The present invention relates to a flap drive system for a flap mounted in a movable manner on the body of a piece of furniture.
WO 2006/099645 A1 discloses a flap mounted in a movable manner on the body of a piece of furniture with a mechanical actuating unit having an actuating arm which can be connected to the flap and an energy accumulator which acts on the actuating arm. Furthermore, an electric motor for driving the flap is provided as an integral component of the mechanical actuating unit. A flap drive system with constructional units or components which are closed off from one another is not disclosed.
Drawbacks of the prior art include, on the one hand, the fact that a decision, once made, for a purely mechanical actuating unit or a mechanical actuating unit with an integrated electric motor may be altered only by way of a complete exchange of the mechanical actuating unit for a unit with or without an integrated electric motor. In other words, it is not possible to retrofit a mechanical actuating unit, which has already been installed in the body of a piece of furniture, with an electric motor. If the electric motor has to be exchanged owing to a defect, this requires the entire mechanical actuating unit to be taken apart or even the entire actuating unit with the defective electric motor to be exchanged for an actuating unit with an intact electric motor.
The object of the invention is to eliminate these problems of the prior art.
This object is achieved by providing a flap drive system in which the electric motor is arranged in an electric drive, wherein the electric drive is embodied as a closed-off component, so that the electric drive can be fastened to the actuating unit, which is present as a closed-off constructional unit, even when the actuating unit is already mounted on the body of the piece of furniture. This also allows a defective electric drive to be exchanged without having to remove the mechanical actuating unit from the body of the piece of furniture.
The electric motor can be fastened, for example, without tools, preferably by way of a snap connection, or else by way of a screw connection or in another suitable manner. Suitable fastening means must be arranged on the mechanical actuating unit and/or the electric drive for fastening the electric drive to the mechanical actuating unit.
The simplest embodiment of the electric drive as a closed-off component is achieved in that all the components of the electric drive are fastened to a common base plate. In this case, the base plate of the electric drive can be fastened to the mechanical actuating unit. The base plate can of course be completely or at least partially sheathed by a housing to protect the components of the electric drive.
Alternatively, provision may also be made for all the components of the electric drive to be arranged in a common housing. In this case, it is not necessary for all the components to be fastened to the base plate of the housing.
Particularly preferred is an embodiment of the invention in which provision is made for the drive force to be transmitted from the electric drive to the actuating unit via a preferably single interface. This interface can be formed, for example, by a shaft journal which connects an output of the electric motor or a gear mechanism arranged on sides of the electric drive to the mechanical actuating unit. The shaft journal is in this case, for example, non-rotatably introduced into an opening on the actuating unit. In this case, provision may for example be made for the interface to interact directly with the actuating arm of the actuating unit, so that the flap is driven via the electric motor, the interface and the actuating arm.
Of course, a gear mechanism may also be provided in the drive chain between the electric motor and the actuating arm.
Particularly preferably, provision is made, in the embodiment with the interface, for the interface to establish, as it were automatically, a connection for transmitting force between the electric drive and the actuating unit as a result of the fastening of the electric drive to the actuating unit. This may be carried out, in the embodiment of the actuating unit as a shaft journal, in such a way that the shaft journal is fastened to the electric drive and engages, during the fastening of the electric drive as a result of its positioning, with a corresponding withdrawal opening on the actuating unit.
If the actuating unit has a housing with a base which can be fastened to the body of the piece of furniture and a covering surface set apart from said base, provision may be made to fasten the electric drive to the covering surface. Alternatively, provision may be made to fasten the electric drive to the actuating unit, laterally next to said actuating unit. In both cases, it is not necessary to remove the actuating unit from the body of the piece of furniture, for fastening the electric drive, if the actuating unit is already mounted on the body of the piece of furniture.
Very generally, provision may of course be made to fasten the electric drive to the actuating unit before the actuating unit is mounted on the body of the piece of furniture. In this case, the key advantage of the invention over the prior art consists in the fact that the electric drive may easily be removed from the actuating unit once said actuating unit has been mounted; this is advantageous, for example, in the case of a defective electric motor.
If provision is made for the electric drive to have a gear mechanism, provision may furthermore be made for the interface to be coupled to the gear mechanism on the side of the electric drive. This embodiment affords the advantage that no modification of pre-existing mechanical actuating units is required, provided that the units have an interface.
In a further preferred embodiment of the invention, provision is made for a coupling to be connected between the at least one electric motor and the interface or between the at least one electric motor and the gear mechanism.
The coupling can be embodied, for example, in a mechanically flexible manner (for example as a hose coupling). A mechanically flexible embodiment of this type of the coupling helps to reduce transmission of the drive noise of the electric motor to the gear mechanism and if appropriate the housing part in which the gear mechanism is arranged. This is important to the extent that preferably the electric motor is mounted in a floating manner in the housing of the electric drive and therefore itself gives off hardly any vibrations to the housing. The acoustic properties of the electric drive may be further improved if provision is made for additional weights to be connected to the at least one electric motor. This allows the ratio between the stator mass and rotor mass of the electric motor to be advantageously altered.
