Technical Field
The present disclosure relates generally to fastening devices, and more particularly, to an automatic fastening device drives double-headed fasteners.
Description of the Related Art
Double-headed fasteners (or “duplex nails”) have been used for many years in applications where it is desirable to later remove the fasteners from objects. For example, thousands of double-headed fasteners are manually driven through wood boards/panels when creating forms for a concrete structure. The outer heads of the double-headed fasteners will protrude from the wood boards/panels for easy removal of the double-headed fasteners a later time, such as after concrete has cured adjacent the boards/panels. Manually driving thousands of double-headed fasteners into wood boards/panels or other objects is very time consuming and inefficient.
Power fastener devices, such as electric, pneumatic, and fuel cell types, have been known for many years. These fastener devices typically include a magazine that is adapted to hold a strip of nails which can be driven one at a time as the strip is advanced through a drive head and engaged by a reciprocating knife or hammer. These magazines are adapted to hold a single-headed nail. Thus, workers are required to manually drive thousands of double-headed fasteners without the aid of a power fastening device.
Currently, nail guns used to build homes and other construction projects are typically pneumatic. A pneumatic nail gun has a long hose connected to an air compressor that provides the compressor air. This hose must be connected to the nail gun at all times. If the pneumatic nail gun is being used around concrete construction, there are many protruding rebars, spikes and other hard items on which the hose might be caught or punctured. Dragging a pneumatic hose around a concrete construction building in which duplex nails are often used is dangerous and may result in damage to either the pneumatic hose system or the user.
Another disadvantage of pneumatic hose nail guns is their limited power. An air compressor must deliver compressed air through a long hose and the amount of drive power is limited based on the compressor pressure and the amount of pressure that can be held in the hose system. As a result, a pneumatic system has trouble driving even 8 d nails.
A duplex nail has particular technical issues for being driven a full depth of the first head because power can only be applied to the second head. The driving force must be transmitted from the second head through the shaft and to the first head. The head being driven to be flush with the top surface is not directly impacted by the driving hammer, but rather, the second head is driven.
Accordingly, the inventors realized that it would be beneficial to have a compressed gas cartridge type of nail gun to drive a duplex nail.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a fastening device, such as a nail gun, drives a double-headed fastener into an object. The fastening device includes a driving mechanism for driving the fastener and a magazine attached to the driving mechanism that receives the fastener. The magazine includes a first channel that at least partially receives a first head of the fastener and a second channel that at least partially receives a second head of the same fastener. The first and second channels guide the fastener along the magazine and toward an actuation component of the driving mechanism for driving the fastener into an object.
In some aspects, the fastening device includes a nose portion that has an opening positioned adjacent a supply end of the magazine. The opening has a duplex opening sized to receive the double-headed fastener and to position the fastener proximate and in-line with the actuation component for driving the fastener into an object.
A plurality of double-headed fasteners are inserted into the magazine. The plurality of double-headed fasteners, each having first and second heads, are slidably engaged to the first and second channels of the magazine, respectively. The fastener enters the nose of the nail gun via a specially sized duplex opening which ensures the fastener is properly fed into the nail gun such that the fastener is always ensured of being properly aligned for being driven. One of the double-headed fasteners is positioned proximate the actuation component of the automatic fastening device. The nose section of the automatic fastening device is biased against an object to receive the fastener. A trigger is pulled (or other device is actuated) to cause rapid movement of the actuation component toward the fastener, thereby causing impact against the fastener. The fastener is thereby expelled from the automatic fastening device at a high velocity and is at least partially driven into the object. Importantly, the first head of the fastener will at least partially extend from the object so that the fastener may be easily removed at a later time. The fastening device is used repeatedly until all of the fasteners in the magazine are depleted, and then additional fasteners may be inserted into the magazine and driven into an object.
The automatic fastening device 10 receives and drives double-headed fasteners 12a into an object one at a time, such as from a strip 12 of double-headed fasteners 12a shown in
The double-headed fasteners are usually nails, but other types of fasteners that have two heads, one spaced vertically above the other, can also be used with this device. These are sometimes called duplex nails.
The automatic fastening device 10 includes a housing 13 and a magazine 14 attached to the housing 13. The housing 13 contains a driving mechanism 16 for driving the fastener 12a delivered by the magazine 14. The driving mechanism 16 includes a nose section 17 that receives and positions the fastener 12a from the magazine 14. The magazine 14 includes a biasing mechanism 18 slidably coupled to the magazine 14. The biasing mechanism 18 biases the fasteners 12 toward the nose portion 17 of the driving mechanism 16. Such biasing mechanisms may include a spring and are well known in the art.
