This application relates in general to tools for mechanical joints, and in particular, to a joint assembly for use in a retractable awning.
Retractable awnings provide a person the flexibility of being able to control the reach of light as well as of atmospheric precipitations over an area adjacent to a building, such as the user's home or a commercial building, without having to perform labor-intensive activities such as setting up a tent. Such awnings generally include a canvas, such as fabric, stretched over a structure that attaches to the building and including at least two mechanical arms that include a tensioned spring and whose bending and straightening can be controlled by the user, increasing and decreasing the area covered by the fabric. When the user desires to limit the reach of light or precipitation over the area, the awning is extended to cover the desired area via a straightening of the arms. When the coverage by the canvas is no longer desired, the awning can be retracted via a bending of the arms, making the desired area once again accessible to light, such as sunlight, and precipitation. As retractable awnings are commonly motorized, a user can often accomplish the extension and retraction of an awning with a push of a button.
Existing retractable awnings have a variety of drawbacks that limit their functionality and attractiveness to a user. For example, most manufactured arms have a tension in the spring that differs from the tension in other arms. If two arms with mismatched tension are included in the same awning, the awning may not properly extend or retract. Thus, awning manufacturers must either match the arms for an awning at the factory or accept the possibility that their awning may not properly deploy.
Further, as awnings are attached to the outside of buildings, the mechanical components of the awnings, such as the arms, are constantly and continuously exposed to the elements, such as precipitation and wind. Such exposure can lead to the degradation of the mechanical components due to corrosion and other environmental impact, causing a need to replace the awning. A particularly vulnerable point of such awnings can be an elbow, a joint of the mechanical arm at which the arm bends. If degraded, the arms may be no longer capable of bending, and the awning will no longer be retractable, losing the awning's usefulness. This degradation is especially significant due to commercially available awnings not providing adequate protection of the internal components of the arms. For example, the awnings distributed by BAT USA Group of Manhattan, N.Y. include arms with elbows whose internal components are visibly exposed to the outside world. Such exposure allows moisture and other elements to interact with the internal elbow components, hastening their degradation. Other currently available commercial designs suffer from similar drawback. Further, the exposure of the internal components of the elbows, such as cables used in the elbows, may be aesthetically unattractive to the user. Such aesthetic repulsion may increase as the internal components become visible corroded.
Likewise, additional components of currently-produced arms have functional and aesthetic drawbacks. For example, an overextension of the arms could cause a deformation of the shape of an awning, rendering the awning useless. To keep the arms from overextending, existing awnings, such as those distributed by BAT USA Group, employ external blocks that limit how far the elbow of the arm can rotate, thus preventing the overextension of the arm. Due to these blocks being external, they are exposed to potential damage, creating another vulnerability in the arm. Some users may also find such blocks aesthetically unappealing.
Finally, currently available arms of retractable awnings are generally unitary structures that cannot be easily disassembled in the field. When one component of such arms becomes degraded, the entire arm, if not the entire retractable awning, needs to be replaced, or returned to the manufacturer. Such replacement or return increases the cost of owning a retractable awnings as well limiting their lifespan.
Accordingly, there is a need for an easily-serviceable and adjustable retractable awning arm whose internal components are not easily accessible to the elements and in which tension can be regulated.
An awning arm is provided in which internal components are concealed and in which tension is adjustable. The arm includes an elbow that includes an outer knuckle that includes a top tang and a bottom tang, the tangs rotatably engaged to a circular encasement of an inner knuckle via a plurality of bushings. Two hubs are concealed by the encasement and the tangs, the hubs secured within the two tangs. A webbing is secured within the hubs, a pull upon the webbing urging the rotation of the hubs and consequently the outer knuckle and the elbow as a whole. Arm extrusions are attached to the outer and inner knuckles, with the rotation of the elbow causing the bending and straightening of the arm.
The concealment of the webbing and other internal components of the arm increases the protection of these components from the elements while increasing the aesthetic attractiveness of the arm at the same time. In addition to the webbing, the components of the elbow that prevent the arm from overextending are concealed within the elbow. Further, the disclosed arm can be serviced in the field and individual components can be provided replaced separately, without having to replace the entire arm.
