The present invention relates to a safety gas lighter. More particular, the present invention relates to a safety gas lighter wherein the striking wheel is loosely mounted on an axle.
A conventional gas lighter using striking wheel and flint are easy to use, reliable and production cost is low. However, children may accidentally operate it and cause fire and/or burn injury. Therefore, safety measures are needed in order to prevent accidental operations by children.
Many types of safety devices were developed. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,846,069, a rotatable wheel hood having a safety position and an activation position is placed over the striking wheel. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,860,733, a ratchet-pawl mechanism was used. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,716,024, a pair of brake discs and a pair of brake devices are placed outside of the two driving wheels. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,520,197, two brake members work in conjunction of the two turning wheels to stop the rotation of the striking wheel assembly. These designs all added more components in the lighters, increased the cost, and it is possible that mal-function will occur, cannot guarantee safety.
Accordingly, the present invention presents a safe and simple design to prevent accidental operations by children and easy to use for adults.
A safety gas lighter with a loosely mounted striking wheel comprises a lighter body, topped by a lighter head, a gas release valve, a pressing lever for gas release, a spring, a flint, and a wheel assembly with an axle. In one preferred embodiment of the present invention, the first end of the axle of the wheel assembly is fixed to the first side wheel of the wheel assembly, the second side wheel is mounted to the second end of the axle, while a striking wheel is loosely mounted on the axle and between the first and second side wheel. The outside diameter of the striking wheel is smaller than the outside diameters of the first and second side wheel. The inside diameter of the striking wheel is larger than the outside diameter of the axle. Therefore, if only the first and second side wheels are stroked by a thumb, the striking wheel will not turn, and the safety gas lighter of the present invention will not light a fire; however when extra force is used, the thumb will press more inward, and the striking wheel will be stroked to rotate and generate sparks to light a fire.
For children, because their hands are small, and their strengths cannot be compared with the adults, they can only rotate side wheels, but cannot rotate striking wheel, so the children cannot light fire when they play with the lighter. When adults are using the lighter, their hands will touch the side wheels as well as the striking wheels, to make the side wheels and striking wheel rotate simultaneously. The striking wheel will touch the flint, to generate sparks, and light fires. Because children would not be able to light fire, only adults can light fire, the lighter is a safety type lighter.
The present invention will in more detail be described with reference to the drawings, in which
As shown in
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, as seen in
In the present invention, if only the first side wheel 102 and the second side wheel 4 are stroked by a thumb, the first side wheel 102, the second side wheel 4, and the axle 101 will rotate, but the striking wheel will not rotate, and the safety gas lighter 1 will not light a fire. When extra force is used, the thumb will press more inward, and the striking wheel will be stroked to rotate and generate sparks to light a fire. For small children, their thumbs are small, and their strengths are weak, the chance of them accidentally lighting fires by the safety gas lighter of the present invention is small. For adults, a little bit of extra force is needed to use the safety gas lighter of the present invention, but no significant difference. It is still easy to use.
In normal operation, the striking wheel is rotated and the press end 52 of the pressing lever 5 is pressed virtually simultaneously, that means the gas is released by the gas release valve 7 while sparks are generated when the flint 10 is rubbed. The sparks ignite the fuel gas and a flame is maintained so long as the press end 52 of the pressing lever 5 is pressed downward. The flame adjusting ring 6 can be adjusted to control the magnitude of the fire.
In one alternative embodiment, the striking wheel 301 can be fixed to the axle 101, and the first side wheel 102 and the second side wheel 4 can be pivotally mounted to the axle 101, wherein when the thumb strikes the first side wheel 102 and the second side wheel 4, only the first side wheel 102 and the second side wheel 4 will rotate. The axle 101 and the striking wheel 301 will not rotate, unless the striking wheel 301 is stroked by the thumb directly.
Although only a single or few exemplary embodiments of this invention have been described in detail above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible in the exemplary embodiment(s) without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of this invention. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention as defined in the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060281034 A1 | Dec 2006 | US |