GB2425413A - Drive circuit for a hair clipper achieving constant speed - Google Patents

Drive circuit for a hair clipper achieving constant speed Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2425413A
GB2425413A GB0508214A GB0508214A GB2425413A GB 2425413 A GB2425413 A GB 2425413A GB 0508214 A GB0508214 A GB 0508214A GB 0508214 A GB0508214 A GB 0508214A GB 2425413 A GB2425413 A GB 2425413A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
clipper
drive circuit
supply voltage
motor
circuit
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
GB0508214A
Other versions
GB0508214D0 (en
Inventor
Kwok Kuen Tse
En Hui Wang
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Johnson Electric SA
Original Assignee
Johnson Electric SA
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Johnson Electric SA filed Critical Johnson Electric SA
Priority to GB0508214A priority Critical patent/GB2425413A/en
Publication of GB0508214D0 publication Critical patent/GB0508214D0/en
Publication of GB2425413A publication Critical patent/GB2425413A/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26BHAND-HELD CUTTING TOOLS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B26B19/00Clippers or shavers operating with a plurality of cutting edges, e.g. hair clippers, dry shavers
    • B26B19/38Details of, or accessories for, hair clippers, or dry shavers, e.g. housings, casings, grips, guards
    • B26B19/3873Electric features; Charging; Computing devices
    • B26B19/388Sensors; Control
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26BHAND-HELD CUTTING TOOLS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B26B19/00Clippers or shavers operating with a plurality of cutting edges, e.g. hair clippers, dry shavers
    • B26B19/38Details of, or accessories for, hair clippers, or dry shavers, e.g. housings, casings, grips, guards

Landscapes

  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Dry Shavers And Clippers (AREA)

Abstract

A drive circuit for a hair clipper 23 comprises an electric motor and a control circuit for operating the motor at a constant speed regardless of load condition. Constant clipper speed is achieved by increasing the voltage in response to a sensed increase in load current, caused by increased work required of the clippers due to eg. lack of lubrication. The control circuit comprises detector means 31 for sensing the supply voltage to the clipper and the clipper current, processing means 32 for generating an error signal indicative of a change in supply voltage needed to maintain a constant motor speed and driver means 34 responsive to the error signal for adjusting the supply voltage to the clipper to drive the motor at said constant speed.

