The present invention relates to a punch apparatus having a lever handle for punching holes in a stack of paper sheets.
Prior art paper punches typically use a direct force approach to punch holes in a stack of paper sheets. In these prior punches, the user presses down on a pivoting cover flap which forces the punch pins down and into the paper stack. This direct force approach has very little mechanical advantage. The force required to punch through the holes increases with the thickness of the paper stack. For thicker paper stacks, the required force to punch through the stack may exceed what the user can easily provide.
To address this problem, several punch manufacturers have proposed using a lever mechanism to reduce the required force by increasing the mechanical advantage. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,778,750 proposes the use of an elongated lever handle where one end of the handle is pivotally fixed to the punch and the other end is pressed down by the user. In turn, an intermediate surface (between the ends of the handle) is forced down on the cover flap to exert the punching force. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,109,155, a lever handle is pivotally attached to a rod extending up from the based and through the cover flap. As in the '750 patent, when the handle is pressed down by the user, an intermediate surface on the lever presses down on the cover flap to exert the punching force. Both of these patents disclose the use of a lever handle to increase the force applied to the cover flap by mechanical advantage. This effectively reduces the maximum force the user needs to apply to punch the paper stack.
The present invention offers a novel lever-handled paper punch which increases the mechanical advantage in a different manner than other proposed lever punches. The present punch reduces the maximum punch force and improves upon the disadvantages of prior art punches.
The present invention is directed to a punch apparatus for punching holes through a paper stack. The apparatus has a punch base with an attached mounting plate. Punch pins are mounted to the mounting plate for punching through the paper stack. A lever handle is rotationally attached to the mounting plate. The lever handle has a handle end, a contact end, and a rotation axis between the handle end and the contact end. A main shaft is rotationally mounted on the punch base. A lever arm and pressure plate are attached to the main shaft. The lever arm engages the contact end of the lever handle while the pressure plate engages the punch pins. When a downward force is applied to the handle end of the lever handle, the lever handle rotates about the rotation axis. The contact end of the lever handle then exerts an upward force on the lever arm which in turn rotates the main shaft and attached pressure plate. As a result, the pressure plate exerts a punching force down on the punch pins thereby causing the punch pins to punch down through the paper stack.
Other aspects of the invention include that the punching force is greater than the downward force due to a mechanical advantage of the lever handle. Each punch pin may be aligned in a punch head bracket adjustably mounted to the mounting plate. Each punch head bracket preferably has a paper feed slot for positioning the paper stack. Each punch pin has a top end engaged by the pressure plate and a punch end for punching through the paper stack positioned in the paper feed slot. The punch pins are preferably spring mounted in the punch head brackets such that the punch ends are retracted above the paper feed slot when the downward force is not being applied. A cover may be mounted on the punch base for covering the mounting plate, the main shaft, the lever arm, the pressure plate, and the plural punch head brackets. Preferably, the cover does not move during operation of the punch apparatus. The contact end of the lever handle is preferably a cylindrically-shaped transverse pin. The lever arm may have a cylindrically-shaped contact pin for engaging the contact end of the lever handle. The handle end may have a padded region. The punch base may have a chip tray for collecting paper hole cutouts punched from the paper stack. The punch base may have a window for viewing inside the chip tray. Assuming the main shaft rotates about a first axis, the punch pins move in the direction of a second axis, and the lever handle rotates about a third axis; it is preferred that the first, second and third axes be orthogonal.
Another embodiment of the invention is directed to a paper punch comprising a base having a substantially rectangular shape. A mounting plate is fixedly attached on the base. A main shaft is rotationally attached along a longitudinal axis of the base. The main shaft has a longitudinally attached pressure plate and a perpendicularly extending lever arm. A lever handle is rotationally attached to the mounting plate. The lever handle comprises a handle portion, a contact portion, and a rotation axis between the handle and contact portions. The rotation axis is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis. The contact portion of the lever handle is in contact with the lever arm of the main shaft. A plurality of punch units are attached to the mounting plate and are in contact with the pressure plate. When an applied force is exerted on the handle portion of the lever handle, it is transferred through the rotation axis to the contact portion which forces the lever arm to rotate the main shaft such that the pressure plate transfers a punching force to the plurality of punch units to punch holes in a stack of paper sheets.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims and accompanying drawings where:
The present invention uses a lever handle on a paper punch in a novel manner for increased mechanical advantage. The lever handle effectively reduces the amount of force required from the user to punch holes in a stack of paper sheets.
The present punch is operated by inserting a stack of paper sheets into the paper feed slots 222. The user presses down upon the handle end 114 of the lever handle. By virtue of pivot screw 112, the downward force on the handle end 114 is translated into a leveraged upward force on the contact end 116. The amount of leverage is related to the ratio of the distances between the handle end and the pivot screw and the pivot screw and the contact end. The contact end forces the contact lever arm 130 upward. This upward force is translated through contact lever arm 130 into a rotational force on the main shaft 240. The rotation of the main shaft about its longitudinal axis forces the pressure plates 250 down onto the top ends of the punch pins 210. The punch ends of the pins are driven downward through the paper feed slot to punch through any inserted paper sheets. The paper hole cutouts created by the punching operation drop through slot openings 224 in the base and into the chip tray. When the user stops pressing on the handle, the spring biased punch pins retract up into the punch brackets to clear the paper feed slot so that the punched paper stack can be removed.
The invention has been described in the context of a three-hole paper punch. The invention, however, can be extended to punches having other numbers of holes and for use in punching materials other than paper. The invention should be construed to include any useful equivalents. Such equivalents will be understood to be within the scope of the invention, which is defined by the appended claims and equivalents.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080168874 A1 | Jul 2008 | US |