Hand tool with multiple locking blades controlled by a single locking mechanism and release

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6802094
  • Patent Number
    6,802,094
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, December 3, 2002
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, October 12, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
A hand tool such as a knife or a combination tool includes multiple blades, each independently rotatable on a common axle between a closed position within a handle of the tool and an open position extending from the handle. Each blade is positively but releasably locked into its open position. Those blades which remain closed are biased toward the closed position when the opened blade is locked into position and also as it is opened and closed. A single locking, releasing, and biasing mechanism serves all of the blades in one handle.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to hand tools with foldout blades, and, more particularly, to such hand tools with multiple foldout locking blades.




Hand tools with multiple deployable blades have long been known and used in the home, in the workplace, and in sporting applications. A folding pocket knife having two blades is an example. The blades are carried inside a handle for storage, and are selectively opened, one at a time, when required to perform specific functions.




Pocket-knife-like devices, such as those produced by Wenger and Victorinox and commonly called “Swiss Army” knives, use this same principle extended to a plurality of tools carried within the body of the knife on axles located at either end of the knife. Such implements typically incorporate a variety of types of blade-type tools, such as one or more sharpened blades, a screwdriver, an awl, a file, a bottle opener, a magnifying glass, etc. Generally, Swiss Army knives are designed to be sufficiently small and light for carrying in a pocket and are therefore limited as to the strength and robustness of their structure.




In recent years, devices known generically as “combination tools” have been developed and widely marketed. A combination tool is built around a jaw mechanism such as a full-size pliers head. The pliers head has handles fixed thereto. To make the combination tool compact yet capable of use in situations requiring the application of large forces, the handles are made deployable. To make the combination tool more useful, a number of blade tools, generally of the type found in the Swiss Army knife, are received in a folding manner within the handles themselves.




One useful feature of some conventional folding knives is the ability to positively lock the blade in the open position to prevent an unintentional closure during service that could cut the hand of the user. Lockbacks, sidelocks, axle locks, and other types of locks are known in the art. Another useful feature is the biasing of the blade toward its closed position from angular orientations close to the closed position. Such a biasing acts as a detent to prevent the blade from unintentionally folding open when carried or when another blade is already open and in use. The blade may also be biased toward its open position from angular orientations close to the open position. In either case, the biasing effect gives a secure feel to the closing and opening of the blades. Cam, backspring, ball detent, and other types of biasing structures are known in the art.




Positive locks used in conjunction with biasing structures are desirable features of knives, but they have not been successfully utilized in knives having multiple blades rotating in the same direction on a common axle. (When the term “blade” or “blade tool” is used herein in reference to deployable tools received into the handle of the combination tool, knife, or other type of tool, it refers to any relatively thin tool that is folded into the handle, regardless of the utilization of the tool. Such a “blade” therefore includes, but is not limited to, a sharpened knife blade, a serrated blade, a screwdriver, an awl, a bottle opener, a can opener, a saw, a file, etc.) Existing approaches have internal structures that require too much space when adapted for use on several side-by-side blades, or the locking release controls take up too much space or are inconvenient. For example, a typical combination tool has four or more blades folding from a common axle in each handle, where the width of the handle—the required envelope size within which the entire structure must fit—is on the order of about 1 inch or less. The sides of the handle, the blades, and any locking and biasing mechanism must fit within that width, and the externally accessible lock releasing structure must also fit on the outside of the handle within that width. If the width of the handle of the hand tool is increased significantly above about 1 inch, the combination tool will no longer be comfortable in the hand. There have been some attempts to provide a positive lock for the blades of a combination tool, but they have been highly inconvenient to use in practice.




There is a need for an approach to locking and biasing multiple, side-by-side blades of combination tools, knives, and other types of hand tools where the blades pivot on a common axis. The present invention fulfills this need, and further provides related advantages.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention provides a hand tool wherein multiple blades pivot on a single axle. The blades are each positively locked into their open positions by a single strong locking mechanism. The blades are also biased toward their closed positions and their open positions. When one blade is opened, the others stay in their closed positions. The opened blade is positively locked and later unlocked without moving the other blades from their closed positions. The locking and biasing mechanism fits within the envelope size required for a hand tool, and has been demonstrated operable for four blades within a space of less than 1 inch width.




In accordance with the invention, a hand tool comprises a tool body having a pair of oppositely disposed sides, an axle extending transversely between the sides of the body at one end of the tool body, and at least two blades supported on the axle. Each blade includes a blade base having a peripheral surface and an implement extending outwardly from the blade base, and further has a bore through the blade base with the axle extending through the bore so that the blade base and thence the blade is rotatable on the axle between a closed position wherein the blade is contained within the tool body and an open position wherein the blade extends from the tool body. There is a notch in the peripheral surface of the blade base. A single rocker is supported on the tool body and has a locking finger extending therefrom. The locking finger is dimensioned and positioned to engage the notch of each blade base when the blade is in the open position. A biasing spring reacts against the single rocker in a direction so as to force the locking finger against the peripheral surface of the blade base.




