The present application claims priority to Japanese patent application no. 2020-120213 filed on Jul. 13, 2020, the contents of which are hereby fully incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to portable (e.g., hand-held) power tools having a tool accessory that orbits and/or rotates to perform a processing operation on a workpiece or surface, such as sanding, abrading, polishing or grinding.
Some known portable (hand-held) power tools, such as sanders, have an electric motor, a battery (rechargeable battery pack) serving as a power source of the electric motor, and a handle that extends in an elongated manner in a horizontal direction. For example, WO 2018/168421 discloses a sander having an elongated main handle on one side of an electric motor and a battery on the other side of the electric motor. In addition, an auxiliary handle is arranged on the other side in such a manner as to oppose or face three sides of the battery. The auxiliary handle is configured to be pivotable between a retracted position for permitting attachment and detachment of the battery and a holding position for being held (gripped) by a user during a sanding/abrading operation.
According to one non-limiting, representative aspect of the present disclosure, a portable (hand-held) power tool may include a first handle extending in an elongated manner and configured to be held by a user, an electric motor, a tool accessory configured to undergo orbital and/or rotary motion by utilizing (in response to) a rotational driving force output by the electric motor, and a battery mounting part to which a battery (rechargeable battery pack or cartridge) is attachable to serve as a power source of the electric motor. If the extension direction of the first handle is defined as a front-rear direction, a direction orthogonal to the front-rear direction and in which the first handle and the tool accessory are arranged in series is defined as an up-down direction. In the up-down direction, a first side on which the first handle is located is defined as an upper side, while a second, opposite side on which the tool accessory is located is defined as a lower side. The battery mounting part includes an upward mounting surface (i.e. a mounting surface that faces upward in the up-down direction) on which the battery is mountable, and one or more terminals (e.g., in the form of a terminal block) configured to be electrically connected to the battery when a surface of the battery that includes a connection interface is placed on the upward mounting surface. The upward mounting surface is located at a position different from the first handle in the front-rear direction, and is located below an upper end (or uppermost edge or surface) of the first handle in the up-down direction.
Because the upward mounting surface for mounting the battery is located below the upper end (uppermost edge or surface) of the first handle, it is possible to make the portable power tool more compact in the up-down direction with the battery mounted thereon. Here, it is noted that the “upward” mounting surface may extend completely perpendicular to the up-down direction, or it may extend at a non-perpendicular angle with respect to the up-down direction. Such non-perpendicular angle is preferably within the range of 45−89° with respect to the up-down direction, more preferably 60-89°, even more preferably 80-89°.
According to one non-limiting embodiment of the present disclosure, the battery mounting part may be configured such that the battery (e.g., a battery pack or battery cartridge) is mountable by sliding in a direction that forms an angle of 30 degrees or less (within a range of plus/minus 30 degrees) with a horizontal direction that is orthogonal to the up-down direction. According to this embodiment, the portable (e.g., hand-held) power tool is designed such the battery is slid and mounted from any of such directions as to prevent interference with a stepped part formed between the upper end (edge or surface) of the first handle and the mounting surface, so that a high degree of freedom of design is obtained. Thus, the portable power tool can be easily designed such that the battery is slid and mounted from such a direction as to prevent interference with other components of the power tool, while making the portable power tool more compact in the up-down direction.
In addition, the battery mounting part may be configured such that the battery is mountable thereon by being slid in a direction that is orthogonal or at least substantially orthogonal to the up-down direction (that is, in a horizontal or at least substantially horizontal direction, i.e., 30 degrees or less from the horizontal direction). According to this embodiment, the weight of the battery is at least substantially evenly distributed in the horizontal direction and thus applies an even downward force on the tool accessory during a processing operation. Consequently, a uniform processing operation such as sanding, abrading, polishing or grinding can be more easily achieved, as compared to known embodiments in which the battery is mounted on a side wall of the sander or polisher, because the burden on the user to press the power tool with a uniform (even) downward pressure is reduced owing to the at least substantially uniform downward force applied to the tool accessary by the battery itself.
