Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6823760
-
Patent Number
6,823,760
-
Date Filed
Thursday, October 31, 200222 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, November 30, 200420 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Millen, White, Zelano & Branigan, P.C.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 081 355
- 081 337
- 081 32
- 081 336
- 081 329
- 081 347
- 081 348
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A winged corkscrew has a lock box that prevents a non-stick coated worm from turning in a reverse direction and slipping out of a cork when two wings of the corkscrew are closed. The lock box locks onto a collar on a main shaft of the cork screw, and thereafter, a cam on the main shaft forms a one way rotational ratchet with the lock box. When the worm is fully inserted, the wings are lowered to remove the cork, but the ratchet prevents the worm from turning in reverse and slipping out of the cork. The corkscrew also has catches that center the corkscrew on the bottle and align the worm into the center of the cork. After the cork has been removed from the bottle, the lock box is unlocked to allow the cork to be removed.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to winged corkscrews having non-stick coated worms. In particular, the invention relates to mechanisms that prevent the worm from turning in a reverse direction and slipping out of a cork when a user attempts to remove the cork.
2. Description of Related Art
Winged corkscrews conventionally include a worm, which may be in the form of a wire wound helically about an axis, having a point at a lower end for initial insertion into a cork and having a handle at the upper end to aid rotation. The corkscrew conventionally has two similar wings (sometimes called arms) extending symmetrically outwardly on opposite sides of the axis and engagingly attached to rings about the axis. As the worm is inserted into the cork, the rings move downward with the worm and the wings are raised upwards. Then, to remove the cork from the bottle, the wings are lowered to their original position against the corkscrew, thus raising the worm and the cork.
In order for the worm to more smoothly enter the cork and to minimize the possibility that the cork might crumble, the worm may be enameled or coated with a non-stick surface coat, such as Teflon™. However, if the worm is slick-coated, when the wings of the corkscrew are lowered, the worm may turn in a reverse direction and slip out of the cork without raising the cork from the bottle. Furthermore, known corkscrews lack a means to center the worm on diverse size bottle necks that may come in various bottle neck diameters. As a result, the worm sometimes obliquely enters a cork or enters the cork at an offset. A cork is likely to be broken or crumbled when the worm enters at an oblique angle or an offset axis.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention prevents a non-stick coated worm from slipping out of a cork when the cork is pulled from the bottle and also helps to center the corkscrew onto the bottle and align the worm in the center of the cork. The term “cork” as used here means any bottle stopper material that may be used as a cork.
An improved winged corkscrew has a lock box that prevents a non-stick coated worm from turning in a reverse direction and slipping out of a cork when wings of the corkscrew are closed to raise the cork. In one example of the operation of the invention, the lock box locks onto a collar on a main shaft of the cork screw. In another example of the operation of the invention, a cam on the main shaft forms a one way rotational ratchet with the lock box. When the worm is fully inserted, the wings are lowered to remove the cork, but the ratchet prevents the worm from turning in reverse and slipping out of the cork. In another example of the invention, the corkscrew has catches that are fitted to ordinarily accept small bottle necks, but have the flexibility to enlarge to accept wide bottle necks. This helps to center the corkscrew on the bottle and align the worm into the center of the cork. After the cork has been removed from the bottle, the lock box is unlocked to allow the cork to be removed.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
The invention will be described in detail in the following description of preferred embodiments with reference to the following figures wherein:
FIG. 1
is a front view of a corkscrew;
FIG. 2
is a perspective view of the main shaft of the corkscrew;
FIG. 3
is a section view of the cam portion of the main shaft;
FIG. 4
is a front view of the corkscrew showing the interaction of the main shaft and the wing teeth;
FIG. 5
is a front view of the lock box;
FIG. 6
is a side view of the lock box showing the interaction of the main shaft and the protruding portion;
FIG. 7
is a side view of the main lever of the lock box;
FIG. 8
is a side view of the protruding portion of the main lever of the lock box;
FIG. 9
is side view of the lock box showing the interaction of the main shaft and the protruding portion;
FIG. 10
is a perspective view of the body of the corkscrew;
FIG. 11
is a bottom view of the body of the corkscrew; and
FIG. 12
is a section view of the resilient catches of the corkscrew along the line XII—XII of FIG.
10
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
In
FIG. 1
, a corkscrew
10
has a body
20
, a main shaft
100
, two wings
30
, two hinge axles
40
, and a lock box
200
. The body
20
of the corkscrew
10
may be plastic or metal and may be wholly formed or may be formed in several pieces which are attached together, such as by screws.
An example of a main shaft
100
that includes a collar
120
is depicted in FIG.
2
. In
FIG. 2
, the main shaft
100
of the corkscrew
10
includes a collar
120
, and on one side of the collar
120
, a cam
114
. Preferably, on a side of the cam
114
that is distal to the collar
120
, a knob
112
is located at one end of the main shaft
100
. Preferably on the other side of the collar
120
, the main shaft
100
has several ridges
104
along a length of the main shaft as well as a worm
102
on an end. The worm
102
is a helically shaped wire, has a sharp end, and is preferably non-stick coated, typically by Teflon™, or equivalent, to easily penetrate a cork. The worm
102
may be integral with the entire main shaft
100
or may be attached, such as by wedging, gluing, or an equivalent. The collar
120
preferably has a larger diameter than the diameter of the ridges
104
. The cam
114
has several cam crowns
116
(see
FIG. 3
) which extend from the center
118
of the main shaft
100
but do not extend as far as the edge of the collar
120
. The knob
112
is a handle for the corkscrew and may be in a decorative shape, for example in a substantially rectangular or oval shape, and may include indicia such as a trade name or trademark or an advertisement.
In
FIG. 4
, each wing
30
has several wing teeth
32
which extend into spaces between the ridges
104
of the main shaft
100
, allowing the wings
30
and the main shaft
100
to move reciprocally. The wings
30
advantageously interact with the ridges
104
of the main shaft
100
such that when the main shaft
100
moves axially, then the wings
30
rotate as well, and vice versa. The wings
30
are attached to the body
20
by the hinge axles
40
.
An example of the lock box
200
as it interacts with the collar
120
and the cam
114
is depicted in
FIGS. 5-9
. In
FIGS. 5-9
, the lock box
200
has a main lever
210
installed in box housing
250
. The main lever
210
includes a button
212
, an end portion
230
and a lever
216
(between the end portion
230
and the button
212
) that pivots around a pivot
214
. The pivot
214
may be part of the lever
216
or may be attached to the lever
216
. On one end of the main lever
210
is a button
212
that extends out of the box housing
250
of lock box
200
. The button
212
is arranged so that, when operated, it presses against a spring
270
that is, in this example, disposed between button
212
and a portion of the box housing
250
(see FIG.
9
). The spring
270
may be a spiral compression spring, leaf spring, resilient material, a torsion spring, or an equivalent, and the exact location of the spring may be corresponding relocated based on spring type. On the other end of the main lever
210
is an end portion
230
(see FIG.
7
). The spring
270
holds the button
212
in an ordinarily raised position as depicted in
FIG. 9
, and holds the end portion
230
of the main lever
210
in an ordinarily lowered position as also depicted in FIG.
9
.
In
FIG. 7
, two axes of the main lever
210
are defined to be a lever axis
218
and a transverse axis
232
. In the end portion
230
, a protruding portion
220
extends along the transverse axis
232
and interacts with the collar
120
of the main shaft
100
as further discussed below. The protruding portion
220
has a chamfered bevel
222
on a distal side of portion
220
and a substantially right angle
224
(lateral view angle
224
), on a proximal side of portion
220
(see FIG.
7
). The chamfered bevel
222
is angled to allow the collar
120
of the main shaft
100
to pass by the protruding portion
220
in one direction (i.e., inserting the worm into the cork), while the lateral view angle
224
is angled to resist the collar
120
from passing the protruding portion
220
in the opposite direction (i.e., removing the worm from the cork).
In operation, as the worm
104
turns into the cork, the main shaft
100
is drawn toward the cork past the lock box
200
. In particular, the collar
120
of the main shaft
100
is drawn past the protruding portion
220
of the lock box
200
. As the collar
120
passes the protruding portion
220
, the collar
120
slidably urges against the chamfered bevel
222
to move the protruding portion
220
upward (as depicted in FIGS.
7
and
8
), causing the main lever
210
to pivot around the pivot
214
and compress the spring
270
(see FIGS.
