Electric tool

12485521 ยท 2025-12-02

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

The present disclosure relates to an electric tool, including a housing, a motor accommodated in the housing, a transmission mechanism, and an impact mechanism, where the impact mechanism includes an air cylinder, and an impact rod, a guide device, an impact hammer, and a piston arranged in the air cylinder; and when the impact rod moves along a direction opposite to an output direction, a second guide part sequentially supports a third section and a second section greater than the third section in diameter.

Claims

1. An electric tool, comprising: a housing; a motor accommodated in the housing; a transmission mechanism; and an impact mechanism, the impact mechanism comprising: an air cylinder; and an impact rod; a guide device; an impact hammer, and a piston arranged in the air cylinder, the piston compressing air and driving the impact hammer to impact the impact rod; wherein the guide device comprises a first guide part and a second guide part located behind the first guide part; wherein the impact rod has a first section sliding along the first guide part, and a second section and a third section which slide along the second guide part, and a radial size of the third section is smaller than a radial size of the second section; when the impact rod moves along an output direction, the second guide part sequentially supports the second section and the third section; and when the impact rod moves along a direction opposite to the output direction, the second guide part sequentially supports the third section and the second section, such that the impact rod is inclined relative to an axis of the air cylinder before moving.

2. The electric tool according to claim 1, wherein an angle of inclination of the impact rod relative to the axis of the air cylinder is 0.2-0.5.

3. The electric tool according to claim 1, wherein a radial size of the first section is equal to the radial size of the second section.

4. The electric tool according to claim 1, wherein the impact rod further comprises a connecting section for connecting the first section to the second section, a radial size of the connecting section is greater than the radial size of the first section and the radial size of the second section, and the connecting section limits the impact rod between the first guide part and the second guide part.

5. The electric tool according to claim 4, wherein the first guide part is a first step part protruding inwards along a radial direction of the air cylinder and integrally formed with the air cylinder; and the first section penetrates through the first step part and extends forward.

6. The electric tool according to claim 5, wherein the impact mechanism further comprises a sleeve axially limited in the air cylinder and located behind the first step part, and the second guide part is a second step part protruding inwards along a radial direction of the sleeve.

7. The electric tool according to claim 6, wherein the impact mechanism further comprises a stop ring arranged between the first guide part and the connecting section; when the impact rod moves forward, the first section penetrates through the stop ring and the connecting section abuts against the stop ring; and when the impact rod moves backward, the connecting section abuts against the sleeve.

8. The electric tool according to claim 7, wherein the impact mechanism further comprises a slip ring located between the stop ring and the sleeve, and the stop ring and the slip ring are limited between the first guide part and the second guide part in a relative sliding manner.

9. The electric tool according to claim 6, wherein a flange part protrudes outward along a radial direction of an end part of the impact hammer that faces the impact rod, the impact mechanism further comprises a locking part limited in the air cylinder and clamped with the flange part, and when the electric tool is in an unloaded state, the flange part is clamped in the locking part.

10. The electric tool according to claim 9, wherein a third step surface protrudes inward along a radial direction of an inner wall of the air cylinder, and the sleeve has a front side abutting against the third step surface and a rear side abutting against the locking part.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) The specific embodiments of the present disclosure are further described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings.

(2) FIG. 1 is a schematic three-dimensional view of an electric tool according to a preferred embodiment of the present disclosure;

(3) FIG. 2 is a sectional view of the electronic tool shown in FIG. 1;

(4) FIG. 3 is a schematic partial enlarged view of the electronic tool shown in FIG. 1 in an operating state;

(5) FIG. 4 is a schematic partial enlarged view of the electronic tool shown in FIG. 1 in a hammer locking state; and

(6) FIG. 5 is a schematic three-dimensional view of an impact rod of the electronic tool shown in FIG. 1.

DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS

(7) The terms used in the present disclosure are only for the purpose of describing the specific embodiments and are not intended to limit the present disclosure. The orientations or positional relationships indicated by the terms upper, lower, front, rear, etc. below are based on the orientations or positional relationships shown in the accompanying drawings, merely for the convenience of describing the present disclosure and simplifying the description, rather than indicating or implying that the referred device or element must have a particular orientation or be constructed and operated in a particular orientation, and therefore cannot be understood as limiting the present disclosure.