There is, additionally, means for biasing one of the blades toward the open position while biasing all others of the blades toward the closed position. This biasing means preferably takes the form of a first cam surface on the peripheral surface of each blade base at a location adjacent to the notch, having a first cam maximum surface height and a first cam maximum surface height angular position, and a second cam surface on the peripheral surface of the blade base at a location remote from the notch, having a second cam surface height less than the first cam surface height and a second cam maximum surface height angular position located about 110 to about 120 degrees from the first cam maximum surface height angular position. The first cam maximum surface height is preferably slightly smaller than the second cam maximum surface height.




Thus, the invention provides a locking/biasing mechanism that positively locks any one of the blades into its open position while biasing the remaining blades toward their closed positions. The locking mechanism has a single release that releases the blade that is locked into the open position. As the selected blade is opened or closed against its biasing force, the other blades remain in their closed positions under the influence of their biasing forces. Subsequently, a different blade may be selected for opening, with the same results and performance.




Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following more detailed description of the preferred embodiment, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, which illustrate, by way of example, the principles of the invention. The scope of the invention is not, however, limited to this preferred embodiment.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is an elevational view of a combination hand tool with multiple blades in one handle and one of the blades opened;





FIG. 2

is a perspective view of the handle of the combination tool of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

is another perspective view of the handle of the combination tool of

FIG. 1

, with the handle inverted from the view of

FIG. 2

;





FIG. 4

is an schematic end view of the handle of the combination tool of

FIG. 1

, with the separations between elements exaggerated for clarity;





FIG. 5

is a schematic sectional view of the handle of the combination tool of

FIG. 1

, taken along lines


5





5


of

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 6

is an elevational view of the blade base;





FIG. 7

is a perspective view of the rocker and biasing spring;





FIG. 8

are a series of schematic elevational views of the operation of the locking and biasing mechanism as a blade is operated, wherein

FIG. 8A

shows the blade in the fully open and positively locked position,

FIG. 8B

shows the blade after manual unlocking but while biased toward the open position,

FIG. 8C

shows the blade at an intermediate biased toward the closed position,

FIG. 8D

shows the blade approaching the closed position, and

FIG. 8E

shows the blade in the closed position;





FIG. 9

is a schematic elevational view of the operation of the locking and biasing mechanism, with two blades, one open and positively locked and the other closed;





FIG. 10

is a schematic elevational view of the operation of the locking and biasing mechanism, with two blades, one in an intermediate position and the other closed;





FIG. 11

is a schematic view of a knife using the approach of the invention;





FIG. 12A

illustrates in an end-on elevational view a conventional Phillips screwdriver head;





FIG. 12B

illustrates in an end-on elevational view a modified Phillips screwdriver head;





FIG. 13A

illustrates in elevational view a modified blade tool having a stop recess;





FIG. 13B

illustrates in elevational view the shape of the blade tool in the absence of the stop recess; and





FIGS. 14A-D

illustrate a pliers head serrated grip operable for gripping a wide variety of bolt head sizes, wherein

FIG. 14A

illustrates the gripping of a 1-inch bolt head,

FIG. 14B

illustrates the gripping of a ¾-inch bolt head,

FIG. 14C

illustrates the gripping of a ½-inch bolt head, and

FIG. 14D

illustrates the gripping of a ¼-inch bolt head.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION





FIG. 1

illustrates a hand tool in the form of a combination tool


20


including a jaw mechanism


22


with two jaws


24


pivotably connected by a jaw pivot


26


. Two handles


28


are deployably connected to the jaws


24


by handle pivot pins


30


. The handles


28


are channel sections. In the view of

FIG. 1

, one of the handles


28




a


is in a deployed position and the other of the handles


28




b


is in a nested position. A number of different combination tools of various configurations are known, see, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,238,862; 4,744,272; 5,142,721; 5,212,844; 5,267,366; and 5,062,173, whose disclosures are incorporated by reference, and several types are available commercially.




In the combination tool


20


, those described in the referenced patents, and those available commercially, it is common practice to affix a plurality of blade tools


32


in each of the handles


28


to increase the utility of the combination tool. The blade tools


32


are pivotably connected by a tool pivot axle


34


to the handles


28


at the ends remote from the pivot pins


30


. Each of the blade tools


32


can be closed to lie within the channel sections of the handles


28


or opened to extend from the handle


28


to perform their function or positioned at an intermediate position, as shown in the three positional indications in FIG.


1


. When the term “blade” or “blade tool” is used herein in reference to deployable tools received into the handle of the combination tool or other type of tool, it refers to any relatively thin tool that is folded into the handle, regardless of the utilization of the tool. Such a “blade” therefore includes, but is not limited to, a sharpened knife blade, a serrated blade, a screwdriver, an awl, a bottle opener, a can opener, a saw, a file, etc. This terminology is used to distinguish the tool folded into the handle from the overall hand tool, in this case of the combination tool


20


.




