The invention is a pipe wrench product for rotating a hollow object, such as a pipe and a tube, by engaging the object interior. The product is designed to minimize any distortion to the shape of the object caused by the product and to maximize the tangential force transmitted to the object by the product.
The product is designed to automatically change a direction and a magnitude of a force transmitted to the pipe as needed to cause the pipe to rotate. Specifically, the product increases a tangential force applied to the pipe faster than a radial force. This enables the product to rotate the pipe without damaging and distorting the pipe.
Other types of pipe wrenches can provide varying amounts of force as needed to rotate the pipe, but the product is unique in its ability to change the magnitude and the direction of the force transmitted to the pipe.
The product can be used to rotate pipes, tubes and other hollow objects that can be interiorly engaged. For example, there is a need to rotate threaded pipes where the pipes are located in tight spaces. In tight spaces, it can be impractical to use a pipe wrench that grips a pipe around the pipe exterior.
There is also a need to rotate hollow objects that have an exterior surface that would be damaged by an exterior-gripping wrench. The product enables rotating such objects without contacting the exterior surfaces.
Also, the product is well adapted for use with high-speed impact and air tools. The product has a slender profile required to fit inside the pipe that reduces rotational inertia of the product, making the product easier to operate at high rotational speeds.
The product comprises a rotator and a shoe. In use, at least part of the shoe and the rotator are inserted in a pipe. Then the rotator is rotated from outside the pipe and contacts the shoe. The rotator applies a force on the shoe causing the shoe to rotate with the rotator and causing the shoe to move outwards from the rotator. When the shoe moves outwards it engages the pipe interior and transmits the force from the rotator to the pipe, causing the pipe to rotate with the rotator.
The product is designed to automatically change the direction and the magnitude of the force transmitted to the pipe as needed to cause the pipe to rotate. Specifically, the product increases the tangential force applied to the pipe faster than the radial force. This enables the product to rotate the pipe without damaging and distorting the pipe.
When the rotator rotates, the rotator and the shoe contact across a curved driving surface and at a curved driven surface. The rotator, via the contacting driving and driven surfaces, applies the force to the shoe, which transmits the force from the rotator to the pipe when the shoe engages the pipe.
The curved driven surface is shape-wise distinguishable from the curved driving surface. The term “shape-wise distinguishable” as used here and throughout means that a surface is recognizable from another surface due to one or more differences in size, curvature, concavity, convexity, and by various other shape-related characteristics.
The curved driving surface and the curved driven surface are devised to interact during contacting in such a way as to minimize the increase in radial force on the pipe and to maximize the increase in tangential force on the pipe.
The product can have multiple driving surface components and multiple driven surface components. The shoe can have multiple shoe components. Each of the shoe components can have a driven surface component for contacting one or more of the driving surface components.
In addition, the shoe has a separate curved gripping surface for interiorly engaging the pipe. The gripping surface distributes the force across the pipe interior where the gripping surface engages the pipe so that the product can rotate the pipe without damaging and distorting the pipe.
The curved gripping surface is shape-wise distinguishable from the curved driven surface.
The shoe can have multiple gripping surface components. Each of the shoe components can have a gripping surface component for interiorly engaging the pipe.
In
A proximal end of the rotator can have a connector for rotating the rotator from outside the pipe. The rotator can have various types of connectors such as a standard square and hexagonal drive element, a knurled element, and other connecters adapted for rotating by various methods. In FIG. 1 and
In
In use, at least part of the shoe and part of the rotator are inserted in the pipe. Then the rotator is rotated in the preferred direction. When the rotator is rotated, the rotator and the shoe contact across the curved driving surface and at the curved driven surface. The rotator, via the contacting curved driving surface and curved driven surface, applies the force to the shoe.
The force has a forcing direction that is determined by the relative positions of the driving surface and the driven surface. The forcing direction is along an axis that is normal to the driving surface and normal to the driven surface where they contact each other.
Initially, when the force is applied, the shoe can move radially and tangentially along the forcing direction until the shoe engages the pipe at the pipe interior. After the shoe engages the pipe, the pipe resists the radial movement and the tangential movement of the shoe. Further rotating the rotator, after the shoe engages the pipe, causes the driving surface and driving surface to shift positions and travel across each other.
The respective shapes of the curved driving surface and the curved driven surface cause the surfaces to shift their positions when there is resistance to the force on the shoe, such as the resistance caused by inertia and the resistance caused by the pipe resisting the movement of the shoe. The curved driving surface and the curved driven surface are designed to shift positions so that the forcing direction turns more tangential when there is resistance to the force on the shoe.
By turning the forcing direction more tangential, the product reduces the ratio of radial force to tangential force on the shoe. This reduces the likelihood of excessive radial force causing distortion and damage to the pipe. Also, turning the forcing direction more tangential increases the amount of tangential force transmitted to the pipe, making the product more efficient.
