Concurrently filed herewith is a U.S. Application which has not yet been assigned a Ser. No., but which has the same inventive entity as the present invention, is entitled “Handle Assembly for Power Tool”, claims priority from GB Patent Application Nos. GB 1109492.7 filed on 7 Jun. 2011 and GB 1113116.6 filed 29 Jul. 2011 in the name of Black & Decker Inc., and is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Furthermore, the present application claims priority from GB Patent Application Nos. GB 1109494.3 filed on 7 Jun. 2011 and GB 1113117.4 filed 29 Jul. 2011 in the name of Black & Decker Inc.
The present invention relates to handle assemblies for power tools, and relates particularly, but not exclusively, to vibration damping handle assemblies for use with hammer power drills.
Hammer power drills are known in which a rear handle for operation by a user's hand is provided at a rear part of a tool housing, and a front handle operated by the user's other hand is provided at a forward part of the tool housing. The front handle may be provided with vibration damping means for reducing the transmission of vibrations from the housing of the tool to the user's hand.
GB 2444160 discloses an auxiliary handle for a hand held machine tool in which a supplementary handle is clamped to a machine tool by means of an injection moulded clamping collar. This arrangement suffers from the drawback that the tendency of mechanical stresses to be concentrated in certain regions of the clamping mechanism results in the apparatus being expensive to construct if it is to be sufficiently robust.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention seek to overcome one or more of the above disadvantages of the prior art.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mounting apparatus for mounting a handle to a power tool, the apparatus comprising:
a support for supporting a handle and engaging a body of the power tool;
a flexible member for engaging the support at first and second locations to form a loop for retaining the support in engagement with the body of the power tool;
a retaining mechanism comprising a pair of first members for engaging the support and the flexible member, and retaining means for retaining the first members in position relative to the support; and
adjustment means for causing movement of said first members relative to each other in a first direction to reduce the size of said loop and in a second direction to increase the size of said loop.
By providing a retaining mechanism comprising a pair of first members for engaging the support and the flexible member, and retaining means for retaining the first members in position relative to the support, and adjustment means for causing movement of said first members relative to each other in a first direction to reduce the size of said loop and in a second direction to increase the size of said loop, this provides the advantage of enabling clamping stresses to be spread along the length of the loop, thereby enabling the apparatus to be robustly constructed in a more cost effective manner.
Said first members may be mounted in use adjacent respective ends of said flexible member.
This provides the advantage of enabling the area over which tensioning forces are applied to the flexible member to be increased, thereby improving reliability of the apparatus.
At least one said first member may be slidable relative to said support.
This provides the advantage of enabling the construction of the apparatus to be simplified, thereby reducing its cost.
At least one said first member may be slidable relative to said support by means of mutually engaging surfaces on said first member and said support.
This provides the advantage of enabling the construction of the device to be simplified, and the device to thereby be reduced in cost, by enabling sliding movement of at least one said first member relative to the support to cause movement of the first members towards or away from each other, for example by means of suitable inclined surfaces.
The retaining means may comprise at least one retaining member for engaging said first members.
At least one said retaining member may be adapted to pass through a respective aperture through each said first member.
The adjustment means may engage at least one said retaining member to cause at least one said first member to move relative to said support.
The adjustment means may engage said retaining member by means of respective screw threads provided on said retaining means and said retaining member.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a handle mechanism comprising a mounting apparatus as defined above, and a handle mounted to said support.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only and not in any limitative sense, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
The mounting parts 16 of the handle 4 are pivotably mounted to a third mounting part 24 on the base 6 such that the enlarged portions 22 of the torsion spring 18 are received in respective first and second mounting parts 16. The enlarged portions 22 of the torsion spring 18 are attached to the first and second mounting parts 16 by means of screws 26, and the enlarged portion 20 at the centre of the torsion spring 18 is attached to the third mounting part 24 by means of a screw (not shown). The ends of the first and second mounting parts 16 are closed by end caps 28 which are slidably received in respective apertures in the mounting parts 16.
When no load is applied to the grip 14, the torsion spring 18 remains flat and the grip 14 remains in its rest position. However, when pressure is applied to the grip 14, the mounting parts 16 at the respective ends of the grip 14 cause the enlarged portions 22 at the ends of the torsion spring 18 to twist around the longitudinal axis of the torsion spring 18 relative to the enlarged portion 20 at the centre of the torsion spring 18, and twisting movement of the torsion spring 18 damps the transmission of vibrations from the body of the power tool via the base 6 to the grip 14.
Referring now to
In the embodiment of
As the side handle 104 is pivoted about the pivot axis 160 relative to the base 106, the spring rods 118 are bent as a result of the change in circumferential position of the recesses 162 at the ends of the rods 118 relative to the protrusions 164 between the ends of the rods 118, and the resilience of the spring rods 118 resists this pivoting motion and damps vibrations passing from the tool housing to the handle 104.
It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that the above embodiment has been described by way of example only and not in any limitative sense, and that various alterations and modifications are possible without departure from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. For example, it is possible to replace the threaded rod 166 of the embodiment of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1109492.7 | Jun 2011 | GB | national |
1109494.3 | Jun 2011 | GB | national |
1113116.6 | Jul 2011 | GB | national |
1113117.4 | Jul 2011 | GB | national |