This invention relates to a knife with means to emit sound using the flow of air, of the whistle type, and particularly a knife with a folding blade.
In some situations, it may be useful, or necessary, or even of vital importance to be able to signal one's presence or attract the attention of others. That may be so of people in trouble, during outdoor sports or leisure activities in a wild or uninhabited environment, such as hiking, mountain climbing, pleasure boating or others.
Whistles have been known for a very long time, with balls or using other techniques, that use the flow of air to emit a sound, which is generally high pitched.
Such whistles have the drawback of being one more piece of safety equipment to be carried by their users, along with a magnifying glass, knife, lamp, compass etc.
In a known manner, it has been proposed to add a whistle to another tool, particularly a knife, in a removable or permanent manner.
While that known system makes it possible to bring together two functions (knife and whistle) in the same object, it does not provide any additional convenience to the user in terms of weight or volume.
Further, using a whistle added to the handle of a knife that stands out from the handle can be inconvenient. Conversely, the presence of a whistle standing out from the handle of the knife can hinder the user of the knife.
If the whistle is added in a removable manner on the handle of a knife, it has the drawback mentioned before.
The invention aims to remedy those drawbacks and proposes a knife with means to emit sound using the flow of air, of the whistle type, wherein the presence of the means does not hinder the user of the knife in any way, and wherein firstly, the whistle can be used easily and comfortably, and secondly, no weight is added to the knife.
Lastly, the invention also applies to knives with folding blades, and the whistle does not affect the folding of the blade in the handle.
To that end, according to the invention, there is provided a knife with a handle and a blade, associated with means of the whistle type adapted to emit sound using an air flow, the said means comprising a recess connected to a mouthpiece located upstream, through which the said flow of air is introduced, and connected to an exit window located downstream, and an air compression chamber located downstream from the mouthpiece, opening (through a hole) into an expansion chamber (or pressure relief chamber) which is itself connected to the said exit window, characterised in that the said whistle means are integrated into the body of the handle, incorporated inside the body of the said handle, and in that the handle is made by moulding and that the compression chamber, pressure relief chambers and exit windows are made while moulding using reservations or the like to make the required recesses.
Advantageously, the handle is made of a single piece.
The compression chamber is such that its section along a plane orthogonal to the longitudinal axis of the handle (or orthogonal to the air flow) reduces, preferably in a linear manner, in the direction of the expansion chamber.
More particularly, on one of the internal sides of the compression chamber, a block with a rectangular base and a trapezoidal section is fixed so as to create a rising ramp from the mouthpiece to the hole communicating firstly with the expansion chamber (pressure relief chamber) and secondly with the exit window.
The exit window has a bevelled edge on the side opposite the compression chamber.
The compression chamber opens onto two distinct expansion chambers that are sealed from each other and each open onto an exit window.
The two expansion chambers are elongated in shape, parallel, and have different lengths in the air flow direction (parallel to the longitudinal axis of the handle).
The sound emitting means are arranged in the handle so that the direction of the air flow is parallel, preferably co-linear, to the longitudinal axis of the handle.
The blade can be folded into a slot provided in the handle that separates the handle into two contiguous parts that oppose each other along a longitudinal and substantially median plane of the handle, the said sound emitting means being then incorporated into one of the said parts.
On a plane transversal to the longitudinal axis of the knife, the compression chamber is rectangular in section, whilst the expansion chamber has a square section.
The means have the following dimensions for a handle with a 20-mm diameter:
The handle is made of plastic, preferably thermoplastic and may contain reinforcing fibres, for example polyamide (PA), in particular with fibreglass reinforcement, or polybutylene terephthalate (PBT).
The handle, which is substantially cylindrical in shape, is moulded in a single piece using a slide mould so as to reserve the parts that are designed to become chambers, hollows and conduits.
In the case of knives with folding blades, a central hollow is provided in the handle to accommodate the blade (at least most of the blade).
The compression chamber, the compression or pressure relief chamber or chambers and the window or windows are made, while moulding, by reservation or other known means to make the necessary recesses.
The invention will be better understood in the light of the description below relating to illustrative but non-limitative examples of the invention, by reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The terms ‘horizontal’, ‘vertical’, ‘top’ and ‘side’ refer to the natural positions when the knife is normally in use in the user's hand, as for example in the side view of
By reference to
The knife 1 comprises an elongated handle 2, a blade 3 with a proximal end comprising a heel 4 (close to the handle) mounted articulated on the handle 2 at its proximal end 5 that comprises a recess 6 capable of accommodating the heel 4.
A split ring 8 covers the end 5 of the handle 3, with the split matching and in line with the recess 6.
The articulation of the blade 3 on the handle is provided by a pin 7 that goes through the ring 8, the end 5 of the handle 2 and the heel 4 of the blade 3.
The blade 3 can be folded into the handle, which comprises a corresponding recess (not visible in the figure).
A split ferrule 9 covers the ring 8 and can rotate in relation to the ring. Means known in themselves and not illustrated are provided to prevent any longitudinal displacement of the ferrule 9.
The ferrule 9, depending on its position while rotating, makes it possible to allow the blade 3 to pass (when the splits of the ferrule 9 and the ring 8 are lined up) or lock the blade (the ferrule 9 preventing the passage of the blade) either in the open unfolded position (
By reference to
Further, the knife 1 of the invention comprises sound emitting means of the whistle type incorporated in the handle and described below by reference to
The whistle is represented schematically in the form of a tube 18 with at one end a mouthpiece or mouth 19 and with another end 20 which is closed. The mouth 19 is made on an open side of a compression chamber 21, itself connected at its other end (opposite the mouth 19) by a hole 22 to an expansion or pressure relief chamber 23 (with a parallelepiped shape).
The upper wall of the latter has an exit window 24 located near the said hole 22. The downstream edge of the window 23 opposite the compression chamber 21 has a bevel 25.
The compression chamber 21 has a prismatic shape with a trapezoidal transverse section. A block 26 with a square or rectangular section and trapezoidal section is provided in the downstream part of the tube 18. The oblique wall 26A of the block 26, with an ascending slope up to the hole 22, demarcates the compression chamber 21 with the other walls of the tube 18. In other words, the straight section in a vertical plane of the mouth 19 is larger than that of the hole 22 communicating with the pressure relief chamber 23. The slope of the oblique wall 26A is between 5° and 20°, preferably 10° to 13°, with a length (in the longitudinal direction of the handle) of approximately 18 mm.
That alternative whistle differs from that in
The first pressure relief chamber 23A is longer than the second one 23B and comprises a first part 28 (near the blade of the knife) that goes beyond, in the longitudinal direction, a second part 29 that opens onto the window 24A. The second part 29 has the same length as the second pressure relief chamber 23B. The single compression chamber 21 placed upstream opens into the two pressure relief chambers 23A and 23B.
The pressure relief chambers 23A and 23B have different lengths and emit sounds with different frequencies through their respective exit windows 24A and 24B.
As shown in
On the plane of
The dimensions of the exit windows 24A and 24B are identical, namely, in a top view (
The handle has a longitudinal recess 30 on a vertical plane, with a quadrangular section, designed to accommodate the blade (not shown).
The
The handle 2 of the knife is made of thermoformable plastic, such as polyamide (PA) or PBT (polybutylene terephthalate).
The handle is moulded in a single piece and comprises two parts, the so-called left part 2A and the so-called right part 2B (by reference to
The right-hand part 2B of the handle includes the whistle of the invention. The compression chamber, the pressure relief chambers and the exit windows are made, while moulding, by reservation or other known means to make the necessary recesses.
The whistle described above is integrated to the body of the handle and is made inside the handle.
By blowing into the mouthpiece 19, the user creates an air flow that enters into the compression chamber 21. Because of the ramp 26, the air flow pressure increases at the exit of the chamber 21 and then enters, after passing through the hole 22, into the pressure relief chamber 23, or the two pressure relief chambers 23A and 23B from where the air then escapes from the window 24 or the two windows 24A and 24B. The fact that the pressure relief windows have different lengths makes it possible to emit sounds through each window with different frequency spectra, where one is higher than the other. The end result only increases the overall power of the emitted sound, which in this case can be heard several hundreds of metres away.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1156940 | Jul 2011 | FR | national |