Additional tangential force on the shoe is transmitted to the pipe, urging the pipe to rotate with the shoe and the rotator. Additional radial force on the shoe pushes the shoe outwards into the pipe, causing the pipe to distort, and generating heat and friction.
Excessive radial force can distort the shape of the pipe and can damage the pipe interior, for example by scratching, spalling, and gouging the pipe interior. Also, excessive radial force wastes energy by generating heat and excess friction.
The force characteristics, between the rotator and the shoe of product 10, are illustrated in FIG. 4 and FIG. 5.
In the assembled condition, shown in
In
From FIG. 4 and
In
The force characteristics, between the rotator and the shoe of the product 20, are illustrated in FIG. 7 and FIG. 8.
In
In
From FIG. 7 and
The product comprises at least one at least one curved driving surface and at least one curved driven surface. The <first surface> driven surface can be concave and convex. The driving surface can be concave and convex. The driven surface can have more than one driven surface component, and the driving surface can have more than one driving surface component. The product can have more than one driven surface and more than one driving surface. The driven surface can contact one or more driving surfaces. Alternatively, the driving surface can contact one or more driven surfaces.
The driven surface can be a separate entity as shown in FIG. 3 and
The driving surface can be a separate entity. Alternatively, the driving surface can be cylindrically curved, elipsoidally curved, spheroidally curved, spherically curved, arbitrarily curved and combinations thereof.
In
In the assembled condition, shown in
The force characteristics, between the rotator and the shoe of product 30, are similar to those of the product 10.
The shoe can have more than one shoe component. The products 10, 20 each have three shoe components. The product 30 has two shoe components. Other product configurations can have one, two, three or more shoe components.
The shoe, as shown in
The outward-facing gripping surface can have various configurations. For example, the outward-facing gripping surface can be machined, knurled, and ground. Abrasives can be applied to the outward-facing gripping surface in various ways, such as by embedding in the surface and by bonding with adhesives.
Some configurations, for example machined, knurled, and various other configurations, can result in the gripping surface and the gripping surface components being substantially textured, rough, and otherwise discontinuous. It is understood that the meaning of curved gripping surface as used here and throughout includes such textured, rough, and discontinuous surfaces so long as an outermost perimeter of the gripping surface substantially approximates a curve.
The outward-facing curved gripping surface can have various shapes. The shoes of products 10, 20, 30 have outward-facing curved gripping surfaces shaped substantially cylindrically for engaging the cylindrical pipe interior. Alternatively, the outward-facing curved gripping surface can be ellipsoidally curved, arbitrarily curved, and combinations thereof.
The shoe can have segmented jaws as in products 10, 20, and 30. Alternatively, the shoe can have jaws that encircle the rotator. Alternatively, the show can have jaws stacked axially along the rotator length. Various shoe configurations can be used, so long as the shoe is moved outward from the rotator by the action of contacting non-similar curvilinear surfaces, as described. The product can have more than one shoe.
The rotator can have a shaft extending from the curved driving surface. The products 10, 20, and 30, have a cylindrical shaft 12.
The rotator can have a connector for rotating the rotator from outside the pipe. The connector can have various configurations; such as a male square drive feature, a hexagonal drive socket, a knurled feature, a T-slot, and combinations thereof. Alternatively, the connector can be any feature that enables rotating from outside the pipe. In
The product can have a depth controller for controlling how deep the product is inserted into the pipe. As shown in
The product can have means for limiting the axial movement and the radial movement of the shoe. In
The upper can and lower cap are designed to enable the shoe to collapse inward so that it can be inserted in the pipe, and permit the shoe to expand outward so that it can engage the interior of the pipe. Various other methods for limiting the axial movement and the radial movement of the shoe can be used.
The lower cap 15 fits over the rotator and rests on a shoulder at the end of the shaft 12. The lower cap has a circular pocket that captures the flange 23, 23A, 23B, on the end of the jaw 21, 21A, 21B, respectively.
The upper cap 16 sits against the end of the rotator. The upper cap has a circular pocket that captures the flange 24, 24A, 24B, on the end of the jaw 21, 21A, 21B, respectively.
The upper cap can be held in place by a fastener 80 and by various other methods such as a clip, a resilient element, by magnetic means, by threading the upper cap and the rotator, and combinations thereof.
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1251408 | Murray | Dec 1917 | A |
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1790761 | Ortolon | Feb 1931 | A |
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2455005 | Hall | Nov 1948 | A |
2468867 | Collins | May 1949 | A |
2482501 | Oravetz | Sep 1949 | A |
2573327 | Gossard | Oct 1951 | A |
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6675679 | Dugan | Jan 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040177732 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |