Abstract
A device for locking an electric tool with a rechargeable battery
pack has at least one locking bar mounted on one element selected
from the group consisting of the electric tool and rechargeable battery
pack in a manner that allows it to move against a spring force, whereby
when the electric tool and rechargeable battery pack are joined, the
locking bar is engaged in succession in a first and a second recess
of the other element selected from the group consisting of the electric
tool and rechargeable battery pack, and is retained tightly in the
second recess by a force of a spring and, to release a lock, is manually
disengaged from the second recess, wherein the locking bar is engaged
in the first recess while being disengaged from the second recess.
Claims
1. A device for locking an electric tool with a rechargeable battery
pack, comprising at least one locking bar mounted on one element selected
from the group consisting of the electric tool and the rechargeable
battery pack in a manner that allows it to move against a spring force,
whereby when the electric tool and the rechargeable battery pack are
joined, said locking bar is engaged in succession in a first and a
second recess of the other element selected from the group consisting
of the electric tool and the rechargeable battery pack, and is retained
tightly in said second recess by a force of a spring and, to release
a lock, is manually disengaged from said second recess, wherein said
locking bar is engaged in said first recess while being disengaged
from said second recess.
2. A device as defined in claim 1, wherein said locking bar and
said recesses are configured so that, when the rechargeable battery
pack is being detached from the electric tool, said locking bar
is disengaged from said first recess by the force of said spring.
3. A device as defined in claim 1, wherein said locking bar and
said recesses are formed so that when the electric tool and rechargeable
battery pack are joined, said locking bar is automatically engaged
in said first recess against the force of said spring.
4. A device as defined in claim 3, wherein said locking bar has
a slanted edge that interacts with another slanted edge when the
electric tool and rechargeable battery pack are joined, to move
the locking bar into said first recess.
5. A device as defined in claim 1, wherein said first recess is
larger than said second recess.
6. A device as defined in claim 1, wherein said locking bar is
movable transversely to a direction of motion during joining and
engages in said first or second recess with diametrically opposite
ends.
7. A device as defined in claim 1, wherein said locking bar is
pivotable and has two arms that engage with said first or second
recess when said locking bar is swiveled.
8. A device as defined in claim 1; and further comprising another
locking bar, said locking bars being located in succession in said
one element selected from group consisting of the electric tool
and the rechargeable battery pack and engage in said recesses in
diametrically opposed surfaces of the other element selected from
the group consisting of the electric tool and the rechargeable battery
pack.
9. An electric tool system, comprising an electric tool; a rechargeable
battery pack; and a device for locking said electric tool with said
rechargeable battery pack, said locking device including at least
one locking bar mounted on one element selected from the group consisting
of the electric tool and the rechargeable battery pack in a manner
that allows it to move against a spring force, whereby when the
electric tool and the rechargeable battery pack are joined, said
locking bar is engaged in succession in a first and a second recess
of the other element selected from the group consisting of the electric
tool and the rechargeable battery pack, and is retained tightly
in said second recess by a force of a spring and, to release a lock,
is manually disengaged from said second recess, wherein said locking
bar is engaged in said first recess while being disengaged from
said second recess.
10. An electric tool system as defined in claim 9, wherein said
locking bar is provided in said electric tool while said recesses
are provided in said rechargeable battery pack.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a device for locking an
electric tool with a rechargeable battery pack.
[0002] In the field of mains-independent electric tools, such as
hand-guided drills, drilling hammers and the like, increasingly
more powerful machines with increasingly longer operating times
are being developed. As a result, increasingly heavier rechargeable
battery packs are required to provide the desired amount of energy.
As the weight of the rechargeable battery pack increases, however,
so does the potential for danger, e.g., if the rechargeable battery
pack unexpectedly detaches from the housing of the electric tool--due
to wear, contamination, material failure or the like--and falls
downward. This could result in a fatal accident if it would occur
at a high level.
[0003] To prevent unintended detachment of a rechargeable battery
pack from a mains-independent electric tool, it is already known--with
regard for large, heavy devices, in particular--to provide a "double
lock" between the electric tool and the rechargeable battery
pack. A double lock of this type is created using a device of the
type described initially, which is composed of one or, typically,
a plurality of locking bars supported in the housing of the electric
tool such that, when the rechargeable battery pack is inserted,
they are movable against spring force, and each of which is engaged
via spring force in two lock-in grooves located in the rechargeable
battery pack in series in the direction of insertion. When the locking
bar engages in the first lock-in groove--located in the front, in
the direction of insertion--the rechargeable battery pack is secured
only relative to the housing, although an electrical connection
between connecting contacts of the rechargeable current accumulator
of the rechargeable battery pack and an electric circuit of the
load of the electric device is not established until the locking
bar engages in the second lock-in groove, which is second in position
in the direction of insertion.