(8) Reference is made to FIG. 1 to FIG. 5, which show an electric tool 100 according to a preferred embodiment of the present disclosure. In this embodiment, the electric tool 100 is an electric hammer for drilling or chiseling on walls, cement floors, and other occasions. An output direction of the electric tool 100 is defined as a front direction. The electric tool 100 includes a housing 10, a motor 20 arranged in the housing 10, a transmission mechanism 30, an impact mechanism 40, a chuck 60 extending outwards along a front end of the housing 10, and a working head (not shown in figures) fixed in the chuck 60. After the electric tool 100 is started, the motor 20 drives the impact mechanism 40 by the transmission mechanism 30 to input impact, and the impact mechanism 40 drives the working head in the chuck 60 to output the impact.

(9) Referring to FIG. 2 to FIG. 4, the motor 20 includes a motor shaft 21 extending along an axial direction perpendicular to the output direction, and the transmission mechanism 30 includes a gear 31 meshed with the motor shaft 21, an eccentric wheel 32 in transmission connection with the gear 31, and an eccentric pin 33 integrated with the eccentric wheel 32. The motor shaft 21 drives the eccentric wheel 32 by the gear 31 to rotate.

(10) The impact mechanism 40 includes an air cylinder 41, and an impact rod 45, a guide device 50, a stop ring 47, a slip ring 48, a sleeve 46, a buffer ring 462, a locking part 49, an impact hammer 44, a piston 43, and a connecting rod 42 sequentially arranged in the air cylinder 41 from front to rear. The connecting rod 42 has a rear end sleeved on the eccentric pin 33 and a front end pivotally connected to the piston 43; and the eccentric wheel 32 drives the piston 43 by the connecting rod 42 to move back and forth, the piston 42 moving back and forth compresses air and drives the impact hammer 44 to impact the impact rod 45, and the impact rod 45 impacted impacts the working head along the output direction.

(11) Referring to FIG. 3 and FIG. 4, a flange part 441 protrudes outward along a radial direction of an end part of the impact hammer 44 that faces the impact rod 45, the impact mechanism 40 further includes a locking part 49 limited in the air cylinder 41 and clamped with the flange part 441, and an O-shaped ring 491 for locking the hammer is provided in the locking part 49. When the electric tool 100 is in an unloaded state, the working head is not in contact with a machined part, the impact hammer 44 impacts the impact rod 45 along the output direction, and the impact rod 45 pushes the working head to a foremost end of the chuck 60. In this case, the flange part 441 of the impact hammer 44 penetrates through the O-shaped ring 491 and moves to the front of the O-shaped ring 491, and the flange part 441 is clamped in the O-shaped ring 491, thereby preventing the piston 43 from continuing driving the impact hammer 44 in the unloaded state.

(12) When the electric tool 100 is unloaded and there is a large rebound force when the impact rod 45 impacts the stop ring 47, the impact rod 45 reversely impacts the impact hammer 44 clamped in the O-shaped ring 491. The impact hammer 44 is impacted repeatedly even if it is easily separated from the O-shaped ring 491, thereby affecting the service life of the electric tool 100.

(13) Referring to FIG. 2 to FIG. 4, the guide device 50 includes a first guide part 51 and a second guide part 52 located behind the first guide part 51. The first guide part 51 is a first step part protruding inwards along a radial direction of the air cylinder 41 and integrally formed with the air cylinder 41. The second guide part 52 is a second step part protruding inwards along a radial direction of the sleeve 46. A front side of the sleeve 46 abuts against a third step surface 411 protruding inwards in the radial direction of the air cylinder 41, a periphery of the sleeve 46 that gets close to a rear end surface thereof is provided with a bulge 461 protruding outwards in the radial direction, and the bulge 461 abuts against the locking part 49 through the buffer ring 462.

(14) Referring to FIG. 3 to FIG. 5, the impact rod 45 has a first section 451 sliding along the first guide part 51, and a second section 452 and a third section 453 which slide along the second guide part 52; the first section 451 penetrates through the first step part and extends forward; a radial size of the third section 453 is smaller than a radial size of the second section 452; and a radial size of the first section 451 is equal to that of the second section 452. When the impact rod 45 moves along the output direction, the second guide part 52 sequentially supports the second section 452 and the third section 453, that is, before the impact rod 45 is impacted, the second guide part 52 supports the second section 452. In this case, an axis of the impact rod 45 coincides with an axis of the air cylinder 41, the impact hammer 44 impacts the impact rod 45 along a linear direction, and the impact rod 45 outputs impact along the linear direction to improve the energy transfer efficiency. When the impact rod 45 moves along a direction opposite to the output direction, the second guide part 52 sequentially supports the third section 453 and the second section 452, such that the impact rod 45 is inclined relative to the axis of the air cylinder 41 before moving, where an angle of inclination of the impact rod 45 relative to the axis of the air cylinder 41 is 0.2-0.5. When the electric tool 100 is unloaded, the inclination of the impact rod 45 consumes energy of the impact rod 45 moving in the opposite direction to prevent the impact rod 45 from taking the impact hammer 44 away from the O-shaped ring 491, thereby prolonging the service life of the electric tool 100; when the electric tool 100 is loaded, the inclination also consumes the energy of the impact rod 45 to reduce a recoil force of the impact rod 45 on the electric tool 100.

(15) An inclined surface 455 is formed between the second section 452 and the third section 453. When the impact rod 45 moves backward, the inclined surface 455 impacts a side wall of the second guide part 52, to reduce vibration and noise.

(16) The impact rod 45 further includes a connecting section 454 for connecting the first section 451 to the second section 452, a radial size of the connecting section 454 is greater than the radial size of the first section 451 and the radial size of the second section 452, and the connecting section 454 limits the impact rod 45 between the first guide part 51 and the second guide part 52. The stop ring 47 is arranged between the first guide part 51 and the connecting section 454. When the impact rod 45 moves forward, the first section 451 penetrates through the stop ring 47 and the connecting section 454 abuts against the stop ring 47. When the impact rod 45 moves backward, the connecting section 454 abuts against the sleeve 46, to axially limit the impact rod 45.

(17) The slip ring 48 is arranged between the stop ring 47 and the sleeve 46, and the slip ring 48 and the stop ring 47 are limited between the first guide part 51 and the second guide part 52 in a relative sliding manner. When the electric tool 100 performs upward impact operation, the slip ring 48 prevents the stop ring 47 from directly falling onto the impact rod 45 to affect the output. In addition, the slip ring 48 and the stop ring 47 have a certain sliding distance in the axial direction for buffering a forward impact force of the impact rod 45 when unloaded, thereby preventing the stop ring 47 from being broken by impact.

(18) In this embodiment, when the impact rod 45 moves along the direction opposite to the output direction, the second guide part 52 sequentially supports the third section 453 and the second section 452 greater than the third section 453 in diameter; a gap between the second guide part 52 and the third section 453 is added, such that the impact rod 45 is inclined relative to the axis of the air cylinder 41 before moving; when the electric tool 100 is unloaded, the inclination consumes energy of the impact rod 45 moving in the opposite direction to prevent the impact rod 45 from taking the impact hammer 44 away from the locking part 49, thereby preventing impact when the impact hammer 44 is unloaded from affecting the service life of the electric tool 100; when the electric tool 100 is loaded, the inclination also consumes the energy of the impact rod 45 to reduce a recoil force of the impact rod 45 on the electric tool 100; before the impact rod 45 is impacted, the second guide part 52 supports the second section 452; and in this case, an axis of the impact rod 45 coincides with the axis of the air cylinder 41, the impact hammer 44 impacts the impact rod 45 along a linear direction, and the impact rod 45 outputs impact along the linear direction to improve the energy transfer efficiency.

(19) The present disclosure is not limited to the above specific embodiments. Those of ordinary skill in the art can readily understand that there are still many alternative solutions for the electric tool according to the present disclosure without departing from the principle and scope of the present disclosure. The scope of protection of the present disclosure is subject to the content of the claims.