The present invention relates to an electrically operated shaving apparatus according to the preamble of Claim 1.
From DE 195 31 013 C1, a shaving apparatus indicated is already known according to the preamble of Claim 1. According to
On the front side according to
In order to extend the long-hair cutter L1, the actuating button 9 is brought into a first position, wherein the electric motor 27 is set into rotation and drives a threaded spindle that in turn displaces the shaver housing 8, according to
From DE 10 2004 029 234 A1, an electrically operated shaving apparatus of the type described above is known. In this shaving apparatus as well, the cutting system, operating as a long-hair cutter, is no longer retracted or extended into or out of the housing by hand, but rather by the drive device of the shaving apparatus. For this purpose, the drive part, which is connected to an electric motor and which oscillates back and forth, is connected to a deflection device that, according to
The object of the invention is to create a shaving apparatus whose extendable or retractable cutting system is realized in a particularly simple manner and also requires a small number of components. In this way, an economical shaving apparatus is to be created.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by the features of Claim 1. According to the invention, an elastic element that is uncompressed in the initial or final position of the shaver housing is connected to the drive part that moves back and forth in a rotationally fixed and axially non-displaceable fashion, so that the distance of the free end of the elastic element to the center axis of the drive part is greater than the distance of the wall to the center axis of the drive part. When the shaver housing is displaced in order to extend or retract the long-hair cutter, the free end of the elastic element comes into contact with the beginning of the wall, and upon further displacement, the elastic element is bent in the direction of displacement so that the free end is fixed in the wall surface. In this process, it is, of course, necessary for the drive part to absorb the spring force that arises at the elastic element and not to escape in the opposite direction of displacement. For this purpose, for example, springs can engage on the drive part that produce a greater spring force than that resulting from the bending force. However, the oscillating drive forces must then be greater than these spring forces. In order to achieve, according to the invention, an automatic advance at the shaver housing, the ends of the elastic element that can be brought into contact with the wall, as well as the wall itself, must be designed such that during the movement of the drive part toward the wall, the free end of the elastic element is hooked in the wall, or forms a fixed engagement therewith, while during the movement back of the drive part past the center toward the other side, the connection between the free end of the elastic element and the wall is disconnected and transitions to a sliding process. The effect is similar to that of a ratchet locking mechanism, in which it is likewise the case that in the one direction something is carried along while in the other direction the driving part slides through without entraining anything. The realization of the invention is particularly simple because a strip-shaped element can be positively fastened to the drive part as an elastic element, or can even be integrally formed in one piece thereon.
The features of Claim 2 provide that an automatic switching off of the drive takes place both in the initial position and in the final position. Due to the expansion at the two ends of the walls in the direction of displacement, the elastic element can be deformed in its direct position, i.e. in a straight line, and there no longer has contact with the walls. The deflecting device is therefore detached from the shaver housing.
According to the features of Claim 3, the surface of the wall has recesses that are situated one after the other along its length, in which the free ends of the elastic element engage. The recesses can for example be formed by fine teeth whose wall surfaces form a thread angle with the axis running perpendicular to the direction of displacement, said angle is preferably between 30° and 60°. Here, the free end of the elastic element forms an obtuse angle with the side surfaces. The free end is therefore firmly supported on the individual teeth in the direction of displacement, while in the direction of detachment it slides away over the teeth. The wall can also have only a certain degree of surface texture, so that here a somewhat sharp-edged free end of the elastic element can also have a firm engagement in the direction of displacement but will merely slide along in the direction opposite the direction of displacement. The teeth run perpendicular to the direction of displacement of the shaver housing.
According to the features of Claim 4, the wall or walls, as well as the free end of the elastic element or elements can also be provided with a micro-toothing that also results in a sliding clutch manner of operation.
According to the features of Claim 5, the wall runs parallel to the direction of displacement of the shaver housing. In this way, the result is that the elastic element is always bent equally strongly during engagement in the wall, so that accordingly a predetermined bending tension, and thus a constant pressure force acting on the wall, is maintained. This is also supported by the features of Claim 6.
Through the features of Claim 7, the degree of bending and pre-tension of the elastic element is determined as a function of the selected cross-section. The pre-tension or bending force of the elastic element must be selected large enough that the pressure force, which increases at the elastic element during the outward movement of the drive part, is sufficient to displace the shaver housing in its guide by diverting the pressure force to form a displacement force.
According to the features of Claim 8, the elastic element is preferably made of metal. Here, a plate element is used that is preferably made of spring steel and that therefore has good elastic flexibility without losing its spring characteristic. According to the features of Claim 9, the elastic element can however also be made of plastic, as long as this material has particularly good spring characteristics.
