The present patent application claims priority from German Patent Application Ser. No. 10 2009 053 614.0, and which was filed on Nov. 17, 2009 and PCT Application Ser. No. PCT/EP2010/065505, and which was filed on Oct. 15, 2010.
The present invention relates to a motor-driven angle grinder, and in particular to a motor-driven angle grinder driven by an electric motor, which has a motor housing accommodating a multiplicity of motor components and a transmission housing accommodating a multiplicity of transmission components, and wherein the invention further has a motor shaft and a tool spindle which are oriented at an angle to one another via an angular gear arrangement having a crown wheel, and wherein a grinding or separating tool which can be driven in rotation is mountable on the tool spindle.
A number of angle grinders have been disclosed, heretofore. An example of such art includes EP 1 938 924 A1. The teachings of this patent is incorporated by reference herein.
It is the object of the present invention to provide an improved angle grinder of the above-mentioned type such that poorly accessible work regions or areas which are bordered, in particular, by sections which are oriented at an acute angle to one another can be machined in an improved manner or can be machined if at all in the first place.
In the case of an angle grinder of the above-mentioned type, this objective is achieved according to the invention in that the crown wheel is formed in the shape of a hat, and is further arranged such that a recess forming the hat shape is oriented toward that side of the crown wheel that faces the tool, and a toothing on the crown wheel is arranged and located radially outside an elevation, which borders the recess, of the crown wheel, and on that side of the crown wheel that is remote from the tool. The recess is dimensioned such that the tool spindle and a bearing device mounting the tool spindle with respect to a flange of the transmission housing extend in the axial direction and into the recess.
On account of this configuration and according to the teachings of the present invention, a flat construction, which has not hitherto been realized in the case of angle grinders, is achieved in the region of the transmission housing. As a result, the range of application and usefulness of the angle grinder is widened considerably even under spatially restricted working conditions. As a result of the claimed configuration and spacial orientation of the crown wheel, the bearing device for supporting the tool spindle, and which is typically a roller-type bearing device, is arranged at the level of the crown wheel and located within the transmission housing. This feature saves considerable axial installation space. Further, in the disclosed invention an elevation bordering the recess toward the other side is provided on the crown wheel. On account of the fact that the toothing as provided on the crown wheel is arranged radially outside this elevation, a drive component meshing with the crown wheel, for example a pinion driven by the motor shaft or fitted on the motor shaft, can also be arranged at least partially within the axial installation space of the crown wheel. As a result of this arrangement, optimal use is made of the available axial installation space, and a minimum height of the transmission housing in the region of the tool spindle can be realized.
In another aspect of the present invention, it is proposed that a concentric portion of the flange of the transmission housing also extends in the axial direction and into the recess in the crown wheel. In this way, the portion of the flange extending into the recess can form an accommodating region for the bearing device.
In further continuation of this concept of the invention, the bearing device as earlier described, is secured axially against falling out with respect to the flange of the transmission housing, and in particular with respect to the concentric portion of the flange of the transmission housing, by an axially acting securing element, such as a snap ring, and wherein the axial securing element is fitted in a position which is located behind the flange.
In a preferred embodiment of the disclosed angle grinder, and according to the teachings of the present invention, a height of the transmission housing in the region of the grinding or separating tool lies in a range of about 32 mm. to about 40 mm. The height is measured in the axial direction of the tool spindle from an outer side, that faces the tool, as far as a top side, that is remote from the tool, of the transmission housing. It proves to be advantageous in this invention for the transmission housing to have this maximum height over the entire extent of the grinding or separating tool. However, the transmission housing should at least have this maximum height as far as the location of the longitudinal axis of the tool spindle.
Since angle grinders having such a low height of the transmission housing in the region of the tool spindle have not hitherto been available, protection is of course claimed for this concept of the invention. In particular, protection is claimed for this concept of the invention in conjunction with the teaching that the crown wheel is formed in the shape of a hat and is further arranged such that a recess forming the hat shape is oriented toward that side of the crown wheel that faces the tool.
According to a further embodiment of the present invention, the transmission housing is beveled toward the front, and preferably toward the sides and particularly on that side of a longitudinal axis of the tool spindle that is remote from the motor housing, such that the extended course of the bevel does not project beyond a peripheral edge of the tool. In prior art angle grinders, the extended course of the bevel intersects the plane of the tool and is located outside, and in front of the peripheral edge of the tool. This arrangement severely restricts the usability of the machine tool at poorly accessible work regions, as is shown in
In a further development of this concept of the invention, another embodiment of the invention is proposed, and wherein a tangent to the transmission housing forms an angle with the plane of the tool at the peripheral edge of the tool and which lies in a range of about 35° to about 42° . Further, single handed protection is a claimed feature of the present invention.