[0004] Although this can prevent the rechargeable battery pack
from detaching unexpectedly from the electric tool if the locking
bar does not engage properly in the rear lock-in groove if it is
contaminated, if the spring breaks due to material weakness, or
if the lock becomes tight or is completely blocked due to dirt,
grease or any other foreign objects that entered the locking-bar
recess, a double lock of this type cannot reliably prevent the rechargeable
battery pack from falling even if a plurality of locking bars is
provided for reasons of redundancy.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0005] Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to
provide a device for locking an electric tool with rechargeable
battery pack, which avoids the disadvantages of the prior art.
[0006] In keeping with these objects and with others which will
become apparent hereinafter, one feature of the present invention
resides, briefly stated, in a device for locking an electric tool
with a rechargeable battery pack, comprising at least one locking
bar mounted on one element selected from the group consisting of
the electric tool and rechargeable battery pack in a manner that
allows it to move against a spring force, whereby when the electric
tool and rechargeable battery pack are joined, said locking bar
is engaged in succession in a first and a second recess of the other
element selected from the group consisting of the electric tool
and rechargeable battery pack, and is retained tightly in said second
recess by a force of a spring and, to release a lock, is manually
disengaged from said second recess, wherein said locking bar is
engaged in said first recess while being disengaged from said second
recess.
[0007] When the device is designed in accordance with the present
invention, it has the advantage that, even if the spring would break
or the locking bar would not engage completely or at all in the
second recess because it is tight, the rechargeable battery pack
is retained securely relative to the electric tool, since, in these
cases, the locking bar is engaged in the first recess in a manner
that differs from that of the related art and prevents the rechargeable
battery pack from falling.
[0008] A preferred embodiment of the present invention provides
that, when the rechargeable battery pack is released from the electric
device, the locking bar is disengaged from the first recess by the
force of the spring, enabling it to be retained in the first recess
if the spring would break or if the locking-bar guide would become
tight. When the lock functions properly, it is disengaged from the
first recess automatically, i.e., without any further manual operation
of the locking bar, so that only one actuation of the locking bar
is required--as is the case with conventional tools for releasing
the connection--i.e., to disengage the locking bar from the second
recess.
[0009] According to a further preferred embodiment of the present
invention, when the electric tool and the rechargeable battery pack
are joined, the locking bar is automatically engaged in the first
recess against spring force, preferably via a guiding pivoted member
of the electric tool located in front of the second recess in the
direction of motion of the rechargeable battery pack during attachment,
and advantageously has a slanted edge that interacts with a corresponding
slanted edge of the locking bar during joining to engage it in the
first recess against spring force.
[0010] The second recess can be located behind or in front--in
the direction of motion of the rechargeable battery pack when it
is joined with the electric tool--of the first recess and preferably
has a form that is nearly complementary to that of the free end
of the locking bar, while the first recess is larger. As a result,
when the locking bar engages in the first recess, a certain translatory
relative motion between the rechargeable battery pack and the electric
tool is possible. This makes it possible, when the rechargeable
battery pack and the electric tool are joined, for the locking bar
to subsequently engage in the second recess, and, if the spring
would break or the locking bar would become tight, it signals to
the user--via the relative mobility--that locking did not occur
properly.
[0011] The means of attaining the object of the invention according
to the present invention is suited for designs in which the locking
bar is engaged in the first or second recess via a translatory motion
transversely to the direction of motion when the rechargeable battery
pack is joined with the electric tool, and for designs in which
the locking bar is pivotably supported and engagement with the first
or second recess takes place by pivoting the locking bar. In the
first case, the locking bar preferably has two free, diametrically
opposed ends, one of which is engaged in the first recess and the
other of which is engaged in the second recess. In the latter case,
the locking bar is advantageously designed as a two-armed rocker,
one of the arms of which engages in the first recess, and the other
arm of which engages in the second recess.
[0012] As with typical devices for locking rechargeable battery
packs, the locking bar is preferably integrated in the electric
tool, while the recesses are provided in the rechargeable battery
pack. The reverse arrangement is also feasible.
[0013] The novel features which are considered as characteristic
for the present invention are set forth in particular in the appended
claims. the invention itself, however, both as to its construction
and its method of operation, together with additional objects and
advantages thereof, will be best understood from the following description
of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying
drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] FIG. 1 shows a partially cut-away perspective view of a
connection between an electric tool and a rechargeable battery pack
with a locking device according to the present invention;
[0015] FIG. 2 shows a side view of the locking device along the
plane II-II in FIG. 1 after the electric tool and rechargeable battery
pack have been joined;
[0016] FIG. 3 shows a partially cut side view of another connection
between an electric tool and a rechargeable battery pack with a
locking device according to the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0017] The locking devices shown in the drawing serve to mutually
lock a mains-independent electric tool 2, e.g., a hand-guided drilling
hammer, and a rechargeable battery pack 4 required to supply power
to electric tool 2.
[0018] As shown best in FIG. 1, electric tool 2 has, in a known
manner, a projecting guide rail 8 on the free lower end of its gripping
surface 6, that can be slid in the direction of arrow A into a guide
groove 10 formed in the upper end of rechargeable battery pack 4,
the guide groove having a cross section that is complementary to
the cross section of guide rail 8. The insertion motion of guide
rail 8 into guide groove 10 is limited by interacting stops (not
shown) that bear against each other when rechargeable battery pack
4 is locked properly with electric tool 2 and an electrical connection
between connecting contacts of a current accumulator of rechargeable
battery pack 4 and an electrical circuit of a load of electric tool
2 is established.
[0019] Locking device 12, which serves to lock rechargeable battery
pack 4 with electric tool 2, includes a locking bar 14 that is movably
supported in a locking-bar recess 16 of guide rail 8 against the
force of a coil compression spring 18 and engages successively in
two locking-bar recesses 20, 22 provided in guide groove 10 of rechargeable
battery pack 4 and, in fact, in a first locking-bar recess 20 (shown
only in FIGS. 2 and 3), whereby this engagement results in a temporarily
locked state without establishing an electrical connection between
the connecting contacts of rechargeable battery pack 4 and electric
tool 2, and a second locking-bar recess 22, whereby this engagement
ensures proper locking of rechargeable battery pack 4 relative to
electric tool 2 and the establishment of an electrical connection
between them.
[0020] With locking device 12 shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, locking bar
14 has an essentially bar-shaped configuration and is displaceable
in a translatory manner against the force of spring 18 transversely
to the direction of insertion (arrow A) in locking-bar recess 16.
Its length is adapted to the length of locking-bar recess 16 such
that one of the two diametrically opposed ends 24, 26 extends over
a lateral guide surface 28, 30 of guide rail 8 to an extent corresponding
to the depth of each locking-bar recess 20, 22 when the tip of the
other end 26, 24 is flush with diametrically opposed guide surface
30, 28 (refer to FIG. 2). Both ends 24, 26 have slanted edges 32
that point in the direction of insertion. A projection 34 that extends
laterally above locking bar 14 serves as an abutment for one end
of spring 18, and the other end bears against an abutment 36 fixed
in position in the interior of guide rail 8. Projection 34 penetrates
a slotted opening 40, the lateral, diametrically opposed edges of
which limit the travel of locking bar 14.
[0021] As best shown in FIG. 2 and, to a partial extent, in FIG.
1, the two locking-bar recesses 20, 22 are formed in two diametrically
opposed lateral surfaces 42, 44 of guide groove 10 that are located
at a slight distance from lateral guide surfaces 30, 28. While first
locking-bar recess 20--located in the front, in the direction of
insertion--is located in lateral surface 44 of guide groove 10 adjacent
to abutment 36, second locking-bar recess 22--located in the rear,
in the direction of insertion--is located in diametrically opposed
lateral surface 42 of guide groove 10 adjacent to projection 34.
[0022] Lateral surface 42 also has a further recess 46 that extends
in the direction of insertion from the front end of guide groove
10 outward and past the front end of diametrically opposed, first
locking-bar recess 20 and, on the other side thereof, is provided
with a slanted edge 48. Slanted edge 48 ensures that, when guide
rail 8 is inserted into guide groove 10, locking bar 14 is first
pressed, with its end 24, against the force of spring 18 into first
locking-bar recess 20, as shown in FIG. 2 with dashed lines, and
is retained therein until rechargeable battery pack 4 reaches the
end position shown in FIG. 2 in which spring 18 simultaneously presses
locking bar 14, via its one end 24, out of recess 20 and, via its
other end 26, into recess 22. The motion made by locking bar 14
during insertion corresponds to the shape of curve B shown in FIG.
2.
[0023] To unlock rechargeable battery pack 4, locking bar 14 is
slid against the force of spring 18 using an operating button (not
shown) that acts on locking bar 14 or projection 32, whereby its
end 26 disengages from recess 22 and, simultaneously, its other
end 24 is engaged in recess 20 and, in fact, before end 26 leaves
recess 22.
[0024] After rechargeable battery pack 4 is inserted, at least
one of the two ends 24, 26 of locking bar 14 therefore always engages
in adjacent recess 20, 22, thereby reliably preventing detachment
of rechargeable battery pack 4, even if spring 18 breaks or locking
bar 14 becomes tight, if the force of spring 18 is not sufficient
to press the locking bar into recess 22.
[0025] In contrast, with locking device 12 shown in FIG. 2, with
which the same parts are labeled with the same reference numerals,
locking bar 14 is designed as a two-armed rocker that is supported
such that it can pivot around an axis 50 in the lower end of gripping
surface 6 of electric tool 2. When rechargeable battery pack 4 is
inserted in a guide 52 of gripping surface 6, one arm 56 of rocker
14 is pressed by the force of spring 18 from the top against a top
side 26 of rechargeable battery pack 4 provided with two locking-bar
recesses 20, 22. As a result, its free end 58 is pressed into second
locking-bar recess 22, as shown in FIG. 3 using dashed lines, when
rechargeable battery pack 4 reaches its end position in which it
is locked relative to electric tool 2 and is electrically connected
therewith.
[0026] Other arm 54 of rocker 14 is pressed against the force of
spring 18 via its free end 60 into first locking-bar recess 20,
as shown in FIG. 3 with dashed lines, when free end 58 of arm 56
moves when rechargeable battery pack 4 is inserted into guide 52
via a guide projection 62 located in front of recess 22 in the direction
of insertion, or when pressure is exerted manually on an operating
surface 64 of arm 54 to manually disengage end 58 of other arm 56
to manually remove rechargeable battery pack 4 from recess 22.
[0027] Similar to the exemplary embodiment shown in FIGS. 1 and
2, at least one of the two ends 58, 60 of rocker is always engaged
in recess 22 or 20, thereby reliably preventing unintended disengagement
of the connection; when end 60 engages in recess 20, this is ensured
by the fact that it strikes a limiting face of recess 20 that is
perpendicular to the direction of insertion, as shown using dashed
lines.
[0028] To ensure redundancy and thereby increase safety, the device
according to the present invention can also include two or more
locking bars 14 of the type described above, located in series in
the direction of insertion, whereby each locking bar 14 has the
design according to the present invention and they engage, in succession,
in first and second recesses 20 and 22.
[0029] The concept "rechargeable battery pack" 4 used
within the framework of this application refers primarily to a pack
with rechargeable current accumulators (rechargeables), although
a pack with disposable current accumulators (batteries) is also
intended. In addition, any geometry other than the geometry of the
connection between rechargeable battery pack 4 and electric tool
2 shown in the drawing can be used, e.g., a slot in electric tool
2 into which rechargeable battery pack 4 is partially inserted.
In addition, the locking device 12 described is suited not only
for locking rechargeable battery pack 4 with electric tools 2, but
also any other mains-independent electrical devices.
[0030] It will be understood that each of the elements described
above, or two or more together, may also find a useful application
in other types of constructions differing from the types described
above.
[0031] While the invention has been illustrated and described as
embodied in a device for locking an electric tool with a rechargeable
battery pack, it is not intended to be limited to the details shown,
since various modifications and structural changes may be made without
departing in any way from the spirit of the present invention.
[0032] Without further analysis, the foregoing will reveal fully
revel the gist of the present invention that others can, by applying
current knowledge, readily adapt it for various applications without
omitting features that, from the standpoint of prior art, fairly
constitute essential characteristics of the generic or specific
aspects of the invention.
[0033] What is claimed as new and desired to be protected by Letters
Patent is set forth in the appended claims. |