Work tool with motor and fan
11426854 · 2022-08-30
Assignee
Inventors
- Antonio Lauciello (Reggio Emilia, IT)
- Lorenzo Castellari (Montecchio Emilia, IT)
- Vincenzo Gagliardi (Modena, IT)
Cpc classification
A01D34/84
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
B25F5/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02K7/14
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Described herein is a work tool (100) comprising: a motor (125) provided with a drive shaft (130), a casing (195) containing the motor (125) and provided with at least one inlet opening (235) and with at least one outlet opening (240), an implement (135) positioned outside the casing (195) and kinematically connected with the drive shaft (130), and a fan (245) kinematically connected to the drive shaft (130) and able to generate a flow of air from the inlet opening (235) towards the outlet opening (240) of the casing (195) passing in heat exchange relationship with the motor (125), wherein said fan (245) is contained inside the casing (195) in a space located between the motor (125) and the implement (135).
Claims
1. A work tool (100) comprising: a motor (125) provided with a drive shaft (130), a casing (195) containing the motor (125) and provided with at least one inlet opening (235) and with at least one outlet opening (240), a tool (135) positioned outside the casing (195) and kinematically connected to the drive shaft (130), a fan (245) kinematically connected to the drive shaft (130) and adapted to generate an air current from the inlet opening (235) towards the outlet opening (240) of the casing (195) passing in heat exchange relationship with the motor (125), and a transmission (205) adapted to connect kinematically the drive shaft (130) to the tool (135), which comprises a toothed pinion (210) coaxially fixed to the drive shaft (130) and a gear wheel (215) coaxially fixed to an output shaft (220) and set to mesh with said toothed pinion (210), wherein said fan (245) is contained inside the casing (195) in a space located between the motor (125) and the tool (135) and is coaxially fixed to the output shaft (220) of the transmission (205), and the gear wheel (215) is a gear wheel with inner teeth realized in a single body with the fan (245).
2. The work tool (100) according to claim 1, wherein the fan (245) is an axial fan.
3. The work tool (100) according to claim 1, wherein the outlet opening (240) of the casing (195) faces the tool (135).
4. The work tool (100) according to claim 1, wherein the fan (245) is axially interposed between the gear wheel (215) of the transmission (205) and the tool (135).
5. The work tool (100) according to claim 1, wherein the motor (125) is an electric motor comprising a rotor (140) coaxially fixed to the drive shaft (125), a stator (145) and a motor body (160) containing the rotor (140) and the stator (145), said motor body (160) comprising at least one inlet port (180) and at least one outlet port (185) for the air flow generated by the fan (245), which are positioned at opposite sides of the stator (145) along the direction defined by the drive shaft (130).
6. The work tool (100) according to claim 5, wherein said inlet port (180) is realized on a head (170) of the motor body (160) oriented towards the tool (135), whereas the outlet port (185) is obtained on a lateral wall (165) of the motor body (160).
7. The work tool (100) according to claim 5, wherein the motor (125) comprises an auxiliary fan (190) positioned inside the motor body (160) and coaxially fixed to the drive shaft (130).
8. The work tool (100) according to claim 7, wherein the auxiliary fan (190) is a centrifugal fan radially facing the outlet port (185) of the motor body (160).
9. The work tool (100) according to claim 7, wherein the auxiliary fan (190) is axially interposed between the rotor (140) and a commutator (150) also contained inside the motor body (160).
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Further features and advantages of the invention shall become readily apparent from reading the following description provided by way of non-limiting indication, with the aid of the figures illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) The present description relates to a work tool 100, typically a portable work tool, for example of the type of those that are commonly used to perform gardening work.
(7) In the illustrated example, the work tool 100 is a brush cutter, i.e. a tool that is hand-carried by a user and typically used to mow lawns or cut hedges.
(8) However, the aspects of the present description may be applied to other work tools, for example lawn mowers, hedge trimmers or the like.
(9) The work tool 100 comprises an operating unit, globally indicated with the numeral 105, which can be mounted at the end of a support rod 110 provided, for example at the opposite end, with a handle 115 and with a grip 120 that enable the user to pick up the work tool 100.