In addition, the electric motor may include a motor shaft extending in the up-down direction. Furthermore, the battery mounting part may be configured to hold the battery above both the tool accessory and the motor shaft in the up-down direction. Owing to this rational arrangement of the components in this embodiment, the size of the power tool can be reduced both in the front-rear direction and in a direction (e.g., a left-right direction) that is orthogonal to the front-rear direction and the up-down direction. Moreover, if the motor shaft is located at or relatively near the center of the tool accessory when viewed in the up-down direction, the relatively heavy battery acts as a load (weight) around the center of the tool accessory. Therefore, the pressing force of the battery that downwardly presses the tool accessory, e.g., against a workpiece, is uniformly or evenly distributed, which means that the workpiece can be uniformly or evenly polished, sanded, abraded, etc. with less burden on the user.
In addition, an upper end of the motor shaft may be located below a lower end (edge or surface) of the first handle in the up-down direction, which enables the size (length) of the power tool to be reduced in the up-down direction.
In addition or in the alternative to the preceding embodiments, the electric motor may be a brushless motor. According to this embodiment, the length of the motor shaft can be reduced, so that the upper end of the motor shaft can be easily arranged below the lower end (edge, surface) of the first handle.
In addition or in the alternative to the preceding embodiments, the portable power tool may include an output shaft arranged in parallel to the motor shaft and configured to transmit the rotational driving force of the motor shaft to the tool accessory. The battery mounting part may be configured to hold the battery above the output shaft. An upper end of the output shaft may be located below the lower end of the first handle in the up-down direction. According to this embodiment, even if the portable power tool includes an output shaft that is separate from the motor shaft, the size (length) of the portable power tool can also be reduced in the up-down direction, in the front-rear direction and in the direction orthogonal to the front-rear direction and the up-down direction, while remaining capable of performing uniform sanding, polishing, grinding, etc.
In addition or in the alternative to the preceding embodiments, the portable power tool may include a controller configured to control operation (energization) of the electric motor. The controller may be located on a side on which the first handle is located with respect to the motor shaft in the front-rear direction, and located below the first handle in the up-down direction. According to this embodiment, the controller can be arranged in a dead space (i.e. an otherwise unused space) below the first handle. Thus, the controller can be arranged without substantially increasing the size of the power tool.
In addition, the largest surfaces (i.e. the surfaces having the largest surface area) of the controller may respectively face upward and downward in the up-down direction. According to this embodiment, the installation space (height) for the controller in the up-down direction can be minimized. Therefore, even if the controller is arranged below the first handle, the controller will not interfere with the user's ability to hold the first handle.
In addition or in the alternative to the preceding embodiments, the portable power tool may include a second handle arranged below the battery mounting part in the up-down direction. According to this embodiment, the user can hold the power tool more stably by holding (grasping) both of the handles (i.e. both of the first handle and the second handle). Furthermore, the second handle does not interfere with attachment and detachment of the battery.
In addition or in the alternative to the preceding embodiments, the tool accessory may have a generally rectangular shape having a longitudinal direction in the front-rear direction when viewed from (in) the up-down direction. When, in the front-rear direction, a first side on which the battery mounting part is located is defined as a front side and a second, opposite side on which the first handle is located is defined as a rear side, the battery mounting part may be configured such that the battery is mounted by sliding from the front to the rear. Although a sliding type mounting mechanism for the battery is required to have a minimum length in the sliding direction, according to this embodiment, the sliding type mounting mechanism is configured such that the battery is slid in the longitudinal direction of the tool accessory, so that the minimum length required for the sliding type mounting mechanism is easily ensured. In other words, it is not necessary to increase the device size (length) in a direction orthogonal to the up-down direction and the front-rear direction only for the purpose of ensuring the required minimum length of the sliding type mounting mechanism.
In addition or in the alternative to the preceding embodiments, the portable power tool may include the battery (battery pack or battery cartridge).
A detailed non-limiting embodiment of the present teachings will now be described in further detail with reference to the drawings. In this embodiment, an orbital sander (hereinafter simply referred to as a sander) 10, which is also known in the art as a finishing sander, will be described as a representative example.
