The present invention relates generally to folding knives, and more specifically, to a folding knife with a removable blade. Folding knives are disclosed in a number of U.S. patents, including U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,145,202, 5,802,722, and 5,815,927, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference. Knives with removable blades are shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 1,706,251, 2,265,775, 3,851,986, 3,896,546, 4,408,394, 4,918,820, 5,979,065, 6,134,788, and 6,354,007, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference for all.
A knife is provided including a first side and a second side where the first side may be removably coupled to the second side. The knife further may include a blade removably secured to the handle and rotatable about a pivot point between an open position and a closed position. A manually-releasable fastening device disposed on the handle may be adapted to secure the first side to the second side and to secure the blade to the handle.
The advantages of the present invention will be understood more readily after a consideration of the drawings and the Detailed Description.
Referring to the drawings, and more specifically to
In the illustrated embodiment, blade 14 may include a tang 20 that may be pivotally connected to handle 12 at a pivot point 22. Blade 14 may be adapted to pivot about pivot point 22 between an open (fully-extended) position and a closed position as indicated by the arrow A. Although only an open fully-extended position and a closed position are illustrated, it should be appreciated that in some embodiments, the knife may be positioned in any number of various open and/or closed positions.
Blade 14 further may include a tang-protruding portion 24. Tang-protruding portion may protrude from handle 12 when the blade is in a closed position. Tang-protruding portion 24 may be adapted to aid a user in opening blade 14 from the closed position. For example, a user may push protruding portion 24 into the handle, thereby urging blade 14 out of handle 12 into the open position. Blade 14 also may include a thumb stud 26 located on one or both sides of blade 14. Thumb stud 26 may allow a user to apply a force to blade 14 further aiding in opening and/or closing of the blade. Such features may be useful in one-handed assisted-opening devices and are further described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,145,202 and 5,802,722, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference above.
It should be appreciated that the blade may be maintained in the open position by any suitable locking or retention mechanisms. For example, liner locks, sliding locks, spring locks, etc. may be used to retain the blade in a selected position. Additionally, the handle may include features which further operate to lock the blade in an open position. For example, handle 12 may have an indentation 28 adapted to receive thumb stud 26 of blade 14 when the blade is in the open position. Indentation 28 may act as a stop for blade 14 preventing the blade from being moved or rotated beyond the fully-extended open position. Thus, in the open position, thumb stud 26 is cradled within indentation 28 of handle 12.
A fastening device 30 disposed on the handle may be adapted to secure the first side piece to the second side piece and to secure the blade to the handle. Additionally, fastening device 30 may be adapted to simultaneously secure blade 14 to handle 12, and secure various handle components. For example, blade 14 may be removably secured to handle 12 by a manually-releasable fastening device 30. In some embodiments, including the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment shown in
A seat 36 for fastening device 30 may be substantially adjacent the receiving slot of the handle. For example, seat 36, also referred to as a seat, may substantially surround or extend along one or both sides of the handle slot 34. The seat may be a recessed portion within the handle, such that the surface of the seat is below the plane of the handle. Seat 36 may be adapted to receive a portion of fastening device 30. For example, knob 32 may be rotated onto seat 36 so as to secure blade 14 to handle 12.
As described in more detail below, handle 12 may further include a rear connector 40 located at a rear end 38 of handle 12, where rear end 38 is distal to pivot point 22. The rear connector may act to secure the components of the handle together. It should be noted that rear connector 40 may be capable of being selectively released to enable assembly/disassembly of handle 12.
Referring to
As briefly described above, first side piece 42 and second side piece 44 of handle 12 may be additionally connected by a rear connector 40 substantially disposed toward the rear end 38 of handle 12. Rear connector 40 is shown to be a pin connector but may also be a bolt, a screw, a rivet, or any fastening device, and may be adapted to be released manually. It should be appreciated that other connectors may function in a similar manner as rear connector 40.
