The invention is based on an insertable tool with a rotationally driven disk-shaped hub.
Typically, disk-shaped insertable tools, such as grinding wheels or cutting-off wheels for angle grinders, consist entirely of bonded grinding means, and they have a central circular recess by way of which the insertable tool can be fastened to an angle grinder spindle with a lock nut by nonpositive engagement in the circumferential direction and by positive engagement in the axial direction. Both insertable tools that have a reinforcement of sheet metal in the region of the recess and those without such a reinforcement are known.
The invention is based on an insertable tool with a rotationally driven disk-shaped hub, to which a grinding means is secured in the radially outer region.
It is proposed that the hub is embodied with a flexural strength that varies in the radial direction. An advantageous transition between the grinding means and the hub can be achieved, and overall, a harmonious bending line can be attained. An advantageous hold between the grinding means and the hub can be achieved, and detachment on fastening the insertable tool, for instance to a spindle of an angle grinder, and during work can be reliably avoided.
A flexural strength or bending line can be purposefully adapted to a desired course in a structurally simple way by means of the design of recesses made in the radially outer region of the hub. The flexural strength of the hub can be purposefully weakened in individual regions. The recesses can have various shapes that appear useful to one skilled in the art. The recesses may be embodied as slots of constant width and/or slots with a width that decreases radially inward either continuously or in stages, as a result of which the flexural strength decreases radially outward because the hub material decreases radially outward.
In a further feature of the invention, it is proposed that at least one recess has a greater width in the radially inner region than in the radially outer region, as a result of which an advantageously large fastening area can be furnished in the radially outer region, while in the adjacent radially inner region a kind of spring region can be achieved. The recesses are advantageously embodied as open radially outward, and as a result, segments that can be largely deflected independently of one another can advantageously be achieved. In principle, however, the recesses can also be embodied as closed radially outward.
Instead of recesses, other structural embodiments appearing useful to one skilled in the art are conceivable for achieving a certain bending line, such as embodiments with material thicknesses that increase or decrease radially outward, different numbers of layers of material, different materials with different rigidity and/or with reinforcing ribs in order to establish a desired bending line. Moreover, materials that radially outward are subjected to different material treatments are conceivable.
The hub is advantageously produced economically and in an environmentally friendly way from a sheet metal, in particular sheet steel. The grinding means, which is often recyclable only with difficulty, can advantageously be used up, while the hub can be recycled easily. In principle, however, any other hub materials are also conceivable, such as plastic, ceramic materials, and so forth.
The provisions for attaining the object of the invention can be employed especially advantageously in grinding means that form a cutting-off, grinding, roughing, and/or parting wheel. Especially the grinding means of a thin cutting-off wheel, compared to a sheet-metal hub without the aforementioned recesses, has very great flexibility. The adapted bending line of the sheet-metal hub means that detachment of the grinding means from axially exerted forces can be reliably avoided. In principle, however, these provisions of the invention can also be employed in insertable tools in which the grinding means is formed by a grinding paper or the like.
In another feature of the invention, it is proposed that the hub is covered at least partly on both sides by at least one layer of the grinding means, for instance a fabric layer that carries abrasive substances, or fiberglass mats, and so forth, as a result of which the connection between the hub and the grinding means can be improved. A positive engagement can be attained in both axial directions.
Moreover, the connection can be improved by providing that the grinding means and the hub are connected by positive engagement at least in the direction of rotation via connecting means. Strong driving moments can be reliably transmitted from the hub to the grinding means. Besides a positive engagement in the direction of rotation, a positive engagement in the axial direction is conceivable, for instance by means of angled and/or offset protrusions and so forth. The positive engagement can be realized in a structurally simple way, without additional components, by means of protrusions extending in the axial direction from the hub and forming the connecting means, which reach into or through the grinding means in the axial direction and can be formed onto the hub advantageously in a stamping process, for instance jointly with other recesses. Particularly with thin grinding means, an axial positive engagement can be accomplished by bending formed-on protrusions or grooved frames, which reach through the grinding means, over outward or inward in an economical way in the course of pressing the grinding means.
A connection between the hub and the grinding means can be further improved by providing that in a production process of the grinding means, the grinding means and the hub are jointly subjected to at least one heating process, and/or that the grinding means is joined to the hub not only via a nonpositive and/or positive connection but also via a material-engagement connection, such as an adhesive connection in particular. The material-engagement connection can be established either after or during the production process of the grinding means. If the production process of the grinding means is utilized for connecting the hub and the grinding means, then additional work steps can be saved, and overall, a more-rational production process of the insertable tool can be achieved. In particular, a gluing operation can be easily integrated into the grinding means production process, but still other material-engagement connections are also conceivable, such as soldered and/or welded connections, and so forth.
The provisions according to the invention can be used in insertable tools that are fastened to a spindle via a lock nut and can also be used especially advantageously in hubs that have not only a central recess but also recesses for fastening via a fast-action clamping system. Upon mounting on a spindle, mounting forces that occur can advantageously be absorbed in the axial direction via a harmonious bending line.
Further advantages will become apparent from the ensuing drawing description. In the drawing, exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown. The drawing, description and claims include numerous characteristics in combination. One skilled in the art will expediently consider the characteristics individually as well and put them together to make useful further combinations.
Shown are:
According to the invention, the hub 10 is embodied with a flexural strength that varies in the radial direction; in its radially outer region, to adapt the flexural strength, the hub 10 is purposefully weakened by slotlike recesses 16. The recesses 16 are embodied as open radially outward, thus advantageously creating segments that can be deflected largely independently of one another. The recesses 16 have a constant width and protrude radially inward to just before a region in which recesses 30, 32 are made, for fastening the insertable tool to an angle grinder spindle via a fast-action clamping system. In the middle region of the hub 10, a circular recess 28 is made, for centering the insertable tool.
The hub is covered on both sides by at least one layer 22, 24 of the grinding means 14; on one side 48, oriented toward the angle grinder 36, the grinding means 14 is disposed with essentially its full thickness in an annular indentation, so that the hub 10 and the grinding means 14 advantageously come to an end, in the direction of the angle grinder 36, in the same plane. In the event that the grinding means 14 should come loose from the hub 10 during operation, however, it is still secured in captive fashion by the hub 10 (
The grinding means 14 and the hub 10 are connected by positive engagement in the direction of rotation via connecting means 26 (
In the production process of the grinding means 14, the hub 10 and the grinding means 14 are subjected to a joint heating process, in which a material-engagement connection between the grinding means 14 and the hub 10, specifically an adhesive connection, is hardened.
In
The hub 12 has recesses 18, 20, which are embodied as open radially outward and which have different widths in the radial direction. The recesses 18 are embodied in the shape of a T and in their radially inner region they have a greater width than in the radially outer region, while conversely the recesses 20 are embodied as V-shaped and have a decreasing width radially inward. In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
101 06 980 | Feb 2001 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE01/04757 | 12/14/2001 | WO | 00 | 3/19/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/070205 | 9/12/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2652321 | Douglas | Oct 1953 | A |
3526999 | Jaegers | Sep 1970 | A |
3667169 | MacKay | Jun 1972 | A |
4251955 | Shawke | Feb 1981 | A |
4860721 | Matsuda | Aug 1989 | A |
4962748 | Schweickhardt | Oct 1990 | A |
5839423 | Jones et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
6129077 | Parini | Oct 2000 | A |
6136143 | Lund et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6408838 | Ogata et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
577 365 | Jul 1976 | CH |
37 28 233 | Mar 1989 | DE |
44 30 229 | Feb 1996 | DE |
298 06 114 | Jul 1998 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030162487 A1 | Aug 2003 | US |