The combination tool


20


has at least two, and more typically 3-4 or more, of the blade tools


32


arranged on the axle


34


of each handle


28


, as seen in

FIG. 2

for the case of four blade tools


32




a


,


32




b


,


32




c


, and


32




d


, all of which open in the same rotational direction.

FIG. 2

also shows the channel-shaped section of the handle


28


, having two sides


36




a


and


36




b


and a web


38


connecting the two sides


36




a


and


36




b


. The tool pivot axle


34


extends between the two sides


36




a


and


36




b.






In the preferred approach, one of the sides


36




a


has a cut-down region


40


to permit easy manual access to the blade tools


32


when they are to be opened. (The cut-down region


40


is generally configured to follow the profile of one of the jaws


24


so that the jaw mechanism


22


can be nested between and within the handles


28




a


,


28




b


when the combination tool


20


is nested for storage.) The blade tools


32


are arranged so that the longest of the blades


32




d


is adjacent to the side


36




b


which is not cut down, and the shortest of the blades


32




a


is adjacent to the side


36




a


having the cut-down region


40


.




Two convenience features are provided on the combination tool to aid in the locating and opening of the selected blade tool


32


, as illustrated in FIG.


2


. Experience with Swiss Army knives and commercial combination tools has shown that the identifying and opening the desired one of the blade tools can be difficult, particularly under adverse conditions of darkness, wet surfaces, etc.




To aid in locating a specific blade tool of interest, icons


98


are positioned on the externally facing surfaces of the sides


36


of the handles


28


. The icons


98


are standardized pictorial identifiers of the types of blade tools in the handle and their order of positioning in the handle. As an example shown in

FIG. 2

, an icon


98




a


in the form of a “+” sign identifies a conventional four-armed Phillips head screwdriver, an icon


98




b


in the form of a “−” identifies a flat blade screwdriver, an icon


98




c


in the form of a blade identifies a sharpened blade, and an icon


98




d


in the form of a blade with serrations identifies a serrated blade. Larger icons are used to identify larger tools, such as larger screwdrivers. With some familiarizing practice, the user of the combination tool quickly becomes adept at locating a desired blade tool by either sight or finger touch.




To aid in the opening of the selected blade tool


32


, at least some of the blade tools include an integral lifting lever


100


extending upwardly from the implement so as to be accessible from the open side of the channel-shaped section and also from the cut-down side


36




a


. The lifting levers


100


are graduated in length so that the lifting lever


100




a


closest to the cut-down side


36




a


is short, and the lifting levers


100




b


and


100




c


further from the cut-down side are progressively longer. The lifting levers


100


aid the user of the combination tool in readily opening the selected blade tool against the biasing force that tends to hold the selected blade tool in its closed position. As illustrated in

FIG. 2

, the longest of the blade tools


32




d


can often be made without a lifting lever, because it may be readily grasped without any such lever.





FIG. 3

illustrates the handle


28


in a view inverted from that of

FIG. 2

, and with one of the blade tools


32




d


opened by rotating it on the pivot axle


34


. In normal use, only one of the blade tools


32


is opened at a time, with the others remaining closed and within the handle


28


. If the generally flat blade tools


32


were positioned too closely adjacent to each other in a touching contact, as is the case in some commercially available combination tools, the friction between the touching surfaces of adjacent blade tools would tend to cause a blade tool to be unintentionally dragged open as one of the other blade tools was intentionally opened. In the present approach, illustrated in

FIG. 4

, a washer


42


is placed between each pair of blade tools


32


and between the last blade tool on the axle and the interior of the side


36


of the handle


28


. (In

FIG. 4

, the spacings between the blade tools


32


, into which the washers


42


are received, are exaggerated as a viewing aid.) Because the width dimension W of the handle


28


is typically small, on the order of about ½ inch, conventional thick metal washers are preferably not used. Instead, the washer


42


is preferably made of a polymeric material, most preferably polypropylene, polyethylene, or polytetrafluoroethylene (teflon), about 0.010 thick. Such washers can be prepared economically by a cutting or stamping process on a sheet of teflon adhered to a substrate carrier with a pressure-sensitive adhesive, to produce annular washer shapes. The individual washers are peeled off the substrate carrier and affixed to the opposite sides of the blade tools


32


overlying a bore


44


through which the tool pivot axle


34


passes. The washer may also be obtained as a separate article and assembled with the blade tools


32


and the axle. In another approach, the washer may be formed as a raised annular area of the blade tool surrounding the bore


44


.





FIG. 5

shows a preferred form of the locking and biasing mechanism. The blade tool


32


includes a blade base


46


and an implement


48


extending outwardly from the blade base


46


. The implement may be any generally flat, operable type of implement such as a sharpened knife blade (as illustrated), a serrated blade, a screwdriver, an awl, a bottle opener, a can opener, a saw, a file, etc. The implement


48


is preferably integral with the blade base


46


, although it can be made detachable.




