The present invention relates to a hand-guided machine tool, in particular a grinder, according to the preamble of claim 1.
DE 10 2005 014 045 A1 describes a hand-guided grinder, which includes—on the underside of the housing—a grinding plate with suction holes for suctioning up dust. An abrasive disc in which holes that correspond with the suction holes have been punched is installed on the grinding plate. With the aid of a dust fan, the grinding dust produced during operation of the grinder is directed through the holes in the abrasive disc, and it is directed further via the holes in the grinding plate and via a blow-out connector on the housing and into a dust collection container, which has been installed on the blow-out connector. To empty the dust collection container, it is pulled off of the blow-out connector in the axial direction opposite to that in which it is installed. The dust collection container is typically sealed off from the surroundings via a sealing ring located on the blow-out connector. When the dust collection container is removed, the problem may occur that, due to the increased friction between the sealing ring and the dust collection container, a considerable resistance must be overcome in order to detach the dust collection container from the blow-out connector. Once the initial high resistance is overcome, the dust collection container is abruptly released.
The object of the present invention is to design a hand-guided machine tool using simple design measures such that the dust collection container may be removed from the machine tool in a controlled manner.
This object is achieved according to the present invention via the features of claim 1.
The subclaims describe advantageous refinements.
The hand-guided machine tool according to the present invention includes an electric motor in a housing for driving a tool, via which a work piece will be worked. A dust collection container for receiving abraded particles, e.g., grinding dust, may be connected with the housing by sliding a container connector—which is installed in the wall of the dust collection container—onto an associated blow-out connector on the housing of the machine tool in the axial direction. In the installed position, the container connector and the blow-out connector are located coaxially with one another.
To release this connection, it is provided according to the present invention that the wall of the dust collection container and an associated wall of the housing are in contact with each other via at least one common support point that has radial clearance from the longitudinal axis. When the dust collection container is rotated about the longitudinal axis of the container connector, the support point travels in the axial direction—relative to the longitudinal axis of the container connector—and, expediently, in the circumferential direction as well. This superposed rotary and axial motion of the contact point represents a combination of a rotary and translational displacement motion, with the translational components pointing in the axial direction of the container connector of the dust collection container. This axial motion of the contact point serves as the actuating motion for the axial release motion of the dust collection container, which bears via the support point against the wall of the housing. The trajectory of the contact point follows an approximately spiral path. An axial displacement in the release direction of the container is therefore automatically attained when the dust collection container is rotated around the axis of the container connector. It is therefore no longer necessary to apply a manual, axial release force to the dust collection container. Instead, it is sufficient to simply rotate the dust container manually around the axis of the container connector. The axial displacement automatically results via the traveling contact point between the walls of the dust collection container and the housing of the machine tool.
According to an advantageous refinement of the present invention, it is provided that at least one of the walls—which face each other—of the dust collection container and the housing has a shape that deviates from a plane that is vertical relative to the longitudinal axis of the container connector. This wall, which is located either on the dust collection container or the housing or on both components, may itself be flat in design, or it may have a shape that deviates from a plane, e.g., it may be designed as a three-dimensional flank. It is essential that at least one part of this wall is designed to extend vertically—at an angle to the plane—through the longitudinal axis of the container connector; the contact point between the dust collection container and the housing travels along this part of the wall while the container is being detached. Due to the oblique orientation of this part of the wall, the contact point performs a motion with axial components during the release motion that is responsible for the axial removal of the dust collection container of the blow-out connector.
In the installed position, there is—expediently—at least one support point between the housing walls—which face each other—of the machine tool housing and the dust collection container. It is also possible, however, to design corresponding walls to bear against each other in two dimensions, at least in sections, when the dust collection container is in the installed position. In this design, therefore, there is—at least in the installed position—not just a contact point, but also a contact surface. As the rotational motion of the dust collection container about the longitudinal axis of the container connector begins, the two-dimensional contact is eliminated and is reduced to one contact point.
According to a further expedient embodiment, at least one of the connectors—either the container connector on the dust collection container or the blow-out connector on the housing—is slightly conical in design, while the particular other connector is, expediently, cylindrical in design. As the sliding-on motion takes place, the frictional force caused by the seal therefore increases.
It may also be expedient to provide a raised area on the jacket surface of a connector, which, in the installed position, extends into an assigned detent groove in the particular other connector. In this manner, a detent connection is provided that is form-fit in the axial direction, which holds the dust collection container in the installed position on the housing under normal operating conditions despite the vibrations caused by the motor or that occur while the workpiece is being worked. Due to the inherent elasticity of the connectors and/or the detent elements, the detent connection may be automatically released as soon as the dust collection container is rotated about the longitudinal axis of the container connector.
Further advantages and advantageous embodiments are depicted in the further claims, the description of the figures, and the drawing.
Components that are the same are labelled with the same reference numerals in the figures.
Machine tool 1 shown in
Machine tool 1 includes—in a housing 2 composed of plastic—an electric drive motor 3, which drives a drive shaft 4, which is eccentrically connected with a tool 5. A power-supply connection 10 is provided to supply power to electric drive motor 3. The abraded particles produced when a workpiece is worked—in particular the grinding dust—are suctioned up, e.g., with the aid of a dust fan, which is located in the machine tool, and they are conveyed into the interior of housing 2. From there, the abraded particles travel through a blow-out connector 6, which is designed as a single piece with housing 2, into dust collection container 7. Dust collection container 7—which is advantageously also composed of plastic and into which a filter element, e.g., a paper filter or a polymer filter, may be inserted—includes a container connector 8, which is designed as a single piece with the wall of dust collection container 7. Container connector 8 is slid axially onto blow-out connector 6 of housing 2. In the installed position shown in
As shown in the enlarged depiction of dust collection container 7 in
As also shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 061 635 | Dec 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/062368 | 11/15/2007 | WO | 00 | 10/13/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/080688 | 7/10/2008 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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10 2005 014 045 | Sep 2006 | DE |
1 506 840 | Feb 2005 | EP |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090280728 A1 | Nov 2009 | US |