Claims
- 1. A vibration isolator for use on a hand-held vibrating device for reducing the mechanical vibration imparted to the user, said vibrating device including a handle for grasping by the user and a tool body, said vibration isolator comprising:
- a resiliently deformable element attachable between said handle and said tool body, said element being resiliently deformable in a length direction to shorten under application of load, said element including a buckling section which is resiliently bendable laterally to the length direction under application of load, wherein said element has a varying spring rate which is greater at an undeformed length of said element than at a shortened length within an operating range of said element, so that said spring rate and a corresponding force to displace said handle relative to said tool are less within said operating range as compared to said spring rate and to a displacement force at the undeformed length of said element so that mechanical vibration imparted to said handle from said tool body within said operating range is absorbed.
- 2. A vibration isolator in accordance with claim 1 wherein said buckling section is a metal buckling element having at least one elongated member extending in the length direction.
- 3. A vibration isolator in accordance with claim 1 wherein said buckling section is elastomeric and generally cylindrically shaped, and said hand-held device includes means for restraining cocking movement and means for restraining torsional movement, yet allows translation and compression of said buckling section along an axial direction.
- 4. A vibration isolator in accordance with claim 1 including a snubber with a projection and a shoulder wherein movement of said handle relative to said tool body in the axial direction is constrained by said projection contacting said shoulder.
- 5. A vibration isolator in accordance with claim 1, wherein said buckling section is an elongated element having a length to thickness ration of at least two.
- 6. A vibration isolator in accordance with claim 1, wherein said spring rate within the operating range has a value in a range of 1/2 to 1/30 of said spring rate in the undeformed condition.
- 7. An elastomeric vibration isolator for use on a hand-held vibrating device for reducing the radial and axial mechanical vibration imparted to the user, comprising:
- (a) a body of elastomer having an outer surface forming a handle for being grasped by a hand of a prospective user, said body of elastomer being positionable about a central axis of said hand-held vibrating device; and
- (b) multiple buckling sections extending radially inward from said handle toward said central axis, said buckling sections each having a length in the radial direction that is at least two times a thickness wherein said buckling sections are bendable in a direction divergent from the length direction under application of load and exhibiting in an installed state when positioned on said hand-held vibrating device
- i) an installed radial spring rate with said buckling sections in a bent condition, and
- ii) resistance to movement of said hand-held vibrating device relative to said user's hand,
- which are each, respectively, lower than an initial spring rate in a non-installed condition and corresponding initial resistance to movement of said hand-held vibrating device relative to said user's hand.
- 8. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 7 wherein said multiple buckling sections each exhibit a low axial stiffness such that the combined axial stiffness is low enough to isolate axial vibration of said device from said grasping hand.
- 9. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 7 wherein said multiple buckling sections extending radially inward toward said central axis are formed by a series of substantially parallel slots axially extending radially outwardly from said central axis into said body of elastomer.
- 10. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 7 wherein said multiple buckling sections extending radially inward toward said central axis are formed by a series of substantially parallel cores axially extending radially outward from said central axis into said body of elastomer.
- 11. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 7 wherein said buckling sections and said body of elastomer are formed of a soft elastomer having a hardness in the range of between 30 and 100 durometer.
- 12. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 7 which encircles and isolates said hand of said user from said radial and axial mechanical vibrations of a member selected from the group consisting of a tool and a tool body.
- 13. A hand-held vibrating device which reduces the mechanical vibration imparted to a user, comprising:
- (a) a handle for being grasped by said user;
- (b) a tool body;
- (c) a tool bit attached to said tool body;
- (d) resiliently deformable means attached between said handle and said tool body said deformable means being compressible in a length direction responsive to a load and including a buckling section resiliently bendable laterally to the length direction responsive to a load, so that said deformable means has a spring rate which decreases under application of load; and
- (e) a grip isolator including a body of elastomer providing a handle for being grasped by the user's hand, said body of elastomer disposed about a central axis and surrounding a grip location formed by one of said tool bit and said tool body, said grip isolator having multiple buckling sections extending radially inward from said handle toward said central axis, said buckling sections each having a length in the radial direction that is at least two times a thickness for providing buckling under application of load and reducing a spring rate and a magnitude of thrust needed to move said grip location relative to said user's hand.
- 14. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 13 further including a tuned mass suspended on a spring element.
- 15. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 13 further including axially spaced sliding surface means for contacting an outer periphery of said tool body to constrain relative cocking motion between said tool body and said handle and spline means received in grooves in said tool body for restraining said handle from torsional movement.
- 16. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 13 further including a projection and a shoulder, wherein said tool body and said handle are constrained from relative axial movement by said projection contacting said shoulder.
- 17. An elastomeric vibration isolator in accordance with claim 13 wherein said grip isolator includes buckling means for reducing said spring rate formed by bores extending into said body of elastomer.
- 18. A fluid and elastomer vibration isolator for use between a handle and tool body in a hand-held vibrating device, comprising:
- (a) a first variable volume chamber associated with said vibration isolator;
- (b) a second variable volume chamber associated with said vibration isolator;
- (c) a first flexible element defining at least a portion of said first variable volume chamber;
- (d) a second flexible element defining at least a portion of said second variable volume chamber;
- (e) a fluid passageway between said first and second variable volume chambers;
- (f) a fluid contained within, and substantially filling, said first variable volume chamber, said second variable volume chamber, and said fluid passageway;
- (g) one of said first and second flexible elements being resiliently deformable under load in a length direction and being positioned so that relative movement between said handle and said tool body deforms said one element in the length direction, said one element including a buckling section positioned between said handle and said tool body, said buckling section being bendable under load in a direction divergent to the axial direction to provide said one member with a spring rate that varies with length, being lower at a deformed length than at an initial undeformed length thereby requiring less force to cause movement of said tool body relative to said handle when said one clement is deformed, wherein reciprocal movement of said handle relative to said tool body causes fluid to flow to and from said first variable volume chamber from and to said second variable volume chamber through said fluid passageway;
- whereby said fluid flow within said fluid passageway creates counter inertial forces which substantially coincide with the operating frequency of said hand-held vibrating device and reduce the vibration forces transmitted to said handle.
- 19. A fluid and elastomer isolator in accordance with claim 18 wherein one of said first flexible element and said second flexible element further includes a diaphragm.
- 20. A fluid and elastomer isolator in accordance with claim 18 wherein said fluid passageway is spiral shaped.
- 21. A fluid and elastomer isolator in accordance with claim 18 wherein an air supply tube is surrounded by at least one of said first variable volume fluid chamber and said second variable volume fluid chamber.
- 22. A vibration isolator for use on a hand-held vibrating device for reducing the mechanical vibration imparted to the user, comprising:
- (a) a handle for being grasped by said user;
- (b) a tool body,
- (c) a first spring for providing a flexible connection between said handle and said tool body of said hand-held vibrating device; and
- (d) tuned absorber means comprising a second spring and a attached mass for providing a tuned inertia effect substantially coinciding with said operating frequency of said vibrating device.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
The present application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 07/009,695 filed by James T. Gwinn on Jan. 27, 1993, and owned by the assignee of the present invention, now abandoned.
PCT Information
Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
102e Date |
371c Date |
PCT/US93/12271 |
12/16/1993 |
|
|
7/26/1995 |
7/26/1995 |
Publishing Document |
Publishing Date |
Country |
Kind |
WO94/16864 |
8/4/1994 |
|
|
US Referenced Citations (26)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
82104567.1 |
May 1982 |
EPX |
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09695 |
Jan 1993 |
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