The present invention relates to an extruder for the formation of clay or similarly pliable materials in particular shapes.
Clay extruders are often used by potters and sculptors for shaping clay into uniform shapes. Many extruders are designed to accept interchangeable dies to allow for various shapes to be formed. The formed shapes may be solid or hollow depending on the particular die used.
Existing clay extruders can be categorized into four classes: clay extruder guns, mechanical large format clay extruders, pneumatic powered large format clay extruders. And hydraulic extruders. Clay extruder guns may be small enough to be held in the palm of a hand and able to be paired with dies of less than one inch in diameter or may be larger, up to about 2 inches in diameter. For larger diameters, artists must look to large format clay extruders. Typical mechanical large format clay extruders are attached to a wall and are operated by pulling down a lever to cause a plunger to push clay through a die. The act of pulling the lever requires a not insignificant amount of force to operate the lever, and many artists are unable to easily and comfortably operate such extruders. Moreover, because of the force required to operate them, it is sometimes difficult for users to tightly control the amount of clay that is shaped, causing users to waste time in managing the excess extruded clay. Large format extruders operated through connecting to air compressors or a hydraulic pump work in much the same way, though the air compressors and pumps provide the force necessary to operate the levers and offer the option to more easily control the amount of clay extruded. Air compressors and hydraulic machinery are, of course, not inexpensive and quite noisy, and they are not suitable for some work environments.
Accordingly, there exists a need for extruders that may be used to produce larger extruded forms without either the force necessary to operate a mechanically operated lever or the noise and expense of utilizing an air compressor or hydraulics to operate the extruder.
As described herein, the invention consists of an extruder for shaping clay or similarly pliable material into desired extruded shapes. The inventive extruder first comprises an operational section. This operational section comprises the body of the extruder, which serves as an outer housing. The operational section further comprises, within the body, a plunger for pushing extrusion material through the cassette, a means for controlling movement of the plunger, and a means for supplying electricity to control the operation of the plunger. The body also includes a means for attaching to the body a cassette for holding extrusion material to he extruded. The extruder further comprises the cassette, which is a cavity for holding extrusion material that will be shaped through which the plunger will pass. The cassette is removably connected to the body of the extruder. The die comprises an aperture used to shape the extrusion material and is able to be attached to the cassette.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
Embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to the drawings. The invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiment as depicted and described herein and can be altered, modified, improved without departing from the scope of the present invention.
As shown in
The operational section also includes a cassette connector 60 for attaching the cassette 100 to the body 50. The cassette connector 60 may be secured to the operational section body 50 in any number of ways, such as, for example, providing for a click fit, screw fit, pressure fit, or some combination thereof. In the depicted embodiment, the cassette connector 60 is removably secured to the cassette 100 by means of threaded bolts 62, 64, each of which passes through a die cleat 160, frictionally fits into a slot in the cassette connector 60, and is threaded into a bracket 120 secured to the side of the cassette body 110 as shown in
The cassette 100 is designed to hold a supply of extrusion material to be extruded. As may he seen in
While the cassette body 110 may be shaped in any number of ways, the interior of the cassette body 110 shall have a shape and diameter just large enough within which the head 76 of the plunger 70 may fit. As described above, the plunger 70 in its unactuated position is housed within the body 50. The electrical supply means 170 may cause the plunger 70 to extend from the body 50 into the cassette 100. As the head 76 of the plunger 70 meets with the extrusion material held within the cassette 100, the extrusion material is pushed to the distal end of the cassette 100, through the die 150 and an aperture 162 in the die cleat 160, and to the exterior of the extruder 10. Since the cassette 100 is removably attached to the body 50 of the extruder 10, the cassette 100 can be removed for reloading with additional extrusion material or for cleaning following completion of use.
The extruder 10 may further incorporate an indicator (not shown) to provide the user with information regarding the location of the head 76 of the plunger 70. The indicator may be a light or set of lights. In one embodiment, the indicator may be a single light that displays one color, for example green, when the plunger 70 is fully retracted and a second color, for example red, when the plunger 70 is fully extended. In another embodiment, the indicator may be a single light that displays one color when the plunger 70 is fully retracted, a second color when the plunger 70 is fully extended, and a third color when the plunger 70 is somewhere between fully retracted and fully extended. In other embodiments, there may be two lights, one to indicate when the plunger 70 is fully extended and the second to indicate when the plunger 70 is fully retracted. In still further embodiments, there may be a plurality of lights with one light indicating when the plunger 70 is fully extended, a second light indicating when the plunger 70 is fully retracted, and one or more lights indicating that the plunger is somewhere between hilly retracted and fully extended.
Optionally, the extruder 10 may incorporate a means to attach a second die 153 to allow for extrusion of hollow shapes. This may be accomplished in a number of ways such as, for example, the embodiment shown in
As can be seen in
Due to the incorporation of an electric power supply and a securely seated cassette 100, the extruder 10 taught herein is capable of operation vertically and extruding downward as is traditionally seen but also will function in all manner of other orientations as well. The force provided by the electric power supply and the ability to control the speed of extrusion allows for extrusion in vertically upward direction, a horizontal direction with the extruder 10 positioned on its side, or in any manner of diagonal orientation as well,
Those skilled in the art will recognize that modification and adaptions to the invention are possible without departing from the intended scope of the invention. Many variations and modifications may be achieved within the spirit and scope of the invention as described in the appended claims. The components parts and steps of use described herein need not be perforated in the order described, and component parts and steps may be added or omitted.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62928330 | Oct 2019 | US |