The present invention relates to a fastening apparatus for use as a duvet pin and otherwise.
A duvet is a bedding cover that provides warmth and style. Duvets are typically plush quilts or sacks filled with down, feathers, or synthetic fibers. A duvet cover is a removable, decorative, protective fabric shell or cover for covering a duvet, similarly to the way a pillowcase covers a pillow. One may change the look of his or her bed by changing the duvet cover, without changing the entire duvet. The duvet cover may be removed for washing.
It is important to keep the duvet cover securely attached to the duvet while in use so that the duvet does not get bunched up or otherwise displaced or rearranged within the cover. Duvet pins are currently available consumer products that are commonly used to pin duvet and duvet covers together.
Typically, duvet pins comprise a straight pin with a relatively broad head, like a large button head, and a sharp distal end. The user penetrates the pin through the fabric of the duvet and duvet cover, and the sharp end of the pin is received on the other side of the fabric by a pin receiver that receives and holds the distal end of the pin securely. The pin receiver is also relatively broad so that the fabric is held between the pin head and pin receiver. If a duvet pin becomes separated from the pin receiver under normal use, the purpose of the duvet pin is defeated and the exposed sharp point of the pin becomes a safety hazard. Many currently available duvet pins embody mechanical means for preventing separation, which means also make it difficult to intentionally disassemble the duvet pin and pin receiver from one another. For example, some currently available duvet pins require a magnetic key for disassembly, which creates even more inconvenience and is susceptible of being lost.
There is a need for a duvet pin that provides a quick, convenient, effective, more easily releasable, more reliable and safer means than a straight pin for pinning a duvet and duvet cover together.
The present invention is directed to an improved duvet pin that fulfills the foregoing needs. The present invention has broader application as a fastening apparatus for fastening objects.
In a first aspect, the present invention provides an apparatus for securing a duvet cover to a duvet, comprising: a first body; a pin extending from the first body, said pin comprising at least part of a coil; a second body configured with a protrusion for engaging the at least part of a coil whereby the first and second body may be releasably secured together by a threading motion.
In a second aspect, the present invention provides a fastening apparatus, comprising: a first part comprising a coil; a second part comprising external threads; wherein the first part and second part are releasably connectable together by threading them together so that the coil meshes with the threads.
In a third aspect, the present invention provides a fastening apparatus, comprising: a first part comprising a coil; a second part comprising internal threads; wherein the first part and second part are releasably connectable together by threading them together so that the coil meshes with the threads.
In a forth aspect, the present invention provides a fastening apparatus, comprising: a first body; a pin extending from the first body, said pin comprising at least part of a coil; and a second body comprising penetrable material configured so as to form a releasable mechanical connection with the pin upon insertion of the pin into the penetrable material.
In a fifth aspect, the present invention provides a method of connecting a first and second object through a layer of material, comprising: providing a first object comprising a coiled pin; providing a second object comprising threads; positioning the first object proximate to a first side of a layer of material; positioning the second object proximate to a second side of the layer of material in alignment across the layer with the first object; moving at least one of the pin and layer so that the end of the pin advances into the layer; and turning at least one of the first part and second part in a screwing motion so that the pin meshes with the threads so as to form a threaded connection.
The subject matter that is regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the concluding portion of the specification. The invention, however, may be best understood by reference to the following detailed description of various embodiments and the accompanying drawings in which:
With reference to
As a convenient convention for purposes of this disclosure, directional references may assume a vertical arrangement as shown in
With reference to
In the embodiment shown in
With reference to
With reference to
In alternate embodiments, lateral protrusion 40 may be so configured as to form grooves, such as square grooves instead of V-shaped thread interstices.
With reference to
With reference to
In a preferred embodiment, the coil pitch is greater than the thread pitch so that the coil elastically deflects in compression into a smaller pitch. In another embodiment, the coil pitch is less than the thread pitch so that the coil elastically deflects in tension into a larger pitch. In other embodiments, the coil may have an irregular shape so that the irregularity causes interference with the threads, such as, for example including a straight section at the distal end or at some other portion of the pin.
In a preferred embodiment, the coil diameter is sized so as to have a flush fit or clearance fit with the pin receiver. In other embodiments, the coil diameter is sized to have an interference fit with the pin receiver so that, upon threading the pin and receiver together, the coil and pin receiver interfere and impart normal force on their respective surfaces of mutual contact. The force causes the coil to elastically deflect into a larger diameter and cause friction forces that provide for a more secure mechanical connection by resisting unintended unthreading that may be caused by external forces that may be experienced during normal use on a duvet. Upon intentional unthreading, the pin coil elastically returns to its original diameter.
