The invention relates to a hand power tool having a clutch.
A hand power tool of this kind is used in particular as a so-called dry construction screwdriver. With a dry construction screwdriver, screws can be screwed in to a uniform depth. To that end, the clutch has a drive shaft toward the motor and a driven shaft toward the workpiece, and the clutch engages under pressure on the driven shaft and disengages in cooperation with a depth stop located on the hand power tool. The screw to be inserted is pressed against the wall with the driven shaft and with an attachment or bit that is necessary for engagement with the screw. Because of the counterpressure on the driven shaft, the clutch engages. The driven shaft is driven by the drive shaft. The screw is inserted into the wall. Once the screw reaches the set depth, the pressure exerted on the screw by the hand power tool is absorbed by the depth stop that presses against the wall. The pressure on the driven shaft lets up the clutch disengages. The driven shaft is no longer driven.
A dry construction screwdriver operates at high rotary speeds of up to 6000 rpm. In the clutch engagement operation, a driving part that is rotating at high rotary speed must accordingly be coupled to a stationary driven part by means of the clutch. For a dry construction screwdriver, clutches are known that couple by means of slaving. The clutch engages once the clutch parts have come close enough to one another, or when a sufficiently high pressure is exerted on the clutch parts.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a power hand tool with a clutch, which is a further improvement of the existing hand power tools.
The invention is based on a hand power tool, having a clutch, a drive shaft toward the motor, and a driven shaft toward the workpiece, in which the drive shaft and the driven shaft can be coupled by means of the clutch that engages when pressure is exerted on the driven shaft.
It is proposed according to the invention that the clutch includes a clutch engagement aid. Even with only gradual pressure on the driven shaft, clutch engagement can be done quickly and completely. An unpleasant production of noise from the overlooking or lining up of the clutch parts, and high wear that is associated with this, can be avoided. The term “clutch engagement aid” can be understood to mean any design or device of mechanical, electrical or magnetic type that in addition to the pressure reinforces and/or speeds up the clutch engagement operation by the driven shaft. For instance, the pressure on the clutch parts can be increased mechanically, electrically or magnetically.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the clutch includes a first clutch half, connected to the drive shaft, and a second clutch half, connected to the driven shaft, and the driven shaft is passed through both clutch halves. As a result, the clutch halves can be stably supported with only a few components. Advantageously, the clutch includes a gear wheel that drives the clutch halves, and the driven shaft is also guided by the gear wheel. Expediently, both clutch halves and in particular the gear wheel as well are supported directly or indirectly on the driven shaft. The bearing of the drive shaft can be made especially economical and long-lived if the drive shaft is supported in two bearings, which are located one on either side of the clutch in the axial direction. Only a slight tilting moment occurs, and as a result the driven shaft can be supported in simple slide bearings.
An especially stable, compact clutch can be achieved if the clutch has a gear wheel, and the clutch engagement aid is located between the gear wheel and a first clutch half connected to the drive shaft. The gear wheel here is advantageously a gear wheel that drives the clutch halves and is connected to the drive shaft.
A compact, economical clutch can be achieved if the clutch has a gear wheel, which is connected to the drive shaft, is rotatable relative to the driven shaft, and is located surrounding the driven shaft, and in particular is supported on the driven shaft.
Advantageously, the clutch has a first clutch half connected to the drive shaft and a second clutch half connected to the driven shaft, and the clutch engagement aid is designed as additionally shortening the spacing of the clutch halves when pressure is exerted on the driven shaft. This version achieves a clutch engagement aid that is economical and can easily be realized in hand power tools of a conventional design.
Upon an initial clutch engagement, the clutch engagement aid can reinforce the clutch engagement operation by moving the clutch halves toward one another, for instance pulling them together or into one another. Moreover, when pressure is exerted on the driven shaft, the clutch engagement can for instance be tripped electrically or magnetically by an approach of the clutch halves. The driven shaft itself need not be axially displaceably supported then.
Advantageously, the clutch engagement aid converts a rotary motion into a translational motion. A difference in a rotary motion of the two shafts can be converted into a coupling motion of the clutch and/or an approach motion of the two clutch halves.
In a preferred mechanical embodiment, the driven shaft and with it the second clutch half are supported axially displaceably. The axially displaceable driven shaft, when pressure is exerted on it, moves the second clutch half toward the first clutch half. Now, in addition to the displacement by the driven shaft, the clutch engagement aid now shortens the spacing of the clutch halves. Thus the clutch engagement operation no longer exclusively follows the motion of the driven shaft; instead, the clutch parts move more quickly toward one another. The clutch engagement takes place faster and even with only gradual pressure on the driven shaft.
In a further embodiment of the invention, the clutch has a first clutch half connected to the drive shaft and a second clutch half connected to the driven shaft, and upon clutch engagement, an initial rotational slaving of the second clutch half by the first clutch half leads to a complete clutch engagement. A clutch engagement operation can be achieved reliably and regardless of the geometry of elements touching one another in the two clutch halves.
Expediently, the clutch has a first clutch half connected to the drive shaft and a second clutch half connected to the driven shaft, and as a clutch engagement aid, at least one of the clutch halves is supported displaceably in the axial direction in its bearing and is in engagement with a ramp contour, extending in the circumferential direction, of a counterpart or gear element of the drive shaft and/or driven shaft. In this embodiment, the thus-supported clutch half moves along with the driven shaft and/or drive shaft. The clutch half is in engagement with a ramp contour of the counterpart or gear element.
By means of the ramp contour extending in the circumferential direction, a relative rotation of the clutch half to the drive shaft and/or driven shaft is permitted. If the clutch half is rotated relative to the drive shaft and/or the driven shaft, then it runs on the counterpart or gear element along the ramp contour. By means of the ramp, the clutch half is thus axially displaced relative to the counterpart or gear element. The ramp contour brings about a further shortening of the spacing of the clutch halves, as soon as a relative rotation of the thus-supported clutch half occurs relative to the counterpart or gear element. This version is simple and mechanically easy to achieve.
