1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a blade sharpening stand and more specifically to a blade sharpening stand used when sharpening the cutting edge of, for example, a kitchen knife blade.
2. Description of the Related Art
Sharpening the cutting edge of the blade of a cutting tool such as a kitchen knife is usually done by an electric knife sharpener, and it is also done manually. When a cutting tool is sharpened manually, a grind stone, typically in a rectangular block shape, is set on a flat surface, and the blade of a knife held at its handle by one hand of an operator is placed on the top surface of the grind stone, and then operator moves the blade back and forth along the length of the grind stone while pressing the blade, particularly, near the cutting edge, against the grind stone. This operation is done in the same manner for both a chisel shape blade (or a single-edge blade) and a wedge shaped knife (or double-edged blade).
So as to produce an ideal or intended sharp cutting edge, it is preferable to use a grind stone that has a smooth sharpening surface with no concavities nor convexities thereon, and it is also preferable that the operator give constant pressing force to the blade during the sharpening action and further keeps the sharpening angle between the cutting edge of a blade and the sharpening surface of a grind stone constant during the entire sharpening process. However, it is not easy to always satisfy these sharpening conditions, particularly to keep the sharpening angle between the cutting edge and the sharpening surface of a grind stone constant during the entire sharpening process, and it is almost not possible to obtain an expected result in forming of a blade shape and an intended result in sharpening of the cutting edge. It is indeed not safe and not good practice to place fingers near the cutting edge during the sharpening action.
Accordingly, it is an object to provide a blade sharpening stand that can help easy and assured sharpening action of a blade of a cutting tool such as a knife, kitchen knife, etc. without the difficulties seen in the conventional cutting tool sharpening.
The above object is accomplished by a unique structure of the present invention for a blade sharpening stand in which the sharpening stand comprises:
With the structure above, a blade of a cutting tool such as a kitchen knife is set on the blade set plate and then held in immovably by the blade holder, and the blade set plate is adjusted for its inclination at appropriate angle with respect to a horizontal plane and then secured at that angle by a securing means. A grind stone is placed on the cutting edge of the blade and on the guide roller and then moved back and forth and zigzag, thus sharpening the cutting edge of the blade. Since the blade set plate can be moved in a swingable fashion for its desired inclined angle and fixed at that angle, the cutting edge of the blade that is held on the blade set plate by the blade holder can be sharpened at an intended angle. Once the blade set plate is set at an intended inclined angle, the angle does not change by being secured by a securing means, and thus the angle between the edge of the blade and the sharpening surface of the grind stone does not change either during the sharpening process; and accordingly, the cutting edge is sharpened at intended angle for its entire length.
In the above-described structure of the present invention, the blade holder is movably provided so that a distance or position of the blade holder from a rear side of the blade set plate can be changed. Accordingly, any size of blade can be held by the blade holder on the blade set plate; in other word, a cutting tool in any size can be sharpened with the sharpening stand of the present invention.
In addition, the pair of supporting stands are formed with curved vertical guide grooves. Accordingly, when making swing motion or when the blade set plate is set for its inclined posture, the blade set plate is guided along the curved vertical guide grooves, and inclined setting of the blade set plate can be made easily and smoothly; and further since the swingable blade set plate can be set at any desired angle when guided and rotated via the guide groove, even a very minute inclination angle adjustment, for instance 15-20 degrees, can be made, thus making it possible to sharpen the cutting edge of a blade for less than 1 mm in height (or to sharpen a 1 mm range from the very tip end of the blade edge), which is almost impossible when sharpening is done by hand while pressing and moving a blade on a grind stone.
Furthermore, the blade set plate can be provided on its under surface with a magnet. With this structure, the blade of a knife can be securely held on the blade set plate in addition of the pressing force provided by the blade holder.
One embodiment of the blade sharpening stand according to the present invention is comprised of a support base body 10, a blade set plate 20 provided on the support base body 10, a blade holder 30 provided in the blade set plate 20, and a guide roller 40 set on the support base body 10.
The support base body 10 is comprised of a pair of supporting stands 11. The supporting stands 11 are, in this embodiment, substantially rigid metal plates that are connected to each other by a front connecting member 12F and a rear connecting member 12R with a certain distance (for instance, 8 inches apart) in between, so that the supporting stands 11 stand vertically. Each of the supporting stands 11 includes a front vertical frame 11F (of, for instance, 2 inches high) and a rear vertical frame 11R (of, for instance, 2.5 inches high). The front connecting member 12F connects the front vertical frames 11, and the rear connecting member 12R connects the rear vertical frames 11R, and each of the front vertical frames 11F is formed at top end thereof with a guide roller receiver 11G which is an arc-shaped recess for receiving therein one end of the guide roller 40 (see
The blade set plate 20 is substantially a rectangular metal plate with its four side edges bent downward, thus forming an empty shallow box upside down. The blade set plate 20 thus formed is attached at one side 20R (or at its rear side) thereof to the upper end of the rear vertical frames 11R of the support base body 10 by, for instance, holding screws 26, so that the blade set plate 20 is swingably moved up and down as indicated with a curved arrow VT in
The front supporting stands 11 F are formed with curved (or arc-shaped) vertical guide grooves 14 that have the same circular arc as that of the swingable blade set plate 20 makes when the blade set plate 20 is swung or rotated up and down as shown by curved arrow VT in
Furthermore, the blade set plate 20 is provided with a blade holder 30 that is adapted to securely hold the blade of a cutting tool to be ground on the blade set plate 20. For this blade holder 30 to be allowed to move front-rear direction, the blade set plate 20 is formed with a pair of parallel longitudinal guide grooves 24 that extend in the front-rear direction of the blade set plate 20 (or parallel to the supporting stands 11).
The blade holder 30 is comprised of, as seen from
The blade holder 30 is mounted on (the upper surface of) the blade set plate 20 with the pair of guide shafts 32 (shank portion 34S) inserted through the longitudinal guide grooves 24 of the blade set plate 20. Each of the guide shaft 32 is mounted with a washer 32a that is larger in diameter than the width of the longitudinal guide groove 24. Each guide shaft 32 is further mounted with a holding coil spring 32b (called “holding spring 32b”) so that one end (upper end) of the holding spring 32b is in contact with the washer 32a (or with bottom surface of the washer). At another end (lower end) of the guide shaft 32 is screwed with a butterfly screw (holding screw) 32c, so that the holding screw 32c is in contact with another end (lower end) of the holding spring 32b. With these washers 32a, holding springs 32b and holding screws 32c, the upper end portions of the guide shafts 32 project out of the (upper surface of) the blade set plate 20 so that a gap can be formed between the (lower surface of the) blade holder 30 and the (upper surface of the) blade set plate 20 as will be described below.
Instead of the screw 34 described above, the guide shaft can be formed by a securing screw 34′ screwed into the top end of a guide pipe member 34S′ which is an equivalent to the shank portion 34S of the screw 34. The diameter of the screw head of the securing screw 34′ is larger than the width of the longitudinal guide groove 24, and the guide pipe member 34S′ is within the longitudinal guide groove 36 of the holding plate 30P. On the guide pipe member 34S′, a washer (32a) that is larger in diameter than the width of the longitudinal guide groove 24, a holding spring (32b) and a butterfly (holding) screw 32c are provided in the same manner as those provided on the screw comprising the screw head 34 and the shank portion 34S.
The holding plate 30P of the blade holder 30 is provided with a pressing lever 38 which is typically made of a metal. The pressing lever 38 is fixed at its one (root) end to substantially the center of the blade holder 30 by a rivet 38A so that another (tip) end portion of the pressing lever 38 sticks out over the front bent portion 30F of holding plate 30P. The pressing lever 38 can be rotatably attached to the blade holder 30 so that the tip end portion sticks out over the front bent portion 30F when the blade holding clip 38 is turned frontward and positioned parallel to the supporting stands 11.
When the pressing lever 38 is pushed down, overcoming the spring force of the holding spring 32b, the rear edge 30R of the blade holder 30 is, as seen from
Furthermore, the blade holder 30 is formed with a pair of lateral guide grooves 36 on both sides of the pressing lever 38. The lateral guide grooves 36 are parallel to the rear side 20R of the blade set plate 20; and into these lateral guide grooves 36, the guide shafts 32 are inserted which are also, as described above, within the longitudinal guide grooves 24 of the blade set plate 20. With a combination of the lateral guide grooves 36 formed in the blade holder 30 and the longitudinal guide grooves 24 foamed in the blade set plate 20, the blade holder 30 can be moved on the blade set plate 20 not only in the lateral direction (a direction parallel to the rear side 20R of the blade set plate 20) but also in the longitudinal direction (a direction parallel to the supporting stands 11) for the length of the lateral and longitudinal guide grooves 36 and 24.
The blade sharpening stand according to the present invention further includes a guide roller 40, shown in
In use, the sharper stand 10 is set on, preferably, a flat and horizontal surface. A silicon or rubber mat can be placed underneath so as to prevent the sharper stand from slipping during the use. As shown in
The location of the blade holder 30 on the blade set plate 20 is adjusted so that the cutting edge 52E of the blade 52 slightly projects out of the rear side 20R of the blade set plate 20 and the blade holder 30 is substantially at the center of the blade 52 in the lengthwise direction of the blade 52. This adjustment is done by moving the blade holder 30 longitudinally, as shown by arrows LG in
Upon completion of the positional adjustment of the blade 52 with reference to the blade holder 30, the grinding angle for the blade 52 is set by way of vertically moving the blade set plate 20 about its rear side 20R. This vertical swing motion of the blade set plate 20 along the arrow VT in
As shown in
Though, in the above-described structure, the blade holder 30 includes a pair of guide shafts 32 and the blade set plate 20 is formed with a pair of (longitudinal) guide grooves 24, the blade holder 30 may include a single guide shaft 32, and the blade set plate 20 is formed only one guide groove 24 to comply with the single guide shaft for the movements of the blade holder 30 on the blade set plate 20.
In the present invention, since the blade holder 30 can be positioned at any desired location on the blade set plate 20 using the lateral and longitudinal guide grooves 24 and 36, substantially any size of blade can be set on the blade set plate 20 and sharpened; and since the blade is securely held by the blade holder 30, the blade can be sharpened evenly for the entire length and height.