1. Technical Field
The disclosure relates to wire-winding devices used with electronic equipment such as consumer electronic products, and especially a wire-winding device typically used for an earphone set.
2. Description of Related Art
An earphone set may include one or two earpieces, together with a wire having a plug on an end thereof. The plug is connected to an earphone port of an electronic device, such as a mobile phone, an MP3 (Moving Picture Experts Group, audio layer 3) player, a CD (compact disc) player and the like, and thus the earpieces can receive sound signals from the electronic device. Such an earphone set enables mobile use of electronic devices, for example when walking, running, driving a car, or working. For all these uses, an adequate length of the wire is required, but the wire may tangle and cause inconvenience.
The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the disclosure, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this application. The drawings illustrate embodiments of the disclosure and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the disclosure.
Examples of the present embodiments are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same or similar reference numbers are used, in the drawings and the description, to refer to the same or like parts.
Referring to
Referring also to
Referring also to
A part of the accommodation member 230 is recessed from a top face of the accommodation member 230 towards the supporting plate 210, to form an indentation 232 in communication with the shaft hole 212. Thus, a closed side wall 231 of the accommodation member 230 surrounds the indentation 232. An external surface of the closed side wall 231 serves as a wire-collecting surface 239 where the wire 80 of the earphone set is wound up. The indentation 232 includes a cylindrical accommodation cavity 232a in which the torsion spring 300 is accommodated, and a straight moving cavity 232b with a smooth internal surface. In the illustrated embodiment, the accommodation cavity 232a and the moving cavity 232b are in communication with each other. In an alternative embodiment, the accommodation cavity 232a and the moving cavity 232b are not in communication with each other. A portion of the closed side wall 231 at an end of the moving cavity 232b farthest from the accommodating cavity 232a functions as an abutting wall 233.
One end 310 of the torsion spring 300 is coiled around the securing shaft 114. The other end 310 of the torsion spring 300 is bent into a hook, and is hooked around a latching member 237 located in a bottom of the accommodation cavity 232a.
Referring also to
A spring lid 430 is provided to cover a top of the accommodating cavity 232a and a part of the moving cavity 232b of the indentation 232. The spring lid 430 includes a base cover 431, and a protrusion block 432 extending down from a center portion of the base cover 431. The base cover 431 is arranged to correspond to the through hole 530 of the top cover 50, and is coplanar with the top cover 50. The protrusion block 432 is nested in the accommodating cavity 232a, and abuts an inner surface of the closed side wall 231 defining the accommodation cavity 232a. A bottom end of the protrusion block 432 is spaced from the torsion spring 300. A securing hole 435 is defined through the base cover 431 and the protrusion block 432. The securing shaft 114 is engagingly received in the securing hole 435, and the spring lid 430 is thereby fixed relative to the housing 10. Accordingly, when the rotation body 200 rotates, the spring lid 430 is prevented from rotating with the rotation body 200. A locking slot 433 is defined in a circumference 431a of the base cover 431, and extends in a radial direction of the base cover 431. In the embodiment, a diameter of the base cover 431 is a little less than a diameter of the through hole 530, so that an annular gap between the base cover 431 and the top cover 50 defines an annular guideway 700 (see
The wire-winding device 1 further includes a locking unit 40, which is configured to lock the rotary wire-winding unit 30 in a desired position and prevent rotary movement of the rotary wire-winding unit 30 when the rotary wire-winding unit 30 is in the locked state. The locking unit 40 can also be driven to release its locking of the rotary wire-winding unit 30, by inserting the plug 90 into the plug inlet channel 235. When the plug 90 is inserted in the plug inlet channel 235 and no pulling force is applied on the wire 80 of the earphone set by a user (operator), the locking unit 40 allows free rotation of the rotary wire-winding unit 30 so as to make the rotary wire-winding unit 30 rotate in a first direction and rewind and gather the wire 80 automatically. On the other hand, when the wire 80 has been rewound and the plug 90 is in place in the plug inlet channel 235, and a pulling force is applied by the user to unwind the wire 80 so as to extend the wire 80, the rotary wire-winding unit 30 rotates in a second direction opposite to the first direction, and the wire 80 can be pulled out until the plug 90 is ready to be drawn out of the plug inlet channel 235. In the embodiment, the first direction is clockwise, and the second direction is counterclockwise.
The locking unit 40 includes a moving member 410 slidably accommodated in the moving cavity 232b, a locking member 413 upwardly extending from the moving member 410, and a spring 415 such as a coil spring.
A length of the moving cavity 232b determines the extent to which the moving member 410 can slide along the moving cavity 232b. The spring 415 is arranged along the lengthwise axis of the moving cavity 232b, and is sandwiched between the moving member 410 and the abutting wall 233. In the embodiment, one end of the spring 415 abuts against the abutting wall 233, and the other end of the spring 415 rests against a side surface 411 of the moving member 410 facing towards the abutting wall 233. The locking member 413 is configured to be slidably engaged in the locking slot 433. In an alternative embodiment, the locking member 413 extends downwardly from the spring lid 430, and accordingly, the locking slot 433 is defined in the moving member 410.
