The invention relates to indirect shooting fastening device for driving a fastening element into a receiving material through a feeder also driven in a tool barrel and then a tip-guide forming the tool nose. The feeder driving energy may be any energy, but generally it is the combustion energy of a powder charge or an air-gas mixture of a cartridge located in the tool.
As examples of fastening elements, staples, nails, or other fastening tips may be mentioned.
The fastening elements are generally introduced into the tool tip-guide bore from a charger removably fixed at the tool nose and at the shear unit, also fastened in turn on the tool, the tip-guide bore being partly formed by the shear unit.
A “shear unit” is mentioned because generally the fastening elements are arranged in strip, being stuck next to each other on a paper or plastic film, which is precisely sheared, at each shot, by the feeder when it drives with it the fastening element located in the tip-guide bore.
The introduction of the fastening elements into the tip-guide bore, from the charger, is done through a passing window provided in the shear unit, the axial length of which is slightly bigger than the length of the longest elements, that the tool is intended to use.
When the feeder, further to the ignition, hits the fastening element located inside the tip-guide, this element tends to hit the tip-guide bore wall and to bounce off it towards the passing window. If they are long fastening elements, the element placed inside the tip-guide then hits the following strip element placed on the other side of the passing window and bounces off it to be appropriately returned inside the tip-guide bore. But, when they are short fastening elements, the element being hit by the feeder can perfectly rock inside the charger through the window and cause a tool jam.
To avoid this risk, the document U.S. Pat. No. 6,808,101 proposes to provide, in the tip-guide and shear unit assembly, a device for adjusting the effective length of the passing window to the length of the charger fastening elements.
This adjustment device is a lever pivotally mounted around a transverse axis, orthogonal to the plan of the charger fastening element strip, that is about a transverse axis and orthogonal to the fastening elements themselves. As a circle shaped sector, it is returned by a spring into a partial plugging position of the passing window to only leave free the portion necessary for the passage of the short fastening elements.
When the charger comprises long fastening elements, against the action of the return spring, they rotate the lever towards the tool nose end to release the whole passing window.
Because of the adjustment lever operation and shape, there is possibly a risk for the short fastening elements to rock onto the other side of the passing window, inside the charger, above the adjustment lever, and jam the charger and the tool.
So the invention according to the present application aims at cancelling any jam risk.
Thus, it relates to a fastening tool for driving fastening elements of different lengths, comprising a tip-guide and shear unit assembly, to which can be fastened a charger comprising fastening elements, the fastening elements being introduced from the charger inside the tip-guide bore through a passing window provided inside the shear unit, the tool comprising a pivoting device for adjusting the effective length of the passing window to the length of the fastening elements to be driven, and which is submitted to return means back to a partial plugging position of the window for the shortest elements, characterised in that the adjustment device comprises a flap pivotally mounted about an axis being substantially parallel to the tip-guide bore and is adapted to provide a guiding surface to the shortest fastening elements before they enter into the partially plugged passing window.
It is through the pivoting action around an axis parallel to the tip-guide bore, more precisely parallel to its axis, that the adjustment flap of the invention tool has been able to be adapted to show this guiding surface for the short elements and, consequently, for their end turned to the tool nose end, and thus avoid their rocking action and therefore a tool jam.
The invention will be further understood from the following description, with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
The fastening tool 10 of
The fastening elements 11 are introduced from the charger 18 (
The shear unit 40 is a part completing the tip-guide 22 for forming the bore 12; the advantage of those two parts that are assembled is to allow for them to be disassembled when needed, when a fastening element 11 has been put askew and causes a tool trouble. The shear unit 40 thus constitutes the outlet of the charger 18 and takes generally the form of a frame 50, providing the passing window 13, with side hearings 43 for fastening to the tip-guide, an upper gantry-shaped part 44 for the passage of the fastening elements, here, as nails 11 are concerned, for the passage of their heads 45 and adjacent parts, a pair of small rear side plates 46 to guide the nail rods 47, and a rear bracket 48 supporting a flap 51 for adjusting the length of the passing window 13. In case of long nails, the small guiding plates 46 really surround the nail rods 47. But in case of small nails, the small plates 46 only surround the nail tips 49 and the adjacent rod parts.
Referring to
The flap 51 can pivot about the shaft 60, from a plugging position for the passing window 13 (
The adjustment flap has been described with two flange rings, with a shaft being driven therethrough, for pivoting the flap on the bracket. A shaft integral with the flap being mounted on the bracket bearings could be envisioned. A spring blade causing the rotation of the flap with no rotation axis could also be imagined instead of the flange rings, the shaft and the spring.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0706213 | Sep 2007 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB08/02287 | 9/3/2008 | WO | 00 | 3/3/2010 |