This application relates to opening a cable having a length of filament disposed within a sheath.
One example of cable structure that includes a length of filament disposed within a sheath is a fiber-optic cable. As is well known, a typical fiber-optic cable includes an optical fiber that is disposed within a cable sheath, which may be composed of a polymeric material. The optical fiber includes a silicon oxide glass core (which may be doped to achieve specific optical characteristics) surrounded by a cladding layer to ensure total internal reflection of light, with the core and cladding layer surrounded by a fiber coating. The fiber optic-cable may additionally include a strength member or plurality of strengthening fibers made of a material such as a nylon aramid. Sometimes such strength members are referred to colloquially in the art as “piano wires.”
Opening a cable having such a structure, such as may be desired for breakout of the internal filament during field installation operations, may require considerable physical exertion. There are many instances in which technicians have suffered injuries in attempting to open such cables manually, including significantly disabling back injuries and the like. One example of a tool that has sometimes been used to assist in the opening of such cable structures is illustrated in
There is accordingly a general need in the art for improved tools and methods for opening cables having a length of filament disposed within a sheath.
In a first set of embodiments of the invention, a tool is provided for opening a cable having a length of filament disposed within a sheath. The tool comprises a proximal portion, a distal portion, and a column that is coupled with one of the proximal and distal portions and detachably engaged with the other of the proximal and distal portions. The proximal portion has a first flange connected with a shaft extending from the flange and adapted for engagement with a powered mechanical rotation device. The distal portion has a second flange. The column includes a cavity adapted to grip the filament and is disposed such that the cavity is between the first and second flanges when the column is engaged with the other of the proximal and distal portions.
In some such embodiments, the column may be fixedly coupled with the one of the proximal and distal portions. In some instances, the column may comprise a hollow interior, with the cavity comprising a hole extending through a surface of the column to the hollow interior. A plurality of cavities may be provided, with each such cavity being adapted to grip the filament. In one embodiment, the first flange comprises a threaded hole and the column is threaded at a proximal end for threading into the threaded hole; in this embodiment, the column is thereby detachably engaged with the proximal portion and coupled with the distal portion. In another embodiment, the second flange comprises a threaded hole and the column is threaded at a distal end for threading into the threaded hole; in this embodiment, the column is thereby detachably engaged with the distal portion and coupled with the proximal portion. The filament may comprise a strength member of an optical-fiber cable and the powered mechanical rotation device may be a hand-held drill in certain embodiments.
In a second set of embodiments, a method is provided for opening a cable having a length of filament disposed within a sheath. An end of the filament is attached to a tool having a column disposed between two flanges. The column includes a cavity adapted to grip the filament. Thereafter, the column is rotated to pull the filament from the sheath and to spool the filament about the column. Thereafter, one of the flanges is separated from the column to release the spooled filament.
In some of these embodiments, the column is rotated with a powered mechanical rotation device such as a hand-held drill. The tool may further have a shaft extending from a first of the flanges, with the rotation of the column being performed with a powered mechanical rotating device engaged with the shaft. In such cases, either the first flange or the second flange may be separated from the column to release the spooled filament. Also, the flange that is separated from the column may comprise a threaded hole into which a threaded end of the column is screwed so that the separation is achieved by unscrewing the column relative to one of the flanges.
A further understanding of the nature and advantages of the present invention may be realized by reference to the remaining portions of the specification and the drawings wherein like reference numerals are used throughout the several drawings to refer to similar components.
Embodiments of the invention provide a tool and methods for opening a cable having a length of filament disposed within a sheath. These embodiments provide a mechanism that allows the assistance of a powered mechanical rotation device, such as a hand-held drill, to be used in opening the cable. With such powered assistance, the risk of injury to the technician is substantially reduced. In some such embodiments, the tool uses the powered mechanical rotation device to rotate a column that grips an end of the filament with a cavity, thereby spooling the filament about the column. The filament is confined to a longitudinal region along the length of the column with a mechanism that may be removed to release the filament from the longitudinal region after it has been spooled.
A perspective view of the tool in one embodiment of the invention is provided in
One or more cavities 206 are provided on the column to grip the filament 204 and thereby act as an anchor for the filament 204 on the tool 200 as the tool 200 is rotated to spool the filament 204. In one embodiment where the column 220 comprises a hollow interior, the cavities 206 may comprise holes that extend through a surface of the column 220 to the hollow interior. This allows an end of the filament to be inserted through the holes for securing the end of the filament to the column 220 as the tool 200 is rotated. The position of the cavities 206 at a distal end of the column 220 is shown in
In some embodiments, the tool 200 is structured for easy disassembly into proximal and distal portions. Usually, each of the proximal and distal portions comprises one of the flanges 212 and 216 so that the spooled filament 204 may be readily removed from the confining longitudinal region along the column 220 when the tool 200 is disassembled.
In another embodiment, the tool 200 could be structured for disassembly between the column 220 and the distal flange 216, such as by having the distal flange 216 include a threaded hole into which a threaded distal end of the column 220 may be screwed. In such an embodiment, the proximal portion 302 would comprise the shaft 208, the proximal flange 212, and the column 220 while the distal portion 300 would comprise the distal flange 216. In both this embodiment and the embodiment shown explicitly in
In still other embodiments, the tool may be configured so the column 220 is detachably engaged at both ends. For instance, in one such embodiment both the distal flange 216 and the proximal flange 212 may comprise threaded holes into which threaded distal and proximal ends of the column 220 are screwed. In that embodiment, the proximal portion 302 comprises the proximal flange 212 and the shaft 208, the distal portion 300 comprises the distal flange 216, and the column 220 is comprised by an intermediate portion of the tool 200.
The operation of the tool 200 is illustrated with the exploded view shown in
The tool 200 may be fabricated using a variety of different techniques. For instance, in some embodiments, the portions of the tool 200 are fabricated from metal, but in other embodiments they may be fabricated from any material with sufficient strength to permit use in the manner described above. In one embodiment, portions of the tool 200 are fabricated from a heavy-duty plastic material. In such an embodiment, injection-molding techniques may advantageously be used as part of the fabrication process. For example, the proximal and distal portions 300 and 302 could be poured using injection molding with a metal shaft 208 integrated into the proximal portion 302.
Having described several embodiments, the above description should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention, which is defined in the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5277350 | Thornbury, Jr. | Jan 1994 | A |
5868348 | Bulman | Feb 1999 | A |
6648262 | Huffman | Nov 2003 | B1 |
6732426 | Adams | May 2004 | B2 |
20010029814 | Tiano | Oct 2001 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050077410 A1 | Apr 2005 | US |