The moving member 410 receives a thrust force from a free end of the plug 90, when the plug 90 is pushed into the plug inlet channel 235 by the user and reaches the moving cavity 232b. Thereby, the moving member 410 slides outwardly along the lengthwise axis of the moving cavity 232b so as to make the locking member 413 disengage from the locking slot 433. The moving member 410 includes a contact surface 412 configured for receiving the thrust force. The contact surface 412 is an oblique surface facing towards an inner opening of the plug inlet channel 235 at the moving cavity 232b. When the plug 90 is inserted into the plug inlet channel 235, the free end of the plug 90 abuts against the contact surface 412 so as to generate the thrust force applied to the contact surface 412. Thus the whole moving member 410 is moved along the moving cavity 232b by the thrust force, compressing the spring 415, and making the locking member 413 disengaged from the locking slot 433.
In the embodiment, a cap 900 is sleeved on and fixed to a free end of the locking member 413. The cap 900 cooperates with the locking member 413 to function as an operation handle 600 to receive the user's thumb press. When the locking member 413 is disengaged from the locking slot 433, the user can push the operation handle 600 and thereby drive the locking member 413 to move along the guideway 700 so that the rotary wire-winding unit 30 rotates. Alternatively, another kind of handle can be fixed to the locking member 413, as a substitute for the above-mentioned operation handle 600. The other handle can be operated by the user to drive the locking member 413 to move along the guideway 700 so that the rotary wire-winding unit 30 rotates.
In assembly of the wire-winding device 1, the rotation body 200 is inserted into the housing 10, with the securing shaft 114 passing through the shaft hole 212, entering the accommodation cavity 232a and protruding beyond a top of the accommodation cavity 232a. Thereby, the supporting plate 210 of the rotation body 200 is sleeved around the pivot 112 of the housing 10. One end 310 of the torsion spring 300 is placed around the securing shaft 114, and the other end 310 of the torsion spring 300 is hooked onto the latching member 237. Thereby, the torsion spring 300 is fixed into the rotation body 200. At this time, the torsion spring 300 is in an elastically deformed state, storing a certain amount of elastic potential energy. Then the spring 415 together with the moving member 410 are accommodated in the moving cavity 232b. The moving member 410 and the spring 415 sit in a straight line along the lengthwise axis of the moving cavity 232b, with the spring 415 sandwiched between the moving member 410 and the abutting wall 233. The spring lid 430 covers the indentation 232, and the securing shaft 114 is engaged in the securing hole 435. The protrusion block 432 of the spring lid 430 is received in the accommodation cavity 232a; and the location of the locking slot 433 of the base cover 431 is arranged to correspond with the moving cavity 232b, so that the locking member 413 engages in the locking slot 433. In this position, the top cover 50 conceals the top circumferential edge of the housing 10, and the end of the locking member 413 with the cap 900 protrudes up higher than the guideway 700, so that the rotary wire-winding unit 30 can freely rotate when the locking member 413 is located in the guideway 700.
In the embodiment, after finishing the assembly of the wire-winding device 1, the torsion spring 300 is in the elastically deformed state, and the locking member 413 is received in the locking slot 433.
The operation principles of the wire-winding device 1 are briefly described below:
Referring to
Then when an end portion of the wire 80 at the earpieces of the earphone set is pulled out from the wire-winding device 1 by the user, because the plug 90 is still inserted in the plug inlet channel 235, the locking unit 40 is still in an unlocked status, and the rotary wire-winding unit 30 is rotated in the second direction by the pulling force. That is, the wire 80 can be pulled out until the plug 90 is able to be drawn out of the plug inlet channel 235. During the pulling action on the wire 80, the deformation of the torsion spring 300 is cumulatively increased, due to the reversed rotation of the rotation body 200.
Referring to
In the embodiment, the rotary wire-winding unit 30 can for example be pushed to move along the guideway 700 by operation of the operation handle 600, when the plug 90 is inserted into the plug inlet channel 235. Therefore even if the torsion spring 300 does not have sufficient elastic potential energy to fully wind up the wire 80 of the earphone set, the user can still operate the operation handle 600 and thereby push the locking member 413 to move along the guideway 700 so that the rotary wire-winding unit 30 rotates and fully winds up the wire 80.
According to the above, the wire 80 of the earphone set can be automatically wound up on the rotary wire-winding unit 30 by the thrust force applied by the free end of the plug 90 when the plug 90 is inserted into the plug inlet channel 235. This helps avoid wire tangles. Moreover, the wire 80 can be completely pulled out from the wire-winding device 1 and freed from the wire-winding device 1 by the user. Therefore, the earpieces and wire 80 of the earphone set can be completely detached from the wire-winding device 1 according to user requirements. For example, after such detachment, the user may employ a different earphone set with the wire-winding device 1, by inserting a plug of the other earphone set into the plug inlet channel 235. Thus the wire-winding device 1 is even more convenient for everyday portable use.
Although numerous characteristics and advantages of the present embodiments have been set out in the foregoing description, together with details of the structures and functions of the embodiments, the disclosure is illustrative only; and changes may be made in detail, especially in the matters of shape, size and arrangement of parts within the principles of the disclosure to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201110267313.X | Sep 2011 | CN | national |