The blade base


46


, shown in greater detail in

FIG. 6

, is generally flat and thin. on the order of about 0.05 to about 0.20 inches thick, and includes the bore


44


extending therethrough and the washer


42


around the bore. (The blade bases of the various blade tools need not be of the same thicknesses.) The tool pivot axle


34


extends through the bore


44


. The blade base


46


is laterally bounded generally on three sides by a peripheral surface


50


, and contiguous with the implement


48


on the fourth side. The peripheral surface


50


includes a generally straight-sided, flat-bottomed notch


52


. Immediately adjacent to the notch


52


, on the side remote from the implement


48


, is a first cam surface


54


. More remote from the notch


52


is a second cam surface


56


. The first cam surface


54


is characterized by a first cam maximum surface height measured as a maximum distance to the peripheral surface


50


along a radius from the center of the bore


44


of C1 and passing through the first cam surface


54


. The second cam surface


56


is characterized by a second cam maximum surface height measured as a maximum distance to the peripheral surface


50


along a radius from the center of the bore


44


of C2. In the preferred approach, C2 is greater than C1, preferably by about 0.005 inches in a typical case. In a prototype combination tool prepared by the inventors, C1 is about 0.220 inches and C2 is about 0.225 inches. The height of the peripheral surface is reduced between the first cam surface


54


and the second cam surface


56


. In a preferred embodiment, the first cam maximum surface height of the first cam surface


54


is positioned about 6 degrees away from the adjacent edge of the notch


52


. The second cam maximum surface height of the second cam surface


56


is positioned about 118.5 degrees from the first cam maximum surface height.




Referring to

FIG. 5

, a single rocker


58


is a planar piece of spring steel lying generally parallel to the long axis of the handle


28


. The rocker


58


is pivotably supported on a rocker axle


60


that extends between the sides


36




a


and


36




b


. Only one rocker


58


is provided for two or more blade tools


32


. At a first end of the rocker


58


a locking finger


62


extends from one face of the rocker


58


toward the blade base


46


. The locking finger


62


is positioned and dimensioned to contact the peripheral surface


50


. The locking finger


62


has a straight-sided, flat-topped configuration that is received into the notch


52


in a locking engagement, when the locking finger


62


and the notch


52


are placed into a facing relationship with the locking finger


62


biased toward the notch


52


. The rocker


58


is biased so that the locking finger


62


is forced toward the peripheral surface


50


by a spring. The spring may be of any form, but, as seen in

FIG. 7

, it is preferably a leaf


64


formed by slitting the rocker


58


parallel to its sides and one end, and bending the leaf portion within the slits away from the plane of the rocker


58


. The rocker


58


is assembled with the leaf


64


contacting the web


38


portion of the handle


28


. The leaf


64


is compressed when the rocker axle


60


is assembled into place, so that the rocker


58


and thence the locking finger


62


is biased toward the peripheral surface


50


of the blade base


46


. Equivalently, the spring that biases the rocker may be a leaf extending from the web


38


as an integral element or an attachment to the web, or a cantilevered spring extending from the handle.




At the end of the rocker


58


remote from the locking finger


62


, and on the opposite side of the rocker


58


, is a pad


66


. A window


68


is formed through the web


38


of the handle


28


, and the pad


66


faces the window


68


(see also FIG.


3


). The blade tool


32


is positively locked into position against motion in either rotational direction when the blade tool


32


is fully opened to the position shown in

FIG. 5

, and the locking finger


62


engages the notch


52


. The locking finger


62


is lifted out of the notch


52


by manually pressing inwardly on the pad


66


, to achieving unlocking of the blade tool


32


. All of the blade tools


32


have a structure of the type described above, but there is a single locking finger


62


that achieves the locking of all of the blade tools


32


.




Additionally, as can best be seen in

FIG. 6

, there is desirably a shoulder


70


on the implement


48


that is in facing relation to a rounded end


72


of the web


38


. This engagement of the shoulder


70


to the end


72


provides an additional interference restraint of the blade tool


32


that resists rotation of the implement


48


in the clockwise direction of

FIGS. 5 and 6

. This additional restraint is particularly valuable where the implement


48


is of a type where it is forced in the clockwise direction during service, such as a blade having a sharpened edge


74


that is forced downwardly during cutting operations. The blade tool is preferably dimensioned so that there is a gap of about 0.005 inches between the shoulder


70


and the end


72


of the web


38


when no load is applied to the blade tool. When a sufficient load is applied to produce a 0.005 inch deflection, the shoulder


70


contacts the end


72


to stop any further movement.





FIGS. 8

depict the operation of the locking/biasing mechanism in a series of views as a single blade tool


32


is moved from the open and positively locked position (

FIG. 8A

) to the closed and biased closed position (FIG.


8


E). In

FIG. 8A

, the blade tool


32


is open, and the locking finger


62


is received into the notch


52


, forming a positive lock of the blade tool


32


into the open position. The notch


52


and the locking finger


62


are cooperatively dimensioned so that the locking finger


62


rests against the sides of the notch along a locking distance


102




a


and


102




b


of about 0.030 to about 0.060 inches, most preferably about 0.040 inches, and does not bottom out in the notch. If the locking distance is significantly greater than about 0.060 inches, the blade tool will not lock securely. If the locking distance is significantly less than about 0.030 inches, the locking finger


62


may pop out of the notch


52


to unintentionally release the lock under moderate applied loads.




In

FIG. 8B

, the pad


66


has been depressed to lift the locking finger


62


out of the notch


52


(as previously described in relation to

FIGS. 3

,


5


, and


6


), and the user of the tool has manually rotated the blade in a counterclockwise direction by about 10 degrees. The blade tool


32


remains biased toward the open position, because the locking finger


62


rests against the sloping cam surface


54




a


that slopes back toward the notch


52


.




After only a slight additional rotation of the blade tool


32


in the counterclockwise direction,

FIG. 8C

, the locking finger


62


has passed the first cam maximum surface height location


54




b


and is contacting the portion of the first cam surface


54




c


that slopes away from the notch


52


. If the blade tool


32


is released at this point, it tends to move toward the closed position rather than the open position.




Further counterclockwise rotation of the blade tool


32


brings the locking finger


62


into contact with the second cam surface


56


, FIG.


8


D. An additional counterclockwise rotation of the blade tool


32


brings the locking finger


62


into contact with the portion


56




a


of the second cam surface


56


that slopes toward the closed position and thereby biases the blade


32


toward the closed position, FIG.


8


E. The blade


32


is thereby forced toward the closed position and retained there. To move the blade


32


away from the closed position of FIG.


8


E and back toward the orientation of

FIG. 8D

requires that the user manually overcome the bias force resulting from the reaction of the rocker


58


and its locking finger


62


against the cam surface


56




a.






A comparison of the effects on the blade tool


32


of the reaction between the locking finger


62


and the peripheral surface of the blade base


46


in

FIGS. 8A and 8E

illustrates the difference between “positive locking” of the blade tool and “biasing” of the blade tool. In

FIG. 8A

, the reception of the locking finger


62


into the notch


52


provides a positive lock from which the blade tool


32


cannot be moved by the application of any ordinary manual force to the blade tool


32


. Intentional release of the positive lock by manually pressing the pad


66


is required in order to move the blade tool


32


from its positively locked position. On the other hand, the biasing of the blade tool


32


toward a position, illustrated for the biasing toward the closed position in

FIG. 8E

, is produced in the preferred embodiment by a cam action which can be readily overcome with ordinary manual force on the blade tool. This distinction between positive locking and biasing is important. Biasing is readily achieved for blade tools


32


in a confined space, but positive locking is difficult to achieve in a confined space such as that available in a typical combination tool wherein 3-4 or more blade tools are supported in a narrowly confined space in each handle. For example, the multiple blade tools of Swiss Army knives are typically biased toward both the open and closed positions, but they are not typically provided with a positive lock in the open position.




An important feature of the present approach is that the blade tool selected for opening and use is positively locked into the open position, while the remaining blade tools that have not been selected remain biased toward their closed position. The origin of this feature is illustrated in

FIG. 9

, which superimposes views of an open and positively locked blade tool


32


and a closed and biased closed blade tool


32


′. At the same time that the locking finger


62


is received into the notch


52


of the positively locked blade tool


32


, the locking finger


62


rests against the slope


56





a


of the second cam surface


56


′ of the biased closed blade tool


32


′. The locking finger


62


both positively locks the blade tool


32


open and biases the blade tool


32


′ closed. The same bias-closed effect is operable for all of the blade tools which are not open and in use. In a typical case wherein there are four blade tools such as shown in

FIGS. 2-4

, there is a single blade tool


32


which is open and positively locked and three blade tools


32


′ which are biased closed.




A further important feature is that the blade tool


32


′ remains biased toward the closed position as the blade tool


32


is opened and closed. As shown in

FIG. 10

, at an intermediate stage of rotation of the blade tool


32


between its closed and open positions, the locking finger


62


continues to rest against the slope


56





a


of the second cam surface


56


′ of the closed blade tools


32


′, biasing them toward the closed position. The closed blade tools


32


′ therefore do not unintentionally open as the intentionally opened blade tool


32


is rotated. With this camming approach, there is an unavoidable small range of the rotation of the blade tool


32


(as the locking finger


62


passes over the top of the second cam


56


) where the locking finger


62


is raised off the slope


56





a


to release the biasing of the blade tools


32


′ toward the closed position. This small range of release of biasing is not noticeable to most users of the combination tool as they close or open the blade tool


32


in a smooth motion, and for most orientations of the tool.




Most of the discussion of the rotation of the blade tools in relation to

FIGS. 8-10

has been in regard to the closing of the previously opened blade tool


32


. The present approach provides an important advantage when the selected blade tool


32


is being opened as well. If

FIG. 10

is viewed as one moment during the opening of the selected blade tool


32


(i.e., clockwise rotation of the blade tool


32


), the biasing force of the locking finger


62


on the cam surfaces


56


′ tends to retain the other blade tools


32


′ in the closed position. Tests with prototype combination tools have shown that the cooperation of this biasing action on the blade tools


32


′ and the use of the washers


42


to reduce the frictional forces between the blade tool


32


that is being manually rotated and the blade tools


32


′ which are to remain closed causes the blade tools


32


′ to either remain in the fully closed position or to rotate back to the fully closed position after a small rotation away from the fully closed position. Thus, the user of the tool is afforded the convenience of opening, positively locking, later manually unlocking, and closing any of the selected blade tools while the others of the blade tools are automatically retained in the closed position.




