This application is based on German Patent Application 10 2009 027 223.2 filed Jun. 26, 2009.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a hand-guided power tool, having a housing and a tool holder that is disposed on a drive shaft which is rotatably supported in the housing in at least one first bearing that is disposed in at least some portions in the vicinity of a face end of the housing oriented toward the tool holder.
2. Description of the Prior Art
From the prior art, hand-guided power tools of this kind are known. They may have a detent mechanism for impact generation for the drive shaft, which detent mechanism can be switched on during operation of the power tool. As a rule, the detent mechanism includes one detent disk structurally connected to the housing and one detent disk structurally connected to the drive shaft, which are disposed between the first bearing of the drive shaft and a second bearing that is disposed in the vicinity of a gear mechanism that drives the shaft, or between that second bearing and the gear mechanism. For impact generation during operation of the power tool, the detent disks are put into operative engagement with one another.
It is disadvantageous in the prior art that this power tool requires not inconsiderable installation space and in particular has a not inconsiderable structural length.
One object of the invention is therefore to furnish a novel hand-guided power tool, having a detent mechanism, in which reducing an associated installation space is made possible.
This problem is attained by a hand-guided power tool, having a housing and a tool holder that is disposed on a drive shaft which is rotatably supported in the housing in at least one first bearing that is disposed in at least some portions in the vicinity of a face end of the housing oriented toward the tool holder. A detent mechanism for impact generation for the drive shaft is embodied between the first bearing and the tool holder.
The invention thus makes it possible to furnish a hand-guided power tool in which, by means of a disposition of the detent mechanism between a bearing of the drive shaft toward the tool holder and the tool holder itself, a reduction in an installation space required for the power tool and a reduction in an associated took weight are made possible.
In one embodiment, the tool holder has a drill chuck, provided with clamping bodies and a clamping bush, which drill chuck is secured to a securing device provided on the drive shaft.
Thus a safe and reliable tool holder can be furnished.
The detent mechanism has at least one first detent disk secured to the drive shaft. The first detent disk is preferably disposed in at least some portions radially inside the clamping bodies and/or the clamping bush.
The invention thus makes it possible to reduce the structural length of the power tool.
In one embodiment, the first detent disk is integrally formed onto the drive shaft.
Thus a stable, economical drive shaft and detent disk arrangement can be furnished.
The detent mechanism has at least one second detent disk, secured to the housing, which detent disk in an impact mode of operation of the power tool is in operative engagement with the first detent disk for impact generation for the drive shaft. The second detent disk is connected to a ringlike element, in which the first bearing is supported.
The invention thus makes it possible to furnish a simple, compact power tool.
In one embodiment, the drive shaft is drivable via a gear mechanism. The drive shaft is rotatably supported in at least one second bearing which is disposed in at least some portions in the vicinity of a face end of the gear mechanism that is oriented toward the face end of the housing.
Thus a stable and safe support of the drive shaft can be made possible.
The second detent disk preferably has a support element for axially bracing the first bearing.
Thus an axial displacement of the first bearing in operation of the power tool can be restricted in a simple way.
In one embodiment, a sealing element is provided for sealing off the detent mechanism.
The invention thus makes it possible in a simple way to protect the detent disks of the detent mechanism from dust, dirt, and loss of grease.
The invention will be better understood and further objects and advantages thereof will become more apparent from the ensuing detailed description of preferred embodiments taken in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
An electric drive motor 180, supplied with power by the battery pack 190, and a gear mechanism 170 are disposed in the housing 110. The drive motor 180 is shown as being actuatable or in other words capable of being switched on and off via a manual switch 195 as an example, and it can be any arbitrary type of motor, such as an electronically commutated motor or a direct current motor. Preferably, the drive motor 180 can be controlled and regulated electronically in such a way that both operation in reverse and specifications indicating a desired rotary speed can be attained. The mode of operation and construction of a suitable drive motor are well known in the prior art, and so to keep the description concise, a detailed description of it is dispensed with.
