FILE BELT SANDER
20220324078 · 2022-10-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A belt sander for sanding a workpiece including a main housing, a motor having a motor shaft disposed within the main housing, a gear assembly driven by the motor shaft, and a drive assembly coupled to the gear assembly for driving a sanding belt. The drive assembly includes a hammer coupled to the motor shaft, an anvil configured to receive rotational impacts from the hammer, and a spring biasing the hammer towards the anvil. The drive assembly is configured to convert the continuous torque provided by the motor and gear assembly to intermittent applications of torque to the anvil. The sanding belt is coupled to the anvil, such that the sanding belt is intermittently driven by the drive assembly when an abrasive load between the sanding belt and a workpiece causes a reaction torque exerted on the anvil to exceed a biasing force of the spring.
Claims
1. A belt sander for sanding a workpiece, the belt sander comprising: a main housing; a motor having a motor shaft disposed within the main housing; a gear assembly driven by the motor shaft; and a drive assembly coupled to the gear assembly for driving a sanding belt, the drive assembly including a hammer coupled to the motor shaft, an anvil configured to receive rotational impacts from the hammer, and a spring biasing the hammer towards the anvil, wherein the drive assembly is configured to convert the continuous torque provided by the motor and the gear assembly to intermittent applications of torque to the anvil, and wherein the sanding belt is coupled to the anvil, such that the sanding belt is intermittently driven by the drive assembly when an abrasive load between the sanding belt and a workpiece causes a reaction torque exerted on the anvil to exceed a biasing force of the spring.
2. The belt sander of claim 1, further comprising a belt drive system driven by the drive assembly, wherein the belt drive system includes a drive wheel that is driven by the anvil, a driven wheel that is driven by the drive wheel via the sanding belt, and a platen disposed between the drive wheel and the driven wheel.
3. The belt sander of claim 2, wherein the sanding belt has teeth on the inner periphery to intermesh with corresponding teeth of the drive wheel that, in turn, is directly coupled to the anvil, such that a positive engagement is established from the anvil to the sanding belt.
4. The belt sander of claim 3, wherein the driven wheel has teeth that intermesh with the teeth on the inner periphery of the sanding belt.
5. The belt sander of claim 1, further comprising a camshaft that is directly driven by the gear assembly and drives the hammer.
6. The belt sander of claim 1, further comprising hammer lugs disposed on the hammer that engage with anvil lugs disposed on the anvil.
7. The belt sander of claim 6, wherein the drive assembly is capable of transitioning between an engaged state, in which the hammer lugs are meshed with the anvil lugs, and a disengaged state, in which the hammer lugs are no longer meshed with the anvil lugs.
8. The belt sander of claim 7, wherein the hammer lugs cam against the anvil lugs, causing the hammer to retract away from the anvil against the bias of the spring when the reaction torque exerted on the anvil exceeds the biasing force of the spring.
9. The belt sander of claim 7, further comprising a camshaft that is directly driven by the gear assembly and drives the hammer, wherein the camshaft includes cam grooves and cam balls that rotationally couple the hammer to the camshaft and allows for relative axial movement of the hammer relative to the camshaft between the engaged state and the disengaged state while the camshaft continues to rotate.
10. The belt sander of claim 1, wherein the biasing force of the spring can be adjusted by an adjustment mechanism, allowing the spring to either be expanded or compressed.
11. A belt sander for sanding a workpiece, the belt sander comprising: a main housing; a motor having a motor shaft disposed within the main housing; a contact arm extending from the main housing for driving a sanding belt, the contact arm is moveable relative to the main housing; and a drive assembly disposed between the motor and the contact arm and including a hammer driven by the motor shaft about a drive axis, an anvil configured to receive rotational impacts from the hammer and coupled to the sanding belt, and a spring biasing the hammer towards the anvil, wherein the drive assembly is configured to convert the continuous torque provided by the motor to intermittent applications of torque to the anvil, and wherein the sanding belt is intermittently driven by the drive assembly when an abrasive load between the sanding belt and a workpiece causes a reaction torque exerted on the anvil to exceed a biasing force of the spring.
12. The belt sander of claim 11, further comprising a drive wheel that is coupled to the anvil and disposed at one end of the contact arm, a driven wheel that is driven by the drive wheel via the sanding belt and disposed at another end of the contact arm, and a platen disposed on the contact arm and between the drive wheel and the driven wheel.
13. The belt sander of claim 12, wherein the drive wheel and the driven wheel both have teeth that intermesh with corresponding teeth on the inner periphery of the sanding belt, such that a positive engagement is established from the drive wheel to the sanding belt.
