The invention relates to a cork extractor with a spiral which is disposed within a sleeve which can be seated on the edge of the bottle or rotatable between at least two corresponding limbs adapted to engage the neck of the bottle and which is actuated by a drive shaft which rotates the spiral connected therewith.
The simplest corkscrew is comprised of a spiral which, at its end not provided with the screw, has a handle secured thereto. After driving the spiral into the bottle cork to be removed, the bottle is held in one hand and the cork withdrawn by the other.
In addition, there are still other cork screws which are comprised of a handle of U-shaped cross section and, between the limbs, a screw which is hinged to the handle and is under a spring pressure and which has a support lever pivotally connected to the handle and also of U-shaped cross section. This support lever, after the driving of the screw into the cork has a noselike projection which is applied to the bottle to be opened and serves as a support for the lever as the cork is withdrawn from the bottle. Such a corkscrew may be used primarily in wine cellars or restaurant establishments and can be folded to a small size.
There are, in addition, known cork screws with a sleeve whose lower end can be seated upon the neck of the bottle and whose upper end via a screw thread is shiftable axially along the cork screw shaft.
On the same thread a nut is displaceable which, upon the driving of the spiral into the screw, enables the cork to be withdrawn with the spiral from the bottle by rotation of the nut. A variant of this type is described in German Patent DE 86 219 C and has the sleeve of the cork screw divided. On the spiral shaft, a shiftable ring is provided which, in a closed position of the sleeve by the effect of the spring tends to hold the sleeve in the closed position. When one screws the spiral into the cork, this spring is stressed and the extraction of the cork is facilitated.
All cork screws have in common that the extraction or rotation requires sufficient force to overcome the friction effect with which the cork is retained in the neck of the bottle. The cork is held in the bottle neck at a relatively high pressure which must be sufficient in the case of vibration and shock to retain the cork and the contents of the bottle firmly sealed against penetration of ambient air into the bottle. Usually the cork is sealed so tightly that a weak person cannot apply sufficient strength to remove the cork.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a cork screw or extractor which is easily handled and can enable withdrawal of a bottle cork with significantly reduced expenditure of force.
This object is achieved with the cork extractor of claim 1 characterized in accordance with the invention in that between the drive shaft and the spiral a stepdown transmission is arranged, preferably a planetary gear transmission, whose transmission ratio is between 1:2 and 1:4.
By a corresponding choice of the transmission ratio the force required for withdrawal of the cork by comparison with state of the art corkscrews can be reduced by the transmission ratio of say 1:2. This can, however, be increased further so that with actuation of the drive shaft with a finger, sufficient force may be produced. The correspondingly greater travel over which the force must be applied is easily tolerated because of the fact that the spiral receives sufficient force to enable it to drive into the cork. In practice, the great path or greater number of turns at the drive side as well as the greater cost of the structure are tolerable.
The drive shaft can be connected with a lever or cross bar to enable their actuation. In accordance with a further feature of the invention, the lever can be made telescoping or a swingable pin or arm can be provided on the lever to form a crank structure at the drive shaft.
In principle, it is also possible to connect the drive shaft with a further transmission and a vertically arranged hand crank which changes the direction of force application by 90°.
In another embodiment of the invention the step-down transmission can be provided with a locking pin or knob for enabling actuation of the transmission or for deactivating it. In this case, when the transmission is operative, the advantage of low force expenditure at the cost of a greater actuating path is obtained. When the transmission is decoupled, the shorter path but with a correspond-ingly greater force is required, depending upon what force the operating individual can or desires to use to remove the cork.
The transmission can be configured with alternatives as well and, for instance, the spiral can be connected by a member fixedly with the hollow gear of the planetary transmission or further as a unit therewith, whereby the planet gears can be spatially fixed. Alternatively, the hollow gear and the transmission housing can form a unit within which the planet gears circulate in the hollow gear.
Further embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the drawing. The drawing shows:
a through 1c respectfully different views of a first corkscrew embodiment;
d an exploded view of the individual drive components;
e a cross section through a planetary transmission;
f a longitudinal section through the planetary transmission;
a a perspective view of a further embodiment of a corkscrew with a further translation connected to a crank drive;
b an exploded view of the drive components and connecting members associated therewith;
a and 6b respective corkscrew embodiments with a locking knob to cut out the transmission.
Key to the corkscrew is a spiral 10 which can be driven into a cork and which has at its upper end an internally toothed hollow gear 12 fixed to the spiral via a connecting piece 11 at its upper end. This can be realized in the form of a one piece fabrication or the construction using screws as illustrated in
Instead of the lever 16, a transverse bar 20 can be used which passes through a bore in the drive shaft 15 as shown in
In accordance with a further embodiment which is somewhat more costly and has been illustrated in
As can be seen from
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 102 17 982.4 | Apr 2002 | DE | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/DE03/01271 | 4/15/2003 | WO | 10/25/2004 |