Not Applicable
Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to hand trucks for transporting items, and more particularly to hand trucks specifically adapted for transporting pails.
2. Description of the Related Art
Various types of products, such as paint and wallboard joint compound, are commonly sold in five gallon pails. The term pail, as defined and used herein, refers to a bucket, or similar container, with a handle extending above and across the bucket. Usually the handle is a generally cylindrical body through which an inverted U-shaped wire extends with the ends of the wire pivotally attached to opposite sides of the bucket. A user is able to carry the pail by grasping the handle in the palm of one hand and lifting upward, which results in the bucket being suspended from the handle. Five gallon buckets when full of material often are very heavy and when being carried, bang against the legs of the lifting person.
Large pails, containers, and other items are frequently transported using a hand truck. A common design of a hand truck has a pair of wheels located at the bottom of an upwardly extending frame. A platform, often formed by a piece of heavy gauge sheet metal, projects forward at the bottom of the frame and typically rests flat on the floor when the hand truck is stationary. The item or items being transported are placed on the platform. Then the upper end of the hand truck is tilted backwards about the wheels, thereby raising the platform and the items off the floor. In this tilted position, the truck is then rolled on the wheels to the desired location where the items are to be delivered. The frame is then tilted forward until the platform rests on the floor and the platform is removed from beneath the items.
Such hand trucks can be used to transport five gallon pails of various products. However, when the pail is relatively full, its top opening must be sealed with a cover to prevent the contents from spilling when the hand truck is tilted for movement. Though such a restriction does not present a problem when transporting previously unopened pails, it can present a problem when the pail is being reused to transport other types of materials. For example, if a pail is being reused to transport water, the cover may no longer be available and thus the pail cannot be filled to its maximum capacity without the water spilling out when the hand truck is tilted.
As a consequence, it is desirable to design a hand truck that will allow open, full pails to be transported without readily spilling the contents.
A hand truck, for transporting a pail, includes a frame that has a main section with a user handle and that has first and second spaced apart legs extending from the main section. First and second wheels are respectively attached to the first and second legs at points remote from the main section. A boom is attached to and projects away from the frame and has a receiver for engaging a handle of the pail. When the receiver is engaging the pail handle, rotating the frame about the wheels raises the pail which becomes suspended from the boom.
With the pail so suspended, the hand truck can be wheeled around to a desired location. During movement of the hand truck, the pail can swing freely on the boom without striking the frame or the wheels. That free swinging suspension permits transportation of an open, relatively full pail without spilling its contents.
With initial reference to
As shown specifically in
A carrier 34 projects forward from and is attached to the frame 12 for engaging a pail 40 to be carried. The particular embodiment of a carrier 34 shown in
To transport the pail 40, its handle 42 is raised above the bucket and placed onto the receiver 38 of the hand truck 10. The pail may have to be lifted slightly to place the handle into a hook-type receiver or the hand truck may be tilted forward on the feet 30 to lower the hook to fit underneath the handle. In the orientation illustrated in
As shown in
After the hand truck 10 has moved the pail 40 to the desired location, the frame 12 is tilted forward to the vertical position shown in
The foregoing description was primarily directed to a preferred embodiment of the invention. Although some attention was given to various alternatives within the scope of the invention, it is anticipated that one skilled in the art will likely realize additional alternatives that are now apparent from disclosure of embodiments of the invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention should be determined from the following claims and not limited by the above disclosure.