7
and
9
).
When the collar
120
has moved past the protruding portion
220
, the spring
270
urges the main lever
210
to pivot about the pivot
214
so that the protruding portion
220
forcibly urges against the cam
114
on the distal side of the collar
120
(see FIG.
2
). The protruding portion
220
hooks over the distal edge of the collar
120
. The lateral view angle
224
(see
FIG. 7
) on the protruding portion
220
is substantially a right angle to resist the lock box
200
from being able to be pulled back over the collar
120
in the opposite direction.
FIG. 8
depicts an end view of the main lever
210
with the protruding portion
220
extending into the aperture
252
of the box housing
250
. A central axis of the main shaft
100
(
FIG. 2
) passes through a center of the aperture
252
in the box housing
250
. A line that is normal to the plane of the chamfered bevel
222
and interests the central axis of the main shaft
100
, also preferably passes through a central area of the chamfered bevel
222
. With this geometric relationship, the chamfered bevel
222
even further facilitates movement of the lock box
200
past the collar
120
as described above.
In
FIG. 8
, two edges of protruding portion
220
extends into the aperture
252
: end edge
226
and side edge
228
. The edges
226
and
228
interact with the cam crowns
116
(see
FIG. 6
) to provide a one way rotational ratchet effect. When the main shaft
100
is rotated in a direction to screw the worm
102
into a cork, the cam crowns
116
slideably urge the end edge
226
in an upward direction (as depicted in
FIGS. 6
,
7
and
8
) causing the button
212
to move down (as depicted in
FIG. 7
) as the main lever
210
rotates around the pivot
214
and compress the spring
270
(also see FIG.
9
). As the main shaft
100
is further turned and the protruding portion
220
passes each cam crown
116
, the spring
270
urges the main lever
210
to pivot about the pivot
214
so that the protruding portion
220
returns to its ordinarily lowered position. Thus, the ratchet effect permits the main shaft
100
to rotate in the direction that screws the worm into the cork. However, in contrast, when the main shaft
100
is urged to rotate in the opposite direction to unscrew the worm
102
from the cork, the cam crowns
116
urge against the side edge
228
of the protruding portion
220
, but the protruding portion
220
does not move because the lever
216
is not arranged to pivot in that side direction. Thus, the ratchet effect prevents the main shaft
100
from rotating in the direction that unscrews the worm from the cork.
In operation, after the protruding portion
220
has passed the collar
120
, as described above, the end and side edges
226
and
228
of the protruding portion
220
interact with the cam crowns
116
of the main shaft
100
to provide the one way rotational ratchet effect.
In
FIGS. 10-12
, the body
20
of the corkscrew also has resilient catches
22
at the end of the corkscrew
10
. The catches
22
may be integral with the body
20
or may be formed separately and attached, such as by screws, rivets, bonding adhesives or equivalent. The outer edge
24
of the corkscrew
10
is sized to accept oversize bottle necks, while the catches
22
are fitted to ordinarily accept small bottle necks, but have the flexibility to enlarge to accept large bottle necks. The catches
22
flex outward to hold on to bottle necks of any size and center the bottle necks in the corkscrew
10
. When fitted to a bottle, the bottle neck top rests against the shoulder
26
, and the worm
102
passes through the bottom aperture
28
to enter the center of the cork of the bottle. The flexing of the catches
22
aligns the worm
102
into the center of the bottle.
In operation, the corkscrew
10
is positioned over the top of a bottle. The resilient catches
22
hold the bottle in the center of corkscrew
10
, while flexing to allow bottles of nonstandard size to fit in the corkscrew
10
. The top of the bottle stops against the shoulder
26
of the corkscrew
10
. The knob
112
of the corkscrew
10
is turned to screw the worm
102
into the cork of the bottle. As the worm
102
is screwed into the cork, the entire main shaft
100
moves downward, moving the teeth
32
of the wings
30
along the ridges
104
of the main shaft
100
.
As the worm
102
moves downward, the wings
30
move upward, and the protruding portion
220
of the lock box
200
passes over the ridges
104
until the protruding portion
220
passes over the collar
120
of the main shaft
100
. The collar
120
moves slidably along the chamfered bevel
222
to pass the protruding portion
220
, until the protruding portion
220
lockingly engages the collar
120
.