The locking/biasing mechanism has been discussed in relation to the blade tools of the combination tool


20


, but it is equally applicable to other hand tools which have openable blade tools.

FIG. 11

depicts a knife


80


having two blade tools


82


, a blade tool


82




a


illustrated in the open and positively locked position and a blade tool


82




b


illustrated in the closed and biased closed position. The knife


80


has a tool body


84


and a locking/biasing mechanism for the two blade tools


82


that is within the tool body and is the same as that discussed previously. The locking/biasing mechanism is not visible in

FIG. 10

except for an unlocking pad


86


visible through a window


88


, which are analogous to the pad


66


and window


68


discussed previously. In the knife and the combination tool and other embodiments, the locking/biasing mechanism need not control all of the blade tools that open from a handle—only two or more. Thus, there could be two locking/biasing mechanisms in a single handle, each controlling two blade tools, and there would be two unlocking pads.




As discussed previously, size constraints are important considerations in the design of a combination tool. Two modifications in the design of specific implements and one modification in the design of the pliers jaw mechanism have been developed to achieve a desired performance or even improved performance in a reduced available space.




In the first modification, illustrated in

FIGS. 12A and 12B

, the design of a Phillips screwdriver head


200


is modified. A conventional Phillips screwdriver head


200


of

FIG. 12A

has four arms


202


to engage the corresponding recesses in the head of a Phillips screw. In building a prototype combination tool, it was found that such a large Phillips screwdriver could not be readily accommodated within the available space envelope along with the nested pliers head and the other blade tools. As an alternative, a modified Phillips screwdriver head


204


of

FIG. 12B

was prepared having only three arms


206


. Tests of the three-armed modified Phillips screwdriver head


204


showed that its performance is comparable with that of the standard four-armed Phillips screwdriver head


200


in most instances. In some cases, as where the recesses in the head of the Phillips screw have been deformed or damaged, the performance of the modified three-armed Phillips screwdriver head


204


may be superior to that of the conventional Phillips screwdriver head


200


.




In the second modification illustrated in

FIG. 13A

, the shape of the blade of the blade tool


32


is provided with a stop recess


210


for the transversely extending rocker axle


60


. If the stop recess


210


were not present, it would be necessary to make the blade tool


32


narrower to fit within the available height constraint H, as shown in FIG.


13


B. The stop recess


210


also acts as a stop against the blade tool


32


being forced too far in a clockwise direction as shown in

FIG. 13A

during closing of the blade tool


32


.




In the third modification illustrated in

FIGS. 14A-D

, an internally recessed and serrated portion


220


of the pliers head is modified so that its serrated region can accurately grasp a variety of sizes of articles, in this case illustrated as a bolt head


222


. The serrated portion


220


is not semicircular or other regular shape. Instead, it is structured so that a forwardmost portion


220




a


grasps a large, 1-inch bolt head


222




a


, FIG.


14


A. An intermediate portion


220




b


grasps a ¾-inch bolt head


222




b


,

FIG. 14B. A

central portion


220




c


grasps a ½-inch bolt head


222




c


, FIG.


14


C. The gap between the opposing sides of the serrated portion


220


is dimensioned to be large enough to grasp a ¼-inch bolt head


222




d


, FIG.


14


D.