In a further advantageous embodiment, the at least one clutch half is in engagement with three ramp contours of the counterpart or gear element. In this way, the clutch half can be guided at three points, so that wobbling of the clutch half, especially upon clutch engagement, relative to the counterpart or gear element is avoided.
It is also advantageous if the at least one clutch half likewise has a number of ramp contours, so that the clutch half and the counterpart or gear element are in mutual engagement via ramp contours. This embodiment is especially secure and stable.
Advantageously, the drive shaft drives a gear wheel, as a gear element, on which the first clutch half, meshing with the gear element via the at least one ramp contour, is supported axially displaceably. This makes a secure support of the first clutch half possible and takes existing structural conditions of hand power tools into account. Via the driven gear wheel, the desired gear ratio with respect to the drive motor is established.
Expediently, the ramp contour includes regions of different slope. As a result, very specifically required conditions for the hand power tool can be met. For instance, via a rising slope along the ramp contour, the clutch engagement operation can be initiated gently and finally—at the end of the ramp contour having the pronounced slope—concluded quickly and stably with a fast clutch engagement.
Economical manufacture of the clutch can be achieved if the two clutch halves are designed identically.
As already noted at the outset, the invention is not limited to a mechanical clutch engagement aid. Advantageously, the clutch engagement aid may also be designed electromechanically.
Further advantages will become apparent from the ensuing description of the drawings. In the drawings, exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown. The drawings, description and claims include numerous characteristics in combination. One skilled in the art will expediently consider these characteristics individually as well and put them together to make useful further combinations.
The novel features which are considered as characteristic for the present invention are set forth in particular in the appended claims the invention itself, however, both as to its construction and its method of operation, together with additional objects and advantages thereof, will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Between the gear wheel 24 and the driven shaft 22, there is a clutch 26, which when pressure is exerted on the driven shaft 22 couples the drive shaft 20 and the driven shaft 22 to one another. For this purpose, the clutch 26 has a first clutch half 28 and a second clutch half 30. The two clutch halves 28, 30 are shaped identically. The first clutch half 28—as a clutch engagement aid, it is axially and tangentially displaceable relative to the gear wheel 24—meshes with the gear wheel 24. The second clutch half 30 is force-lockingly connected to the driven shaft 22. The driven shaft 22 and the second clutch half 30 are jointly supported axially displaceably in the dry construction screwdriver 10. The driven shaft 22 is supported in two bearings 31, which are disposed one on either side of the clutch 26 in an axial direction 38, and thus one bearing 31 is located in front of the clutch 26, and one bearing 31 behind it, in the axial direction 38. By means of this bearing of the driven shaft 22 outside the clutch 26, only a slight tilting moment occurs on the driven shaft 22, and as a result, ball bearings can be dispensed with, and the bearings 31 can be designed as simple slide bearings.
A pressure exerted on the driven shaft 22 when a screw is being inserted is absorbed by means of a mechanical spring element 32, which is fastened between the two clutch halves 28 and 30.
When pressure is exerted on the driven shaft 22, the second clutch half 30 approaches the first clutch half 28. When the two clutch halves 28 and 30 touch, the first clutch half 28 experiences a relative rotation relative to the gear wheel 24, and this motion, via a ramp contour that is not visible in
To make the mode of operation of the clutch 26 more comprehensible, the clutch is shown on a larger scale and in detail in
The gear wheel 24, which supports the first clutch half 28, is supported freely rotatably relative to the driven shaft 22 in a gear wheel bearing 40. This can be seen from a gap 42 between the gear wheel 24 and the driven shaft 22. Via teeth 44, which extend diagonally along the circumference, the gear wheel 24 is driven by the drive shaft 20. The first clutch half 28 is supported rotatably to a certain extent on the gear wheel 24. For that purpose, the first clutch half 28 meshes, via a protuberance 46 that is shown in perspective in
In the disengaged state, the first clutch half 28 rotates with the gear wheel 24 that is driven by the drive shaft 20. The driven shaft 22—and thus the second clutch half 30—is stopped. If the driven shaft 22, and with it the second clutch half 30, now moves toward the first clutch half 28 as a result of pressure exerted by the craftsman on the screw to be inserted, then a state is reached in which the second clutch half 30, via the clutch teeth 50, is slaved by the first clutch half 28. As a result, the first clutch half 28 simultaneously rotates relative to the gear wheel 24. Via a ramp contour 60, 64 (
How the gear wheel 24 is embodied in detail can be seen from the three-dimensional view in
If the first clutch half 28 and the gear wheel 24 are resting on one another, then the protuberances 46 and the elevated parts 56 of the gear wheel 24 and of the first clutch half 28, respectively, alternatingly engage the recesses 62 and 58 in the first clutch half 28 and in the gear wheel 24, respectively. Upon a relative motion between the gear wheel 24 and the first clutch half 28, the two move away from one another, because of the ramp contours 60 and 64. The boundary of the recesses 62 and 58 serves here as an end stop.
It will be understood that each of the elements described above, or two or more together, may also find a useful application in other types of constructions differing from the types described above.
While the invention has been illustrated and described as embodied in a hand power tool with a clutch, it is not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made without departing in any way from the spirit of the present invention.
Without further analysis, the foregoing will so fully reveal the gist of the present invention that others can, by applying current knowledge, readily adapt it for various applications without omitting features that, from the standpoint of prior art, fairly constitute essential characteristics of the generic or specific aspects of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 059331.0 | Dec 2004 | DE | national |