(10) The support rod 110 can be adjustable in length and, at the grip 120, can be provided with a series of controls to control the operation of the operating unit 105.
(11) During normal use, the user, standing in the erect position, grips the handle 115 and the grip 120, so as to incline the support rod 110 downwards and to bring the operating unit 105 in proximity to the ground.
(12) The concepts of “lower/upper”, “top/bottom”, “horizontal/vertical”, which will occasionally be used in the remainder of the description are to be construed with reference to this configuration of normal use.
(13) As shown in
(14) The motor 125 is preferably an electric motor, for example a direct-current electric motor, which generally comprises a rotor 140 coaxially and integrally fixed to the drive shaft 130 and a stator 145 that surrounds the rotor 140.
(15) The stator 145 can comprise permanent magnets able to generate a fixed magnetic field, while the rotor 140 can comprise electrical windings able to be travelled by current, in such a way as to generate an induced magnetic field that, interacting with the fixed magnetic field of the stator 145, causes the rotation of the rotor 140, and therewith of the drive shaft 130, around its own axis Y.
(16) To allow this operation, the motor 125 can comprise a commutator 150 provided with brushes 155, which is able to cyclically reverse, during rotation, the direction of the electric current that travels through the windings of the stator 145.
(17) The commutator 150 can be positioned coaxially with respect to the drive shaft 130 and to the side, i.e. axially offset, with respect to the assembly formed by the stator 145 and by the rotor 140.
(18) The rotor 140, the stator 145 and any commutator 150 can be contained inside a motor body 160, which generally comprises a lateral wall 165, for example with substantially cylindrically shape, which winds and coaxially surrounds the stator 145 and any commutator 150, and two heads able to close the axial ends of said lateral wall 165, of which a first head 170 and a second head 175.
(19) The lateral wall 165 and the first head 170 can be realised as a single body having substantially the shape of a tumbler, while the second head 175 can be realised as a lid that closes the mouth of said tumbler.
(20) The rotor 140 and the stator 145 can be positioned inside the motor body 160 in proximal position to the first header 170, while any commutator 150 can be positioned proximally to the second header 175.
(21) The drive shaft 130 is rotatably supported inside the motor body 160, from which it projects outwards through at least one opening obtained in the first head 170, i.e. preferably at the opposite part with respect to the one where any commutator 150 is located.
(22) The motor body 160 can be provided with one or more inlet ports 180 and with one or more outlet ports 185, which are able to put the inner volume of the motor body 160 in communication with the exterior, so as to allow an air flow to traverse the motor body 160 and hence to cool the rotor 140 and the stator 145.
(23) To improve the effectiveness of this cooling, the inlet port(s) 180 and the outlet port(s) 185 can be mutually positioned at opposite parts of the stator 145, relative to the direction defined by the axis Y of the drive shaft 130.
(24) In particular, it can be preferable that, with respect to the direction defined by the axis Y of the drive shaft 130, the outlet port(s) 185 are positioned between the stator 145 and any commutator 150, so that the latter is not traversed by the air flow.
(25) For example, the inlet port(s) 180 can be obtained in the first head 170 of the motor body 160, while the outlet port(s) 185 can be obtained in the lateral wall 165, preferably arranged radially relative to the axis of the drive shaft 130.
(26) To create the aforementioned cooling air flow, the motor 125 can comprise a fan 190, which is contained inside the motor body 160 where it can be coaxially and securely fixed to the drive shaft 130.
(27) In particular, it is preferable for said fan 190 to be a centrifugal fan and to be positioned substantially at the same axial height, relative to the axis Y of the drive shaft 130, whereat are also positioned the outlet port(s) 185, so as to be at least partially facing the outlet port(s) in the radial direction.
(28) For example, the fan 190 can be axially interposed between the rotor 140 and any commutator 150.
(29) The motor 125 is globally contained inside a casing, indicated in its entirety by the numeral 195, which can be fixed at the end of the support rod 110.
(30) The casing 195 can be realised by two or more shells, each of which can be made of plastic material, for example by means of an injection moulding process, and which are mutually joined together, for example by means of screws.