The disclosed arm provides an easy way to adjust the tension within the arm, allowing for a way to equalize tensions in awning arms that are initially mismatched. A tension bolt is inserted within a shoulder of the arm. The bolt is also screwed into a tension hook within the shoulder. The tension in the arm is provided by a tensioned spring one end of which is attached to the tension hook and the other end of which is attached to the webbing. The bolt can be screwed in further into the tension hook to bring the hook away from the webbing and thus increase the tension within the spring. Alternatively, the tension hook can be moved closer to the webbing by screwing the tension bolt more out of the hook, decreasing the tension in the spring.
In one embodiment, a joint assembly for use in a retractable awning is provided. The assembly includes: an inner knuckle including a circular encasement and an inner knuckle sleeve one end of which is formed on a portion of the circular encasement, the portion of the encasement defining a slot; an outer knuckle including a support structure, an outer knuckle sleeve one end of which is formed on one side of the support structure, a top tang including a circular bore and that is formed on a side of the support structure opposite to the side on which the outer knuckle sleeve is formed, and a bottom tang including an indentation and that is formed on the opposite side of the support structure, the top tang rotatably engaged to a top portion of the circular encasement, the bottom tang rotatably engaged to a bottom portion of the circular encasement, the outer knuckle rotatable in two directions along the top portion of the encasement and the bottom portion of the encasement; a bottom hub partially within the circular encasement and including an inner surface and an outer surface, the outer surface including an end inserted into the bottom tang indentation, the inner surface including a counterbore formed at another end of the bottom hub and a passage from the counterbore to the end of the bottom hub, the bottom hub further defining a slot adjacent to at least a portion of the counterbore; a top hub partially within the circular encasement, the top hub including a bottom portion mounted within the bottom hub counterbore and a top portion mounted within the circular bore, the top hub further including a passage that is adjacent to the bottom hub passage and defining a slot that is adjacent to a portion of the top hub passage and to the bottom hub slot; a pin inserted through at least a portion of the top hub passage and at least a portion of the bottom hub passage; and a webbing looped around at least a portion of the pin and passed through the bottom hub slot, the top hub slot, and the inner knuckle slot into the inner knuckle sleeve, the webbing adapted to wrap around at least a portion of the outer surface of the bottom hub when the outer knuckle rotates in one of the directions, the webbing urging the outer knuckle to rotate into another of the directions upon an application of a pulling force upon the webbing.
In a further embodiment, a retractable awning arm is provided. The arm includes a shoulder including a shoulder extrusion through which a bolt is inserted, the shoulder further including a tension hook mounted upon the bolt; a upper arm extrusion including an upper arm sleeve into one end of which the shoulder extrusion is inserted; a tensioned spring within the upper arm sleeve that is securely attached to the tension hook; a lower arm member; a wrist assembly securely attached to the lower arm member; and an elbow assembly. The elbow assembly includes: an inner knuckle including a circular encasement and an inner knuckle sleeve including one end formed on a portion of the circular encasement and another end securely inserted within the lower arm sleeve, the portion of the encasement defining a slot; an outer knuckle including a support structure, an outer knuckle sleeve one end of which is formed on one side of the support structure, a top tang including a circular bore and that is formed on a side of the support structure opposite to the side on which the outer knuckle sleeve is formed, and a bottom tang including an indentation and that is formed on the opposite side of the support structure, the top tang rotatably engaged to a top portion of the circular encasement, the bottom tang rotatably engaged to a bottom portion of the circular encasement, the outer knuckle rotatable in two directions along the top portion of the encasement and the bottom portion of the encasement, the rotation of the outer knuckle causing a rotation of the lower arm; a bottom hub partially within the circular encasement and including an inner surface and an outer surface, the outer surface including an end inserted into the bottom tang indentation, the inner surface including a counterbore formed at another end of the bottom hub and a passage from the counterbore to the end of the bottom hub, the bottom hub further defining a slot adjacent to at least a portion of the counterbore; a top hub partially within the circular encasement, the top hub including a bottom portion securely mounted within the bottom hub counterbore and a top portion mounted within the circular bore, the top hub further including a passage that is adjacent to the bottom hub passage and a defining slot that is adjacent to a portion of the top hub passage and to the bottom hub slot; a pin inserted through at least a portion of the top hub passage and at least a portion of the bottom hub passage; a webbing looped around at least a portion of the pin and passed through the bottom hub slot, the top hub slot, the inner knuckle, the inner knuckle slot, the inner knuckle sleeve into the inner upper arm sleeve and coupled to the spring, the webbing adapted to wrap around at least a portion of the outer surface of the bottom hub when the outer knuckle rotates in one of the directions, the tensioned spring adapted to urge the webbing to rotate into another of the directions.
In a still further embodiment, a retractable awning is provided. The awning includes a fabric roll including fabric partially rolled onto a rotatable roller tube; a front bar to which a portion of the fabric is attached; a torsion bar attached to the roller tube; and two arms attached to the torsion bar and the front bar, the arms bendable upon a rotation of the fabric roll pulling the front bar towards the fabric roll. Each of the arms includes: a shoulder including a shoulder extrusion through which a bolt is inserted, the shoulder further including a tension hook mounted upon the bolt; an upper arm extrusion including an upper arm sleeve into one end of which the shoulder extrusion is inserted; a tensioned spring within the upper arm sleeve that is securely attached to the tension hook; a lower arm member; a wrist assembly including an end securely attached to the lower arm member and another end attached to the front bar; and an elbow assembly. The elbow assembly includes: an inner knuckle including a circular encasement and an inner knuckle sleeve including one end formed on a portion of the circular encasement and another end securely inserted within the lower arm sleeve, the portion of the encasement defining a slot; an outer knuckle including a support structure, an outer knuckle sleeve one end of which is formed on one side of the support structure, a top tang including a circular bore and that is formed on a side of the support structure opposite to the side on which the outer knuckle sleeve is formed, and a bottom tang including an indentation and that is formed on the opposite side of the support structure, the top tang rotatably engaged to a top portion of the circular encasement, the bottom tang rotatably engaged to a bottom portion of the circular encasement, the outer knuckle rotatable in two directions along the top portion of the encasement and the bottom portion of the encasement, the rotation of the outer knuckle causing a rotation of the lower arm; a bottom hub partially within the circular encasement and including an inner surface and an outer surface, the outer surface including an end inserted into the bottom tang indentation, the inner surface including a counterbore formed at another end of the bottom hub and a passage from the counterbore to the end of the bottom hub, the bottom hub further defining a slot adjacent to at least a portion of the counterbore; a top hub partially within the circular encasement, the top hub including a bottom portion securely mounted within the bottom hub counterbore and a top portion mounted within the circular bore, the top hub further including a passage that is adjacent to the bottom hub passage and a slot that is adjacent to a portion of the top hub passage and to the bottom hub slot; a pin inserted through at least a portion of the top hub passage and at least a portion of the bottom hub passage; a webbing looped around at least a portion of the pin and passed through the bottom hub slot, the top hub slot, the inner knuckle, the inner knuckle slot, the inner knuckle sleeve into the inner upper arm sleeve and coupled to the spring, the webbing adapted to wrap around at least a portion of the outer surface of the bottom hub when the outer knuckle rotates in one of the directions during the bending of the arm, the tensioned spring adapted to urge the webbing to rotate into another of the directions and to urge a straightening of the arm.
Still other embodiments of the present invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, wherein is described embodiments of the invention by way of illustrating the best mode contemplated for carrying out the invention. As will be realized, the invention is capable of other and different embodiments and its several details are capable of modifications in various obvious respects, all without departing from the spirit and the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the drawings and detailed description are to be regarded as illustrative in nature and not as restrictive.
The bending and straightening of the arm 16 allows for extension and retraction of the awning 10.
