The present invention pertains generally to hand tools, and more particularly to hand tools that are operated using one hand.
Hand tools having two pivotally connected handles for moving jaws that a user operates with one hand are well known in the art. The basic tool has three parts: a unitary first member having a first handle on one end and a first jaw on the other, a unitary second member having a second handle on one end and a second jaw on the other, and an axle pivotally connecting the two together. Scissors and sheet metal snips are examples of such hand tools operated by one hand.
In many applications, the mechanical advantage offered by the simple leverage of three part hand tools is insufficient making it difficult or impossible to achieve the desired result with one hand. For example, cutting, crimping, and seaming sheet metal with a three part hand snipper, crimper, or seamer can require more hand pressure than the user can deliver, particularly when the cutting, crimping, or seaming must be performed over a protracted period of time.
One solution is to provide a compound lever action tool.
In the embodiment shown, first jaw member J1 and second jaw member J2 are shaped and dimensioned so that they combine to form a seamer, which is used to press material between the flat plates of first jaw member J1 and second jaw member J2. However, it may be appreciated that hand tools designed for other purposes such as cutting and crimping can also have the same compound leverage structural arrangement of pivots and levers. One such hand tool is the bolt cutter shown in U.S. Pat. No. 484,670 to H. K. Porter. It is noted in this tool that pivot P1 actually comprises two spread-apart pivots, yet the fundamental principle of the invention is the same as hand tool 500. It is further noted that hand tool 500 is designed to be used by one hand, whereas the tool of U.S. Pat. No. 484,670 is designed to be used by two hands.
Additional mechanical advantage can be achieved by adding an additional set of levers to provide the tool with double compound leverage. U.S. Pat. No. 1,348,735 also by H. K. Porter is an example of such a tool. The handles pivot together to provide leverage. The jaws pivot together to compound the leverage provided by the handles. Intermediate links pivot together to doubly compound the leverage provided by the handles. This tool is designed to be used by two hands.
Snippers, crimpers, and seamers having only simple leverage for use by one hand may be satisfactory for work on sheet metal and other applications where the material is very thin and the work to be done does not extend over a long period of time. Snippers, crimpers, and seamers having compound leverage for use by one hand such as tool 500 above may be satisfactory for work on sheet metal and other applications where the material is somewhat thicker. But there are other situations where snippers, crimpers, and seamers having double compound leverage for use by one hand would be advantageous both to work thicker materials and perform the work over longer periods of time and these are not available.
The present invention is directed to a hand tool that has an increased mechanical advantage. The hand tool of the present invention includes additional pivots and lever arms that increase the mechanical advantage of the hand tool, and make the tool easier to operate with one hand. This is accomplished by adding center members between the jaw members and handle members to doubly compound the leverage provided by the handles on the jaws.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, a hand tool includes first and second jaw members that are pivotally connected to first and second center members that in turn are pivotally connected to first and second handle members. In all the hand tool of the present invention includes six members that are connected at seven pivot points. This is in contrast to prior art tools for use by one hand that have four members connected at four pivot points. The jaws of the present invention can be adapted to perform a variety of tasks such as cutting, seaming, or crimping sheet metal, cutting vegetation, and other uses.
In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, the overall length of the tool is decreased by placing the pivot for the handles between the pivot for the first and second center members and the pivots connecting the center members to the handles.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, the pivots for each of the center members are outside of the pivot between the center members.
Other aspects of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, which illustrate, by way of example, the principles of the invention.
Hand tool 500 also has first handle member H1 and second handle member H2. An intermediate portion of first handle member H1 is pivotally connected to the opposite end of center member C1 at P5, and an intermediate portion of second handle member H2 is pivotally connected to the opposite end of second center member C2 at P6. The end portions of first handle member H1 and second handle member H2 are pivotally connected together at pivot P7. It is noted that pivot P7 is disposed above pivots P5 and P6.
The preferred embodiments of the invention described herein are exemplary and numerous modifications, variations, dimensional variations, and rearrangements can be readily envisioned to achieve an equivalent result, all of which are intended to be embraced within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
832804 | Oneal | Oct 1906 | A |
1586297 | Du Bios | May 1926 | A |
2765688 | Evans | Oct 1956 | A |
2992576 | Evans et al. | Jul 1961 | A |
5307565 | Erbrick et al. | May 1994 | A |
6408725 | Janson | Jun 2002 | B1 |