In the construction and industrial industries, people are familiar with powder actuated setting tools. These are tools designed to forcefully expel a fastener into a workpiece by using an explosive powder charge to accelerate a piston which ultimately expels the fastener through physical contact therewith. In general, the tools resemble guns, having a barrel, housing, trigger, firing mechanism, charge and load (fastener). Such tools have been in existence for some time and are well disclosed in the patent literature. As powder actuated tools utilize a firing pin to ignite the powder charge, it is necessary to cycle the firing pin to a position where it is ready to fire. This has been done in the prior art by forcing a pin or a carrier for the pin into a ready to fire position against the action of a pair of coil springs. The linear compression force required to overcome the two coil springs, while certainly possible, and indeed operable, is relatively high. Such property causes the operator of the setting tool to need to bear down on the tool with considerably more force than might be desirable to place the setting tool in a position to dispense a fastener to the workpiece.
As will be appreciated by readers hereof, rapid completion of tasks is key in most endeavors whether they be private matters or commercial matters. High compression requirements as discussed above effectively slow the effort from both the time to compression standpoint and the operator fatigue standpoint. It is therefore understandable that high compression requirements to use a setting tool are not desirable as they negatively impact production. Since production must stay high, setting tools having lower compression requirements would be of benefit to the art.
Disclosed herein is a powder actuated setting tool including a housing, a barrel in operable communication with the housing, a trigger mechanism at the housing and a rotary firing pin resetting mechanism in operable communication with the trigger mechanism.
Further disclosed herein is a method for resetting a firing pin in a powder actuated setting tool including imparting a torsional spring force to a firing pin resetting mechanism, extending a barrel of the setting tool to remove an impediment to rotational movement of the firing pin, and rotating the firing pin in response to the torsional spring force.
Referring now to the drawings wherein like elements are numbered alike in the several Figures:
a–3d are a series of views of the assembled firing pin reset mechanism illustrated in sequential positions.
Referring to
Referring to
Rotator 50 further includes a land receptor 56 sized to receive land 46 when the firing mechanism is in the ready to fire position. Receptor 56 is illustrated as one embodiment but it is important to note that the only surface of receptor 56 that is necessary to operation of the firing mechanism is surface 58 for it is surface 58 that causes the rotational movement of land 46 which allows the firing pin 34 to be accelerated toward a powder charge. Rotator 50 also includes a trigger lever recess 60, making rotator 50 responsive to trigger 62 of the setting tool. The trigger lever 68 causes trigger action to interact with rotator 50 and thereby release firing pin 34 by pushing land 46 off of finger 28 pin 34 is propelled forwardly to strike the powder charge.
When assembled, guide 32 anchors one end 70 of a torsion spring 72 at anchor 74. The other end 76 of torsion spring 72 is anchored at rotator 50 at anchor 78. Torsion spring 72 acts to return rotator 50 and thus firing pin 34 to a “ready to set” position after firing of the setting tool by urging rotator 50 rotationally to a settable position. Torsion spring 72 is covered by disk 80 which also acts as a base for firing spring 90. In one embodiment disk 80 includes shoulder 82 sized to receive spring 90 thereon. Pin pullback 42 extends slidably through disk 80 and a pullback spring 84 to engage a nut 86 on thread 44. The pullback spring 84 operates to pullback the firing pin 34 slightly to remove contact between the impact pin 36 and a charge.
Finger 28 has been introduced above but not in context. Still referring to
Operation of the firing mechanism is interrelated with compressive action on the tool causing barrel 18 to cycle into barrel guide 12. As noted above, this occurs when the tool is in use by compressing the tool against a workpiece. Since finger 28 is fixedly connected to barrel 18, finger 28 moves with barrel 18.
With the information from the preceding paragraph, reference is made to
Moving to
Referring to
Rotator 50 remains in the position of
This arrangement as disclosed eliminates a coil spring that was required in the prior art and by doing so reduces overall compressive force needed to set the tool.
While one embodiment has been shown and described, modifications and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the present invention has been described by way of illustration and not limitation.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2719300 | Walker | Oct 1955 | A |
2869127 | Williams | Jan 1959 | A |
3786977 | Shamaly | Jan 1974 | A |
4077556 | Büchel | Mar 1978 | A |
5114064 | Jochum et al. | May 1992 | A |
5135151 | Logan | Aug 1992 | A |
5170922 | Ehmig et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
6364190 | Tor | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 309 204 | Mar 1989 | EP |
1 120 201 | Aug 2001 | EP |
2 140 341 | Nov 1984 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060027087 A1 | Feb 2006 | US |