The present invention relates to a cutter implement for cutting the tip off of a cigar, and in particular an implement to make a hemispherical-shaped surface area cut through the tip of a cigar prior to lighting and smoking the cigar.
When purchased, a cigar normally has at least one end sealed. Prior to a user smoking a cigar, it is desirable to trim or cut the tip of the cigar for a brief axial distance on the end that is to be placed in the user's mouth. This cut enables the user to initially draw air through the wrapped tobacco to light the opposite end of the cigar, and then to allow the user to draw the desired smoke axially through the cigar and into the user's mouth.
Various trimming and cutting devices have been developed to provide a suitable sized and shaped opening in the cigar tip for this purpose. Instruments that have been used in the past include knives, pointed implements, and the like. More sophisticated trimmers or cutters have been developed that use a pair of co-planer movable blades to slice off a portion of the cigar tip, creating an annular, radially extending surface on the cigar tip. Other implements drill out the tobacco at the tip of the cigar, creating a cylindrical-shaped opening along a short axial length of the cigar. Each of these types of cutters can produce a ragged mouth-end for the cigar, which reduces the pleasure of smoking a cigar having a smooth end to be inserted into the mouth.
Another type of cigar trimmer or cutter has a cylindrical shaped blade that slides axially for a short distance into the tip of the cigar to cut a cylindrical-shaped tobacco plug that is removed and discarded upon subsequent withdrawal of the cylindrical cutter from the cigar. In these devices, cutting into the tobacco becomes increasingly more difficult as the blade becomes duller after many uses, since the blade is forced axially against the tobacco packed inside the cigar wrapper.
Existing cigar trimming and cutting devices also leave a limited amount of surface area formed by the cut, limiting the amount of air that can be drawn through the cigar. It has been determined that a hemispherical-shaped surface area trim or cut at the mouth end of the cigar will allow more air to be drawn into and through the cigar upon each inhale by the user, since it is well known that for a given size or shape of a three-dimensional configuration, a spherical or hemispherical surface results in the maximum surface area.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,765,569 discloses a cigar cutter that includes a cylindrical blade for cutting and removing a cylindrical-shaped plug from the end of the cigar. Clockwise rotation of a mandrel inserted into the hollow center of the cutter blade causes the cylindrical blade to rotate and extend outwardly from a blade cover. When the blade cover is placed against an end of a cigar, the rotation and axial movement of the blade cuts a cylindrical plug in the tip of the cigar. The plug is removed from the blade by retracting the blade into the mandrel. This device cuts a cylindrical, and not a partly spherical surface into the tip of the cigar, therefore not creating a maximum amount of surface area through which air can pass upon inhaling.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,907,886 also discloses a cigar tip plug cutter with a cylindrical cutting blade to cut a round, cylindrical shaped plug from the tip of the cigar. In this patent's disclosure, the cigar is urged against a receiving plate and the cylindrical blade by the user, and the cigar is twisted about a central axis. The blade cuts a cylindrical plug through the cigar tip. Upon movement of the cigar away from the cutter blade and pressure is applied to a lower surface of the bore, an ejector rod ejects the plug from the cylindrical blade. The device disclosed in this patent does not create a partly spherical shaped surface area in the tip of the cigar.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,171,940 also discloses a cigar trimming device wherein a cigar tip is urged and rotated against a stationary annular or cylindrical shaped blade that cuts a cylindrical plug from the cigar. The blade portion is then rotated upward against a push pole that ejects the tobacco plug from the cylindrical blade. The device disclosed in this patent does not create a partially spherical shaped surface area in the tip of the cigar.
Other types of scissor-tip cigar trimming or cutting devices that create an annular, radial extending surface on the tip of the cigar, and not a partly spherical surface area, are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,656,595; 9,119,422; 10,736,353; and 11,038,218.
These and other aspects of the present disclosure are disclosed in the following detailed description of the embodiments, the appended claims and the accompanying figures.
The presently disclosed cigar cutter has a housing into which a moveable actuator assembly extends. The housing also includes a rotatable generally spherical shaped cutter blade in a hollow space of the housing, the cutter blade capable of rotative motion in the hollow space under the control of the moveable actuator assembly. A receptacle adjacent the rotatable cutter blade receives a cigar whose tip is desired to be severed. The actuator assembly moves in the housing between a first position where the cutter blade is in an inert first insert position, and a second position where the cutter blade has traversed a hemispherical surface area path in a portion of the cigar.
