The present application is national phase of PCT/IB2008/001915 filed Jul. 23, 2008, and claims priority from European Application Number 07290935.1 filed Jul. 25, 2007, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
The invention relates to nail driving tools that make use of nails organized in strips laid flat one on another in a feeding magazine. Such nail driving tools drive nails through a nose, or nail guide, by means of a piston that is driven by pneumatic energy or by combustion energy from propulsive charges, or from a mixture of air and gas from a gas cartridge. In a strip, the nails are placed beside one another, being offset longitudinally along their shanks by one head and being held in position by an adhesive film. Magazines include mechanisms for pushing the strips of nails towards the nose of the tools and for introducing the nails one by one towards the nose of the tools.
These nail driving tools can be used for manufacturing partitions and other wall panels, first for nailing together the various elements of a frame and then for nailing the multiple boards for each of these panels to the frame. It will be understood that such manufacturing is advantageously automated, a nail driving tool then forming part of manufacturing chain in which it is controlled automatically.
It will also be understood that automatic manufacturing involves high firing rates and that these rates require magazines of large capacity.
Nail driving tools have already been used with a magazine suitable for receiving reels of nails supporting 1200 or even 2500 nails. That is much more than magazines can contain when they hold strips of nails. Nevertheless, it is still not sufficient and reloading the tools remains a constraint for operators.
For staplers, which can be used in the same applications, the problem has already been solved so that they can be fed with strips of staples at any moment during their operating cycle. However, with staples, the problem was simple. With nails the problem was simple, and the invention of the present application seeks to solve the problem of continuously feeding nail driving tools with strips of nails, i.e. feeding the tools without stopping their operation.
To this end, the invention provides a magazine for use with a nail-driving tool, comprising:
Preferably, the pivoting station comprises an edge for retaining the heads of the nails of the nail strip to be pivoted and two guiding walls for guiding the nails of the pivoted nail strip, one of the guiding walls being movable for enabling the nails to pivot under gravity about said edge.
In the preferred embodiment of the magazine of the invention, said transport means comprise a movable platform arranged for extracting the one of the stacked nail strips lying underneath in the storing means.
Advantageously, the extracting transport platform is driven by a jack.
The storing means may include a rear vertical positioning rib for the stacked nail strips, when they are alternately in opposite directions, whereas the nails of each strip are inclined on the strip.
In this case, the pivoting station better comprises two opposite edges for retaining the heads of the nails of two successive nail strips to be pivoted, respectively.
The invention should be better understood upon reading the following description of preferred embodiments, with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
The nail driving tool described below is an automatically-actuated nail driving tool operating on pneumatic energy.
It should be observed at this point that the invention applies equally well to non-automatic nail driving guns that are actuated manually, and also to nail driving tools that operate on other kinds of energy.
With reference to
Shots, causing the cylinder and the piston to move, are triggered automatically by computer, and it is in this sense that the nail driving tool is said to be automatic.
The magazine 3 comprises a storing rack 5, a transport carriage 6, a pivoting station 7, and a pushing device 8.
With reference to
The nails 16 are collated on a strip of adhesive film 15 (
As described more clearly below, the strips of nails 15 are stacked in the storing rack 5 to form a stack 38, the strips lying one on another in planes that are substantially perpendicular to a so-called “feeding” plane in which each strip extends, after pivoting in the pivoting station 7 (
With reference to
The jack 28 is actuated via an admission pipe 31 (
When the jack 28 is actuated, e.g. from the posterior position of the carriage, i.e. in its position under the stack, or pile, 38 of strips of nails 15, and thus in its position for extracting the strip 15 being underneath the stack, the carriage 6 is driven to slide between the two cross bars 9, 10 of the rack 5.
Specifically for extracting the inferior strip from the stack of strips, the platform includes a table 32 for receiving said strip, which table is disposed at a level slightly lower than a thrust shoulder 33, by a height corresponding substantially to the thickness of one strip of nails. Given the crossed alternating disposition of the strips of nails, the shoulder 33 is shaped with a point pointing forwards so as to offer two shoulder portions 33, 35 extending parallel respectively to the shanks 17 of the nails that are inclined in opposite directions from one strip to the next.
In the rear position of the carriage 6, under the stored stack of strips 15, the inferior strip rests on the table 32. When the jack rod 30 is retracted into the cylinder 29, the carriage 6 is driven towards the pivoting station 7 of the magazine and the nose of the tool, taking with it, by means of the shoulder 33, the strip 15 that was resting on the table 32. As a result, the entire stack of strips of nails 15 moves down by one notch, i.e. through a height equal to the thickness of one strip, so as to rest on the two cross bars 9, of the rack 5 and on two reinforcing members 36, 37 fitted respectively thereto. In the opposite direction, when the jack 28 is actuated to reposition the carriage 6 under the stack of strips 38, the shoulder 33 and the superior table 39, which forms it with the inferior table 32 for receiving and extracting a strip, lift the stack 38 until it can move down again, after the shoulder 33 has gone past, and after a new strip of nails 15 has been received on the table 32.
It might happen that lifting the stack 38 for receiving and extracting a new strip of nails 15 is not so easy, because of the weight of the stack. For that reason, a separating pushing tablet 50 may be provided before the storing rack 5, slightly above the pivoting station 7 fixed onto the cross bars 9, 10, for separating the two inferior strips of nails stored in the rack 5. Such a separating pushing tablet has a rear bevelled end 51 shaped as a blade for carrying out the separating function. This tablet 50 is actuated by a rod 52 of a further pneumatic jack 53. To this end the tablet 50 comprises an upstanding bridge 54 receiving the free end 55 of the rod 52 comprising an annular groove 55 receiving the bridge 54.
While the carriage 6 is moving from the storing rack 5 to the pivoting station 7, the shank portion 17 of the nails 16 of the strip 15 disposed on the platform 32, adjacent to the heads 18, slide on the top edge 39, 40 of one of the two cross bars 9, 10 that pass through the pivoting station, the heads 18 on the outside, and the shanks 17 together with their points 19 on the inside.
In
After the carriage 6 has driven the strip of nails 15 to the pivoting station 7, the carriage 6 moves rearwards, i.e. in the opposite direction, to return under the storing rack 5 and take hold of a new strip 15. Since the strip 15 is no longer supported by the carriage 6, it pivots and tilts under gravity about the shank portions that are adjacent to their heads 18, said strip being held by these heads on the edge of the cross bar.
Before the nails tilt, a pivoting guiding plate 41 was located in an outwardly pivoted position, or open position (
The nails 16 are then suspended by their heads 18 resting on the guiding plates 41, 44, with their shanks 17 extending between these guiding plates. The strip of nails 15 is then in a feeding plane for being pushed to the nose 2 of the tool. The nails are pushed forwards by the jack 28 until the forwards nail reaches an end position by hitting a contact valve which moves the rod of jack 28 backwards to pick another strip of fasteners from the magazine. Then, a small pushing jack 8 takes over temporarily for pushing the nails to the nose 2.
In case the magazine comprises a separating pushing tablet 50, once a strip of nails at the pivoting station 7 is tilting prior to lying in the feeding plane, the tablet 50 is pushed backwards by rod 52 between the two inferior strips 15i and 152 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07290935 | Jul 2007 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2008/001915 | 7/23/2008 | WO | 00 | 1/24/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/013602 | 1/29/2009 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100206935 A1 | Aug 2010 | US |