In some embodiments, a liner 54 may be disposed adjacent one or both of the side pieces such that the liner is positioned adjacent hollow region 52. Liner 54 may include a displaceable portion 56 that may operate to lock blade 14 in an open position. The displaceable portion may be biased such that the displaceable portion may move into the path of blade 14 once blade 14 has moved to a substantially-open position. The displaceable portion thus operates as a liner lock. Closing blade 14 may include disengaging or otherwise moving displaceable portion 56 of liner 54 out of the path of blade 14. These features are further described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,145,202 and 5,802,722, which are incorporated by reference above.
As described briefly above, knife 10 may include a fastening device 30 adapted to secure the blade to the handle. Fastening device 30 may include a knob or other hand-operable portion which may be coupled with a retention pin or post 58. It should be appreciated that in the present embodiment, retention post 58 is adapted to releasably engage knob 32. In some embodiments, retention post 58 may be threaded such that knob 32 securely engages the post. For example, in
In some embodiments, blade 14 may pivot about retention post 58 between an open and a closed position. Retention post 58 may further function to couple handle side pieces 42 and 44 together. For example, retention post 58 may extend through holes/slots in each of the handle pieces, the liner, and the blade. Specifically, blade 14 may include an inlet 59, which includes a blade slot 60 and a receptacle 62. Inlet 59 is adapted to engage at least a portion of fastening device 30. Specifically, blade 14 may engage retention post 58 via blade slot 60 in the tang of the blade. Blade slot 60 may terminate in a receptacle 62 which may be adapted to be seated around retention post 58 as described in more detail below.
The release of knob 32 results in the disengagement of the knob from seat 36 on the side piece of the handle. Detachment of the knob from the seat enables first side 42 of the handle to be rotated or pivoted away from the fastening device, thus disengaging first side 42 from retention post 58 of fastening device 30. Specifically, handle slot 34 is adapted to slide off or away from retention post 58. Because seat 36 is recessed relative to the plane of the handle side piece, the handle is able to smoothly rotate under knob 32 away from fastening device 30. Rotation of handle side 42 away from handle side 44 is illustrated by arrow S in
After rotation of handle side 42 from handle side 44, the blade may be disengaged from the fastening device. As described in more detail in relationship to
Referring to
Removal of blade 14 from retention post 58 may include moving blade 14 upward in direction of arrow U and onto the comparatively narrower neck 70 of retention post 58. Although blade slot 60 is too narrow to allow base 68 to pass through, blade slot 60 may be sized such that neck 70 may pass through. Thus, upward movement of blade 14 aligns slot 60 with neck 70 such that the blade may be slid off of neck 70 and removed from retention post 58.
It should be noted that in some embodiments, the handle side pieces 42, 44 may be assembled/disassembled manually. For example, and as discussed above, the side pieces of the handle may be coupled via a rear connector 40. Referring back to
Assembly of the knife generally follows the reverse of the disassembly method described above. For example, assembly of the knife may include aligning the two handle pieces in the rotated position shown in
The blade may be attached to the handle by positioning the blade slot 60 over the neck 70 of retention post 58. Receptacle 62 of blade 14 may be seated onto the base 68 of retention post 58. Upon rotation of the two handle pieces into parallel alignment (such as shown in
Although the invention has been disclosed in its preferred forms, the specific embodiments thereof as disclosed and illustrated herein are not to be considered in a limiting sense, because numerous variations are possible. The subject matter of the invention includes all novel and non-obvious combinations and subcombinations of the various elements, features, functions, and/or properties disclosed herein. No single feature, function, element or property of the disclosed embodiments is essential. The following claims define certain combinations and subcombinations of features, functions, elements, and/or properties that are regarded as novel and nonobvious. Other combinations and subcombinations may be claimed through amendment of the present claims or presentation of new claims in this or a related application. Such claims, whether they are broader, narrower, equal, or different in scope to any earlier claims, also are regarded as included within the subject matter of the invention.
This application claims priority to U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 60/399,772, filed Jul. 30, 2002 for a POCKET KNIFE WITH REMOVABLE BLADE, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040139613 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60399772 | Jul 2002 | US |