Although a particular embodiment of the invention has been described in detail for purposes of illustration, various modifications and enhancements may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not to be limited except as by the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A hand tool that is one handle of a combination tool having a pair of handles deployably joined to a jaw mechanism, the hand tool comprising:a tool body having a pair of oppositely disposed sides; an axle extending transversely between the sides of the body at one end of the tool body; at least two blades supported on the axle, each blade being rotatable between a closed position wherein the blade lies between the oppositely disposed sides of the tool body and an open position wherein the blade extends from the tool body, each blade including a flat blade base having a peripheral surface; a bore through the blade base with the axle extending through the bore; an implement extending outwardly from the blade base and lying in the plane of the blade base; and a single engagement element supported on the tool body and having a locking finger extending and biased toward the peripheral surfaces of the blade bases from a first end of the single engagement element, the locking finger engaging each blade when that blade is in the open position to positively lock the blade into the open position, and a single manually accessible release, the single release being operable to disengage the locking finger from the blade that is in the open position while permitting the other blades to remain in the closed position.
  • 2. A hand tool, comprising:a jaw mechanism; and two handles pivotably joined to the jaw mechanism, wherein at least one of the handles comprises a tool body in the form of a channel having a pair of oppositely disposed sides, and a web extending between the oppositely disposed sides. an axle extending transversely between the sides of the body at one end of the tool body, at least two blades supported on the axle, each blade being rotatable between a closed position wherein the blade lies between the oppositely disposed sides of the tool body and an open position wherein the blade extends from the tool body, each blade including a flat blade base having a peripheral surface with a notch therein, a bore through the blade base with the axle extending through the bore, and an implement extending outwardly from the blade base and lying in a plane of the blade base, and a single engagement element supported on the tool body and having a single locking finger extending and biased toward the peripheral surfaces of the blade bases from a first end of the single engagement element, the locking finger engaging the notch of each blade when that blade is in the open position to positively lock the blade into the open position, and a release operable to disengage the locking finger from the notch of the blade that is in the open position while permitting the other blades to remain in the closed position.
  • 3. The hand tool of claim 2, wherein the at least two blades comprises at least three blades.
  • 4. The hand tool of claim 2, wherein the single engagement element biases the remaining blades, other than the selected blade, toward their closed positions.
  • 5. A hand tool comprising:a jaw mechanism; and two handles pivotably joined to the jaw mechanism, wherein at least one of the handles comprises a tool body having a pair of oppositely disposed sides and a web connecting the two sides, an axle extending transversely between the sides of the body at one end of the tool body, two lockable blades pivotably supported on the axle, wherein each of the blades is independently rotatable in the same rotational direction between a closed position wherein the blade is nested between the sides of the tool body and an open position wherein the blade extends outwardly from the body, and a single locking mechanism that positively locks any of the lockable blades into its open position, wherein the single locking mechanism has a release operable to unlock the locked blade from the open position while the remaining blades remain in the closed position.
  • 6. The hand tool of claim 5, wherein the locking mechanism biases the remaining blades, other than the selected blade, toward their closed positions.
  • 7. A hand tool comprising:a jaw mechanism; and two handles pivotably joined to the jaw mechanism, wherein at least one of the handles comprises a tool body having a pair of oppositely disposed sides and a web connecting the two sides, an axle extending transversely between the sides of the tool body at one end of the tool body, at least two lockable blades pivotably supported on the axle, each of the lockable blades being independently rotatable in the same rotational direction between a closed position wherein the lockable blade is nested between the sides of the tool body and an open position wherein the blade extends outwardly from the body, and a single locking mechanism movable between a locked-open position wherein any selected blade of the at least two lockable blades is positively locked into its open position while all of the other blades remain in their closed positions, and a release position wherein the selected lockable blade is released from its locked-open position while all of the other lockable blades remain in their closed positions, wherein the locking mechanism has a release that releases the selected locked-open blade.
  • 8. A hand tool, comprising:a jaw mechanism; and two handles pivotably joined to the jaw mechanism, wherein at least one of the handles comprises a tool body having a pair of oppositely disposed sides. an axle extending transversely between the sides of the body at one end of the tool body, at least two blades supported on the axle, each blade including a blade base having a peripheral surface and further having a bore through the blade base with the axle extending through the bore so that the blade base and thence the blade is rotatable on the axle between a closed position wherein the blade is contained within the tool body and an open position wherein the blade extends from the body, and a notch in the peripheral surface of the blade base, and an implement extending outwardly from the blade base, a lock operable to positively lock a selected one of the at least two blades into the open position while the remaining blades remain in the closed position, and to unlock the selected blade that is locked into the open position without opening any of the remaining blades, wherein the lock includes a release accessible to the hand of the user and operable to unlock any of the blades that is in the positively locked-open position.
  • 9. The hand tool of claim 8, wherein the at least two blades comprises at least three blades.
  • 10. The hand tool of claim 8, wherein the lock biases the remaining blades than the selected blade, toward their closed positions.
  • 11. A hand tool comprising a jaw mechanism and two handles joined to the jaw mechanism, at least one of the handles comprising:a tool body having a pair of oppositely disposed sides and a web connecting the two sides; an axle extending transversely between the sides of the body at one end of the tool body; at least two blades; a bore through each of the blades, with the axle extending through the bores so that the blades are pivotably supported on the axle, each of the blades being independently rotatable in the same rotational direction between a closed position wherein the blade is nested between the sides of the tool body and an open position wherein the blade extends outwardly from the body; and a washer disposed between a pair of the at least two blades for reducing the frictional forces between the pair of blades when one of the pair is rotated on the axle, as compared with the frictional forces experienced in the absence of the washer means.
  • 12. The hand tool of claim 11, wherein the washer means includes a washer positioned between each pair of the at least two blades.
  • 13. The hand tool of claim 11, wherein the washer is made of a polymeric material.
  • 14. A hand tool that is one handle of a combination tool having a pair of handle deployably joined to a jaw mechanism, the hand tool comprising:a tool body having a pair of oppositely disposed sides; an axle extending transversely between the sides of the body at one end of the tool body; at least two blades supported on the axle, each blade being rotatable between a closed position wherein the blade lies between the oppositely disposed sides of the tool body and an open position wherein the blade extends from the tool body, each blade including a flat blade base having a peripheral surface with a notch therein; a bore through the blade base with the axle extending through the bore; an implement extending outwardly from the blade base and lying in the plane of the blade base; and a single engagement element supported on the tool body and having a locking finger extending and biased toward the peripheral surfaces of the blade bases from a first end of the single engagement element, the locking finger engaging the notch of each blade when that blade is in the open position to positively lock the blade into the open position, and a manual release operable to disengage the locking finger from the notch of the blade that is in the open position while permitting the other blades to remain in the closed position.
Parent Case Info