After the lock box
200
has locked onto the collar
120
of the main shaft
100
, the lock box
200
interacts with cam
114
to become a one way rotational ratchet mechanism. The end edge
226
of the protruding portion
220
allows the cam crowns
116
to pass in the rotational direction of turning the worm into the cork, and the side edge
228
of the protruding portion
220
resists the cam crowns
116
from passing in the rotational direction of unscrewing the worm from the cork. Thus, when the lock box
200
is locked, the worm
102
can screw farther into the cork but cannot unscrew or slip out of the cork.
After the lock box
200
is locked and the worm satisfactorily turned into the cork, the wings
30
are closed against the body
20
of the corkscrew
10
to raise the main shaft
100
and the cork out of the bottle. As the wings
30
are closed against the body
20
of the corkscrew
10
, the teeth
32
of the wings
30
interact with the ridges
104
of the main shaft
100
to move the entire main shaft
100
and cork upwards. The cork remains on the worm
102
of the main shaft
100
as the main shaft
100
is raised.
After the cork has been removed from the bottle, the cork may be removed from the corkscrew
10
by pressing the button
212
to unlock the lock box
200
from the collar
120
. Depressing the button
212
raises the protruding portion
220
from the cam crowns
116
and over the collar
120
, allowing the main shaft
100
to freely move axially exposing the cork on the worm. The cork is then easily removed from the worm
102
.
Having described preferred embodiments of a novel bottle stopper extractor (which are intended to be illustrative and not limiting), it is noted that modifications and variations can be made by persons skilled in the art in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that changes may be made in the particular embodiments of the invention disclosed which are within the scope and spirit of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Claims
- 1. A winged corkscrew comprising:a main shaft that includes a collar; two wings extending outwardly on opposite sides of an axis defined by the main shaft; and a lock box operable to releaseably engage the collar.
- 2. The winged corkscrew of claim 1, wherein:the main shaft further includes a cam distal of the collar; and the lock box is operable to engage the cam so as to form a ratchet relationship.
- 3. The winged corkscrew of claim 2, further comprising resilient catches, wherein:the main shaft defines an axis; and the resilient catches have a center aligned with the axis.
- 4. The winged corkscrew of claim 3, wherein the main shaft further includes a non-stick coated worm.
- 5. The winged corkscrew of claim 1, further comprising resilient catches, wherein:the main shaft defines an axis; and the resilient catches have a center aligned with the axis.
- 6. The winged corkscrew of claim 5, wherein the main shaft further includes a non-stick coated worm.
- 7. The winged corkscrew of claim 1, wherein the main shaft further includes a non-stick coated worm.
- 8. The winged corkscrew of claim 1, wherein:the lock box is able to slide over the collar in a first axial direction to a locked position; and the lock box is stopped from sliding over the collar in a second axial direction.
- 9. The winged corkscrew of claim 8, wherein the lock box includes a release mechanism to facilitate sliding the lock box from the locked position over the collar in the second axial direction.
- 10. The winged corkscrew of claim 1, wherein:the lock box includes a protruding portion that has a chamfered bevel on a distal end and a substantially right angle on a proximal end; the chamfered bevel is oriented to enable the protruding portion to slide over the collar in a first axial direction; and the substantially right angle is oriented to stop the protruding portion from sliding over the collar in a second axial direction.
- 11. The winged corkscrew of claim 10, wherein:the lock box includes a release mechanism coupled to the protruding portion; and actuation of the release mechanism moves the protruding portion so that the protruding portion may slide past the collar in the second axial direction.
- 12. The winged corkscrew of claim 11, wherein:the release mechanism includes a lever on which the protruding portion is configured at a distal end; and the lever includes a release button configured at a proximal end and a pivot between the release button and the protruding portion.
- 13. The winged corkscrew of claim 10, wherein:the lock box further includes a box housing having an aperture therein; the protruding portion has an end edge protruding into the aperture and a side edge protruding into the aperture; the cam includes plural cam crowns; when the main shaft is urged to rotate relative to the lock box in a first rotational direction, each cam crown in turn urges against the end edge so as to move the protruding out of the aperture and permit the main shaft to be rotated in the first rotational direction; and when the main shaft is urged to rotate relative to the lock box in a second rotational direction, a cam crown urges against the side edge and stops the main shaft from being rotated in the second rotational direction.