Description

A DRWE CIRCIJET FOR A HAIR CLIPPER
This invention relates to a drive circuit for a hair clipper and to a hair clipper equipped with such a drive circuit.
Known hair clippers usually comprise a fixed and a movable blade and a DC motor for reciprocating the movable blade relative to the fixed blade. If the supply voltage to the motor remains constant, the clipping speed of the hair clipper will decrease with an increase in load current and this can cause damage to the hair and cause pain to a user.
The present invention seeks to overcome this drawback.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a drive circuit for a hair clipper comprising an electric motor and a control circuit for operating the motor at a constant speed regardless of load conditions, the control circuit comprising detector means for sensing the supply voltage to the clipper and the clipper current, processor means for generating an error signal indicative of a change in supply voltage needed to maintain a constant motor speed and driver means responsive to the error signal for adjusting the supply voltage to the clipper to drive the motor at said constant speed.
Preferably, an error amplifier is provided for amplifying the error signal generated by the processor prior to supplying the signal to the driver means.
Preferably, the control circuit is an analog circuit or a digital circuit.
Preferably, the supply voltage to the clipper is regulated in linear mode or pulse width modulated switching mode.
According to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a hair clipper equipped with a drive circuit according to the first aspect of the invention.
The invention will now be more particularly described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure 1 is a graph demonstrating the characteristics of a known hair clipper, Figure 2 is a graph demonstrating the relationship between a clipper's voltage and current at constant speed, Figure 3a is a schematic model of a clipper, Figure 3b is a schematic view showing a force applied to a moving blade of a hair clipper, Figure 4 is a schematic view of a drive circuit according to the first aspect of the present invention, Figure 5 is a circuit diagram of one specific embodiment of a drive circuit according to the first aspect of the present invention, Figure 6 is a circuit diagram of another specific embodiment of a drive circuit according to the first aspect of the present invention, and Figure 7 is a circuit diagram of yet another specific embodiment of a drive circuit according to the first aspect of the present invention.
Referring firstly to Figure 1 of the drawings, the speed-current characteristic of a hair clipper shown therein demonstrates that for a constant supply voltage clipping speed will decrease with increase in load current. This of course happens as the clipper penetrates the hair of a user and also depends upon the quantity of lubricant applied to the moving blade of the clipper. As stated previously, a reduction in clipping speed can cause damage to the hair and can cause pain to a user.
Figure 2 demonstrates that it is possible to maintain a constant clipping speed by increasing the supply voltage to the clipper as the load on the clipper increases. Thus when the load current increases by Al as a result of a force applied to the clipper blades, the supply voltage to the clipper must be increased by AV in order to maintain a constant speed. It is to be noted that this has been found to be a linear relationship.
Figure 3a is a schematic model of a clipper. The model is expressed by a voltage source 21 connected in series with a dynamic resistance 22. Therefore, the supply voltage to the clipper becomes: V=ENL+Rd(I-INL), (1. 1) where V = Supply voltage to clipper, I = Clipper current, NL = No-load current to clipper = No-load voltage of clipper, = Dynamic resistance of clipper.
A no-load condition applies when there is no hair present between the clipper blades and there is sufficient lubricant to operate the blades of the clipper.
Experimentally, ENL and NL are simply measured at no-load condition at a predetermined clipping speed. As mentioned previously, if a force F is applied to the moving blade as shown in Figure 3b, the clipper current increases by Al. However, the speed can be maintained by increasing the supply voltage to the clipper by AV.
By taking a partial differentiation of Equation (1.1) the dynamic resistance of the clipper can be expressed as: Rd=AV/AI, (1.2) where = Increase in V to maintain the clipper at no-load speed.
AT = Increase in I subject to F applied Figure 4 shows is a schematic view of a drive circuit for maintaining a constant motor speed regardless of load conditions.
A hair clipper is shown schematically by reference numeral 23. It comprises a fixed and a movable blade and a PMDC micromotor for reciprocating the movable blade relative to the fixed blade. The drive circuit for the clipper 23 comprises a signal detector 31 for sensing the supply voltage to the clipper and the clipper current, a processor 32 for generating an error signal, an error signal amplifier 33 and a motor driver 34. The error signal is representative of a change of supply voltage needed to maintain a constant motor speed.
The motor driver 34 is responsive to the error signal produced by the processor 32 and the error signal amplifier 33 and adjusts the supply voltage to the clipper to drive the clipper at a constant speed.
In the processor 32, the error signal is expressed by the following equation: Error VREF + K2 I - K1 V (2.1) Where VREF = Reference voltage defined by target speed, K1 = Voltage coefficient, K2 = Current coefficient, V = Controller's output voltage, I = Clipper current.
By continuously adjusting the motor driver 34, the processor 32 will make and keep the steady state of the error at zero. Therefore, Equation (2.1) can be written as follows (2.2) K1K1 It is found that the controller's output V is proportional to VREF and I. As compared with Equation (1.1), the parameters in Equation (2.2) are modelling the no-load clipper voltage and its dynamic resistance. That is, =E -Rd I,and (2.3) (2.4) It is a simple matter to obtain the parameters of VREF / K1 and K2 / K1 experimentally.
Therefore, by executing Equation (2.2) in real time, the controller is sensing the current value of I and giving a corrective action to V so that the clipping speed can be maintained constant.
Referring now to Figure 5, the clipper voltage V is controlled by a power transistor Q2 working in linear mode. In this embodiment, the detector 31 comprises resistor R27, capacitor C1 and resistor R34. The processor 32 comprises resistors R25, R26, R32, R33, R25, and R29 and opamp (operational amplifier) U1. The error amplifier 33 comprises opamp U2 and capacitor C2. The motor driver 34 comprises resistors R23 and R31 and power transistors Qi and Q2. This is an analog, low-cost circuit having no sophisticated ICs for process control and current sensing. There is also minimal EMIl as the motor driver works in linear mode.
The circuit shown in Figure 6 is similar to that shown in Figure 5 except that the motor driver 34 operates in pulse width modulated (PWM) switching mode. Also, an anti-parallel diode 42 is provided across the clipper 23 to give a freewheeling path for the motor current.
For some high-end versions of the drive circuit, sophisticated features such as LCDs, tactile keypads, and battery-charger control will be provided. Thus, use of digital chips to realise the speed control become more versatile than the analog ones described with reference to Figures 5 and 6.
Figure 7 shows a way of using a micro-controller unit (MCU) 51, which reads the clipper conditions from the detector 31 and executes Equation (2.2) to control the motor driver 34 operating in either linear or PWM switching mode.
It is therefore possible to provide a drive circuit for operating the clipper motor at constant speed regardless of load conditions. The drive circuit can be an analog or digital circuit and can regulate the clipper voltage in linear or PWM switching mode.
By maintaining a constant clipping speed regardless of load conditions, hair will not be damaged or squeezed by the moving blade. Users will therefore feel more comfortable during a hair cut. Secondly, the clipper can be designed to operate at a relatively low clipping speed to minimise acoustic noise. Thirdly, the quantity of lubricant applied to the clipper blades will not affect the clipping speed.
The embodiments described above are given by way of example only and various modifications will be apparent to persons skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.

