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This invention relates to quick connection and release buckles and more particularly to a stud and clasp combination for selectively disconnecting and attaching carrying straps to luggage, and the like.
Stud and clasp combinations for connecting items of clothing have been in use for many years. Illustratively, to support a stocking from an undergarment it had been customary to attach a clasp and an associated stud to the undergarment. The stud, having an enlarged head, took a purchase on a portion of the stocking and the combined stocking portion and head were pressed through an opening in the clasp. So engaged, the part of the stud that was below the head and a further portion of the stocking associated with that lower part of the stud were jammed into a narrow bight formed in the clasp opening. The bight often had a lining that not only enjoyed a high coefficient of friction to increase the force holding the stud in the bight, but that also avoided abrading, tearing, or destroying the portion of the stocking fabric that was grasped between the stud and the adjoining sides of the bight. These garment connectors, however, were limited in concept and application to supporting an item of clothing that was frictionally gripped between the stud and the clasp.
With respect to detachable traveling straps for items of luggage, however, the emphasis had been directed to complicated snap fasteners and other spring loaded devices for temporarily coupling a strap to an item of luggage. Such devices were expensive to manufacture and difficult to assemble. In use, moreover, these devices led to broken fingernails, broken and deformed springs, and fasteners that failed, causing the supported luggage to drop to the floor, quite frequently at a most inconvenient time.
Accordingly, there is a need for a sturdy, inexpensive and reliable device for connecting and disconnecting items of luggage to carrying straps, handles and the like.
These and other disadvantages of the prior art are largely overcome through the practice of the invention.
For example, in accordance with the invention, a stud is provided with a shank and an enlarged head at an end of the shank. The head has a broad flattened base at the opposite end of the shank, the base joining the stud to a reinforced portion of a carrying strap in a manner that enables the shank to protrude perpendicularly from the reinforced strap portion. A clasp having an aperture that is larger than the width of a corresponding portion of the stud head is attached to an end of the reinforced strap portion. A bight, moreover, is formed in a side of the clasp aperture that corresponds to the anticipated place of luggage load application. Also, the bight is lined with a resilient material that provides a high coefficient of friction with the material from which the stud is formed. The material lining the bight is resilient and the lined entrance to the bight forms a gap that is slightly narrower than the corresponding width of the stud's shank.
Consequently, to couple the stud to the clasp, it is only necessary to press the head of the stud through the clasp aperture. The shank of the stud is then pressed past the resilient and narrow gap at the entrance to the clasp's bight.
In accordance with a salient feature of the invention, because of the relative position of the aperture's bight with respect to the attached item of luggage, the heavier the luggage, the greater is the force that presses the stud into the end of the bight. Thus, through the novel orientation of the stud, the aperture's bight and the applied loading that characterizes this invention, the loading is manipulated to strengthen the coupling between the stud and the clasp.
To disengage the carrying strap from the piece of luggage, it is only necessary to press the stud's shank through the gap, out of the bight and into the clasp's aperture. The stud and the enlarged head then are withdrawn from the aperture. In this manner, the practice of the invention overcomes the higher manufacturing costs of prior art devices and enables the traveler to free the strap from the item of luggage without risk of broken fingernails, broken or deformed springs, accidentally dropped luggage, and the like.
For a more detailed understanding of the advantages and features of the invention, attention is invited to
An exposed surface 16 of the head 13 is sufficiently large to accommodate the end of an index finger or a thumb (not shown in the drawing), the exposed surface 16 as shown in
Turning now to
The elasticity of the protrusions 30, 31 that form the gap 32 is adequate to hold the shank 12 in the bight 27 through the normal forces encountered by luggage in transit. The resiliency of the protrusions 30, 31, however, is sufficiently flexible to permit the shank 12 to be pressed with only digital force in the direction of arrow 33 past the gap 32 and into the portion of the bight 27 that is not occupied by the respective protrusions 30, 31 on the resilient members 25, 26. Similarly, the protrusions 30, 31 also enable the shank 12 to be digitally pressed in the direction of arrow 34 from a position in the rounded end 28 of the bight 27 into the aperture 24, as described subsequently.
With respect to
Further in connection with this feature of the invention and as shown in
Turning once more to
In operation, the carrying strap 40 is looped at its general midpoint 47 between the stud 10 and the clasp 22 through a shackle on an item of luggage (not shown). As best illustrated in
In accordance with a specific feature of the invention, it should be noted that the luggage load is borne in the direction of the arrow 20 (
During transit, and as specifically illustrated in
To release the strap 40, and as shown in
Consequently, the invention provides a sturdy, reliable, relatively inexpensive and safe connector for luggage carrying straps, and the like.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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607742 | Gorton | Jul 1898 | A |
696912 | Ross | Apr 1902 | A |
781430 | Kellogg | Jan 1905 | A |
805559 | Kleinert | Nov 1905 | A |
867255 | Dietz | Oct 1907 | A |
910879 | Taylor | Jan 1909 | A |
920186 | Schloss | May 1909 | A |
1172703 | Grooms | Feb 1916 | A |
1236079 | Hentschel | Aug 1917 | A |
2239004 | Jung | Apr 1941 | A |
2986791 | Strehlein | Jun 1961 | A |
3313008 | Littell et al. | Apr 1967 | A |
5106223 | Kraus | Apr 1992 | A |
5927580 | Ward-Llewellyn | Jul 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080047114 A1 | Feb 2008 | US |