Electromotive furniture drive comprising a gear assembly having an intermediate shaft
11261948 · 2022-03-01
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16H2057/0213
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H1/225
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H25/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H2025/204
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H2025/2046
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H1/203
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H2025/2031
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16H2025/2081
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
An electromotive furniture drive includes a drive motor including an output shaft, a lift spindle arranged in a common plane with the output shaft, and a gear assembly configured to couple the output shaft of the drive motor to the lift spindle. The gear assembly includes an intermediate shaft which intersects the common plane between the lift spindle and the output shaft.
Claims
1. An electromotive furniture drive comprising: a drive motor including an output shaft and a motor housing; a lift spindle arranged in a common plane with the output, shaft; a gear assembly configured to couple the output shaft of the drive motor to the lift spindle, said gear assembly including an intermediate shaft which intersects the common plane between the lift spindle and the output shaft; a standpipe; a lifting tube mounted in the standpipe such as to be linearly displaceable, said lifting tube being coupled to a spindle nut which interacts with the lift spindle; and a housing configured to accommodate the gear assembly, wherein the motor housing and the standpipe project parallel to one another on one side of the housing.
2. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 1, wherein the gear assembly is a double worm gear unit, said intermediate shaft including an intermediate wheel into which a worm of the output shaft of the drive motor engages, and a further worm which engages in a spindle wheel of the lift spindle.
3. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 1, wherein the gear assembly is a combination of a worm gear and a helical gear, said intermediate shaft including an intermediate wheel into which a worm of the output shaft of the drive motor engages, and a helical gear which engages in a helical gear of the lift spindle.
4. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 1, wherein the intermediate shaft intersects the common plane at an angle of 30° to 75°.
5. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 1, wherein the intermediate shaft intersects the common plane at an angle of 35° to 45°.
6. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 1, wherein the lift spindle and the output shaft extend parallel to one another and perpendicular to the intermediate shaft.
7. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 1, wherein the intermediate shaft includes an intermediate wheel which is defined by a diameter and into which a worm of the output shaft of the drive motor engages, said housing having two parallel longitudinal sides at a distance from one another, with the diameter of the intermediate wheel being greater than or equal to half the distance.
8. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 7, wherein the output shaft lies centrally between the parallel longitudinal sides, and wherein the lift spindle lies eccentrically between the parallel longitudinal sides.
9. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 7, wherein the distance substantially corresponds to a dimension of the motor housing in a direction of the distance.
10. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 1, wherein the housing has an upper part from which the motor housing, the drive motor and the standpipe project, and a lower part arranged on an opposite side.
11. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 10, further comprising plain bearings including bearing shells formed in the upper and lower parts of the housing, said intermediate shaft including bearing journals mounted in the plain bearings.
12. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 10, wherein a half-shell-shaped bearing shell in the upper part and a half-shell-shaped bearing shell in the lower part complement each other to form a plain bearing for a bearing journal of the intermediate shaft.
13. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 10, wherein the upper part has a raised dome in a region of the standpipe, said standpipe being inserted laterally in the dome in a form-fitting manner.
14. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 1, wherein the standpipe has an outer wall formed with a transverse groove, and further comprising a clamping ring placed around the standpipe and engaging in the transverse groove.
15. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 14, wherein the housing has an upper part and a lower part arranged on an opposite side, said clamping ring being held positively in a recess between the upper and lower parts.
16. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 14, wherein the clamping ring is formed from two sections which are insertable into one another.
17. The electromotive furniture drive of claim 14, wherein the clamping ring is formed from two sections which are connected to one another in a hinged manner via a hinge.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
(1) The invention is explained in more detail below by means of an exemplary embodiment by means of the drawings, which show as follows:
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(9) The figures show an exemplary embodiment of an electromotive furniture drive in various representations. In all figures, the same reference numerals indicate the same elements.
(10)
(11) The furniture drive has a two-part housing 10, which comprises an upper part 11 and a lower part 12. Upper part 11 and lower part 12 are connected to each other with screws 13. In a further development of the illustrated furniture drive, a different type of connection between the two housing parts can be provided additionally or alternatively, for example a latching, adhesive and/or welded connection. A fork head 121 is arranged on the lower part 12, which fork head serves to couple the electromotive furniture drive to a fixed or movable furniture part or a fixed or movable part of a furniture fitting.
(12) On the side of the housing 10 opposite to the fork head 121, the upper part 11 has a drive motor 20 and a standpipe arrangement 30 with a standpipe 31. Of the drive motor 20, only one motor housing 21 is shown in the illustration in
(13) In the area of the standpipe 31, the upper part 11 is raised in relation to the area where the flange of the drive motor 20 is positioned, and has a dome 111 which ends in a collar 112 at its outer end. The standpipe 31 is inserted into this dome 111 and guided inside the dome 111. At the free end of the standpipe 31 opposite the housing 10, a guide bushing 32 is attached to the standpipe 31, in which a lifting tube 41 of a lifting tube arrangement 40 is displaceably guided.