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In the following description, the extension direction of the first handle 22 (i.e. the longitudinal direction of the first handle 22) is defined as a front-rear direction of the sander 10. In the front-rear direction, a first side on which the battery mounting part 40 is located is defined as a front side, while a second, opposite side on which the first handle 22 is located is defined as a rear side. A direction orthogonal to the front-rear direction is defined as an up-down direction of the sander 10; the first handle 22 and the tool accessory 30 are arranged in series in the up-down direction. In addition, in the up-down direction, a first side on which the first handle 22 is located is defined as an upper side, while a second, opposite side on which the tool accessory 30 is located is defined as a lower side. Further, a direction orthogonal to both of the front-rear direction and the up-down direction is defined as a left-right direction of the sander 10. In the left-right direction, the right side as viewed from the rear is defined as the right side of the sander 10, and the opposite side is defined as the left side of the sander 10.
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Sandpaper (abrasive paper) (not shown) is mounted on the pad 31 by utilizing the front and rear dampers 33, 35. Specifically, the front damper 33 extends along a front edge of the base 32 and above the base 32 (see
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The battery 50 further includes, as parts of the connection interface, an engagement part (latch or hook) 54 and a push button 55. The engagement part 54 protrudes downward from a bottom of the battery 50. The push button 55 is provided on (at) the front end of the battery 50. The engagement part 54 and the push button 55 are mechanically connected in the interior of the battery 50 and are configured such that the engagement part 54 retracts into the interior of the battery 50 when the push button 55 is depressed.
The battery 50 includes a mounting surface 51 on the side on which the above-described connection interface is located. In this embodiment, the battery 50 has a nominal rated voltage of 18 V, but it may have a larger or smaller rated voltage. The nominal rated voltage of the battery 50 may be, e.g., 14V-70V, e.g., 18V-40V.
In this embodiment, because the battery mounting part 40 for mounting the battery 50 has such a structure, the battery 50 is mountable thereon by sliding from the front to the rear. A sliding type mounting mechanism for the battery 50 is required to have a minimum length in the sliding direction so that the slide rails and guide rails can sufficiently engage. In this embodiment, because the sliding type mounting mechanism is configured such that the battery 50 is slid in the longitudinal direction (longest extension direction) of the tool accessory 30, the minimum length required for the sliding type mounting mechanism is easily ensured. In other words, it is not necessary to increase the device size (width) in the left-right direction only for the purpose of ensuring the required minimum length for slidably mounting the battery 50.
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The above-described sander 10 operates as follows. First, when the user manually operates (e.g., presses) the switch 25 to drive (start energization of) the electric motor 60, the motor shaft 61 starts rotating. Since the eccentric bearing 64 that operably connects (couples) the motor shaft 61 and the tool accessory 30 is eccentric to the motor shaft 61, the tool accessory 30 undergoes orbital motion (eccentric circular motion) while compressing the O-rings 74, 75 arranged around the feet 73 and tilting the feet 73 as the motor shaft 61 rotates. More specifically, the tool accessory 30 moves in such a manner as to draw a circle along a horizontal plane while maintaining its attitude without rotating about the axial direction (rotational axis) of the motor shaft 61. In this state, when the bottom surface of the tool accessory 30 is pressed towards the workpiece, the eccentric circular (orbiting) motion of the sandpaper of the tool accessory 30 acts as an abrading motion, and the workpiece is sanded/abraded by the sandpaper attached to the bottom surface of the tool accessory 30.
Because the mounting surface 41 of the battery mounting part 40 is located below the upper side 23 of the first handle 22, a compact sander 10 in the up-down direction can be achieved, even with the battery 50 mounted thereon. Moreover, the sander 10 can be designed such that the battery 50 is slid and mounted from any of such directions without interference with or hindrance by the stepped part formed between the upper side 23 of the first handle 22 and the mounting surface 41 (or from any direction other than from the rear to the front). Consequently, a high degree of freedom of design is obtained for the sander 10. Thus, the sander 10 is easily designed such that the battery 50 is slid and mounted from such a direction as to prevent interference with other components of the sander 10, while reducing or minimizing the overall size of the sander 10 in the up-down direction. Furthermore, the battery mounting part 40 is configured such that the battery 50 is slid and mounted in an at least substantially horizontally direction. In other words, the battery 50 is preferably arranged in parallel, or substantially in parallel (e.g., within 30 degrees or less), to the horizontal direction. Therefore, the weight of the battery 50 acts downwardly on the sander 10 and is uniformly distributed in the horizontal direction, so that it becomes easier and less burdensome (tiring) on the user to achieve even sanding, polishing, grinding, etc.
