The present invention relates to an iron tip cleaner device that removes a solder residue adhered to an iron tip of a soldering iron by blowing air against the iron tip. More specifically, the present invention relates to an iron tip cleaner device from which blown air is smoothly discharged.
In an iron tip cleaner device that removes a solder residue adhered to an iron tip of a soldering iron by blowing air against the iron tip, it is necessary to smoothly discharge the air blown against the iron tip. In a case in which no air discharge means is provided, air with a solder residue mixed therein is jetted from an iron tip insertion port when the iron tip is pulled out of the cleaner device once the removal of a solder residue ends and the jetting is stopped. This is because the iron tip insertion port has necessarily to serve as an outlet port of the air.
Patent Literature 1 describes an iron tip cleaner device that removes a solder residue adhered to an iron tip of a soldering iron by blowing air against the iron tip and that is provided with an outlet port of the air. Here, it is described in [0023] of the specification of Patent Literature 1 that only one air source can be provided to be shared as a first air source and as a second air source. However, this description does not mean that only one supply air system is sufficient, which is one of features of the invention of the present application. Here is an explanation to this point. In the iron tip cleaner device described in Patent Literature 1, the first air source provides air to be used to clean the iron tip while the second air source provides air to be used to discharge the air. In addition, a selector valve for supplying air is provided for each of the first air source and the second air source. Since the first air source and the second air source use different pressures, it is necessary to provide the selector valve for each air source, and two air sources and two selector valves are thus provided. For the sharing of the first air source and the second air source described in [0023] of the specification of Patent Literature 1, it is described that air can be branched into two parts outside the device and allocated and input to the first air source and the second air source. In addition, since the iron tip cleaner device described in Patent Literature 1 includes the two air sources and selector valves provided in the air sources, the structure is complicated, which is also different from the invention of the present application.
An object is to provide an iron tip cleaner device that removes a solder residue adhered to an iron tip of a soldering iron by blowing air against the iron tip, which is a device with a simple structure to enable smooth discharge of the air blown against the iron tip and supply of such air from one supply source. Further, an object is to provide a device that can be easily manufactured at low costs due to its simple structure.
(1) The object is achieved by an iron tip cleaner device for a soldering iron including: an iron tip receiving portion that receives an iron tip of a soldering iron inserted therein; a cleaner portion that strips off a solder residue adhered to the iron tip of the soldering iron through jetting of air; an air supply portion that supplies, to the cleaner portion, the air to be jetted; an air exhaust portion that exhausts the air jetted to the soldering iron; and a housing inside which the air jetted to the soldering iron flows toward the air exhaust portion, in which the air exhaust portion includes a first opening that is an opening through which the air jetted to the soldering iron is discharged, and a second opening that is an opening of a pipe starting from an air supply port, a flow of air jetted from the second opening promotes the discharge of the air from the first opening, and air to be supplied to the air supply portion which supplies, to the cleaner portion, the air to be jetted and the air to be jetted from the second opening are supplied from one common air supply port.
(2) The object is achieved by the iron tip cleaner device for a soldering iron characterized in that the first opening is disposed at a position at which the first opening surrounds the second opening.
(3) The object is achieved by the iron tip cleaner device for a soldering iron characterized by including: a mechanism configured such that a ring-shaped copper wire is disposed in an insertion portion of the iron tip, a change in electrostatic capacity caused by the iron tip having approached the ring-shaped copper wire is detected, and the mechanism is triggered by the detection and starts to jet air.
(4) The object is achieved by the iron tip cleaner device for a soldering iron characterized in that the iron tip receiving portion is opened in a direction inclined from a vertical direction such that the iron tip receiving portion comes into sight of an operator who cleans the iron tip.
(5) The object is achieved by the iron tip cleaner device for a soldering iron characterized in that the iron tip receiving portion is opened in a vertical direction so as to receive the iron tip lowered in the vertical direction.
It is possible to obtain an iron tip cleaner device that removes a solder residue adhered to an iron tip of a soldering iron by blowing air against the iron tip, which is a device with a simple structure to enable smooth discharge of the air blown against the iron tip and supply of such air from one supply source. Further, it is possible to obtain a device that can be easily manufactured at low costs due to its simple structure.
A first embodiment is an example in which an iron tip is inserted into a cleaner device from an obliquely upper side and mainly assumes to be employed in a case in which soldering is performed by a manual operation. A second embodiment is an example in which an iron tip is inserted into a cleaner device from a side right above the cleaner device and mainly assumes to be employed in a case in which soldering is performed by a robot. A third embodiment is an example related to a mechanism that detects whether or not an iron tip has been inserted into an iron insertion port of a cleaner device, which is another example of a mechanism described in the first embodiment and can be applied to both the cleaner devices in the first embodiment and the second embodiment. Hereinafter, each of the embodiments will be described separately.
The first embodiment will be described with reference to
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
The iron tip cleaner 20 includes therein a partitioning plate 22 that partitions a housing of the iron tip cleaner. The inside of the iron tip cleaner is divided by the partitioning plate 22 into a front chamber 24 on the front side of the partitioning plate and a back chamber 23 on the back side of the partitioning plate. The partitioning plate 22 does not completely split the inside of the iron tip cleaner 20 and includes voids that are sufficient for air to smoothly flow into the back chamber 23, on the upper side and lateral sides between the partitioning plate 22 and the housing. This is because a mechanism for discharging air to the outside is provided in the back chamber 23 as will be described later, and if the air does not smoothly flow into the back chamber 23, the discharge of the air to the outside is prevented.
The back chamber 23 includes an air supply port 27 for supplying air to the iron tip cleaner, a solenoid valve 30 that controls opening and closing of a pipe through which the supplied air flows, a joint 31 that splits a flowing direction in the pipe into two directions, and an exhaust port 28 that discharges air to the outside.
Operations of the cleaner device according to the first embodiment will be described with reference to
As described above, illustration of the pipes that connect the members is omitted in
An existing transmissive sensor is provided at the position illustrated with the reference sign 13 (
The air flows while swirling in the cleaning pot 21 and is jetted toward the iron tip.
Air after finishing the cleaning of the iron tip of the soldering iron in the cleaning pot 21 flows toward the scrap receptacle 25 inside the housing of the iron tip cleaner 20 as illustrated by the arrows of the solid lines in
Using
As schematically illustrated in
Air that has flowed out of the inner outlet port 29b of the exhaust port then flows toward the assembled outlet port 29c of the exhaust port and is directly discharged. At this time, a flow of air is formed from the inner outlet port 29b toward the assembled outlet port 29c inside the exhaust port 28. The flow of the air formed here causes a flow of the air inside the housing of the iron tip cleaner 20 flowing from 29a toward the exhaust port 28. As a result, the air after finishing the cleaning of the iron tip of the soldering iron avoids the partitioning plate 22 in the housing of the iron tip cleaner 20 and flows above the housing and the like, and the air that has flowed into the back chamber 23 passes through the outer inlet port 29a of the exhaust port, enters the exhaust port, and is discharged from the assembled outlet port 29c of the exhaust port. Since the air that has flowed into the back chamber 23 originally seeks and flows to an outlet port in the housing of the iron tip cleaner, if even a slight air flow has been generated, the air is likely to flow out with the slight air flow.
The second embodiment will be described with reference to
The third embodiment will be described with reference to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2019-181649 | Oct 2019 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2020/036095 | 9/24/2020 | WO |