being operated directly by the motor in the handpiece, is operated by the elastic connection between the shaving head and the driven under cutters, with the shaving head support itself being constructed to include a resilient element. In contrast to the use of direct-current motors, the use of a linear motor as drive enables very high operating frequencies to be used, and yet friction and noise are avoided in the drive mechanism of the shaving parts because of the absence of gearing, levers or other transmission members, using instead springs, in particular leaf springs, for establishing all the driving connections.
Other objects, features, advantages and application options will become apparent from the subsequent description of the embodiments. It will be appreciated that any feature described or represented by illustration, when used singularly or in any combination, forms the subject matter of the present disclosure.
In the drawings,
The shaving apparatus illustrated schematically in
The shaving head 4 which mounts at least one shaving foil 5, which represents a first shaving element, is connected to the housing 1 in an oscillatory fashion by means of two shaving head supports 6. The leaf-spring type shaving head supports 6 allow a transverse oscillation of the shaving head 4 and with it of the shaving foil 5 within the plane of projection, as indicated by double arrow a.
The electric motor 2 includes a first rotor 7 and a second rotor 8 which are coupled to one another by a resonant spring 9. The second rotor 8 is U-shaped in cross-section so that two iron cores are formed around each of which a coil 10 is wound. The coils 10 are connected to electronic circuitries, not shown, which are disposed in the interior of the housing 1 and are configured to control the current supply to the coils 10.
On its side close to the second rotor and hence to the coils 10, the first rotor 7 includes one or a plurality of permanent magnets 11 the north and south magnetic poles of which are shown in
The first rotor 7 mounts a drive pin 12 which engages an oscillatory plate 14 on which one or a plurality of under cutters 13 are fastened. The under cutters 13 cooperate with one or a plurality of shaving foils 5 so that cooperating cutting elements are able to cut hairs that penetrate the perforations in the shaving foils 5. To be able to set the shaving head 4 itself into oscillations, the oscillatory plate 14 has fastened to its right and left hand sides one end of a leaf spring 15 whose other end is secured to the shaving head 4.
With the shaving apparatus in the operating mode, the coils 10 of the second rotor are supplied with current and generate a magnetic field which acts on the permanent magnets 11 of the first rotor. This causes the first rotor 7 to be displaced sideways relative to the second rotor 8. By controlling the flow of current to the coils 10 periodically as known in the art, the two rotors 7, 8 are displaced in mutually opposite directions in alternation and returned to their initial positions by the restoring forces of the resonant springs 9. In this manner a linear oscillatory motion is imposed on the rotors. The oscillatory motions of the rotors 7, 8 of opposite phase are indicated by associated double arrows b and c, respectively. Because both rotors move in phase opposition to each other and none of the rotors 7, 8 is connected fast with the housing 1, the vibrations resulting from the moved masses are balanced out automatically. This applies in particular when the mass centers of gravity of the rotors 7, 8 involved and the components firmly connected to them and moved along with them move on a common straight line.
The movement of the rotor 7 is transmitted by the drive pin 12 to the oscillatory plate 14 and onwards to the under cutter 13. At the same time, the shaving head 4 is excited to oscillate owing to its connection to the oscillatory plate 14 via the leaf springs 15. Considering that excitation of the shaving head 4 is beyond resonance, i.e., the excitation frequency via the drive pin 12 lies substantially above the resonant frequency of the oscillatory system comprised of shaving head 4 as mass and leaf spring 15 as spring, the oscillatory motion of the shaving head as indicated by the double arrow a is out of phase with the oscillatory motion of the under cutter 13 as indicated by the double arrow d. The phase shift actually developing during operation depends, among other factors, on the friction occurring between the under cutter 13 and the shaving foil 5, which friction is in turn dependent on the contact pressure applied by the user. Ideally, the phase shift angle amounts to 180°, so that the shaving foil 5 moves precisely in phase opposition to the movement of the under cutter 13.
The shaving head 4 itself is connected to the housing 1 by a fork-shaped shaving head support 6, with the connection between the shaving head 4 and the shaving head support 6 being established by pivot joints 30 arranged at the free ends of the two arms 31. As a result, the shaving head 4 is pivotally connected to the housing about an axis of rotation extending parallel to the direction of oscillation—see double arrow d—of the under cutters 13. The arms 31 are of the leaf spring type and hence flexurally elastic with respect to forces acting parallel to the longitudinal axis of the under cutters 13 or their direction of oscillation d. In consequence, the shaving head 4 and the arms 31 represent an oscillatory system which is excited by the leaf spring 15 whose lower end section 32 is connected to the oscillatory plate 14 while its upper end section 33 is secured to the housing of the shaving head 4.
Owing to the phase opposition of the movements of the different masses, the vibration transmitted to the housing 1 or the motor mount 22 is nearly zero, as becomes apparent from the shape of this oscillation curve.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 034 050.7 | Jul 2006 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of, and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 120 from, International Application No. PCT/EP2007/004439, filed May 18, 2007, which claimed priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(a) from German Patent Application DE 10 2006 034 050.7, filed Jul. 20, 2006. Both priority applications are incorporated herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2007/004439 | May 2007 | US |
Child | 12352097 | US |