1. Field of the Invention
The invention is directed to a hand-held power tool with an air spring percussion mechanism with a crank drive and, particularly, to a multipurpose hammer or chisel hammer.
2. Description of the Prior Art
According to German Publication DE2511083, a conventional hand-held power tool of the type mentioned above has a crank mechanism that is driven by an electric motor and that includes an eccentric which is unbalance- compensated in a mirror-symmetric manner with respect to a crank radius and which moves an impact piston, which applies blows directly to a percussion tool, in oscillatory reciprocating motion by means of an air spring.
An air spring percussion mechanism of this kind generates high impact energies in a virtually reaction-free manner. Nevertheless, a small part of the vibrations is also transmitted to the external housing of the hand-held power tool, where it is ultimately absorbed, via the handle, by the user's hand/arm system.
Passive vibration damping, e.g., according to German Publication DE 19503526, or, in high-power hand-held power tools, also active vibration damping, e.g., according to European Publication EP 1221359, is often used in hand-held power tools of the type mentioned above for reducing vibrations of this kind at the handle.
According to the principle of superposition of forces, the vibration can be actively compensated to zero in theory, but only partially in practice, by correspondingly antiphase counterforces. With conventional nonharmonic vibrations, i.e., particularly non-sinusoidal vibrations with respect to time, this can be achieved by a sufficiently large quantity of harmonic counter-vibrations of different frequency, amplitude and phase when the latter are selected so as to be correspondingly in antiphase to the Fourier decomposition of the vibration.
Counterforces suited to this purpose occur, for example, in accelerated counter-oscillating masses. According to British Publication GB 969215, the vibration of the percussion mechanism in a hand-held power tool is compensated by counter-vibrations of a plurality of antiphase, harmonically oscillating masses of rotating eccentrics.
Since the main source of vibrations in air spring percussion mechanisms is the exclusively axially oriented, nonharmonic air spring force, exclusively axially oscillating masses are also suitable for compensation. The fundamental harmonic component of the air spring force is shifted in phase with respect to the crank motion. Therefore, according to European Publication EP 1475190, in a hand-held power tool with a crank-driven air spring percussion mechanism, the guide tube guiding the impact piston is driven by an additional eccentric so as to be shifted in phase by 270° relative to the driving piston and accordingly partially compensates the axially oriented fundamental harmonic component of the vibration.
Further, according to British Publication GB 474902, in a hand-held power tool with a crank-driven spring percussion mechanism, the guide tube for guiding the impact piston is moved in counter-phase to the driving piston by means of a nonround cam disk which is formed at the eccentric of the crank mechanism driving the driving piston.
It is the object of the invention to realize a simply designed active vibration reduction for a hand-held power tool with a crank-driven, air spring percussion mechanism.
This and other objects of the present invention, which will become apparent hereinafter, are achieved with having percussion mechanism which is suitable for generating axial impacts of an impact piston reciprocating along an impact axis and which is driven by a crank pin of a rotatably supported eccentric whose mass distribution with respect to an eccentric axis has an unbalance that is offset in the eccentric plane extending perpendicular to the eccentric axis by an angle of unbalance in the rotating direction in the range of 70° to 90° relative to the crank pin which is spaced by a distance equal to the crank radius from the eccentric axis.
Owing to the unbalance which is arranged so as to be suitably asymmetric with respect to the crank pin, a portion of the fundamental harmonic oscillation of the vibration generated by the air spring percussion mechanism is compensated. Since the eccentric is a necessary component of the crank mechanism, no further structural component parts are required in principle, so that this active vibration reduction is simply designed and economical.
The unbalance with respect to the crank radius and the impact piston mass is in the range of 0.3 to 1.0 so that the unbalance is suitably dimensioned.
At an impact frequency in the range of 5 Hz to 25 Hz, the unbalance with respect to the crank radius and the impact piston mass is advantageously in the range of 0.4 to 1.0.
Alternatively, at an impact frequency in the range of 25 Hz to 60 Hz, the unbalance with respect to the crank radius and the impact piston mass is advantageously in the range of 0.35 to 0.9.
Alternatively, at an impact frequency in the range of 60 Hz to 100 Hz, the unbalance with respect to the crank radius and the impact piston mass is advantageously in the range of 0.3 to 0.8.
The eccentric advantageously has (considered in cylindrical coordinates) a crank disk which is directly adjacent to the crank pin along the eccentric axis and which has a mass distribution which is not rotationally symmetric in the eccentric plane and not mirror-symmetric with respect to the (vectorial) crank radius, so that the eccentric, which has this unbalance and is arranged close to the impact axis, generates only small tilting moments. Further, an eccentric, which is formed in this way, can be produced in a simple manner by casting or forging.
Alternatively, the eccentric advantageously has (considered in cylindrical coordinates) along the eccentric axis, in addition to a crank disk which is directly adjacent to the crank pin, an additional mass spaced therefrom with a mass distribution which is not rotationally symmetric in the eccentric plane and not mirror-symmetric with respect to the (vectorial) crank radius, so that an eccentric, which has this unbalance and is arranged close to the impact axis, generates additional tilting moments, which is especially suited for hand-held power tools having a center of gravity outside of the impact axis.
The eccentric advantageously has a plurality of parts, and an eccentric shaft is fixedly connected with a crank disc or with an additional mass, which is further advantageously formed as an eccentric ring, so that the eccentric can be formed of geometrically simple components.
The novel features of the present invention, which are considered as characteristic for the invention, are set forth in the appended claims. The invention itself, however, both as to its construction and its mode of operation, together with additional advantages and objects thereof, will be best understood from the following detailed description of preferred embodiment, when read with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The drawings show:
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The following dimensions are particularly suitable:
1) Impact frequency: 14 Hz; impact piston mass: 1400 g; crank radius: 4.7 cm; unbalance: 4000 g cm
2) Impact frequency: 50 Hz; impact piston mass: 170 g; crank radius: 1.7 cm; unbalance: 150 g cm
3) Impact frequency: 70 Hz; impact piston mass: 70 g; crank radius: 1.1 cm; unbalance: 40 g cm
Though the present invention was shown and described with references to the preferred embodiment, such is merely illustrative of the present invention and is not to be construed as a limitation thereof and various modifications of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art. It is therefore not intended that the present invention be limited to the disclosed embodiment or details thereof, and the present invention includes all variations and/or alternative embodiments within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 000 279.2 | Jun 2006 | DE | national |