Drive wrenches for nuts in general may be of every shape and design, particularly in the area where the nut to be manipulated is placed. Nowadays, there is a great range of sizes and designs of nut flats, screw heads, wheel stud heads or similar, which are manufactured in this way to control their maneuvering and to achieve the adequate pressure for their torque. The use of this type of wrenches is common in industry, as well as in daily life, where a nut is required to be unscrewed, loosened, screwed and tightened. The wrench of the present invention is a high torque wrench for every kind of nut which has the characteristic of not wearing down or damaging the edges of the screw heads thanks to the use of auto adjustable bearings.
In the market, there is a wide variety of wrenches for actuating ratchet nuts, as commonly known in the field of mechanics. An example of this is the U.S. Pat. No. 7,458,295 B1, which describes an interchangeably manual or automatic tool, comprising a tool body including one of the ends of a grove. The tool comprises a rotating member, having peripheral teeth and driven teeth formed therearound, respectively. The tool body further including a piece leading to two engaging tabs mounted thereon for engaging with peripheral teeth of said rotating member, thereby driving the rotating member in a manual operation mode. Moreover, the tool body includes a motor driven by a power source assembly and affixed at another end thereof, the motor includes a worm shaft disposed at one end thereof, for meshing with a worm gear which is rotatably disposed in the tool body. Between the worm gear and the driven teeth of the rotating member is defined with a transmission set for couplingly urging the rotating member in an electric operating mode. This tool functions as grip for the screw heads by a series of teeth at the inner side of the head, wherein the nut is housed in order to be manipulated through the aid of a motor. The tool has the disadvantages of not having enough torque for big or small nuts, of not having a self-contained operation, as is the case with the present invention.
On the other hand, U.S. Pat. No. 7,444,902 B1 describes a ratchet wrench, which a user may operate in manual operation manner by the use of mechanical power at one of its ends. The operation being substantially based on gears and shafts attached to said gears. This tool has the disadvantage of not having enough torque for big or small nuts, of not having self-contained operation and of only allowing to assist nuts of specific measures.
Another example of ratchet tool is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,070,499, which comprises a ratchet tool having an elongated body with a hollow head, where the nut is housed, the hollow has a series of stationary teeth that are used to grip the nut and to exert pressure either for screwing or unscrewing operations. It includes a rotary member within the handle, which is rotatable about a second axis, and a drive ring which extends around the drive member. This tool has the disadvantage of not having enough torque for big or small nuts, besides, the teeth don't adjust to the different shapes and sizes of the nuts without the edges of the nut being deteriorated or worn out.
The present invention refers to an auto-adjustable bearing wrench for nuts, screws, wheel studs, bolts and similar (in the present application generically referred to as nuts) from different sizes that may be used in a great variety of nut designs regardless of their shape, design and size, without damaging their edges.
International tolerancing standards regarding the nut flat measures are usually too big, particularly when high torques are executed, in the case of big pieces.
Due to a high tolerance, when high torques are executed the typical issues of wear of the flats apexes arise, both in nuts and in nut tightening and loosening wrenches. The result is a quick wear of the nut, as well as work accidents due to an excessive clearance of the tools which are currently in the market.
The present invention overcomes said clearance issues, and provides a simple tool which supplies high torques without the need of compressors, connection cables and other logistic issues usually required in big nuts.
