Tool driving or impacting – Impacting devices – Hammer head driven by pulsating fluid pressure
Reexamination Certificate
2003-05-01
2004-10-05
Smith, Scott A. (Department: 3721)
Tool driving or impacting
Impacting devices
Hammer head driven by pulsating fluid pressure
C173S002000, C173S020000, C173S176000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06799644
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a pneumatic percussive mechanism with a percussion piston, in particular for an at least partially percussive hand machine or power tool, such as a drill or chisel hammer.
In a conventional at least partially percussive hand machine or power tool having a percussive mechanism, a percussion piston is moveable in a reciprocating onto an anvil and further onto the leading end of a tool, in a partially rotating guide, via a gas spring. By triggering the gas spring by a gas piston, on the one hand, and the interaction of the tool with the material to be worked on, on the other hand, the percussion piston is subject to a complex oscillation kinetics, whose steady-state oscillation status is dependent on the boundary constraints. Conventionally, the oscillation kinetics of the percussion piston are optimized with the other parts moved by simulation calculations and practical experiments and produced constructively.
According to U.S. Pat. No. 3,464,503, a piezoelectric sensor picks up the impacts of the percussive mechanism on the tool and with an electronic assessment system provides a controlled adaptation of the percussive mechanism behavior to the material to be worked. This type of percussive impulse measurement makes a comprehensive statement on the oscillation status of the percussion piston possible.
Moreover, DE 19956313 discloses that the position of a fluid-guided piston with a permanent magnet, in a working cylinder, is magnetically sensed by a sensor arranged external to the guide tube. This type of arrangement of a permanent magnet is suitable, preferably, for a slow piston, that is not percussive stressed.
In addition, according to DE 3210716 a high speed of a piston with several axially spaced annular zones of different permeability is magnetically sensed, using an externally radial, contact-less arranged magneto-resistive sensor, such that the change of the magnetic flux is sensed in a radial manner externally by the piston.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The object of the invention in a pneumatic percussive mechanism having a percussion piston is to at least partially sense its movement using measurement technology. A further aspect relates to the realization of a machine or power tool with control or regulation based on the measurement of the movement of the percussion piston.
The object is achieved according to the invention, wherein a pneumatic percussive mechanism having an axial back and forth moving, percussive actuated percussion piston comprises a magnetic field sensitive sensor arranged in a radial manner thereto, wherein the percussion piston has at least radial arranged external ferromagnetic material and several axially spaced zones of different magnetic permeability.
The movement of a radial reciprocating, percussive loaded percussion piston can be measured by the contact-less disposed magnetic field sensitive sensor, which optionally comprises a permanent magnet for generating the magnetic flux. The areas of different magnetic permeability in the percussion piston generate, at the output of the magnetic field sensitive sensor, an almost sinusoidal signal, whose amplitude is dependent on the distance of separation of the sensor to the percussion piston.
Advantageously, the magnetic field sensitive sensor is configured as a differentially switched, solid-state magnetic field sensor such as (Hall-Sensor, AMR (anisotropic magneto resistance)—sensor, GMR (giant magneto resistance)—sensor, MR (magneto resistance)—sensor, MI (magneto impedance)—sensor or as an inductive sensor comprising coil and flux guidance, which are available as standard components. Differential sensors are more insensitive to the radial play of the percussion piston since such sensors measure only the flux difference between two adjacent positions.
The geometry of these areas is dependent on the separation of the differentially connected magnetic field sensitive sensors, wherein advantageously the axial structure size of the areas corresponds at least to the air gap (the gap between the leading edge of the sensor and the piston). To increase the signal amplitudes somewhat larger structure widths are advantageous. The greatest possible axially separated areas on the piston are of advantage for the measurement of the speed trend of the percussion piston.
If, for example, only the zero-crossings are evaluated, then per period of the areas two items of information are obtained. If, in differentially connected sensors, the axial separation T of these two sensors is given (for example, T
sens
=0.8 or 2.0 mm), then the period of the areas should aligned at the separation. The optimal period of the areas would then be the double of the separation of the sensors (T
area
=1.6 mm or 4 mm). Moreover, it is further advantageous to place the sensors in a phase offset in the separation (2n+1)/2*T (n=0, 2, 1).
Advantageously, the areas of different magnetic permeability are configured by a plurality of axially separated, air filled radial grooves, which are technically simple to produce.
Advantageously, the radial grooves are 0.1-1.5 mm, optimally 0.8 mm deep and 0.5-5.0 mm, optimally 3.2 mm wide and form a permanent 0.1-3.0 mm, optimally 1.6 mm wide axial intermediate web, whereby large permeability differences occur at the time of movement past the sensor.
Advantageously, the sensor is arranged radial contact-less outside of an optionally rotating guide tube for the piston, whereby measurement through the guide tube is possible.
Advantageously, the guide tube is tapered in the axial measurement point area external radial to 0.1-2.0 mm, optimally 0.2 mm, whereby with a sufficiently bulge and bend resistant guide tube exerts a minimal influence on the measurement magnetic field radial external interpenetrating the percussion piston.
Advantageously, the sensor is connected to the computer unit, which determines a position and/or a speed from the temporal trend of the sensor signals, which corresponds to the permeability variations acquired by the sensor when the areas of different permeability pass by, whereby the inference of the steady-state oscillation status of the piston is possible. The computer unit uses for this purpose conventional methods of signal processing, such as curve fitting (partial cos fit, non-linear least squares fit), demodulation, Fourier transformation, power spectrum, filtering (auto-regressive filter for spectral estimation) and frequency estimation methods (time—frequency analysis).
Advantageously the computer unit has classification means that can be selectively activated relative to the kinetics of the percussion piston, such as frequency filters, whereby different percussive conditions can be detected and can be classified, for example, in the event a tool encounters structural steel embedded in concrete.
Advantageously, an at least partially percussive machine or power tool with a pneumatic percussive mechanism with an axially reciprocating, percussive loaded percussion piston has a measurement arrangement of this type, whereby in a machine or power tool the kinetics of the percussion piston is at least partially directly measurable.
Advantageously, the computer unit addresses, in dependence on control means corresponding to the different percussive statuses of the percussion piston, the classification means, for example, for reducing the motor speed and/or the speed of the tool and/or interruption of regulation of the percussive drive and thus the percussive power.
Advantageously, the computer unit is connected to a target value memory for the optimal kinetics of the percussion piston and optional other boundary conditions such as percussive energy, number of impacts or strikes, speed, etc. for different materials to be worked, which is further advantageously organized as a multidimensional array, whereby the machine or power tool is automatically adaptable to an optional kinetics of the percussion piston and consequently adjustable to optimal cutting or reduction performance.
Advantageously, a no-lo
Binder Albert
Boeni Hans
Hoop Alexander
Schad Hanspeter
Würsch Christoph
Chukwurah Nathaniel
Hilti Aktiengesellschaft
Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP
Smith Scott A.
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