According to the features of Claim 10, an elastic element extends on both sides of the drive part, and respective walls are arranged on both sides of the drive part, parallel to one another, so that when the elastic element engages in the two walls this element is bent essentially in a U-shape, and also runs essentially symmetrical to the center axis of the drive part. In this way, no bending forces are transmitted to the drive part, and when there is a back-and-forth movement of the drive part the double path can be executed at the displacement device. Here, a back-and-forth movement is to be understood as the path from the initial position of the drive part once to the one side and once to the other side. Thus, for example, during the outward movement of the drive part the right segment of the elastic element forms a non-positive connection with the wall, so that during the advance the shaver housing is displaced, while the left segment slides on the wall. In contrast, during the movement away of the drive part the right segment of the elastic element slides along on the wall, while the left segment forms a non-positive connection with the wall and displaces it. Thus, during a back-and-forth movement of the drive part the shaver housing is displaced twice.
The spring elements are preferably formed by a single shaped part that is fastened to the drive part in a rotationally fixed and axially non-displaceable manner Features relating to the realization on the one side according to Claims 1 through 9 are accordingly also to be transferred to the other side. For the sake of simplicity, therefore, the corresponding design and operation of the walls and of the elastic elements on the other side are not further discussed here.
In a further embodiment of Claim 10, the walls according to Claim 11 form a common slot in which the drive part runs, centrically in the slot. This embodiment creates an elastic element that is held symmetrically in the slot, whose forces are equally transmitted to the left and right to the walls. This results in a particularly homogenous displacement of the shaver housing out of or into the housing of the shaver.
According to the features of Claim 12, the invention can be realized for a shaving apparatus that has only a single cutting system designed on a shaver housing. Such a shaving apparatus is then designated as a purely short-hair or long-hair cutter. In this embodiment, it is then advantageous if the single cutting system can be protectively stored in a housing when it is not being used. During use, in contrast, the cutting system can then automatically be extended out of the shaver housing.
However, it is equally possible to arranged, on a short-hair cutter formed in stationary fashion on a shaver housing, preferably on its front side, a long-hair cutter that can be extended from or retracted into the shaver housing, which can then be provided with the deflection and actuation device according to the invention. However, the deflection and actuation device according to the invention can also be used in all personal hygiene devices in which devices that generally treat the hair or the skin are used, such as plucking or massage devices, which can be extended from or retracted into the housing for better accessibility or better protection.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is shown in the drawing and is explained in further detail in the following.
First, it is to be mentioned that
The second shaving system 32 is arranged on a pivoting head 35 that is pivotable transverse to the shaver housing 1, said head is pivotably mounted on lateral arms 36, 37.
The first cutting system 28 is capable of displacement along the shaver housing 29 on sliding rails 29, in a recess 27 designed on the front side 26 of the shaver housing 1. A button 38 is used to displace the cutting system 28. The shaver housing 1 acts as the carrying part of the cutting systems 28, 32.
According to
The deflection device 2 is essentially made up of an elastic element 5 that is essentially strip-shaped and that is provided at one end with a thickening 8 that functions as a hub. The thickening 8 is provided in its center with a bore 7 through which a pin-shaped drive part 4 passes. The strip-shaped elastic element 5 is preferably connected to the drive part 4 in rotationally fixed and axially non-displaceable fashion via a press-fit seating. This is done so that during the desired bending of the elastic element during the displacement of the shaver housing 1 it cannot rotate or tilt on the drive part 4.
In contrast to
According to
According to
According to
According to
According to
Differing from
The manner of operation of the arrangement according to the invention is now described only on the basis of
The surfaces of the walls 12, 19 can be equipped with a fine toothing 14, wherein the individual teeth then have an angle d that is preferably between 30° and 60°. The front surface on the free end 10, 21 of the elastic elements 5, 6 forms with the upper and lower sides 17, 18 according to
The bending rigidity of the elastic elements 5, 6 must be large enough that during the displacement of the drive part 4 to the left or to the right, a part of this path is deflected in the direction X, while a small part still goes into bending deformation at the elastic element 5 or 6. In the return stroke of the drive part 4 toward the other side, the free end 16 can then slide downward over a part of the toothing 14, and can engage in a tooth flank 25 arranged thereunder, while the opposite side corner 22 laying against the tooth flank 25 displaces the shaver housing 1 upward in direction X and then slides over the individual teeth 24 during the return stroke. Thus, during the back-and-forth movement in direction Z, the shaver housing 1 is displaced upward step-by-step in direction X in the guide system, until it has reached its maximally extended position (not shown). In this position, the elastic elements 5, 6 move into the open spaces 15, causing them to stretch elastically and to assume their initial shape as shown in the retracted position according to
If the shaver housing 1 is now to be moved from its extended position back into its initial position, according to
The dimension a determines how strongly the elastic elements are elastically bent in the slot 3, and how large the movement at the shaver housing 1 is with each stroke. In order to achieve an optimal engagement of the elastic elements 5, 6 on the profile walls 12, the dimensions of the elastic elements are to be matched to the width of the slot 3 and to the profile surface on the walls 12.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 050 057.4 | Oct 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP08/07387 | 9/10/2008 | WO | 00 | 6/15/2010 |