In a preferred embodiment, the auto-adjustable bearing wrench of the present invention comprises a casing (1) having a plurality of housings (14); two bearing guide boxes (4, 4′) contained within the casing; a plurality of bearings (2a-2l) each having an axis (12); each of the bearing guide boxes (4, 4′) comprising a plurality of key-shaped hollow areas (11); each of the bearings being coupled between the bearing guide boxes (4, 4′) introducing the axis (12) into each key (11), whereby each bearing may be separately displaced inside and outside its corresponding housing; at least one key (15) in a face of the casing (1), comprising a spring (3) and a connection cylinder of the boxes (8), the spring (3) is attached in one end to the connection cylinder of the boxes (8) and the other end of the casing (1); wherein the spring (3) pulls the connection cylinder of the boxes (8) counterclockwise to the torque direction of the casing (1), whereby the bearing guide boxes (4, 4′), through the key-shaped hollow areas (11) and the axis (12) cause the bearings to be displaced to the outmost portion of the housings (14) of the receiving casing (1); and wherein upon rotating the casing in the torque direction (clockwise) the connection cylinder of the boxes (8) forces the spring (3) causing the boxes (8) to rotate counterclockwise to the torque direction, whereby the bearing guide boxes (4, 4″), through the key-shaped hollow areas (11) and the axis (12) cause the bearings to be displaced to the innermost part of the housings (14) of the receiving casing (1) until it makes contact with a nut located between the bearings.
The present invention will become more evident from the following description when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In an embodiment of the present invention, as shown in
The auto-adjustable bearing wrench, as shown in
The number of bearings shall determine the grades necessary to carry out the “reassembly” of the wrench, that is, once a torque is executed on a nut with the resulting turn of certain grades usually in clockwise direction, and a greater clockwise turn is required, it is necessary to return to the starting position with a counterclockwise turn without loosening the nut, having then a new angle of clockwise turn on the nut, necessary for keep on tightening the nut. For example, in an hexagonal nut, if the bearings are 12, the wrench shall be reassembled with a turn of 30°.
In reference to
In
In order to loosen a nut, do counterclockwise rotations with reference to the tightening according to clockwise rotations, the tool is simply turned around and the operation is carried out.
In the tightening operation, the connection cylinder of the boxes is located at the right side of the spring, instead, when the wrench is rotated in order to execute a loosening maneuver, the spring is located at the left side of the connection cylinder of the boxes. This is due to the fact that in a tightening rotation (clockwise) the spring (3) drives the connection cylinder (8) of the boxes (4) in a counterclockwise direction so that upon turning in a clockwise direction the receiving casing of the bearings (2a-2l) “finds” each bearing and places it over the nut flat, tightening it.
It's the same in the loosening maneuver, that is, the spring (3) tightens the connection cylinder (8) of the boxes (4) in counterclockwise direction to the rotation of the bearing (2a-2l) receiving casing (1).
The springs (3) which are housed in the key (15) of the main casing (1) receiving the bearings are housed in such a way that they abut against one side with the same support that houses it and on the other they exert pressure over the connection cylinder of the boxes (8). There is a space in the key that communicates the two faces so that the connection cylinder (8) of the boxes may be displaced approximately 10 mm in the embodiment illustrated, which is necessary so that the bearings may be hidden in the keys (11) that are open in the reassembly operation.
There may be a key (15) and a spring (3) on each face of the support so that the connection cylinder (8) between boxes works better. The work may be done with just one springs, though less efficiently. The boxes include key-shaped elongated slots (11) for each roller, which function as bearing guides in its way from the outermost or reassembly part to the innermost or force part, with reference to the center of the bearing receiving casing.
The preferred embodiment includes two springs (3) one on each face of the casing (1) for a better work on the connection cylinder (8) of the boxes (4) bearing guides (2a-2l), and it can also include just one springs, but with certain unbalance. The spring (3) is housed in the key (15) in each face of the casing (1). The key (15) is hollow to be able to hold the bearings, the bearings are enclosed in closing caps (5), one in each face of the casing (1). Both key-shaped elongated slots (15) are in communication so that the connection cylinder (8) between boxes (4) is moveable, in the illustrated embodiment approximately 10 mm, in the operation of displacement between bearings (2a-2l).
The bearings (2a-2l) are located by the two springs (3), one in each face, which are interconnected by the connection cylinder (8) of the boxes (4). The two springs (3) press the connection cylinder (8) of the boxes (4) which in turn force the axes (12) of the bearings, to be placed at the innermost portion of the bearing receiving casing (1).
The function of the connection cylinder (8) of the boxes (4) is to cause the two guide boxes of the bearings to work in a synchronized way, that is, as one single body, besides maintaining the bearings position stationary if there is no rotation of tightening/loosening.
The measure of the bearings doesn't depend on the box; the box has the function of not letting the bearings go out of their action line; whether big or small, the box has a set thickness, for example of 2 mm, since it doesn't exert any stress (all the stress is exerted by the receiving casing, its sole function is to guide the forward backward movement of all the bearings, besides not letting them out from their position.
The bearings (2a-2l) may have different diameters, this is due to the fact that the bearing diameter determines the tensile zone where the nut flat will act upon (this together with the housing angle in the casing); that is if the diameter of the bearing is greater, it shall be able to tension further from the apex of the nut, and if the diameter of the bearing is smaller, it shall tense nearest to the apex of the nut.
Bearings (2a-2l) may have different heights in function of the nut, one bigger nut, therefore of more height, requires a longer bearing. The premise is that the bearing and the caps have the height similar to that of the nut, in order to take advantage of the contact zone of the bearing with the nut; the bigger the contact surface, the better the stress will be distributed and therefore the greater the capacity will be.
As a non restrictive example, bearing wretches of a very small diameters, for example of 0.1 mm, may be manufactured for odontology tools, or otherwise gigantic wrenches with 20 mm diameter bearings to execute operations in nuts of more than 6 inches (15.24 cm).
Set screws (6) (3 units at 120°) of the box and the caps (5) of the casing are disposed in the outmost part, and may be of small diameter (4 mm) since their only function is to hold the outer caps in order to seal the key and to operate as guide-cap together with the boxes.
When the casing rotates counterclockwise (reassembly), the bearings (2a-2l) are housed in the outmost portion of the housing (14). As the nut edges contact their nearest respective bearing, it begins to introduce itself into the housing (14), each in a separate way, thanks to the travel of each bearing into the box. Once the edge of the nut has passed, the spring (3), through the connection cylinder (8) of the boxes (4), forces each bearing to its original stationary position (the furthest part from the center of the casing). The caps (5) and the boxes (4) don't support any tensile strength, their only function is to guide.
The two boxes (4) are united by a connection cylinder (8) so that their rotation with respect to the casing (1) is synchronized. The cylinder is threaded by both ends in order to be able to install a screw (9) in each end so that everything acts as a whole body. The boxes (4) have a plurality of elongated slots (11) so that the bearings are displaced from inside out from the receiving casing. By default, the spring (3) usually drives the bearings into the inner part of the casing, through the spring (3) that pushes the connection cylinder (8) from the boxes (4).
The casing (1) which houses the bearings (2a-2l) is the one that will determine the maximum torque capacity that the wrench may exert.
The height of the casing (1) together with the thickness of the weakest part will determine the torque that may be applied to it.
As has been mentioned, the height of the casing (1) determines the height of the bearings. These heights are determined by the height of the nut. Special nuts of greater height may receive wrenches of greater heights, and therefore, bearings of greater height; special nuts of heights lower than the standards of the market may receive wrenches of lower height and therefore bearings of lower height.
If necessary, nuts made from less resistant materials (for example aluminum) may conform wrenches of lower height and therefore bearings of lower heights, since they will require a lower torque.
In
Therefore, those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MX/a/2010/002057 | Feb 2010 | MX | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2232090 | Anderson | Feb 1941 | A |
5535647 | Donaldson, Jr. | Jul 1996 | A |
6070499 | Wisbey | Jun 2000 | A |
6481656 | Jeong | Nov 2002 | B2 |
7036400 | Matsumoto et al. | May 2006 | B2 |
7444902 | Lin et al. | Nov 2008 | B1 |
7458295 | Lu et al. | Dec 2008 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110203420 A1 | Aug 2011 | US |