Further, because the battery 50 is held above the vertically extending motor shaft 61, the size of the sander 10 in the up-down direction and the left-right direction can be reduced. Moreover, since the motor shaft 61 is located near the center of the tool accessory 30 when viewed from (in) the up-down direction, the relatively heavy battery 50 acts as a load (weight) around (over) the center of the tool accessory 30. Therefore, the pressing force of the tool accessory 30 against the workpiece is uniformly distributed in the horizontal direction.
Further, because the upper end of the motor shaft 61 is located below the lower side 24 of the first handle 22 in the up-down direction, the size of the sander 10 in the up-down direction can be reduced for this reason as well. Moreover, because a brushless motor is used as the electric motor 60 in the above-described embodiment, the length of the motor shaft 61 can be reduced as compared to a brushed motor. Therefore, it is easy to design the sander 10 so that the upper end of the motor shaft 61 is arranged below the lower side 24 of the first handle 22.
Although a particular embodiment of the present disclosure is described in detail above in detail for explanation and illustrative purposes, this embodiment is merely intended to facilitate a good understanding of the present teachings and should not be interpreted as restricting the scope of the invention. The present invention may be changed or modified without departing from its spirit and includes its equivalents. Further, any combination or omission of elements described in the claims and the specification may be made within a range in which, e.g., at least part of the above-described problem(s) can be solved or within a range in which, e.g., at least part of the above-described effect(s) can be obtained.
For example, the sliding direction of the battery 50 may be changed owing to the fact that the sander 10 has a high degree of freedom of design for the sliding attachment of the battery 50 as described above. For example, the battery mounting part 40 may be configured such that the battery 50 is attached and detached by sliding in the left-right direction. In such an embodiment, the battery 50 can be attached and detached even if the second handle 28 is provided above the battery mounting part 40. Further, the sliding direction of the battery 50 is not limited to the horizontal direction, and it may be, for example, any direction within 30 degrees (within a range of plus/minus 30 degrees) relative to the horizontal direction or more preferably within 20 degrees thereof, even more preferably within 10 degrees thereof. In this manner, it is easy to design the sander 10 such that the battery 50 is slid and mounted from such a direction as to prevent interference with other components of the sander 10, while avoiding an increase in size of the sander 10 in the up-down direction. Furthermore, the sliding direction of the battery 50 may be set to any direction. For example, it may be the up-down direction. In this case, it is still possible to avoid an increase in size of the sander 10 in the up-down direction.
Further, the sander optionally may include an output shaft (spindle) as described, for example, in WO2018/168421, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Moreover, the present teachings, as applied above to the above-described embodiment, are not limited to orbital sanders, but also may be advantageously applied to any type of portable or hand-held power tool having an elongated handle and a battery. For example, the present teachings may be readily applied to a random orbital sander or a polisher.
As used herein, the term “tool accessory” is intended to encompass or be, without limitation, a pad or plate designed to detachably hold sandpaper (e.g., abrasive disks or rectangular abrasive papers), a polishing material such as a sponge pad, a felt pad, a wool pad, a bonnet, etc., by using, e.g., clamps, clips, hook-and-loop type fasteners, etc., as well as other types of accessories or attachments that may be integrally attached to a device (e.g., a splined collar, a lock nut, etc.) designed to detachably attach the accessory or attachment to the output shaft (spindle), such as a disk (e.g., a grinding disk), an integrated polishing pad or abrasive pad, a wire wheel, a wire brush, a nylon wheel, a nylon brush, etc.
Although some aspects of the present disclosure have been described in the context of a device, it is to be understood that these aspects also represent a description of a corresponding method, so that each block, part or component of a device, such as the controller 80, is also understood as a corresponding method step or as a feature of a method step. In an analogous manner, aspects which have been described in the context of or as a method step also represent a description of a corresponding block, part, detail, algorithm or feature of a corresponding device, such as the controller 80.