The driving mechanism 16 includes an actuation component 20 and a trigger 22. The trigger 22 is operable by an operator to cause the actuation component 20 to rapidly impact the fastener 12a for driving into an object. The automatic fastening device 10 is preferably a compressed gas nail gun that drives the fasteners 12. Such a nail gun has particular benefits over a pneumatic nail gun which has the long hose, as explained herein. Such an automatic fastening devices is an actuation component 20 (such as a blade or hammer) that is caused to rapidly impact one fastener 12a at a time of a strip of fasteners 12 delivered by the magazine 14, for example. The actuation component 20 is movable in a direction depicted by Arrow A. An adjustment mechanism 23 is attached to the nose section 17 and is adjustable to control the depth fastener 12a is driven into the object being nailed. A contact head 25 is attached to the nose section 17 and is biasable to an object that the fastener 12a is driven into. Driving components of automatic fastening devices are well known and will not be described in greater detail.
The magazine 14 includes a supply output end 24 and a receiving end 26. The supply end can also be called the outlet end because the fasteners are output at that end and the receiving end can be termed the inlet end since the fasteners are input at that end. The supply end 24 is attached to the nose section 17. The receiving end 26 receives a strip of fasteners 12 and the supply end 24 supplies the fastener 12a to the nose section 17 and proximate the actuation component 20. Attached to the receiving end 26 is a receiving component 28 that receives a strip of fasteners 12; the strip is typically inserted by hand. The magazine 14 is an elongated body, but it may be a coil-type magazine or other magazine having similar first and second ends 24, 26 for receiving and supplying fasteners 12 to a fastening device.
Accordingly, and with reference to
The magazine 14 includes a support portion 38 disposed between the first and second channels 30a, 30b and that extends a length of the magazine 14 (
The magazine 14 further includes a first frame portion 40a and a second frame portion 40b that are each disposed on either side of the magazine 14. The first frame portion 40a and the second frame portion 40b define a shank slot 42 that receives the primary shank 32a of the fasteners 12. In some embodiments, only a first frame portion 40a is provided and the biasing mechanism 18 acts to bias the fasteners 12 against the first frame portion 40a.
In the example shown in
As shown in
The nose section 17 has an elongated chamber 48 that receives a fastener 12a of the strip 12 of fasteners 12a from the magazine 14. The elongated chamber 48 allows at least a portion of the actuation component 20 to travel therethrough in directions depicted by Arrow A. The elongated chamber 48 is sized to facilitate spatial positioning of the fastener 12a in the path of the actuation component 20. The breakable strip 36 assists to spatially position each fastener 12a one at a time within the chamber 48. The nose section 17 further includes a contact head 50 that is positionable against an object 52 (such as wood or other building material). Once the contact head 50 is biased against the object 52, a trigger 22 is pulled by an operator, which causes the actuation component 20 to rapidly travel through the elongated chamber 48 and impact the first head 34a of the fastener 12a. The fastener 12a is then detached from the strip 12 and is expelled out from the nose section 17 and into the object 52.
As shown in
With continued reference to the magazine 14 shown in
Advantageously, a single-headed fastener 60 (and strips of such fasteners) is receivable in either the first channel 30a or the second channel 30b.
As previously discussed with reference to
The magazine 14 includes a shank support portion 38 covered by liner 57 that extends from the planar surfaces of the primary guide surface 56a and the secondary guide surface 56b. The support portion 38 includes a support surface 58 that extends a length of the magazine 14 between the first and second channels 30a, 30b. A radial perimeter portion of the secondary shank 32b of the fastener 12a is slidably engaged to the support surface 58. As can be appreciated from
In some aspects, the magazine 14 includes a shank surface 72 that is an elongated surface parallel to the support surface 58. The shank surface 72 is the surface that may be slidably engaged to by a radial portion of the primary shank 32a of the fastener 12a to provide additional stability to the fastener 12a as it slides along the magazine 14.
The magazine 140 includes a support portion 138 of the liner 59 that extends from the planar surfaces of the primary guide surface 156a and the secondary guide surface 156b. The support portion 138 includes a support surface 158 that extends a length of the magazine 140 between the first and second channels 130a, 130b. A radial perimeter portion of the secondary shank 32b of the fastener 12a is slidably engaged to the support surface 158. As can be appreciated from
In this embodiment, the channel 230 is an elongated channel that extends a length of the magazine 240. With particular reference to
It will be appreciated that, with any magazine discussed herein, the hardened liner is positioned in both sides of the magazine in those embodiments in which it is used, even though only one side of the magazine is shown in such embodiments of
The various embodiments described above can be combined to provide further embodiments. Aspects of the embodiments can be modified, if necessary to employ concepts of the various patents, applications and publications to provide yet further embodiments.
These and other changes can be made to the embodiments in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all possible embodiments along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. Accordingly, the claims are not limited by the disclosure.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140331474 A1 | Nov 2014 | US |