The drive motor 180 is connected via the gear mechanism 170 to a drive shaft 120. This shaft is supported rotatably in the housing 110 via a bearing arrangement 130 and is provided with a tool holder 140 that is disposed in the vicinity of one face end 112 of the housing 110. The bearing arrangement 130 may be secured to the housing 110, for instance via associated securing elements, or it may be disposed in an associated intermediate element, such as a separate gear housing in which the gear mechanism 170 is disposed, or a separate motor housing, in which the motor 180 and the gear mechanism 170 are disposed; the gear housing and the motor housing are disposed in the housing 110. The tool holder 140 serves to receive a tool bit 150 and may be an integral component of the drive shaft 120, or it may be connected to it in the form an attachment. In
The bearing arrangement 130, in one embodiment, has a first bearing 134 and a second bearing 132 spaced apart from the first. The first bearing 134 is disposed as an example at least in some portions in the vicinity of the face end 112 of the housing 110 and will therefore hereinafter also be called the “bearing 134 on the tool holder end”. The second bearing 132 is disposed for instance at least in some portions in the vicinity of a face end 172 of the gear mechanism 170 that faces toward the face end 112 of the housing 110 and will therefore hereinafter also be called the “bearing 132 on the gear end”.
In one embodiment, a detent mechanism 160 is embodied between the bearing 134 on the tool holder end and the tool holder 140 itself. This detent mechanism, in operation of the power tool 100, makes it possible to attain an impact mode of operation, in which a percussive motion of the drive shaft 120 is generated. The detent mechanism 160 will be described in detail hereinafter in conjunction with a sectional view, shown enlarged in
The tool holder 140 has as an example a drill chuck 240, which is secured to the securing device 122 of the drive shaft 120. The securing device 122 is embodied for example as a male thread, which is in threaded engagement with a female thread 222 provided on the drill chuck 240. The drill chuck 240 furthermore has a predetermined number of clamping bodies 242, 244, for instance three or four of them, for fastening the tool bit 150, as well as a clamping bush 246, which essentially sheathes the drill chuck 240. The tool bit 150 is rotated in operation of the power tool 100 by means of a rotation of the drive shaft 120.
The gear mechanism 170, in one embodiment, is a planetary gear embodied with various gear or planet stages, which in operation of the power tool 100 is driven to rotate by the drive motor 180. The planetary gear mechanism 170 has for example one hollow wheel 206, at least one planet wheel 205, and a driver 204, and it transmits the torque of the drive motor 180, via the planet stages, to the drive shaft 120 by means of a rotation slaving contour of the driver 204.
As can be seen from
The bearing 132 on the gear end is disposed axially and radially immovably in the housing 110. The bearing 134 on the tool holder end is disposed axially immovably on the drive shaft 120, for instance with a press fit. As an alternative, the bearing 134 may be integrally formed onto the drive shaft 120 and thus be embodied in one piece with it. In one embodiment, the bearing 134 is urged in the direction of the drill chuck 240 by a spring element 250, such as a compression spring, disposed between this bearing and the bearing 132 on the gear end. The spring element 250 rests with its axial end regions preferably against inner rings 292, 294 of the bearings 132 and 134, respectively.
The detent mechanism 160 is shown as an example disposed between the bearing 134 on the tool holder end and the drill chuck 240, and as an example it has at least one first detent disk 164 secured to the drive shaft 120 and at least one second detent disk 162 secured to the housing 110. In the impact generation of the power tool 100, the detent disks 162, 164, for impact generation for the drive shaft 120, are in operative engagement with one another via a face-end set of teeth 263 provided on the detent disk 162 and a face-end set of teeth 265 provided on the detent disk 164. In the normal mode of operation and in the idling mode, the sets of teeth 263, 265 are spaced apart and separated from one another, respectively.
