This invention relates to a motor-driven reinforcing bar binder, and more particularly to a cooling device for the reinforcing bar binder having a temperature control function.
There is previously known motor-driven reinforcing bar binders which are provided with a binding wire feeding mechanism for feeding a binding wire being bent in a loop shape to be wound over a reinforcing bar and a binding wire twisting mechanism for twist and binding the binding wire wound around the reinforcing bar, wherein a binding wire feeding operation and a binding wire twisting operation are successively performed by a trigger operation to perform a once-cycle binding operation (see, e.g. JP-U-05-003494 and JP-A-2003-064876). These reinforcing bar binders include a single-motor type in which the binding wire feeding mechanism and the binding wire twisting mechanism are driven by a single motor and a two-motor type in which the binding wire feeding mechanism and the binding wire twisting mechanism are driven by different motors, respectively. However, in either type, the operation of twisting the binding wire is subjected to considerable load and the motor in charge of the twisting operation generates a large quantity of heat.
As a means for dissipating the heat generated by an electric tool, there is a previously known method in which the interior of a housing inclusive of the motor is cooled during motor rotation by a wind supplied by a fan attached to a motor shaft (see, e.g. JP-U-07-007805). However, in the reinforcing bar binder, in which the operation pattern of the motor is different from that of the electric tool such as an electric drill or an electric driver, a sufficient motor cooling effect cannot be obtained by the fan which rotates simultaneously with the motor. Therefore, the reinforcing bar binders have not been specially provided with cooling means such as fans.
The operation pattern of the reinforcing bar binder is a short-time high speed operation in which the one cycle consisting of the operation of the binding wire feeding mechanism and that of the binding wire twisting mechanism is not longer than 1 sec. More specifically, the operation of the twisting mechanism includes an operation of closing a tip of the twisting mechanism so as to grasp the binding wire, a twisting operation of rotating the twisting mechanism and an operation of reversing the motor to release the binding wire so that the twisting mechanism is restored to an initial position. The motor changes between a normal rotation and a reverse rotation in a short period. Therefore, even with the fan attached to the motor shaft, the rotation time within the one cycle is short. In addition, the rotation of the fan is reversed soon and the number of rotations is also few. Thus, a satisfactory cooling effect cannot be expected. Accordingly, in the conventional reinforcing bar binder, in place of a cooling device, a protecting circuit using a temperature detecting element is provided so that when the temperature within a housing reaches a predetermined upper limited temperature, a power source circuit is interrupted to prevent the motors, circuit elements or the housing from being burned.
As described above, since the conventional reinforcing bar binder is not specially provided with the cooling mechanism, if the binding operation is performed continuously for a long period, the interior temperature gradually rises. As a result, the protecting circuit is activated to interrupt the power source. In this case, the reinforcing bar binder cannot be employed until the interior temperature falls to a safety reference value. In a large-scale construction scene such as bridge or road construction, although the reinforcing bar binder is continuously driven all day long, it cannot be employed owing to temperature rise so that working must be interrupted. This may leads to delay in a work schedule.
In order to obviate such an inconvenience, any cooling means is required. For example, if the reinforcing bar binder is simply provided with an electric fan connected to a power switch, the electric fan which always rotates consumes a large quantity of electric power. This leads to an inconvenience of shortening the duration of a battery of the reinforcing bar binder. Further, in a very low temperature environment in which the atmospheric temperature is not higher than 0° C., the viscosity of lubricant applied to a rotating mechanism portion of the reinforcing bar binder lowers to increase the operation resistance and reduce the battery capacity. So, unless an warm-up is carried out to some extent, the primary performance cannot be shown. In the electric fan which always rotates, air is sent in a low temperature environment also. This leads to a problem that the interior of the reinforcing bar binder is cooled to the temperature not higher than a suitable operation temperature to deteriorate the performance.
In view of the above circumstance, an object of the invention is to provide a cooling device which can control the temperature of a reinforcing bar binder within an appropriate range to permit its long-time continuous operation and extremely suppress power consumption due to cooling.
In order to attain the above object, in accordance with the invention, a motor-driven reinforcing bar binder is provided with: a binding wire feeding mechanism for feeding a binding wire to be wound around a reinforcing bar; a binding wire twisting mechanism for grasping and twisting a loop of the binding wire wound around the reinforcing bar so as to bind the reinforcing bar; a cooling fan provided within a housing of the reinforcing barbinder; temperature detecting means for detecting an interior temperature of the reinforcing bar binder; and means for comparing the temperature detected by the temperature detecting means with a reference temperature; and a fan driving control means for on-off controlling the cooling fan according to a comparison result. The cooling fan is driven when the interior temperature of the reinforcing bar binder exceeds the reference temperature.
Further, a motor-driven reinforcing bar binder is provided with: a binding wire feeding mechanism for feeding a binding wire to be wound around a reinforcing bar; a binding wire twisting mechanism for grasping and twisting a loop of the binding wire wound around the reinforcing bar so as to bind the reinforcing bar; a cooling fan provided within a housing of the reinforcing bar binder; a fan driving control means for on-off controlling the cooling fan; a timer means for counting a fan driving time. Driving of the cooling fan is started when a trigger signal for a binding operation is received, and is stopped after a predetermined time elapses.
Further, a motor-driven reinforcing bar binder is provided with: a binding wire feeding mechanism for feeding a binding wire to be wound around a reinforcing bar; a binding wire twisting mechanism for grasping and twisting a loop of the binding wire wound around the reinforcing bar so as to bind the reinforcing bar; a cooling fan provided within a housing of the reinforcing barbinder; temperature detecting means for detecting an interior temperature of the reinforcing bar binder; and a means for comparing the temperature detected by the temperature detecting device with a reference temperature; and a fan driving control means for on-off controlling the cooling fan according to a comparison result. Driving of the cooling fan is started when the interior temperature of the reinforcing bar binder exceeds the reference temperature and a trigger signal for a binding operation is received, and is stopped after a predetermined time elapses.
Further, there is provided a cooling device for a reinforcing bar binder including a control means for resetting a counting operation of the timer means if a trigger signal for a binding operation is received during a period from when driving of the cooling fan device has been started to when a predetermined fan driving time has elapsed.
Further, there is provided a cooling device for a reinforcing bar binder wherein the cooling fan is arranged on the rear side of a driving motor for the binding wire twisting mechanism and on or in the vicinity of an axial line of the driving motor.
The invention has attained the object of realizing continuous running of the reinforcing bar binder during a long time, by installing a cooling fan in the reinforcing bar binder and on-off controlling the cooling fan according to the interior temperature of the reinforcing bar binder.
In these figures, reference numeral 1 denotes a reinforcing bar binder; 2 a housing; 3 a binding wire twisting mechanism; 4 a binding wire feeding mechanism; 7 a battery; 8 a power supply circuit board; 9 a twisting motor; 10 a feeding motor; 16 a control circuit board; 17 a cooling fan device; 22 an exhausting slit; and 23 a heat sensitive element (temperature detecting device).
The binding wire feeding mechanism 4 has two V-groove equipped gears 11 in mesh with each other, arranged in a front-rear direction of paper face in
The binding wire twisting mechanism 3 includes a twisting shaft 14 and three clamping plates 15 (arranged in a front-rear direction in
And a cutter device (not shown) cuts the rear end of the binding wire loop. With both ends of the binding wire loop being clamped, a twisting shaft 14 is rotated to twist both ends of the binding wire loop, thereby binding the reinforcing bar. The respective operating steps of one cycle consisting of feeding the binding wire, clamping the front end of the binding wire loop, pulling-back of the binding wire, clamping the rear end of the binding wire loop, cutting the binding wire, twisting the binding wire and restoring to an initial position are successively executed by the control of a microprocessor (not shown) mounted to a control circuit board.
In the reinforcing bar binder 1, as a cooling means for cooling the interior of the housing 2, a cooling fan device 17 is arranged at the rear end (right side in
Thus, until the interior temperature of the reinforcing bar binder 1 exceeds the reference temperature, the cooling fan 17 is not actuated. Only at the high temperature, air blowing by the cooling fan 17 is carried out. When the interior temperature falls to the reference temperature or less, the cooling fan 17 is stopped. Accordingly, wasteful power consumption can be prevented. As a result, the long period continuous running of the reinforcing bar binder can be realized without operating the protecting device for the reinforcing bar binder.
An example of more precise control than the first embodiment is shown in
If the interior temperature exceeds 0° C., the binding operation is executed and the cooling fan 17 is also actuated (step 205). Counting of a predetermined on-duration (e.g. 60 sec) of the fan motor is started (step 206). If the trigger switch is turned on during this timer counting (step 207), the timer counting is stopped and cleared (step 208), and then the control processing returns to step 203. According to the interior temperature, the binding operation is executed (step 204), or otherwise the binding operation is executed and also the cooling fan 17 is actuated (step 205).
Further, if the trigger switch is not operated within 60 sec from the completion of the binding operation, simultaneously with count-up of 60 sec, the fan motor is stopped (step 210). Then, the control processing returns to step 202 in which the trigger switch stands by.
Accordingly, if the interior of the reinforcing bar binder 1 is cold in a cold environment, the cooling fan 17 is not actuated. On the other hand, if the interior of the reinforcing bar binder 1 is not lower than the reference temperature, the binding mechanism is actuated and also the cooling fan 17 is driven. When a predetermined time elapses after completion of the binding, the cooling fan 17 is stopped. Thus, the rise of the interior temperature can be suppressed to the utmost to permit the long period continuous running of the reinforcing bar binder, and power consumption of the cooling fan can be minimized.
Incidentally, the invention should not be limited to the above embodiments, but can be modified in various forms within a technical scope of the invention. It is needless to say that the invention covers these modifications.
The cooling device for the reinforcing barbinder according to the invention cools the interior of the reinforcing bar binder using the cooling fan. Therefore, during the continuous operation, the temperature does not rise to injure the binding machine. The protecting circuit is not actuated to forcibly stop the binding machine, thereby improving stability of the machine. Further, by means of the timer means for limiting the driving time of the cooling fan to a predetermined time and the means for on-off controlling the cooling fan according to the interior temperature of the reinforcing bar binder, the power consumption of the cooling fan can be reduced to the utmost. Furthermore, in the construction for on-off controlling the cooling fan according to the interior temperature of the reinforcing bar binder, if cooling is not required, the cooling fan is not actuated so that the binding performance at low temperatures is not deteriorated.
Further, in the construction in which the cooling fan is actuated when the trigger switch for the reinforcing bar binder is turned on and it is stopped after a predetermined time elapses, the temperature rise of the reinforcing bar binder can be suppressed and the endurance thereof can be improved.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2003-292516 | Aug 2003 | JP | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/JP2004/011637 | 8/6/2004 | WO | 00 | 2/10/2006 |
| Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| WO2005/014398 | 2/17/2005 | WO | A |
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3125326 | Ericsson | Mar 1964 | A |
| 5682927 | Takahashi et al. | Nov 1997 | A |
| 6654894 | Kaminski et al. | Nov 2003 | B2 |
| 20040206251 | Nix | Oct 2004 | A1 |
| Number | Date | Country |
|---|---|---|
| A 62-291421 | Dec 1987 | JP |
| U 5-3494 | Jan 1993 | JP |
| U 7-7805 | Feb 1995 | JP |
| A 7-208388 | Aug 1995 | JP |
| A 10-250703 | Sep 1998 | JP |
| A 2003-64876 | Mar 2003 | JP |
| A 2003-147962 | May 2003 | JP |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20060254666 A1 | Nov 2006 | US |