(31) Inside the casing 195, the motor 125 is preferably positioned so that the first head 170 of the motor body 160, i.e. the one from which the drive shaft 130 project, is oriented towards the tool 135.
(32) For example, the motor 125 can be positioned so that the first head 170 is oriented downwards and the axis Y of the drive shaft 130 is substantially vertical.
(33) The tool 135 is positioned outside the casing 195, for example below the motor 125, and it can be kinematically connected to the drive shaft 130 in such a way as to be set in rotation around an axis of rotation A that is preferably parallel to the axis Y of the drive shaft 130.
(34) For example, the tool 135 can be a cutting tool and can comprise a central body 200 that bears a plurality of flexible cutting filaments (not shown because they are known in themselves), which project radially from the central body 200 outwards.
(35) In more detail, the tool 135 can be kinematically connected to the drive shaft 130 through a transmission, indicated in its entirety with the numeral 205, which can define a transmission ratio different from 1 between the drive shaft 130 and the tool 135.
(36) For example, the transmission 205 can be able to define a speed reduction between the drive shaft 130 and the tool 135.
(37) The transmission 205 can comprise a toothed pinion 210 coaxially and securely fixed to the drive shaft 130, specifically to the portion that projects outwards of the motor body 160.
(38) This toothed pinion 210 can be set to mesh with a gear wheel 215, preferably a gear wheel with inner teeth, which can be advantageously positioned in a space that, relative to the direction defined by the axis Y of the drive shaft 130, is between the motor body 160 and the tool 135.
(39) The toothed pinion 210 and the gear wheel 215 can be made of plastic material and preferably with low friction coefficient, in order not to need particular lubrication.
(40) The gear wheel 215, which can have a greater primitive diameter than that of the toothed pinion 210, can in turn be coaxially and securely fastened to an output shaft 220.
(41) The output shaft 220 can be fastened and rotatably supported inside the casing 195, for example by a pair of bearings, so that its axis is parallel to the axis Y of the drive shaft 130, for example coinciding with the axis of rotation A of the tool 135.
(42) While the toothed pinion 210 and the gear wheel 215 are preferably contained inside the casing 195, the drive shaft 220 can partially project outside the casing 195, so that it can be directly engaged to the tool 135.
(43) For example, the drive shaft 220 can project through a lower wall 225 of the casing 195, which can be substantially flat and can directly face the tool 135.
(44) The tool 135 can be engaged to the projecting portion of the output shaft 220 in a demountable manner, for example to allow its replacement in case of malfunction or for other reasons.
(45) The tool 135 can also be partially surrounded by a cover 230, which is fixed to the casing 195, preferably in the part oriented towards the handle 115 and the grip 120, to protect the user from grass clippings or from other objects that could lifted and projected backwards by the tool 135 during operation.
(46) Returning to the casing 195, this component is preferably provided with one or more inlet openings 235 and one or more outlet openings 240, which are adapted to put the internal volume of the casing 195 in communication with the exterior, thereby enabling an air flow to traverse the casing 195 and to cool the motor 125.
(47) For example, the inlet opening(s) 235 can be realised in a wall of the casing 195 which is positioned above and substantially facing the cover 230, so as to contrast the possibility that grass clippings or other contaminants can enter into the casing 195.
(48) To improve this contrasting action, each inlet opening 235 can be aligned to a corresponding rear wall, positioned inside the casing 195 at a short distance from the inlet opening 235, which hinders the entry of solid objects but without preventing the entry of air.
(49) Additionally or alternatively, one or more inlet openings (not shown) can be obtained in the upper part of the casing 195, substantially oriented upwards.
(50) Regarding the outlet opening(s) 240, these openings can preferably face the tool 135 directly, relative to the direction defined by the axis of rotation A, so as to be substantially oriented downwards and hence towards the ground.
(51) For example, the inlet opening(s) 235 can be obtained in the lower wall 225 of the casing 195, where they can be arranged around the projecting segment of the drive shaft 220.