It has also proven to be advantageous for the tool spindle to be produced as a separate component from the crown wheel, and for the tool spindle to extend through the crown wheel, and for a second bearing device for the tool spindle to be provided on that side of the crown wheel that is remote from the tool.
According to a further embodiment of the angle grinder according to the present invention, it is proposed that the transmission housing be formed in an elongate manner such that a dimension of the transmission housing starting from a longitudinal axis of the tool spindle, and extending in the direction of the motor housing is greater than the radius of the tool, so that the tool does not engage beneath the motor housing. This elongated configuration of the transmission housing, which lengthens a typical long handle shape of the motor housing, makes it possible, for the first time, to arrange the tool with respect to the components of the transmission housing and of the motor housing, such that it does not engage beneath the motor housing. However, this design feature opens up the possibility of arranging or fabricating the tool in an orientation which is closer to the transmission housing in the direction of the longitudinal axis of the tool spindle, thereby again saving overall axial height of the transmission housing region. Patent protection is claimed for this concept of the invention, and in particular in conjunction with the feature whereby the crown wheel is formed in the shape of a hat, and is further arranged such that a recess forming the hat shape is oriented toward that side of the crown wheel that faces the tool.
In a further development of this concept of the invention, it is proposed in one form of the invention for the tool to be arranged on the transmission housing in such a manner that the upper and/or lower tool plane of the tool, when the machine tool is viewed from the side, and perpendicularly relative to the tool spindle, does not come to rest beneath the motor housing.
It also proves to be advantageous for the motor-driven angle grinder, and in particular the transmission housing associated with same, and the components thereof, to be configured such that a protective hood for the tool does not engage beneath the motor housing but, when the motor-driven angle grinder is viewed from the side, and perpendicularly to the tool spindle, is arranged next to the end of the motor housing, i.e. entirely within the region of the transmission housing. More specifically, and on account of the low flat construction according to the invention and which relates to the transmission housing, it is possible to arrange the protective hood, and a holder for the protective hood, entirely beneath that side of the flange of the transmission housing that faces the tool, so that it axially overlaps the installation space of the motor housing but,—as mentioned earlier—is arranged in front of the motor housing. Also as a result of the present teaching, a flat construction, which has never been realized before, of an angle grinder, as a whole, can be realized, and more specifically measured from a lower tool plane, to an upper side, that is remote from the tool, of the transmission housing.
Further features, details and advantages of the present invention can be understood from the appended patent claims, and from the illustrations and the following description of a preferred embodiment of the invention. In the drawings:
The tool spindle 36 further passes through a flange 44 which forms a portion of the transmission housing 14, and in a manner which will be described in more detail, hereinafter. The flange 44 is configured in the form of a plate, and the transmission housing 14 terminates towards the outside, and in the direction of the tool side. At a free end section 46, the tool spindle 36 carries, for example, an external thread 48, onto which there can be screwed a clamping means 50 which tightens the tool 16 against an axial abutment section 52 (
The angular gear arrangement 22 as described in the present invention is configured in detail in the following paragraphs.
The crown gear 34 is formed in the shape of a hat (
Thus, as can be seen from the drawings and as was mentioned, above, the crown wheel 34 is oriented such that its recess 54
As mentioned, the tool spindle 36 extends through the central shaft opening 38 (
The components which are illustrated in
The extremely flat or low profile construction of the transmission housing 14 and of the angle grinder 4, overall, can be seen from the figures. A dimension H from a lower side, that faces the tool, of the transmission housing 14, or the flange thereof 44, to a top side of the transmission housing 6 in the entire region above the tool 16 is advantageously only about 36 mm; at the point of the longitudinal axis 40 of the tool spindle 36 it is only about 34.5 mm. However, this dimension may vary and can lie in a range of about 32 mm. to about 40 mm.
Further, a tangent 82 is formed relative to the transmission housing 14, (
The initially mentioned protective hood 20 can be removed from the angle grinder and attached thereto again without tools, and can be locked in various rotational positions. The attachment and tool-less adjustment of the protective hood 20 is described in detail in DE 10 2008 059 249.8 by the applicant, and so reference is made thereto in this regard, and the teachings of this reference are incorporated herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 053 614 | Nov 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/065505 | 10/15/2010 | WO | 00 | 6/14/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/061022 | 5/26/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2267781 | Albertson | Dec 1941 | A |
6386961 | Cureton | May 2002 | B1 |
6871711 | Hansson | Mar 2005 | B2 |
7988538 | Trautner et al. | Aug 2011 | B2 |
20070295521 | Wiker et al. | Dec 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
10 2008 059 247 | May 2010 | DE |
1 938 924 | Feb 2008 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120282846 A1 | Nov 2012 | US |