The present invention relates to improved technology in the field of electric screw-top bottle openers and closers, and more particularly to a cordless, battery operated device which is hand-held, which is designed to securely grip a screw-on bottle cap, which has optional accessory cups to accommodate a wide variety of bottle cap sizes, and which can be driven in a first rotational direction to remove a bottle cap from a bottle or which can be driven in a second rotational direction to securely recap a bottle along with the use of a resistor during capping to insure that capping takes place with secure but less force than uncapping so that subsequent uncapping can take place even where battery power diminishes over time.
Various assistive devices are currently available for uncapping screw-top bottles, and a few also exist for the purpose of recapping screw-top bottles, though they may be notably fewer in number. One of the more simple conventionally available devices for unscrewing bottle caps is a rubber disc used to line the palm of the hand to improve the grip. Though these are relatively inexpensive and easy to acquire, a great deal of grasping strength is still required to grip and twist open a tightly closed cap.
Another conventionally available device for opening bottles is a plier-like apparatus, which usually includes some version of a partial metal ring lined with rubber or similar material which contacts the bottle cap when the device is employed. The diameter of the partial metal ring is adjustable, usually by squeezing together a pair of handles, one of which is attached at each terminus of the ring, or by simply opening a hinge. Generally, however, the range of ring diameter for these kinds of openers tends toward jar-sized lids rather than smaller, bottle-sized caps. Additionally, because the range of ring diameter achievable for each opener is fairly limited, multiple openers having different ring sizes would need to be stocked to anticipate the range of various lid sizes for which the device might be needed; where storage space is at a premium, this may not be feasible. Finally, these kind of openers not only requires enough hand strength to squeeze the handles of the device together so that sufficient circumferential pressure is exerted on the cap by the ring portion, but they also require maintaining that circumferential pressure while generating sufficient torque to unscrew the cap; this is definitely not a workable solution for those who have diminished upper extremity strength.
Other conventional openers include under-the-cabinet devices that may rely on a v-shaped receiving member which is typically serrated metal, into which a lid may be jammed so that the it is tightly gripped by the serrations as the user attempts to untwist the bottle or jar. These may include devices similar to Similar devices may include a track having walls spaced apart such that the distance between them becomes incrementally smaller as a bottle or jar lid is inserted and advanced. Once the lid is advanced to a point where the lid wedges between the walls of the track, the user may attempt to twist on the bottle or jar to open it. These types of openers are widely available and relatively inexpensive, but, like the rubber disc described above, they require sufficient arm strength to lift a jar or bottle, maneuver it into the v-shaped receiving member or track, and twist it until the lid loosens. Additionally, this kind of device is also typically geared toward larger jars rather than bottles.
Re-closing a screw-top bottle lid can also be especially difficult, if not impossible, proposition, either by hand or using any of the conventionally available devices described for gripping lids. Although the rubber disc most lends itself to tightly recapping a bottle, it does not lessen the amount of brute strength necessary to do so.
For users with weak upper extremities, such as the elderly or disabled, none of the conventionally available devices offer an adequate solution for opening or tightly closing screw-top bottles. Most available devices simply require far too much strength for those with diminished physical capacity to operate. Threaded beer bottle caps and soft drink caps are especially difficult to remove if strength is limited, but replacing screw-top threaded beer bottle caps and soft drink caps with any certainty that a leak can be avoided is nearly impossible for anyone without really good hand strength.
What is therefore needed is a device which can be used to open or tightly close a bottle cap, which is portable, which can accommodate a wide variety of bottle cap sizes, and which is power-driven to provide sufficient torque to remove or tightly replace a bottle cap independent of user strength.
The bottle opener and closer of the present invention is affordable, effective, and superior to conventionally available alternatives. The present opener and closer is preferably cordless and may include a battery-powered motor designed to drive a rubber-lined main drive cup which fits over a consumer supplied screw-on bottle cap. The main drive cup may be conically angled or have a tapering conical angle in a variety of sizes to fit a wide variety of bottle-cap diameters, and may include an opening which allows insertion of a finger or other object for ejecting any bottle caps retained after the opening operation. The angle of the conically angled sides ensures that a small downward force on the opener and closer will cause the rubber liner to exert significant lateral grasping pressure onto the bottle cap to confer a high radial gripping force on the circumference of the bottle cap.
The present opener and closer may be ergonomically shaped to easily fit within a user's grip, and includes two side-mounted (right side and left side) momentary action switches which power the motor when activated and cut power to the motor when released once a cap has been successfully released or replaced. A master switch includes a first position to allow for driving the main drive cup in a first direction and a second position to allow for driving the main drive cup in a second direction rotationally opposite the first direction, and a third position which disenables movement in any direction.
In the case where a bottle cap may be larger or smaller than the range of bottle cap sizes accommodated by the main drive cup, accessory drive cups are available for interfacing with the main drive cup to allow the opener to accommodate a variety of other size ranges.
The invention, its configuration, construction, and operation will be best further described in the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The description and operation of the invention will be best initiated with reference to
Illustrated inside lower housing 25 is a gearbox 27, motor 31, pinion housing 33 and batteries 35. Gearbox 27 is illustrated as partially cut away to reveal a series of epicyclic gears 36. Pinion housing 33 is illustrated as being partially cut away to reveal bevel pinion 37 and shaft 41. Also illustrated in lower housing 25 is a left-hand power switch 45, and a right-hand power switch 47, either of which switches 45 and 47 may be leaf-type switches. A left-hand power button 51 is shown adjacent left-hand power switch 45 to accommodate right-handed users, and a right-hand power button 53 is shown adjacent right-hand power switch 47 to accommodate left-handed users. Activation of either of power buttons 51 or 53 powers motor 31. Also seen is an upwardly directed channel 49. Upwardly directed channel 49 may have an concentrically inner wall 50. The upwardly directed channel 49 will help to capture capture and stabilize a main drive cup 55 seen between the upper housing 23 and lower housing 25.
The main drive cup 55 is illustrated just above an opening 56 in lower housing 25. Main drive cup 55 includes an interior surface (to be described), an exterior surface 59, which includes a bevel gear 61, and an upper, circumferentially inwardly disposed, rim 63 extending between interior surface 57 and exterior surface 59 and surrounding a top opening 65. Main drive cup 55 includes a lower rim 67 adjacent exterior surface 59 and surrounding a lower opening 69 indicated by an upwardly pointing arrow and which will be more completely shown later. The liner 81 is seen also as an interior surface, the liner 81 being a thin lining of rubber or other polymeric with high skin friction.
At the uppermost point of
Bevel pinion 37 may be fixed on shaft 41, which also supports epicyclic gears 36 and turns on a bearing surface in pinion housing 33. Motor 31 feeds epicyclic gears 36, which in turn rotate bevel pinion 37 clockwise (to drive bevel gear 61 counter-clockwise) or counter-clockwise (to drive bevel gear 61 clockwise) depending on what direction the user has pre-selected using slide button 73.
The inside of the main drive cup 55 has a liner 81 which may be overmolded to provide a tough surface which is resistive to degradation. Overmolding can as it also provides water seals at the top and bottom of the main cup 55 as it enables the surface of any overmolded parts of the main cup 55 to brought into close sealing contact with other surfaces of the opener and closer 21. In the alternative, a liner may be provided which is constructed of rubber or other conformable material having a high skin friction to facilitate gripping.
Main drive cup 55 is preferably frustoconical in shape, preferably having a conically angled wall angle of less than about 40 degrees from wall to opposite wall. Since the rubber liner 81 may be ideally thin and match the shape of any underlying surface, the liner 81 may preferably have the same angular relationship as a wall to wall angle of about twenty degrees. More specifically, a conical wall angle of about twenty degrees between the walls or about ten degrees flare from the normal axis seems to be a good compromise between grip and range of bottle cap sizes with which the main drive cup 55 may be used, since this angular wall orientation requires only a small amount of downward force to confer a high radial gripping force on the circumference of a bottle cap (not illustrated in
Additionally, top opening 65 of main drive cup 55 admits the upwardly projecting cylindrical portion 83, and circumferentially inwardly disposed rim 63 fits against a portion of the upwardly projecting cylindrical portion 83. The radial shoulder 85 fits just underneath the circumferentially inwardly disposed rim 63. Further, top opening 65, when the rubber liner 81 is in place, enables a finger or other object to be introduced into and through the rubber liner 81 from the top side. Further a finger passage 91 in upper housing 23 further facilitates entry into the top opening 65, even when opener and closer 21 is assembled. Once a bottle cap (not illustrated in
Also in
The main body 97 may have a generally constant conic profile and may preferably have a rubber liner 107. Rubber liner 107 has an internal surface 108. The rubber liner 107 has a different shape than the rubber liner 81, and may be either permanently bonded to the main body 97, or the rubber liner 107 may be replaceable. Liner 107 is sized to conform to single accessory cup 95. When single accessory cup 95 is engaged by main drive cup 55, through-hole 104 preserves a user's ability to discharge a bottle cap from single accessory cup 95 by utilizing finger passage 91 just as described in
Angled upper exterior portion 102 of upper extension 101 are sloped to match the conical angular wall relationship of main drive cup 55, ideally approximately twenty degrees from one side to the other or about ten degrees from axial to facilitate optimal gripping by main drive cup 55 at liner 81. If the bottle cap to be opened is larger or smaller than the range of cap sizes that can be opened using main drive cup 55, single accessory cup 95 may be used to further expand the range of possible bottle cap sizes for which opener and closer 21 may be used. Note that while the shape of the main body 97 of single accessory cup 95 is illustrated as having a higher conic angle than main drive cup 55 to accommodate larger sizes of bottle caps (bottle caps are not shown in
First cup 113 and second cup 123 may be two different sizes as shown to further expand the range of bottles openable using dual accessory cup 111. When dual accessory cup 111 is engaged by main drive cup 55, the through-hole 132 preserves a user's ability to discharge a bottle cap from single accessory cup 111 by utilizing finger passage 91 as described in
Although the invention has been derived with reference to particular illustrative embodiments thereof, many changes and modifications of the invention may become apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, included within the patent warranted hereon are all such changes and modifications as may reasonably and properly be included within the scope of this contribution to the art.