The electric motor can be mounted in a floating manner with the aid of foam pads.
Alternatively or additionally, provision may be made for the electric drive to have a freewheeling coupling for the at least one electric motor. A freewheeling coupling of this type is described in the aforementioned WO 2006/099645 A1 and therefore does not have to be commented on in greater detail at this point.
For various reasons, it may be advantageous if a position measuring device is provided for determining the position of the actuating arm. Alternatively or additionally, provision may be made to provide a position measuring device for determining the electric motor. That is to say, in particular in the case of the arrangement of a freewheeling coupling, it is not necessarily possible to conclude from a known position of the actuating arm or electric motor the position of the other of the two components, the actuating arm and electric motor. In this case, it is advantageous if separate position measuring devices are provided for each component (actuating arm and electric motor respectively). It is of course also possible to provide a common position measuring device having separate sensors for the actuating arm and the electric motor respectively.
At least one of the position measuring devices can in this case have a rotary potentiometer. Other embodiments of the position measuring device(s) are also conceivable.
The measurement signals from the position measuring device or position measuring devices can be supplied to an open or closed-loop controller. The open or closed-loop controller can control the electric motor in an open or closed loop as a function of the measurement signals received. For example, it is possible to implement in this way a touch-latch functionality in which the electric motor is triggered and/or braked for driving the flap as a result of a user acting on the flap. Furthermore, it is also possible to traverse various speed or acceleration profiles, including as a function of the intensity and/or direction of a force exerted by the user.
Furthermore, it is also possible to determine by way of the position measuring devices derived movement variables of the electric motor and/or the flap such as, for example, rotational acceleration and rotational speed or acceleration and speed.
As the flap is not always readily accessible (above all for relatively small users) in the fully opened state, it is possible to provide on the body of the piece of furniture a separate switch which can be used to carry out the closing. If the switch is provided only for the closing, it is concealed by the flap in the closed end position of the flap, in which the flap rests against the body of the piece of furniture. Nevertheless, the process of closing by the electric motor can of course also be started by way of a movement of the flap by the user.
A flap drive system according to the invention can be arranged on one or both sides of the body of a piece of furniture. In the case of an arrangement on both sides, provision may be made for one of the flap drive systems (or the open or closed-loop control unit thereof) to function as the master and the other flap drive system (or the open or closed-loop control unit thereof) as the slave.
Further advantages and details of the invention will emerge from the figures and also the description of the figures pertaining thereto. In the drawings:
a, 12b are each a perspective view of the body of a piece of furniture with a mounted flap drive system according to the first or second exemplary embodiment.
The interface 6 is in this case embodied in the form of the central shaft 6′ of the electric drive 3 and a receptacle (not shown), arranged after a receptacle opening 6″ on the actuating unit 2, for the shaft 6′.
The housing of the actuating unit 2 has a base 23 which can be used to fasten the actuating unit 2 to the body of a piece of furniture. The covering surface 24, which serves to fasten the electric drive 3, is set apart from the base and substantially parallel thereto.
In relation to the electric drive 3,
A further potentiometer, which is embodied directly on the printed circuit board 38 by suitable connections, is not shown separately in the figures. The position of the output of the electric motor 31 can be determined via this potentiometer.
The electric drive 3 also has an overload coupling 331 as well as a freewheeling coupling 35. The overload coupling 331 prevents in this case accidental destruction of the toothed wheels of the gear mechanism 33 as a result of excessive loads acting on the actuating arm 21. The freewheeling coupling 332 allows a user to intervene while the flap 4 is being driven, without the motor 31 preventing him from doing so.
Although a key advantage of the invention consists in the fact that it is possible to fasten the electric drive 3 to an actuating unit 2 even when the actuating unit 2 is already mounted on the body 5 of a piece of furniture (not shown here), the flap drive 1 can of course also be prefabricated in the form shown in
All the components of the electric drive 3 are in this case arranged in a housing 32. The housing 32 can be covered by a cover 321.
The electric motor 31 is arranged in a floating manner in a motor mount. In this case, weights 36 are arranged (in a manner which may not be seen) in the motor mount. The output 312 of the electric motor 31 interacts with a worm wheel 314 via a freewheeling coupling 35 (in this case: a claw coupling). The worm wheel 314 drives the arm 61 via the gear mechanism 33.
a shows the body 5 of a piece of furniture with a flap 4 mounted thereon in a movable manner and a flap drive system 1 according to
b shows the body 5 of a piece of furniture with a flap 4 mounted thereon in a movable manner and a flap drive system 1 according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 696/2007 | May 2007 | AT | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/AT2008/000153 | Apr 2008 | US |
Child | 12579521 | US |