The first detent disk 164 is secured axially and radially immovably on the drive shaft 120, for instance by a press fit, and are braced as an example on the bracing flange 255. As an alternative to this, the detent disk 164 may be integrally formed onto the drive shaft 120 and thus embodied in one piece with it. In one embodiment, the first detent disk 164 is oriented toward the drill chuck 240 and will therefore hereinafter also be called the “detent disk 164 on the drill chuck end”. It is preferably disposed in at least some portions radially inside the clamping bodies 242, 244 and/or the clamping bush 246.
The second detent disk 162 is connected to a ringlike element 266, which is secured axially and radially immovably on the housing 110, or in the vicinity of its face end 112, and the detent disk 162 may be secured to the ringlike element 266 or integrally formed or embodied in one piece with it. The second detent disk 162 will therefore hereinafter also be called the “detent disk 162 on the gear end”. Like the detent disk 164 on the drill chuck end, it is preferably disposed outside the housing 110. The face end 112 of the housing 110 is formed as an example by a sheet-metal-like fixation member 212, which serves to fix the ringlike element 266 in or on the housing 110.
In one embodiment, the bearing 134 on the tool holder end is supported axially displaceably but radially immovably in the ringlike element 266 or in the detent disk 162 on the gear end. To limit an axial displacement of the bearing 134 in the direction of the drill chuck 240, the detent disk 162 on the gear end has a support element 262 for axially bracing the bearing 134. An axial displacement of the bearing 134 in the direction of the gear mechanism 170 can be blocked by a blocking member 270. It is preferably connected to an adjusting device, which for the sake of clarity and simplicity is not shown and with which the normal mode of operation or the impact mode of operation of the power tool 100 can in particular be selectively adjusted.
For sealing off the detent mechanism 160, a sealing element 260 is provided, in order to protect the detent mechanism against dirt and dust and loss of its grease and thus to prevent impairment of its functionality. The sealing element 260 may be embodied as an example as a bellows, so that its air budget is unaffected upon an axial displacement of the detent disk 164 on the drill chuck end. An O-ring, radial shaft seal ring, or gap seal, that is, a seal embodied by an air gap with axial expansion, provided between the detent disks 162, 164, can equally well be employed, so that venting is made possible between the drive shaft 120 and the detent disk 162 on the gear end and between the bearing 134 on the tool holder end and the detent disk 162 on the gear end.
In the normal mode of operation and in idling of the power tool 100, the bearing 134 on the tool holder end is pressed against the support element 262 in the axial direction and blocked by the blocking member 270. Thus the drive shaft 120 cannot be displaced in the direction of the planetary gear mechanism 170, so that the detent disks 162, 164 are spaced apart from one another by a predetermined distance 214, and hence their face-end sets of teeth 263, 265 cannot be brought into operative engagement with one another.
In the impact mode of operation of the power tool 100, an axial displacement of the drive shaft 120 is enabled by release of the blocking member 270. Now, by means of a contact pressure exerted by a user on the power tool 100 or its housing 110, an axial displacement of the housing 110 relative to the tool holder 140 counter to the force of the spring element 250 can be attained, such that the face-end sets of teeth 263, 265 of the respective detent disks 162 and 164 mesh with one another, and as a result of this operative engagement, impact generation for the drive shaft 120 is made possible. This kind of impact generation is well known in the prior art, so that to keep the description concise, a detailed description of it will be dispensed with.
Since as described above the spring element 250 urges the bearing 134 on the tool holder end in the direction of the drill chuck 240, this makes it possible to switch the power tool 100 back and forth between the normal mode of operation and idling. To that end, the bearing 134 on the tool holder end, as described above, is blocked by means of the blocking member 270 in an axial position associated with the normal mode of operation or idling as applicable.
The foregoing relates to preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention, it being understood that other variants and embodiments thereof are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, the latter being defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 027 223.2 | Jun 2009 | DE | national |