The presently disclosed subject matter also includes a method of trimming the tip of a cigar by locating the tip of the cigar adjacent and in the projected path of a rotatable partial spherical-shaped cutting blade having a sharp blade edge, and rotating the cutting blade and sharp blade edge into the tip of the cigar and severing the tip of the cigar from the remainder of the cigar. The residue of the severed tip is collected and discarded. A partial spherical or hemispherical cut is formed in the tip of the cigar by the rotating cutting blade.
Prominent advantages to having a hemispherical cut at the mouth end of the cigar are that the hemispherical cut adds more surface area than a straight cut of the same diameter, and the hemispherical cut provides a more uniform draw compared to a cat's-eye shape of a V-cut. Also, the user's “mouth feel” is improved with less interference with the user's tongue due to the cupped-out shape at the mouth end of the cigar.
Referring to
Attached to a front wall 28 of housing 12 is a generally rectangular panel 30 having an access portal 32 formed with a curved conical shaped receptacle 34. Access portal 32 and receptacle 34 open into a first hollow space 36 in the interior of housing 12, as will be explained. Panel 30 is attached to front wall 28 by screws 38, or any other suitable attachment device that is known in the art.
Referring to
As illustrated in
Mounted for rotation about first rod 50 is a substantially spherically shaped cutter blade 54 having a sharp blade edge 56 at a forward end 58 of cutter blade 54. A channel 60 extends through the body 62 of cutter blade 54, and first rod 50 extends through channel 60. In the illustrated embodiment, body 62 of cutter blade 54 is firmly attached to first rod 50, and first rod 50 rotates in channel 52 as cutter blade 54 rotates, as will be explained. Alternately, body 62 of cutter blade 54 may be rotatably mounted on first rod 50, while first rod 50 is firmly lodged against rotation in channel 52. The body 62 of cutter blade 54 also includes an abutment plate 63 adapted to receive the tip of a cigar when the tip is inserted into receptacle 34, as shown in
A portion of the circumferential surface of cutter blade 54 approximately 180 degrees from blade edge 56 comprises an open slot 64. The ends of a second rod 66 are lodged for lateral movement in slots 68, 70 of shafts 18, 20, respectively. A central portion 72 of second rod 66 rests in slot 64, and the ends of second rod 66 are adapted to slide laterally in slots 68, 70 as cutter blade 54 rotates about (or with) first shaft 50.
As seen best in
Referring to
As shafts 18, 20 move downward, rod 66 lodged in open slot 64 moves downward, forcing cutter blade 54 to rotate about rod 50 as rod 66 applies pressure at the circumferential surface of cutter blade 54. Since rod 66 is acting upon the surface of cutter blade 54, there is also a simultaneous lateral component of movement to rod 66. This lateral movement is allowed since the ends of rod 66 are supported in slots 68, 70 in shafts 18, 20, respectively (
Referring to
Referring to
While the description above refers to an embodiment of the disclosed cigar cutter device, it will be understood that modifications may be made to the disclosed embodiment without departing from the spirit of the invention. The accompanying claims are intended to cover such modified embodiments, as well as the disclosed embodiment, as fall within the true scope and spirit of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
291509 | Gratz et al. | Jan 1884 | A |
567277 | Lehmann et al. | Sep 1896 | A |
951467 | Walker | Mar 1910 | A |
1550314 | Hammer | Aug 1925 | A |
1850314 | Bushaw | Mar 1932 | A |
5694691 | Chen | Dec 1997 | A |
5765569 | Kemanjian | Jun 1998 | A |
6907886 | Kemanjian | Jun 2005 | B2 |
7503329 | Lenart | Mar 2009 | B2 |
8171940 | Chuan | May 2012 | B2 |
8656595 | Wong | Feb 2014 | B2 |
9119422 | Lance | Sep 2015 | B2 |
10736353 | Sharp | Aug 2020 | B1 |
20070107576 | Chen | May 2007 | A1 |
20100257741 | Lin | Oct 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20230148079 A1 | May 2023 | US |