The present invention relates to a device for attaching a handle or a handlebar to a portable tool with the cutting head placed in the end of a pole or shaft, such as a clearing saw, a cord trimmer or a hedge trimmer.
Different types of engine-powered portable tools, such as clearing saws, rotary trimmers and hedge trimmers, are widely used for work in gardens and forests. In order to facilitate the work even more is it important to improve the ergonomic design of the tool so that the tool will fit the operator even though the working conditions changes and the fact that different operators have different physical conditions.
One area of specific importance relates to attaching of the handle or handlebar to tools provided with an engine at one end of a pole or shaft and a cutting head placed at the other end of the pole or shaft. The length of the pole is different for different types of tools depending on the work that the tool is intended to do. These types of tools improve the working conditions for the operator since the tool design increases the range that is reachable for the operator.
There are a couple of different approaches known that enable the operator to adjust the handle or the handlebar so that the working conditions for the operator are optimized.
One approach is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,188,719 in which the handle is slidable along the pole so that the handle can be fastened in a selected position. This approach has the drawback that it is only possible to adjust the position of the handle in one direction, along the pole.
Another approach is illustrated in U.S. Design Pat. No. 333,954 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,175,298. In order to make it possible to optimize the working conditions for the operator, the handle or handlebar is rotatable within the fastening device of the tool.
The handle or handlebar is then fastened in a selected position. This approach has the drawback that it allows the operator to select the height of the handle relative the tool but only makes it possible to make marginal adjustments in the axial direction along the pole. The handle can also be moved to a position suitable for transport with the handle parallel to the pole.
It is therefor desirable to increase the flexibility of the tools so that the operator will have a better opportunity to adjust the tool so that it will fit the operator, as well as the working conditions, as well as possible.
The present invention that is described in this application solves this problem without substantial changes in the construction and design of existing tools.
The new approach, as described in detail hereinafter, makes it possible for the operator to adjust the position of the handle or handlebar in an axial direction along the pole as well as to adjust the height of the handle in relation to the pole and the tool. The handle or the handlebar can also slide sideways in the fastening device if desirable for the operator.
The present invention also makes it possible to retrofit existing tools. This could be done by using a single accessory that fits existing tools.
One embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in the attached drawings and described in relation to the drawings, whereas
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The axle 18 has in both ends perpendicular support arms 19. In the ends of the support arms 19 facing away from the axle 18 is a plate 22 fastened to the support arms 19 so that the plate 22 is running in parallel direction as the axle 18. The plate 22 has a semicylindrical groove 23 running in the same axial direction as the axle 18. The semicylindrical groove 23 is shaped so that the handle or handlebar 14 fits in the half cylindrical groove 23. The handle or handlebar 14 is secured to the lower part 16 by an upper part 17 that is placed so that the handle or handlebar 14 is clamped between the lower part 16 and the upper part 17 by a screw 20.
The axis 24 between the lower part 16 and the upper part 17 about which the handle or handlebar 14 can rotate is alternately referred to herein as the “first axis”. The axis 25 in the holder 13 about which the arm 15 can rotate is alternately referred to herein as the “second axis.”
The handle or handlebar 14 fastened between the lower part 16 and the upper part 17 makes it possible for the handle or the handlebar 14 to slide sideways 26 to the operator's desired position.
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20020110410 A1 | Aug 2002 | US |