(52) The casing 195 is also preferably provided with a plurality of separating walls adapted to define, inside the casing 195, a predetermined path for the air that flows from the inlet opening(s) 235 towards the outlet opening(s) 240.
(53) In particular, this path (indicated by the arrows in
(54) For example, in the illustrated embodiment, the internal separating walls are shaped and arranged so that the air, entering from the inlet opening(s) 235, is guided to flow towards the inlet ports 180 of the motor body 160, preferably preventing it at the same time from flowing directly towards the outlet opening(s) 240.
(55) In this way, all (or nearly all) of the entering air is forced to traverse the motor body 160, rising back in the direction of the axis Y of the drive shaft 130 and cooling the rotor 140 and the stator 145 as described above, before exiting radially from the outlet ports 185.
(56) The internal separating walls of the casing 195 are then shaped and arranged in such a way as to define a conveying conduit that collects the air exiting the outlet ports 185 of the motor body 160 and guides them towards the outlet opening(s) 240, preferably passing through the space in which the transmission 205 is contained.
(57) In this way, the warm air that exits the outlet openings 240 is projected downwards and hence towards the ground, being of little inconvenience for users and at the same time blowing away any grass clippings or other contaminants that otherwise could enter the casing 195, fouling and hampering the operation of the transmission 205.
(58) The air flow described above is generated with the aid of the fan 190 (whose presence is, however, not essential), as well as by an additional fan 245 that is kinematically connected to the drive shaft 130 so as to be driven thereby.
(59) The fan 245 is positioned outside the motor body 160 but it is contained inside the casing 195, in a space that, relative to the direction defined by the axis Y of the drive shaft 130, is between the motor body 160 and the tool 135.
(60) In this way, the fan 245 is substantially positioned below the motor 125 and above the tool 135.
(61) The fan 245 can be an axial fan and it can be adapted to rotate around an axis of rotation that is parallel to the axis of rotation A of the tool 135, for example coinciding therewith.
(62) Relative to the direction defined by its own axis of rotation, the fan 245 also preferably faces the outlet opening(s) 240 of the casing 195, so as to thrust the air directly outwards and hence towards the tool 135.
(63) In more detail, the fan 245 can be kinematically connected to the drive shaft 130 through the same transmission 205 that connects the drive shaft 130 to the tool 135.
(64) For example, the fan 245 can be coaxially and securely fixed to the output shaft 220, preferably interposed in the axial direction between the gear wheel 215 and the tool 135, so as not to interfere with the drive shaft 130 and with the toothed pinion 210.
(65) The fan 245 can also have an outer diameter equal to or smaller than the outer diameter of the gear wheel 215, so that the latter does not hamper the air flow and that all of the air drawn in, or at least most of it, passing to the centre of the gear wheel 215, is effectively guided towards the fan 245.
(66) In accordance with a preferred embodiment, the fan 245 and the gear wheel 215 can be realised as a single assembly that can be mounted and demounted as a whole relative to the drive shaft 220 of the transmission 205.
(67) For example, said assembly can comprise a central hub 250 adapted to be coaxially fixed on the drive shaft 220 of the transmission 205, and a lateral jacket 255, having substantially cylindrical shape, which coaxially surrounds the central hub 250.
(68) The central hub 250 is joined to the lateral jacket 255 by a plurality of blades 260 that extend radially from one to the other, thereby defining the fan 245.
(69) In particular, the fans 260 are able to connect the central hub 250 to a first annular portion of the lateral jacket 255, which also comprises a second annular portion, positioned coaxially to the first and having for example a greater inner diameter, which can extend axially towards the motor 125 and whose inner surface bears the teeth that define the gear wheel 215.
(70) Thanks to this solution, the blades 260 of the fan 245 also serve as support arms for the gear wheel 215.
(71) The central hub 250, the lateral jacket 255 and the blades 260 can be realised as a single monolithic body, for example made of plastic material and obtained by injection moulding, which thereby defines both the gear wheel 215 and the fan 245.
(72) Obviously, a person versed in the art may make numerous changes of a technical and applicative nature to the work tool 100, without thereby departing from the scope of the invention as claimed below.