Alternatively, the foregoing diametrical mismatch may be achieved by providing an irregular shape to the coil or pin receiver, such as, for example by providing a radial bulge or protrusion to the pin receiver post, providing a protrusion on the threads, or providing a straight section on the coil.
Alternatively, diametrical mismatch may be achieved by providing a tapered post that tapers in width for at least a part of its length so that the distal end of the post is sized to have a radial clearance fit with the coil of the pin, and at least part of the post is sized to have a radial interference fit with the coil. For example, the base of a round post may have a first diameter and the distal end of the post may have a second diameter that is smaller than the first diameter. The post diameter may taper from the first to the second diameter. The post may have a clearance fit with the coil at the distal end and an interference fit with the coil at positions between the distal end and the base. As the post diameter transitions wider, the interference, normal force, and friction force between the post and pin all increase as one continues to thread the pin and post together. The pin and post may be so sized and shaped that threading may proceed to a fully threaded state where further threading is mechanically limited by the interference.
Although above disclosure of embodiments of the invention disclose elastic deflection of the pin, in other embodiments the pin receiver may elastically deflect as well. Pin receiver materials may be chosen of materials that have desired strength and elasticity, and the pin receiver may be so configured to achieve desired elastic deflection under anticipated loads.
In other embodiments, either with a tapered or untapered post, the post may comprise an protrusion 34 (see
With reference to
With further reference to
In alternate embodiments, lateral protrusion 40 may comprise any protrusion capable of engaging coil 22 of coil pin 20 so that, upon screwing motion the protrusion may engage the coil and propagate the pin forward toward the base of the post, and on an unscrewing motion may engage the coil and propagate the pin away from the base of the post. For example, the protrusion may comprise a laterally extending round peg, square peg or other shaped peg. As another example, the protrusion may comprise a slanted surface for engaging the coil.
The fastening apparatus of the present invention has broad application. The embodiments shown in
For objects that cannot be readily penetrated by a pin, such as metal objects, the present invention would have application where the objects are provided with a through hole in a similar fashion that a through hole would be provided for a bolt or other threaded fastener. Particular advantages of a fastener of the present invention are that (a) the threads and post of the present invention may be disposed entirely within the thickness of the through hole, i.e., they would not be exposed outside the thickness of the objects such as the end of a bolt would be exposed in a typical nut and bolt joint, while at the same time (b) none of the objects need to be threaded such as an object may need to be threaded to receive a typical threaded fastener where no separate nut is provided. In one embodiment of the present invention, the pin receiver may be a traditional threaded fastener and the coil pin may be sized and shaped to mesh compatibly with the threads of the threaded fastener. As applied to form a joint between parts having through holes, the through holes may be sealed on one side by the head of the pin receiver and on the other side by the pinhead.
In an alternate embodiment of the present invention, the pin receiver may be a female receiver having an inwardly protruding protrusion for engaging the coil of the coil pin. A preferred embodiment of a female pin receiver comprises a body with female threads (i.e., internal threads) for engaging the coil pin in similar fashion as a nut engages bolt threads. Various embodiments of the female pin receiver may comprise the same means described above for creating friction force between the coil pin and receiver, such as diametrical mismatch, pitch mismatch, protrusions interstitial of the threads, and various geometric irregularities.
In another alternate embodiment of the present invention, the pin receiver may comprise a body of penetrable material that may be penetrated by the pin so that penetration of the pin into the body of material secures the pin in the body of material. For example, the body of material may comprise cork or other material soft enough so as to be capable of penetration by a pin while sturdy enough to hold its own form. For another example, the body of material may comprise a fabric casing stuffed with stuffing, which stuffing may comprise, for example, pieces of fabric, steel wool, natural fibrous material (such as sawdust, cotton, wool, husk or ground walnut shells), plastic, or plastic beads. In such embodiments, the pin penetrates into the body of material and forms a releasable mechanical bond with the material. The pin and pin receiver thus form a releasable mechanical connection. The pin may be penetrated into the material by a screwing motion and removed from the material by an unscrewing motion, and such assembly and disassembly may be repeated as necessary, for example assembled to hold together a duvet and duvet cover and disassembled to remove the duvet cover for washing. The material may be configured with sufficient length, width, depth and volume of material to receive the coil or part thereof.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to certain embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made to the invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as described in the following claims.