The invention relates to a hand application device having a handle and a controller for varying the flow rate of a liquid or viscous material through a nozzle, for example, for applying or spraying on adhesive.
Such devices are often conceived for complex gluing work or continuous industrial use and must thus meet high demands with respect to ergonomics, handiness, and manifold usability.
The applicant of the present application has put a hand application device on the market under the name Ecoline, which provides an attachment for one end of a supply hose. See under www.mkhotmelt.fi/robatech tuotteet/sulateliimalaitteet/sulateliimalaitteet 1/e site ecoline 3.pdf. A handle is fastened on the front side of this attachment, which has a nozzle at an approximately 100° angle from the body axis of the supply hose and the attachment positioned thereon. Furthermore, this known hand application device has a controller for varying the flow rate of the nozzle.
In specific applications, however, it has been shown that the ergonomics, the handiness, and in particular the adaptation possibilities of this known hand application device are restricted and capable of improvement.
Experiments have shown that a placement of the nozzle in the extension of the body axis of the supply hose in combination with a configuration of the handle, which is mounted so it is rotatable and adjustable, at an approximately right angle to the body axis of the supply hose achieves the stated object. The rotatable mounting of the handle is performed using a rigid pivot bearing, however, a preferred design variant provides a ball-and-socket joint or spherical bearing instead of a rigid pivot bearing. Such a bearing also offers lateral adjustment possibilities in addition to the rotation.
A rotatably mounted fastening of an approximately semicircular bracket having a corresponding guide results in a further advantageous rotation-adjustment capability around a second rotational axis. A rotatable mounting of a correspondingly designed handle results in a third rotation-adjustment capability around a third rotational axis, namely around the body axis of the handle itself. A hand application device designed according to the invention in this manner can be supplemented by a fourth rotational-adjustment capability of the attachment on the front side of the supply hose. Manifold adaptation possibilities to various work conditions, applications, and space relationships, better reachability of poorly accessible adhesive surfaces, and also improved avoidance of adhesive drops on the hand and more economical handling of the adhesive therefore result. A further advantage is that a heating element can be placed in the attachment and the heat can hardly be transmitted at all to the handle.
All pivot bearings may optionally be provided with a lock.
Furthermore, the configuration of the individual elements of a hand application device according to the invention opens up possibilities for the configuration or integration of novel and inventive controllers of the flow rate of the nozzle.
A first controller according to the invention provides that the handle has a finger trigger. This can optionally be designed not only for one finger, but rather for two or even more fingers for improved ergonomics. It is preferably spring-loaded and causes, for example, a small quantity of adhesive to flow through the nozzle in the case of lighter pressure actuation and a greater quantity in the case of stronger pressure actuation. However, applications are also conceivable in which a reversed controller can be advisable. In any case, a circuit (such as a DC circuit), which is connected to the finger trigger, is provided in this first controller according to the invention. Pressure actuations of the finger trigger cause the generation of an electrical control signal, using a variable resistor, as the manipulated variable for the further control process. A resistor having sliding contacts, a potentiometer, a resistor having sliding contacts having “off” position, or also a voltage-dependent resistor, a so-called varistor, also come into consideration as the variable resistor. The control signal generated by the variable resistor then controls a valve, as a function of the position of the finger trigger. This valve is electrically activatable, i.e., a solenoid valve, for example. All conceivable types of valve come into consideration for the construction of this valve, such as needle valves, ball valves, diaphragm valves, stopcock valves. This valve in turn controls the flow rate of the adhesive through the nozzle.
A second controller according to the invention functions optoelectrically. This can be performed using a so-called optocoupler, fundamentally, however, a light source is excited more or less depending on the position of the finger trigger and accordingly a photodiode or a photo transistor receives a corresponding radiation quantity. In order to prevent external light influences from corrupting the control signal, transmission of the radiation quantity using an optical waveguide is preferred. The corresponding radiation quantity in turn generates a control signal for a control valve of the nozzle, as described above.
A third controller according to the invention combines an electrical circuit with a pneumatic circuit. In this case a solenoid control valve is activated so that the compressed air or liquid which is conducted through this solenoid control valve is varied as a function of the finger trigger actuation. A further valve, preferably a sequence valve or pressure control valve, and thus in turn the flow rate quantity of adhesive through the nozzle, can thus in turn be activated.
A fourth controller functions mechanically using springs and a check valve controlled by spring force—which is also spring-loaded.
The four presented controllers are combinable with one another. Thus, for example, a direct activation of a hydraulic pump and thus the positioning valve of the nozzle using the electrical signal from the finger trigger is also conceivable. Vice versa, however, integration of the finger trigger in a pneumatic circuit can also be implemented, so that a control valve moves mechanically and this mechanical movement influences the positioning valve of the nozzle.
The controllers disclosed up to this point describe a finger trigger. However, a hand application device according to the invention can also have a foot controller or a mouth controller for controlling the delivery of the adhesive. Such a controller can be advisable in particular if both hands are required during gluing.
The transmission of the control signal to the positioning valve for the variation of the flow rate of the nozzle can be performed via a cable, or also in a contactless manner, for example, as an IR or radio signal. Transmissions via optical waveguides, as mentioned above, also come into consideration.
Further embodiments of the invention are specified in the figures and in the dependent patent claims.
The list of reference numerals is part of the disclosure.
The invention is explained in greater detail for symbolic and exemplary purposes on the basis of figures.
The figures are described in coherent and comprehensive form. Identical reference numerals identify identical components, reference numerals having different indices specify functionally-identical or similar components.
In the figures:
FIG. 1—shows a hand application device according to the prior art;
FIG. 2—shows a hand application device according to the invention;
FIG. 3—shows another view of the hand application device according to the invention shown in
FIG. 4—shows a circuit diagram of a controller according to the invention of a hand application device according to the invention having a potentiometer;
FIG. 5—shows a further circuit diagram of a controller according to the invention for a hand application device according to the invention having an optocoupler, and
FIG. 6—shows a further circuit diagram of a controller according to the invention for a hand application device according to the invention having an electrical circuit and a pneumatic circuit.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/003869 | 5/14/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/10/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/138107 | 11/19/2009 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110127295 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |