The present invention relates to an operating procedure for the motor of an electric powered tool such as a hammer drill, the operating idle time of which is set to a value using control electronics, which is the same as or slightly higher than the chosen operating speed. The invention also relates to an electric powered tool with specific features to realise the operating procedure.
The durability and operational readiness of the motor of an electric powered tool depends on the motor temperature. Too high a temperature can result in the motor not being able to be run for a certain time while cooling down. Thus, the temperature of the motor should not exceed a certain temperature during operation. The higher the moment of strain that has to be applied to the motor, the more the motor temperature continues to increase. The temperature falls when the motor is run on idle time. The cooling system is improved due to the increased air flow at high engine speeds.
The operating speed is the engine speed of the motor under strain: it is determined by the operating process or specific operating conditions. The engine speed drops when the motor has to be run on an extremely high moment of strain due to the natural characteristic line for strain in the motor (see FIG. 3).
The operating idle speed for the comfortable operation of the electric powered tool should not be much higher than operating speed when the motor is no longer strained, i.e. it is running on idle speed. This would be annoying in hammer drills when the tool is switched off and then switched on again. There should be no major variations in the operating idle speed, as they can also have an interfering effect. The operating idle speed of the motor is thus always limited to a favourable level only slightly above the chosen operating speed.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,307,325 proposes that a strain index be determined according to the amount of time in which a motor is run on idle speed and under strain—with which the temperature of the motor can be determined with only slight complexity. The motor is switched off to prevent damage done should the temperature exceed a certain value. The electric powered tool can only be switched on again when the motor is cooled down, i.e. the electric powered tool cannot be used for a certain amount of time.
The complete switch off of the motor results in an interruption in the cool airflow so that cooling only takes places slowly. DE 30 21 689 AI suggests that the motor be switched off, but that the input is limited in an overload, maintaining a sufficiently high engine speed below the operating idle speed to cool the motor. This, however, does not only take place in the coil overheating. Additionally, the cooling effect is not optimal, as the engine speed of the motor is not sufficiently high due to the limited input. Motor failure due to overheating thus cannot be prevented in certain cases.
The object of the invention is to ensure sufficient cooling of the motor during the operation of the electric powered tool to prevent motor failure due to overheating. The object is achieved by the invention wherein an operating procedure for the motor of an electric powered tool, the operating idle speed of which is set to a value using regulator electronics, which is the same as one of the chosen operating speeds, whereby the motor is run on a higher and pre-determined idle speed for cooling purposes, should there be no moment of strain on the motor. The motor is still cooled effectively and on a constant basis during normal operational procedures and overheating is thus prevented.
An electric powered tool, according to the invention, presents regulator electronics for the engine speed of its motor, the operating idle speed of which is set to a value, which is the same as one of the chosen operating speeds, and a time measuring device, which sends a trigger signal to the regulator electronics after a certain amount of idle time has passed, whereby the motor is run on a higher and pre-determined idle speed for cooling purposes. It is thus possible that the time measuring device sends a trigger signal immediately, i.e. there is no time delay and the motor is switched over to the increased idle speed as soon as the idle speed has been reached.
The operating procedure, according to the invention, suggests that the motor preferably run on a pre-determined, higher idle time after a specific idle time, while the motor is running on the operating operating idle time. The operating procedure, according to the invention, also suggests that idle time operations be determined preferably by measuring the motor flow or the turning moment of the motor.
It is also advantageous that the idle time be determined in correspondence with the previous strain of the motor.
The idle time is thus shortened and the operating speed switched over, should the motor have previously been run on overload, as soon as a moment of strain above the idle running moment is applied to the motor.
The increased idle speed is then set, as described above, in case the motor was switched off or on again. Increased idle time can be turned on after switching on the motor after a period of idle running, which depends on the previous strain to the motor, should there be no moment of strain to the motor. It is also possible to set the increased idle speed immediately after switching on the motor, should there be no moment of strain to the motor.
A strain measuring device is provided for by the electric powered tool, according to the invention, which measures the motor flow and thus determines the idle operations of the motor, and an idle running signal, which shows the idle running operations of the motor and sends data to the time measuring device and the regulator electronics. The strain measuring device measures the operating strain on the motor and sends a strain signal to the time measuring device to determine idle time corresponding with this strain. The time measuring device determines a shorter period of idle time when a strong strain on the motor was previously measured by the strain measuring device.
The regulator electronics also immediately sets the engine speed of the motor to the operating speed when the idle running signal shows that the motor is not being run in idle time. Comfortable operational procedures are thus guaranteed. The regulator electronics set the engine speed of the motor, as described above, when the motor was switched on or off again.
The invention as well as further features and advantages of the invention are described in an exemplary manner with reference to the drawings, wherein:
The invention suggests that good cooling of the motor and the electronics is attained by setting the engine speed of the motor in idle time to an increased idle speed. The value
Δn, by which the engine speed is increased, can be determined or can depend on the previously determined strain. The engine speed of the motor should not be attained, immediately, but after a certain amount of time by increasing the normal operating idle speed to an increased idle speed. The increased idle speed is thus so high that the effective cooling of the motor is ensured, especially after this has been run on overload.
The increased idle speed should at the same time not exceed a certain level as there could be damage to the electric powered tool. The increased idle speed can, however, be interfering when operating the electric powered tool and for other specific applications. The engine speed is thus lowered from the increased idle speed to the operating idle speed without any time delay as soon as the motor requires a moment of strain above the idle running moment. The alteration to engine speed is thus carried out outside of the operational procedure and therefore ensures that stable operational procedures are possible at all time.
After the idle time ΔT has been completed, the engine speed of the motor at the period of time T2 of the operating idle time n1 is increased to a higher idle speed n2 by value Δn. Value Δn, by which the engine speed is increased, can be pre-defined or can depend upon the maximum moment of strain that occurs between the last cooling and the period of time T1. The motor runs on the increased idle speed until the moment of strain M2is required above the moment of idle running ML (M2>Mj). The presence of the moment of strain M2 is also determined according to the engine speed by via measurements of the motor flow felt by the motor. In
Immediate lowering of the engine speed ensures that the operational procedure is simple and comfortable. The increased engine speed is also lowered, should the electric powered tool be switched off or on again and the motor requires a turning moment above the idle running moment ML. The motor could have also been switched off at the period of time T3, according to FIG. 1.
When the motor is switched off and then switched on, the idle time ΔT is complete and the increased engine speed n2 is then switched on after the tool has been put into operation. It is also possible to set the increased idle speed immediately after switching on the tool. The data required to determine the idle time ΔT, i.e. the maximum moment of strain, can be saved on switching off the motor.
In
This block circuit diagram as shown in
The strain signal 9 takes on continual values, which are dependent on the strain on the motor. A time measuring device determines the idle time ΔT due to the strain signal 9. The idle time ΔT can thus be determine and depend on the maximum moment of strain, which occurs between the last cooling and the period of time T1, or which can depend on the middling strain value. This middling strain value is the middling moment of strain, which occurs between the last and current cooling phase. The cooling phase is the time period, in which the motor is run on the increased idle speed. The strain value is switched back after the increased idle speed has been reached.
The time measuring device starts a timer with the idle time ΔT as the starting point, when the idle running signal 8 is altered from “0” to “1”. This takes place at the period of time T1 in FIG. 1. The time measuring device sends a trigger signal 7 to the regulator electronics 4 after the idle time ΔT has been completed. On receiving the trigger signal 7, the regulator electronics 4 increases the operating idle speed n1 at the period of time T1 by Δn to the increased idle speed (n2). It is possible to do without a time delay so that the increased idle speed (n2) can be attained immediately after the idle running has been determined according to the idle running signal 8. Should the value of the idle running signal 8 have changed from “1” to “0”, or the electric powered tool be switched off by a switch signal 10 and the value of the idle running signal 8 equal “0”, then the engine speed can be lowered immediately to the operating idle speed n1 by the regulator electronics 4 at the period of time (n2).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 59 372 | Dec 2002 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4306264 | Alessio | Dec 1981 | A |
5759085 | Gugenheimer et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
6320286 | Ramarathnam | Nov 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040189224 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |