The present invention relates to a clothes peg.
Clothes pegs are conventionally made of two branches made of wood or of synthetic material, which are identical and mounted in opposite directions, which can pivot one with respect to the other. Each branch comprises a posterior part forming a lever arm, and an anterior part forming a jaw, situated facing the corresponding jaw of the other branch and collaborating with this other jaw. A spring connects the two branches and urges them in the direction of tightening the jaws against each other, thus allowing them to grip a piece of washing that is to be hung up to dry.
Clothes pegs made of synthetic material and molded as a single piece so as to form the two branches and a thin connecting region forming a hinge are also known—see, for example, patent applications EP 0 302 135, BP 0 641 882 and WO 93/23602.
In all cases, the branches of these clothes pegs are rigid parts or portions, and this has disadvantages, particularly in terms of the jaws. When these jaws have a relatively smooth surface, the washing is not held firmly enough, and there is a risk that it will slip out of the peg, under the effect of its own weight or under the effect of other influences such as the wind. To avoid this drawback, clothes pegs are often provided with jaws having a toothed profile, which hold the washing more firmly; however, this configuration has the disadvantage that it “marks” the washing to some extent, at; the points where the pegs are located.
Also known, from documents FR 2 556 620 A and DE 528 520 C, are clothes pegs with two branches which are made of a relatively hard material, of which the jaw-forming parts are internally lined with pads or with a coating of a relatively resilient material designed to form the surface for contact with the rod [sic]. In the case of document FR 2 556 620 A, the two branches of the clothes peg each have a symmetric structure, and resilient pads are provided at the two opposed ends of each branch. Thus, the action of the two pads of one end of the peg is countered by the action of the two pads at the other end, which means that the gripping efficiency of such a clothes peg is still rather dubious. As to document DE 528 259 C, that document discloses a clothes peg operated by a cam lever, therefore with a relatively complex mechanism, because it entails an additional axis of pivoting for this lever. The use of such a clothes peg is somewhat impractical, because it requires action simultaneously on the two branches and on the lever, while at the same time holding up the washing that is to be hung out. Finally, the clothes peg of document IE 528 259 C has no spring for returning it to the closed position.
It is an object of the present invention to overcome these drawbacks by providing an improved clothes peg which appreciably improves the holding of the washing while at the same time avoiding “marking” it, the clothes peg proposed remaining of a simple structure and economical to manufacture.
To this end, the subject of the invention is a clothes peg, essentially consisting of two branches each comprising an anterior part forming a jaw, lying facing the corresponding jaw of the other branch, and a posterior part forming a lever arm, the two branches being connected together at an intermediate point along their length by a thin web of material acting as a hinge, and a helical spring for returning them to the closed position being mounted between the two branches, by being positioned via its ends between two bosses, formed one on the interior side of each of the posterior parts of the two branches, while the jaw-forming parts of the two branches, made of a relatively hard material, are internally lined with a coating made of a relatively resilient material, designed to form the surface for contact with the washing, this surface resulting from interior faces of said coating having a corrugated profile or from relatively smooth interior faces of said coating.
Thus, the clothes peg that is the subject of the invention has, as an essential feature, the fact that it is made of two separate materials, a more resilient material being provided on the interior side of the jaws. This resilient material forms “pads” which, when the peg is in use, are squashed elastically and thus hold the washing excellently, especially if the surface finish of the resilient material used, such as silicone or foam, opposes slippage.
This resilient material may in particular adopt the form of two small distinct pads fixed one on the interior side of each of the jaw-forming parts of the two branches of the clothes peg.
In an alternative form, the resilient material adopts the form of a single piece, having a “U”-shaped profile, of which the two opposed wings are fixed one to the interior side of each of the jaw-forming parts of the two branches of the clothes peg. The resilience of the material of which such a U-shaped part is made, naturally allows it to deform in order to “follow” the relative movement of the two branches, when the clothes peg is opened or closed.
Various manufacturing techniques are possible for fixing the parts made of resilient material to the two branches made of a harder material.
In particular, in the case of a clothes peg the two branches of which are made of a molded synthetic material, the parts made of resilient material may be obtained by an industrial, technique of two-shot injection molding or of overmolding, allowing them to be formed and fixed to the corresponding branches simultaneously.
The parts made of resilient material may also be fixed by bonding or by nesting to the two branches made of a harder material.
The effectiveness of the parts made of resilient material may be increased by widening these parts, and the jaw-forming parts of the two branches, by comparison with the remainder of the branches of the clothes peg, this making it possible simultaneously:
The invention will in any case be better understood with the aid of the description which follows, with reference to the appended schematic drawing which, by way of examples, depicts ai few embodiments of this clothes peg:
The respective anterior parts 6 and 7 of the two branches 1 and 2, forming jaws, are also situated facing each other, and are internally coated with a resilient material. More particularly, in the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
The two pads 17 and is made of resilient material can, during the manufacture of the clothes pegs, be fixed to the respective anterior parts 6 and 7 of the two branches 1 and 2 in various ways: two-shot injection molding, overmolding, bonding, nesting, snap-fastening.
As goes without saying, the invention is not restricted merely to the exemplary embodiments of this clothes peg which have been described hereinabove by way of example; an the contrary, it encompasses all alternative forms of embodiment and of application thereof which follow the same principle. Thus, in particular, it would not be departing from the scope of the invention if:
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCTFR99/02607 | 10/26/1999 | WO | 00 | 7/8/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO0131108 | 5/3/2001 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
528 259 | Jun 1931 | DE |
0 302 135 | Feb 1989 | EP |
0 641 882 | Mar 1995 | EP |
1 325 394 | Jul 1963 | FR |
2 555 620 | May 1985 | FR |
2 777 917 | Oct 1999 | FR |
WO 9323602 | Nov 1993 | WO |