- 14. The winged corkscrew of claim 13, further comprising resilient catches, wherein:the main shaft defines an axis; and the resilient catches have a center aligned with the axis.
- 15. The winged corkscrew of claim 14, wherein the main shaft further includes a non-stick coated worm.
- 16. The winged corkscrew of claim 14, wherein:the resilient catches have a separation defined by a small bottle neck; and the resilient catches are capable of flexing to accommodate a large bottle neck while maintaining a centered position in alignment with the axis.
- 17. The winged corkscrew of claim 10, further comprising resilient catches, wherein:the main shaft defines an axis; and the resilient catches have a center aligned with the axis.
- 18. The winged corkscrew of claim 17, wherein the main shaft further includes a non-stick coated worm.
- 19. The winged corkscrew of claim 17, wherein:the resilient catches have a separation defined by a small bottle neck; and the resilient catches are capable of flexing to accommodate a large bottle neck while maintaining a centered position in alignment with the axis.
- 20. The winged corkscrew of claim 10, wherein the main shaft further includes a non-stick coated worm.
- 21. A winged corkscrew comprising:a main shaft that includes a cam; two wings extending outwardly on opposite sides of an axis defined by the main shaft; and a lock box operable to engage the cam so as to form a ratchet relationship.
- 22. The winged corkscrew of claim 21, wherein:the lock box permits the main shaft to be rotated relative to the lock box in a first rotational direction; and the lock box stops the main shaft from being rotated in a second rotational direction.
- 23. The winged corkscrew of claim 21, wherein:the lock box includes a box housing having an aperture therein and a protruding portion having an end edge protruding into the aperture and a side edge protruding into the aperture; the cam includes plural cam crowns; when the main shaft is urged to rotate relative to the lock box in a first rotational direction, each cam crown in turn urges against the end edge so as to move the protruding out of the aperture and permit the main shaft to be rotated in the first rotational direction; and when the main shaft is urged to rotate relative to the lock box in a second rotational direction, a cam crown urges against the side edge and stops the main shaft from being rotated in the second rotational direction.
- 24. A winged corkscrew comprising:a main shaft that includes a collar defining an axis; two wings extending outwardly on opposite sides of an axis defined by the main shaft; a lock box operable to releaseably engage the collar; and resilient catches having a center aligned with the axis.
- 25. The winged corkscrew of claim 24, wherein:the resilient catches have a separation defined by a small bottle neck; and the resilient catches are capable of flexing to accommodate a large bottle neck while maintaining a centered position in alignment with the axis.
- 26. A method of uncorking, the method comprising:screwing a non-stick worm of a main shaft of a corkscrew onto a cork until a lock box lockingly engages a collar on the main shaft; continuing screwing until wings of the corkscrew have risen and the non-stick worm is fully inserted into the cork; and lowering the wings of the corkscrew to remove the cork from a bottle neck.
- 27. The method of claim 26, further comprising:unlocking the lock box from the collar after the cork is removed from the bottle neck; sliding the main shaft through the lock box to reveal the removed cork; and twisting the cork off of the worm.
- 28. The method of claim 26, further comprising aligning the bottle neck with resilient catches of the corkscrew before screwing the non-stick worm into the cork.
- 29. A winged corkscrew comprising:a main shaft that includes a collar; two wings extending outwardly on opposite sides of an axis defined by the main shaft; and means for releasably engaging the collar.
- 30. The winged corkscrew of claim 29, wherein:the main shaft further includes a cam; and the means for releasably engaging further includes means for engaging the cam in a ratchet relationship.
- 31. The winged corkscrew of claim 30, wherein the main shaft defines an axis, the winged corkscrew further comprising means for aligning a center of an opening with the axis.
- 32. The winged corkscrew of claim 31, wherein the main shaft further includes a non-stick coated worm.
- 33. A winged corkscrew comprising:a main shaft includes a cam; and means for engaging the cam in a ratchet relationship.
- 34. The winged corkscrew of claim 33, wherein the main shaft defines an axis, the winged corkscrew further comprising means for aligning a center of an opening with the axis.
- 35. The winged corkscrew of claim 34, wherein the main shaft further includes a non-stick coated worm.
US Referenced Citations (8)