(14) At the outer end, a fork head 42 is attached to the lifting tube 41, which is in line with the fork head 121 and has a similar design. The fork head 42, like fork head 121, is used to connect the electric motorized furniture drive to a fixed or movable furniture part or a fixed or movable part of a furniture fitting.
(15) The upper part 11 and the lower part 12 of the housing 10 are preferably both integral plastic parts manufactured in an injection-molding process. Likewise, the fork head 42 and the guide bushing 32 are preferably plastic elements, each of which is integrally manufactured by injection molding. The standpipe 31 and the lifting tube 41, on the other hand, are profile elements and are preferably made of a metal, especially aluminum, in order to provide the required stability in spite of low wall thicknesses.
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(18) A double worm gear unit 50 is accommodated in housing 10 as a gear assembly through which rotation of an output shaft 22 of the drive motor 20 is transmitted to a lift spindle 52. Only one free end of the lift spindle 52 is visible in
(19) The double worm gear unit 50 comprises an intermediate shaft 51 which extends perpendicularly to the output shaft 22 and the lift spindle 52. The intermediate shaft 51 is supported in the housing 10 by bearing journals 511, 512, wherein half-shell plain bearings are formed in both the upper part 11 and the lower part 12. For assembly, the intermediate shaft 51 is inserted into the upper part 11 as shown in
(20) A worm, also referred to as motor worm 23 in the following, is mounted or integrally formed on the output shaft 22 and engages in a worm wheel, also referred to as intermediate wheel 513 in the following, of the intermediate shaft 51. Furthermore, a further worm 514 is formed on the intermediate shaft 51, which engages in a further worm wheel, which is mounted non-rotatably on the lift spindle 52 and is referred to as spindle wheel 54 in the following.
(21) By designing the gear assembly as a double worm gear unit 50, a high transmission ratio between the output shaft 22 and the lift spindle 52 is achieved. Correspondingly, a high-speed drive motor 20 can be used, which generally has a smaller design for the same power as a low-speed motor. The use of a double worm gear unit already contributes to a compact design.
(22) Furthermore, a compact design is achieved in that the intermediate shaft 51 crosses a common plane in which the output shaft 22 and the lift spindle 52 are located.
(23) As can be seen particularly well in
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(25) As a result of the inclined position of the intermediate shaft 51 in the housing 10 (in the example shown, the intermediate shaft 51 crosses the center plane M at an angle of about 40°, for example) the intermediate wheel 513 can have a diameter d (see
(26) Furthermore, a compact housing is achieved by placing the lift spindle 52 eccentrically in housing 10 with respect to the center plane. This provides more space on the side where the worm 514 of the intermediate shaft 51 engages in the spindle wheel 54 in order to accommodate the bearing journal 512 in housing 10.
(27) A further measure to be able to support the intermediate shaft 51 in a housing 10 which is as compact as possible and in particular to be able to use an intermediate wheel 513 which is as large as possible is to extend the bearing shells for the bearing journals 511,512 as close as possible to or, as shown, into a wall of the housing 10, In the area of the circumference of the intermediate wheel 513, the example shown also includes a recess in the wall of the housing 10 into which the intermediate wheel 513 projects in order to be able to insert an intermediate wheel 513 which is as large as possible.
(28)
(29) As already mentioned in connection with
(30) When inserting the standpipe 31 into the upper part 11, the clamping ring 33 rests in a recess in the upper part 11 adapted to its circumference. In this way the clamping ring 33 is fixed in the direction of the dome 111 or the collar 112 and with regard to its lateral position in the upper part 11. If the housing 10 is closed by placing the lower part 12 on it and connecting the lower part 12 with the upper part 11, correspondingly shaped projections of the lower part 12 press on the still accessible edge of the clamping ring 33, wherein the latter is also positively fixed in the direction of the lower part 12 in the housing 10.
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(32) On the flattened side 314 and also on the opposite curve, transverse grooves 315 are introduced into the standpipe 31 from the outside, into which the clamping ring 33 is inserted and by means of which the standpipe 31 is fixed in the housing 10 in the longitudinal direction with the aid of the clamping ring 33.
(33) Two exemplary embodiments of suitable clamping rings 33 are shown in
(34) The alternatively usable clamping ring 33 as shown in
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(36) In this sectional view, the already mentioned spindle nut 43 and its engagement in the longitudinal webs 313, which separate the limit switch shaft 312 from the main shaft 311 of the standpipe 31, is visible. The spindle nut 43 is firmly connected to the lifting tube 41. When the lift spindle 52 rotates, the spindle nut 43 and thus the lifting tube 41 and the fork head 42 move linearly out of or into the standpipe 31.
(37) Furthermore, this illustration shows two limit switches 316 which are actuated by an extension at the spindle nut 43 and switch off the drive motor 20 directly or via control electronics when one or the other end position is reached.