Depending on certain implementation requirements, exemplary embodiments of the controller 80 of the present disclosure may be implemented in hardware and/or in software. The implementation can be configured using a digital storage medium (non-transitory computer-readable medium), for example one or more of a ROM, a PROM, an EPROM, an EEPROM or a flash memory, on which electronically readable control signals (program code-computer-readable instructions) are stored, which interact or can interact with a programmable hardware component such that the respective method is performed.
A programmable hardware component can be formed by a processor, a computer processor (CPU=central processing unit), an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), an integrated circuit (IC), a computer, a system-on-a-chip (SOC), a programmable logic element, or a field programmable gate array (FGPA), as well as a microprocessor.
The digital storage medium can therefore be machine- or computer readable. Some exemplary embodiments thus comprise a data carrier or non-transient computer readable medium which includes electronically readable control signals which are capable of interacting with a programmable computer system or a programmable hardware component such that one of the methods described herein is performed. An exemplary embodiment is thus a data carrier (or a digital storage medium or a non-transient computer-readable medium) on which the program for performing one of the methods described herein is recorded.
In general, exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, in particular the controller 80, are implemented as a program, firmware, computer program, or computer program product including a program, or as data, wherein the program code or the data is operative to perform one of the methods if the program runs on a processor or a programmable hardware component. The program code or the data can for example also be stored on a machine-readable carrier or data carrier. The program code or the data can be, among other things, source code, machine code, bytecode or another intermediate code.
A program according to an exemplary embodiment can implement one of the methods during its performing, for example, such that the program reads storage locations or writes one or more data elements into these storage locations, wherein switching operations or other operations are induced in transistor structures, in amplifier structures, or in other electrical, optical, magnetic components, or components based on another functional principle. Correspondingly, data, values, sensor values, or other program information can be captured, determined, or measured by reading a storage location. By reading one or more storage locations, a program can therefore capture, determine or measure sizes, values, variable, and other information, as well as cause, induce, or perform an action by writing in one or more storage locations, as well as control other apparatuses, machines, and components, and thus for example also perform complex processes in the controller 80.
Therefore, although some aspects of the controller 80 may have been identified as “parts” or “steps”, it is understood that such parts or steps need not be physically separate or distinct electrical components, but rather may be different blocks of program code that are executed by the same hardware component, e.g., one or more microprocessors.
Representative, non-limiting examples of the present invention were described above in detail with reference to the attached drawings. This detailed description is merely intended to teach a person of skill in the art further details for practicing preferred aspects of the present teachings and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Furthermore, each of the additional features and teachings disclosed above may be utilized separately or in conjunction with other features and teachings to provide improved power tools.
Moreover, combinations of features and steps disclosed in the above detailed description may not be necessary to practice the invention in the broadest sense, and are instead taught merely to particularly describe representative examples of the invention. Furthermore, various features of the above-described representative examples, as well as the various independent and dependent claims below, may be combined in ways that are not specifically and explicitly enumerated in order to provide additional useful embodiments of the present teachings.
All features disclosed in the description and/or the claims are intended to be disclosed separately and independently from each other for the purpose of original written disclosure, as well as for the purpose of restricting the claimed subject matter, independent of the compositions of the features in the embodiments and/or the claims. In addition, all value ranges or indications of groups of entities are intended to disclose every possible intermediate value or intermediate entity for the purpose of original written disclosure, as well as for the purpose of restricting the claimed subject matter.
10: sander, 20: housing, 20a: right housing, 20b: left housing, 21: bolt, 22: first handle, 23: upper side of the first handle, 24: lower side of the first handle, 25: switch, 26: wall part, 27: controller housing part, 28: second handle, 29: bolt, 30: tool accessory, 31: pad, 32: base, 33, 35: damper, 34, 36: lever, 37: boss, 38: bolt, 40: battery mounting part, 41: mounting surface, 42: terminal base, 43: terminal, 44: engagement recess, 45: guide rail, 50: battery, 51: mounting surface, 52: guide groove, 53: terminal connection groove, 54: engagement part, 55: push button, 60: electric motor, 61: motor shaft, 62, 63, 64: bearing, 65: balancer, 66: bolt, 71: fan, 72: dust collecting nozzle, 73: foot, 74, 75: O-ring, 76: sleeve, 80: controller
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2020-120213 | Jul 2020 | JP | national |