Claims (8)

1. A drive circuit for a hair clipper comprising an electric motor and a control circuit for operating the motor at a constant speed regardless of load conditions, the control circuit comprising detector means for sensing the supply voltage to the clipper and the clipper current, processor means for generating an error signal indicative of a change in supply voltage needed to maintain a constant motor speed and driver means responsive to the error signal for adjusting the supply voltage to the clipper to drive the motor at said constant speed.
2. A drive circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein an error amplifier is provided for amplifying the error signal generated by the processor prior to supplying the signal to the driver means.
3. A drive circuit as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the control circuit is an analog circuit.
4. A drive circuit as claimed in claim I or claim 2, wherein the control circuit is a digital circuit.
5. A drive circuit as claimed in claim I designed to regulate the supply voltage to the clipper in linear mode.
6. A drive circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the control circuit is designed to regulate the supply voltage to the clipper in pulse width modulated (PWM) switching mode.
7. A drive circuit for a hair clipper substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the embodiments shown in the accompanying drawings.
8. A hair clipper equipped with a drive circuit as claimed in any one of the preceding claims.
GB0508214A 2005-04-23 2005-04-23 Drive circuit for a hair clipper achieving constant speed Withdrawn GB2425413A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0508214A GB2425413A (en) 2005-04-23 2005-04-23 Drive circuit for a hair clipper achieving constant speed

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0508214A GB2425413A (en) 2005-04-23 2005-04-23 Drive circuit for a hair clipper achieving constant speed

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB0508214D0 GB0508214D0 (en) 2005-06-01
GB2425413A true GB2425413A (en) 2006-10-25

Family

ID=34639991

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB0508214A Withdrawn GB2425413A (en) 2005-04-23 2005-04-23 Drive circuit for a hair clipper achieving constant speed

Country Status (1)

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GB (1) GB2425413A (en)

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1059612A (en) * 1964-03-09 1967-02-22 Micro Mega Sa Speed regulating electric control-circuit for hand-tool
GB1110584A (en) * 1964-07-03 1968-04-18 Walter John Brown Improvements in electric motor control circuits
GB1338644A (en) * 1971-01-27 1973-11-28 Scragg & Sons Speed controls for electric motors

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1059612A (en) * 1964-03-09 1967-02-22 Micro Mega Sa Speed regulating electric control-circuit for hand-tool
GB1110584A (en) * 1964-07-03 1968-04-18 Walter John Brown Improvements in electric motor control circuits
GB1338644A (en) * 1971-01-27 1973-11-28 Scragg & Sons Speed controls for electric motors

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB0508214D0 (en) 2005-06-01

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