14. The belt sander of claim 11, further comprising a camshaft that is driven by the motor and coupled to the hammer.
15. The belt sander of claim 14, wherein the camshaft includes cam grooves and cam balls that are received within the cam grooves, wherein the cam balls rotationally fix the hammer to the camshaft while also enabling the hammer to translate relative to the camshaft along the drive axis.
16. The belt sander of claim 11, further comprising hammer lugs disposed on the hammer that engage anvil lugs disposed on the anvil.
17. The belt sander of claim 16, wherein the drive assembly is capable of transitioning between an engaged state, in which the hammer lugs are meshed with the anvil lugs, and a disengaged state, in which the hammer lugs are spaced away from the anvil lugs in a direction parallel with the drive axis.
18. The belt sander of claim 17, wherein the hammer lugs cam against the anvil lugs, causing the hammer to retract away from the anvil against the bias of the spring when the reaction torque exerted on the anvil exceeds the biasing force of the spring.
19. The belt sander of claim 11, wherein the biasing force of the spring can be adjusted by an adjustment mechanism, allowing the spring to either be expanded or compressed.
20. The belt sander of claim 11, wherein the contact arm is pivotable relative to the main housing about the drive axis.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0012] Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013]
[0014] With reference to
[0015] With reference to
[0016] With reference to
[0017] With reference to
[0018] The preload of the spring 98 can be adjusted by an adjustment mechanism 100, causing the spring to either be expanded or compressed. The abrasive load threshold increases if the spring 98 is compressed via the adjustment mechanism 100. On the other hand, the threshold decreases if the spring is expanded via the adjustment mechanism 100.
[0019] The camshaft 86 further includes cam grooves 122 in which corresponding cam balls 126 are received. The cam balls 126 are in driving engagement with the hammer 94. The cam balls 126 are capable of moving within the cam grooves 122, which allows for relative axial movement of the hammer 94 along the camshaft 86 between the engaged state and the disengaged state while the camshaft 86 continues to rotate. In other words, the cam balls 126 rotationally drive the hammer 94 with the camshaft 86 and enable the hammer 94 to translate axially while the camshaft 86 is rotated relative to the hammer 94. A bushing 130 is disposed within the gear case 66 to rotationally support the anvil 90.
[0020] With reference to
[0021] With reference to
[0022] With continued reference to
[0023] In operation of the sander 10, an operator depresses the trigger 46 to activate the motor 30, which continuously drives the gear assembly 42 and the camshaft 86 via the drive shaft 38. As the camshaft 86 rotates, the cam balls 126 drive the hammer 94 to co-rotate with the camshaft 86, and the hammer lugs 114 engage, respectively, the anvil lugs 118 to rotatably drive the anvil 90 and the sanding belt 34 (
[0024] At this point, rotation of the anvil 90 and hammer 94 slows or seizes intermittently between each impact, causing the drive wheel 142 and sanding belt 34 to also stop rotating momentarily. Specifically, as rotation of the anvil 90 and hammer 94 slows or seizes, the camshaft 86 continues to rotate relative to the hammer 94, imparting a rearward axial displacement to the hammer 94 via the cam balls 126 and the cam grooves 122 to retract the hammer 94 from the anvil 90 and slide the hammer 94 rearward along the camshaft 86 against the bias of the spring 98, transitioning the hammer lugs 114 and the anvil lugs 118 to the disengaged state. As the hammer 94 moves rearward, the spring 98 stores some of the rearward energy of the hammer 94 to provide a return mechanism for the hammer 94. After the hammer lugs 114 disengage the respective anvil lugs 118 and slide past one another, the camshaft 86 rotationally accelerates the hammer 94 and the spring 98 rebounds to push the hammer 94 forward, toward the anvil 90, until the hammer lugs 114 and the anvil lugs 118 are in the engaged state to cause another impact. During each impact, the anvil 90 causes the drive wheel 142 and the sanding belt 34 to rotate along with the anvil 90. This abrupt, intermittent movement of the drive wheel 142 allows the sanding belt 34 to gouge and rapidly sand/file a workpiece at a faster rate than a traditional, continuous drive sander. Impacting continues to occur so long as the reaction torque exerted on the anvil 90 exceeds the biasing force of the spring 98. The electronic controller 48 is capable of varying the rotational output speed of the motor 30 in response to the abrasive load threshold being exceeded and/or the extent to which the trigger 46 is depressed.
[0025] Although the sander 10 is illustrated as a file belt sander, in other embodiments, the sander 10 may be a reciprocating sander, an orbital sander, a palm sander, a traditional belt sander, or other type of sander.
[0026] Although the invention has been described in detail with reference to certain preferred embodiments, variations and modifications exist within the scope and spirit of one or more independent aspects of the invention as described.
[0027] Various features of the invention are set forth in the following claims.