This application is a continuation of allowed application Ser. No. 09/847,559, filed May 1, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,487,740, for which priority is claimed and whose disclosure is incorporated by reference in its entirety; which in turn is a continuation of allowed application Ser. No. 09/660,256, filed Sep. 12, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,233,769, for which priority is claimed and whose disclosure is incorporated by reference in its entirety; which in turn is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/060,768, filed Apr. 14, 1998, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,170,104, for which priority is claimed and whose disclosure is incorporated by reference in its entirety; which in turn is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/606,169, filed Jan. 11, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,765,247, for which priority is claimed and whose disclosure is incorporated by reference in its entirety.

US Referenced Citations (73)
Number Name Date Kind
97154 Barnard Nov 1869 A
234378 Pierce Nov 1880 A
542601 Baker Jul 1895 A
589392 Kolar Aug 1897 A
592766 Effinger et al. Nov 1897 A
596096 Watts Dec 1897 A
614537 Dahlquist et al. Nov 1898 A
649334 Meloos May 1900 A
662005 Lewis Nov 1900 A
790432 Heilrath May 1905 A
857459 Hendrickson Jun 1907 A
858003 Klever Jun 1907 A
896746 McCarty Aug 1908 A
988068 Beardsley et al. Mar 1911 A
1134425 Wernimont Mar 1915 A
1174132 Dragun Mar 1916 A
1184746 Hanson May 1916 A
1187842 Kaas Jun 1916 A
1194296 Jones et al. Aug 1916 A
1362142 Rohrer Dec 1920 A
1370906 Newton Mar 1921 A
1467661 Undy Sep 1923 A
1474592 Jacoby Nov 1923 A
1486725 Brown Mar 1924 A
1511340 Jackson Oct 1924 A
1524694 DiMaio Feb 1925 A
1551328 Perry Aug 1925 A
1556788 Hallvarson Oct 1925 A
1561833 Cruickshank Nov 1925 A
1561993 Nielsen Nov 1925 A
1619181 Beretz Mar 1927 A
2057201 McCluskey Oct 1936 A
D137408 Frisk Mar 1944 S
2514130 Jones Jul 1950 A
2561682 Barnett Jul 1951 A
2575652 Bovee Nov 1951 A
2606471 Kollweck Aug 1952 A
2641149 Peterson Jun 1953 A
2747446 Eder May 1956 A
2779098 Pocoski et al. Jan 1957 A
2814108 Bassett Nov 1957 A
2824368 Bassett Feb 1958 A
2832135 Bassett et al. Apr 1958 A
3044081 Robinson, Jr. Jul 1962 A
3364508 Garrett Jan 1968 A
3798687 Stevens Mar 1974 A
4040181 Johnson Aug 1977 A
4238862 Leatherman Dec 1980 A
4274200 Coder Jun 1981 A
4302877 Hart et al. Dec 1981 A
4502220 Aoki Mar 1985 A
4512051 Magan Apr 1985 A
4535539 Friedman et al. Aug 1985 A
4563813 Fortenberry Jan 1986 A
D286501 Magan Nov 1986 S
4741106 Yamagishi May 1988 A
4744272 Leatherman May 1988 A
4805303 Gibbs Feb 1989 A
4888869 Leatherman Dec 1989 A
4926554 Martin May 1990 A
5029355 Thai Jul 1991 A
5044079 Gibbs Sep 1991 A
5062173 Collins et al. Nov 1991 A
5142721 Sessions et al. Sep 1992 A
5212844 Sessions et al. May 1993 A
D338386 Frazer Aug 1993 S
5267366 Frazer Dec 1993 A
5320004 Hsiao Jun 1994 A
D356019 Sakai Mar 1995 S
5400509 Collins Mar 1995 A
5511310 Sessions et al. Apr 1996 A
5664274 Collins Sep 1997 A
6088861 Sessions Jul 2000 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (10)
Number Date Country
277412 Nov 1951 CH
30788 Aug 1884 DE
0100 377 Feb 1984 EP
2463 Jan 1869 GB
17248 Jan 1896 GB
20299 Nov 1902 GB
15859 Sep 1904 GB
13254 Sep 1905 GB
186520 Oct 1922 GB
1002145 Mar 1983 SU
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/337,371, Lemaire, filed 1989.
J.A. Henckels, “Mongin: World Class”, Knife World, Mar. 1987, pp. 3-7 and 30-31.
Continuations (4)
Number Date Country
Parent 09/847559 May 2001 US
Child 10/309735 US
Parent 09/660256 Sep 2000 US
Child 09/847559 US
Parent 09/060768 Apr 1998 US
Child 09/660256 US
Parent 08/606169 Jan 1996 US
Child 09/060768 US