Additional details regarding the arm can be seen with reference to
As can be seen with reference to
The tension bolt 27 threads into a threaded bore 34 of a tension hook 96, thus attaching the hook 96 onto the bolt 27. The tension lock 28 has a hexagonal profile that fits into the bolt 27 and that prevents the bolt 27 from spinning and unscrewing from the tension hook 96. The passage 30 is perpendicular to the passage 26, and when the pin 31 is secured within the passage 30 by the bushings 32 and 33, the pin 31 blocks the tension lock 28 from escaping from the passage 26. A shoulder plug 29 is also inserted into the passage 26, concealing the pin 31 and other internal components from view from the passage 26. The pin 31 extends through and beyond the bushings 32 and 33, with the portions of the pin 31 extending beyond at least beyond the bushing 32 being used for attachment of the arm 16 to the torsion bar 14 and rotation of the arm 16 on the torsion bar 14.
As can be seen with reference to
The distance between the hook 96 to which the spring 35 is attached on one end and the webbing 50 to which the spring is attached on the other end influences the amount of tension that the spring 35 is under, which in turn influences the amount of a pulling force necessary to bend the arm 16. The distance, and consequently, the tension present in the arm 16, can be adjusted by changing the depth with which the bolt 27 is threaded into the hook 96. As the bolt 27 is screwed into the hook 96 further, the hook 96 is drawn closer to the tension lock 28 and further away from the webbing 50, thus increasing the tension in the spring 35. In the same manner, as the bolt 27 is screwed out of the hook 96, the hook 96 moves towards the webbing 50 and the tension in the spring decreases. Thus, the shoulder 21 provides a simple way to adjust the tension within the arms 16, allowing to easily correct any complications caused by arms 16 with mismatched tension. To adjust the tension in an arm 16 that has already been installed, one would have to disconnect the arm from the torsion bar 14, remove the plug 29, the pin 31 (and consequently the bushings 32 and 33), and the tension look 28. Once these components are removed, a user can adjust the tension in the arm by turning the bolt 27 in one direction or another, screwing the bolt 27 in or out of the hook 96.
The elbow 17 connects the upper arm extrusion 22 and the lower arm extrusion 23. As further described below, the elbow 17 includes an inner knuckle 36 and an outer knuckle 37. The inner knuckle 36 is attached to the upper arm extrusion 22, such as through being inserted into the end of the sleeve 25 opposite to the end into which the shoulder extrusion 121 is inserted. The outer knuckle 37 of the elbow 17 is in turn attached to the lower arm extrusion 23. Thus, the lower arm extrusion 23 includes a sleeve 38 into which the outer knuckle 37 is inserted. A wrist extrusion 39 included in the wrist assembly 24 is inserted into the end of the sleeve 38 opposite to the end in which in which the outer knuckle 37 is inserted.
The wrist extrusion 39 includes a sleeve 40 into which a wedge 41 is inserted and secured by a bolt 125 that passes through an opening (not shown) within the wrist sleeve 40. The insertion of the wedge 41 widens the sleeve 40 enough to securely insert within the sleeve 38. The sleeve 40 is attached to a support structure 122 on which a hook 42, shown with reference to
As can be seen with reference in
Other elements of the arm 16 are also possible. For example, plastic covers 52 and 53 could be attached to the sleeve 25 and the sleeve 38 respectively, being parts of the upper arm extrusion 22 and the lower arm extrusion 22 respectively. Other components of the arm 16 are also possible.
When the arm 16 is fully assembled, the webbing 50 is not visible from the outside of the arm 16, protecting the webbing 50 and other internal components of the elbow from the elements.
Returning to
The top tang 73 and the bottom tang 75 are rotatably engaged to the top portion of the circular encasement 61 that defines the counterbore 64 and the bottom portion of the circular encasement 61 that defines the counterbore 65, respectively. The rotatable engagement is achieved using a set of bushings 91-94, as further described below.
Returning to
The elbow 17 further includes two coupled hubs that are both partially placed within the hollow space 63: a bottom hub 81 and a top hub 82.
The inner surface 85 of the bottom hub 81 forms a counterbore 86. A passage 87 leads from the counterbore 86 to an end of the bottom hub opposite to the end of the bottom hub shown in
Returning to
The top hub 82 inserts into the inner surface 85 of the bottom hub 82 and the circular bore 74 of the top tang 73.
The top hub 82 further inserts into the bottom hub 81. In particular, the top hub 82 also includes a plurality of protrusions 114 matching the plurality of indentations 90 of the inner surface 85 of the bottom hub 81, preventing the rotation of the top hub 82 within the top hub 81. The top hub 82 further includes a passage 112 from the end 115 of the hub 82 that is secured within the circular bore 74 to the end 116 of the hub 82 that is inserted into the bottom hub 81. A slot 113 is formed within the hub 82 that is adjacent to the passage 112.
As mentioned above, the bushings 91-94 form a rotational engagement of the inner knuckle 36 to the outer knuckle 37. Returning to
Similarly to the bushings 91, 92, the bottom bushings 93, 94 rotatably attach to each other when the elbow 17 is assembled. Thus, the bottom outer bushing 94 surrounds a portion of the bottom hub 81 and one side of the bushing 93 is adjacent to the bottom tang 75. The side of the outer bushing 94 opposite to the side adjacent to the bottom tang 75 is rotatably engaged to a side of the bottom inner bushing 93, which is inserted into the bottom outer bushing 94. The side of the inner bushing 93 opposite to the side rotatably engaged to the bottom outer bushing 93 is pressed into the bottom counterbore 65 of the encasement 61, remaining stationary with respect to the encasement 61. Similarly, the bottom outer bushing 91 remains stationary with respect to the top tang 75.
The lack of rotation of the bushings 91-94 with respect to the tangs 91-94 and to the circular encasement 61 can be accomplished in a variety of ways. For example, the bushings 91 and 94 can include a flat surface (124 as shown on the bushing 91) that is pressed against a flat surface of the support structure 71, preventing the rotation of the outer bushings 91 and 94. Alternatively, the bushings 91 and 94 can include a protrusion (not shown) that can be inserted into an indentation within the support structure 72 to prevent the rotation of the bushing 91. The inner bushings 92 and 93 are rendered immobile with respect to the counterbores 64 and 65 due to a tightness of the fit of the bushings within the counterbores 64, 65.
The bushings 91-94 are rotatably engaged to each other and to other elements of elements of the elbow 17.
As the top hub 82 is securely mounted within the top tang 73 and the bottom hub 82 is securely mounted within the bottom hub 75, a rotation of the structure formed by the top hub 82 being inserted into the bottom hub 81, as shown with reference to
Returning to
The webbing 50 forms a loop around the pin 107 within the continuous passage and is secured by the pin 107 within the elbow 17.
The orientation of the portion of the webbing 50 looped around the pin passed through the slots 89, 113, and 66 differs from the orientation of the portion of the webbing 50 that is attached to the spring 35 as shown in
As can also been seen with reference to
As described above, a rotation of the roller tube 12 pulls the front bar 15 towards the torsion bar 14. If the pull is stronger than the pull of the spring 35 on the webbing 50, the outer knuckle 37 rotates in the counterclockwise direction, allowing the front bar 15 to move towards the torsion bar 14. During the rotation of the outer knuckle (and consequently, the whole elbow 17) in the counter-clockwise direction, the webbing 50 wraps around a portion the outer surface 83 of the bottom hub 81. Once the pull on the fabric 12 is removed, the pull of the spring 35 causes the wrapped webbing 50 to rotate the outer knuckle 37 in the clockwise direction, thus straightening the arm 16 out.
The protection of the internal parts of the elbow 17 from the elements allows to prolong the lifespan of the elbow. Returning to
The webbing 50 can be made of a polyurethane, though other materials are possible. The bushings 31-32 and 91-94 can be made of plastic, though other materials are possible. Unless otherwise indicated above, other components of the arm 16 can be made of a metal, such as aluminum, though other materials are also possible.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described as referenced to the embodiments thereof, those skilled in the art will understand that the foregoing and other changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180106047 A1 | Apr 2018 | US |