The invention relates to an ice axe or a hammer axe for mountaineering comprising a gripping shaft having a hollow tube equipped with a pick tool at the top end, and with a stop at the bottom end.
It is conventional to fix a superficial sleeve around the bottom part of the metal shaft of a mountaineer's ice axe. The document FR-A-2,709,971 describes an anatomical grip formed on the shaft opposite the head of the ice axe and fixed onto the shaft by any process, in particular by hafting, molding from a casting or sticking. The presence of this grip improves the grasp on the ice axe, but increases its weight and does not allow the shaft to be made to penetrate into the snow to form an anchor or a relay point.
The object of the invention is to achieve a versatile ice axe having a light gripping shaft that can be easily handled by the mountaineer.
The ice axe according to the invention is characterized in that the stop is fitted retractable at the end of the shaft between a first retracted position and a second working position, the stop being formed by a plug equipped with a spur laterally salient from the shaft in the second working position to constitute a stop means for ease of gripping and handling of the ice axe.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the quadrangular plug has opposite sides parallel two by two, and an orifice in the central part to receive a fixing screw. One of the sides of the plug bears a protuberance and is extended by the spur salient on the other adjacent side, the protuberance and the spur engaging in a notch of the shaft, respectively in the first retracted position and in the second working position of the stop.
In the first retracted position, the spur of the stop is invisible and the protuberance is housed in the notch leaving the shaft smooth. In the second working position, the spur is visible and acts as stop means at the end of the shaft to improve the grip and handling of the ice axe. In both positions, the stop blocks off the end of the shaft preventing any snow or ice from getting into the tube.
Other features can be used either alone or in combination:
Other advantages and features will become more clearly apparent from the following description of a particular embodiment of the invention, given as a non-restrictive example only and represented in the accompanying drawings, in which:
In
With reference to
Opposite the anchoring pick 18, the orifice 19 is extended by a U-shaped notch 20 extending in the longitudinal direction along a generating line of the lateral surface of the tube 11. The tube 22 in addition comprises a circular hole 21 angularly offset with respect to the notch 20, and allowing a fixing screw 22 of the stop 15 to pass transversely therethrough.
The stop 15 is inserted longitudinally in the orifice 19 so as to be located withdrawn from the anchoring pick 18, and to block off the end 17 of the tube preventing snow or ice from getting into the shaft 11. The stop 15 is formed by a quadrangular plug 23 having a hole 24 in the central zone for screwing the screw 22 into. The plug 23 has opposite sides parallel two by two and separated from one another by a distance corresponding, with an allowance for clearance, to the size of the orifice 19 of the shaft 11. The plug 23 preferably has a square shape and is made of molded plastic material.
One of the sides 26 of the plug 23 has a protuberance 25 having a complementary shape to that of the notch 20 of the shaft 11. The same side 26 is extended by a spur 27 salient from the other adjacent side 28 perpendicular to the side 26.
The stop 15 is fitted in retractable manner in the orifice 19 of the tube so as to occupy after insertion two distinct stable positions comprising a first retracted position wherein the spur 27 is fitted axially in the shaft 11 (
In both the positions, the stop 15 blocks off the end 17 of the shaft 11 preventing any snow or ice from getting into the tube. In the first retracted position (
To change the position of the stop 15, after the screw 22 has been unscrewed, the plug 23 then simply has to be extracted and rotated through a quarter turn. This modification requires the plug 23 to be removed and refitted and the screw 22 to be unscrewed and retightened.
Changing the position of the stop 15 could naturally be achieved by equivalent means, in particular by fitting the plug 23 directly on a rotary supporting pin. The stop 15 is then retractable by rotation between the two positions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04 00052 | Jan 2004 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4727609 | Smith, Jr. | Mar 1988 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 555 156 | Aug 1993 | EP |
1 388 353 | Feb 2004 | EP |
1657210 | Jun 1991 | SU |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050144731 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |