This invention relates to trash collection and more specifically to a device for facilitating the removal of items of roadside debris from a trash picking spear.
It is common for items of trash such as papers, cardboard food-containers, plastic bottles, metal cans and other items to be discarded alongside highways. This highway littering is a major problem for governments, and it has not been satisfactorily addressed by law enforcement efforts. As discarded items accumulate, crews of municipal workers, independent contractors, inmates from correctional institutions, and others, equipped with trash picking devices, walk along the borders of the highway and collect the discarded items for disposal.
Typically, each such worker utilizes a trash picking spear, i.e., an elongated, hand-held, stick with a stainless steel spike protruding from one end thereof to stab the discarded items, and move them to a collection container, which can be a bag with a shoulder strap carried by the worker or a bucket with a handle.
Transfer of the stabbed debris from the picking spear to the collection container can be carried out manually, using gloves. In other cases, the picking spear can be equipped with a stripping plate, movable along the spike, for detaching the items from the spike and dropping them into the container.
When gloves are used to remove trash from the picking spear, they must be cleaned frequently. On the other hand, picking spears equipped with stripping plates are more expensive than simple picking tools.
An object of this invention is to provide a device for rapid and efficient removal of collected debris from a simple picking spear. Briefly, the invention is a device for insertion into a collection bucket that is utilized to remove articles of trash from the spike of a trash picking spear so that the articles drop into the bucket. A bucket has an advantage over a flexible collection bag having a shoulder strap, in that it does not need to be carried continuously by the worker. In areas where there are high concentrations of trash, the worker can place the bucket, with the insert installed, on the ground and collect a large number of articles without moving the bucket.
The bucket insert in accordance with the invention comprises a frusto-conical element having an upper opening and a lower opening smaller than the upper opening. A set of notches is formed in the frusto-conical element at the location of the lower opening for receiving the spike of a trash picking tool. In use, an item of debris impaled on the spike can be removed from the spike and dropped into the collection bucket by inserting the spike with the item of debris downward through said lower opening, moving a portion of the spike located above the item of debris laterally into one of the, notches, and pulling upward on the picking tool.
The term “frusto-conical” as used herein to describe the insert, refers to a shape that surrounds a longitudinal axis, preferably in substantially continuous closed path, and is tapered in the direction of the longitudinal axis so that one end is smaller than the opposite end.
Thus, in the bucket insert of the invention, the frusto-conical element is composed of a plurality of substantially trapezoidal flat panels, hinged to one another so that the frusto-conical element can be collapsed to a flattened condition, composed of two adjacent layers, such that its thickness is approximately twice the thickness of one of the panels.
The hinges by which the plurality of substantially trapezoidal flat panels are connected to one another are preferably in the form of narrow flexible hinges consisting of the same material from which the panels are formed. In this case, the hinges can be formed in the process of molding the components of the insert.
The bucket insert in accordance with the invention can be made by joining two identical molded components.
Plural supports are preferably utilized for attachment of the insert to a bucket. These supports may be connected to the frusto-conical element adjacent the location of its upper opening and extend downward from the upper opening on the exterior of the frusto-conical element. The supports preferably have lower ends with hooks. The hooks extend inward toward the frusto-conical element, for engagement with a ridge formed on the exterior of a collection bucket into which the frusto-conical element can be inserted. The engagement of the hooks with the ridge on the bucket prevents the insert from being pulled out of the bucket when a worker pulls upward on a picking tool to cause an item of debris to be separated from the spike of the picking tool and drop into the collection bucket.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the supports are not only flexible but resilient, and so that, when the supports are in a relaxed condition, the hooks at their lower ends are located within an imaginary cylindrical axial projection of the upper opening, whereby the hooks are able to remain in engagement with a wall of a collection bucket, and at a location underneath the ridge on the exterior of the bucket.
When the frusto-conical element is composed of a plurality of substantially trapezoidal panels, two supports can be utilized and can be arranged in opposed relationship to each other on opposite sides of the frusto-conical element. The frusto-conical element and the two supports can then consist of two identical molded parts joined together along a line extending through a median of each of the supports, and through a median of each of two of the substantially trapezoidal panels located in opposed relationship to each other. With this configuration, each of the two identical molded parts can be molded as a unit.
The shape of the bucket insert is defined herein as “frusto-conical.” However, unless otherwise qualified, the term “frusto-conical” is intended to be interpreted in its broadest sense, to define a tapered, three-dimensional shape. It is not intended to imply that the cross-sections of the insert transverse to an axis are circular. In addition, the cross sections of the bucket insert in planes transverse to the axis can be circular, but are preferably polygonal. As shown in the drawings, the frusto-conical shape preferably consists of a plurality of planar, trapezoidal panels joined to one another in such a way that the insert can be collapsed for convenient storage and shipment. The cross-sections in planes transverse to the axis need not be continuous. Moreover, the polygonal cross-sections in planes transverse to the axis need not be symmetrical in relation to an axis, and the cross-sections in planes in which the axis lies need not be defined by straight lines. That is the axial sections, while preferably defined by straight lines, can be defined by curved lines.
As shown in
The shorter bases, e.g., base 26 of panel 12, form a polygonal lower opening, which is generally hexagonal in the case of six panels. Each of the shorter bases is formed with a V-shaped notch, e.g., notch 28 in base 26.
The longer bases, e.g., base 30 of panel 12, form a polygonal upper opening, also hexagonal in the case where the insert is composed of six panels.
In the embodiment shown in
The circular broken lines in
A similar support 56 is connected to the upper edge of panel 22 on the opposite side of the insert. The supports are resilient so that they can be bent outward to clear the ridge 46 for installation and removal of the insert. The resilience of the supports is such that, unless an external force is applied to the supports, they are urged into a relaxed position as illustrated by the position of support 56 in
As seen in
The two identical parts preferably come out the mold in which they are formed in a flat condition and are secured together after being bent to the frusto-conical configuration shown in
As shown in
For storage or shipment, the insert 10 can be folded into a flattened condition having two adjacent layers, as illustrated in
As shown in
An advantage of the frusto-conical insert is that it is readily installed in a bucket and is prevented by the hook-shaped supports from removal from the bucket during use, but can be readily removed from the bucket after use by bending the supports outward to disengage them from the ridge on the bucket.
When the insert is composed of hinged trapezoidal panels, it can be flattened and stored for later use. Additional advantages, are that the insert is simple and can be produced by molding identical parts and joining the parts together in pairs, and that it is firmly secured by the supports to the collection bucket when in use.
Various modifications can be made to the insert as described. For example, the number and shape of the panels of the insert can be modified, and the number and shape of the supports that prevent the insert from being pulled out of the bucket can also be modified. The size of the insert and the shape and size of the supports can be selected to accommodate various different sizes and shapes of collection buckets. Other modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the following claims.