The present invention relates to lumber cutting and more particularly to an improved lumber positioning device on a carpentry cutting bench which is a convenient and accurate non-step lumber positioning type device.
Prior art lumber cutting bench has a plurality of rows of positioning holes in a pinched board on the bottom and a pair of positioning rods spacedly pressed into a pair of selected positioning holes. These positioning rods is used in cooperation with a rip fence to clip the lumber for cutting. However, this type of lumber positioning device uses a pair of positioning rods insert into a pair of immovable positioning holes that could not adjust the space in between so as difficult to correspond with the sizes of the cutting lumber for a tightly gripping. Further, to select a pair of positioning holes to engage within the pair of positioning rods by measuring the distance with the eyes is not accurate. The carpenter must try again and again to find out a pair of exact positioning holes to dispose the pair of the positioning rods to succeed the gripping of a piece of lumber. This is a great disadvantage of the prior is lumber cutting bench.
The present invention has a main object to provide an improved lumber positioning device on a carpentry cutting bench which adopts non-step positioning structure for quickly and accurately gripping different sized lumbers for cutting that is convenient to a carpenter.
Accordingly, the improved lumber positioning device of the present invention comprises generally a pair of rip fences respectively secured to the lateral sides of a rectangular table. The rip fence each has a plurality of vertical slots of different oblique angles and corresponds with each other. The table has a plurality of meter gauge slots in center surface matched with those vertical slots, at least a pair of straight guide grooves parallel formed beside the meter gauge slots and each having a rack on inner side for engaging with a pair of positioning plates each of which has a central hole for respectively disposing a pair of positioning rods and a horizontal through holes, a pair of arcuate expanding pieces respectively engaged within two end of the horizontal through hole having teeth on their outer peripheries. The arcuate expanding pieces are restrained by at least an elastic ring. The positioning rods each has a handle on the top and an elliptic protrusion eccentrically integrated at lower end and pressed into the positioning plates and the expanding pieces. When rotates the positioning rods for a certain angle, the expanding pieces move outward and their teeth engage with the rack of the straight guide grooves such that the positioning rods together with the rip fences clip a cutting lumber non-steppedly.
The present invention will become more fully understood by reference to the following detailed description thereof when read in conjunction with the attached drawings.
With reference to FIGS. 1 to 5 of the drawings, the improved lumber positioning device 10 of the present invention comprises a pair of symmetrical rip fences 20 and 30 respectively secured to opposing lateral edge of a rectangular board 40 by a plurality of screws 11, wherein the rip fence 20 is positioned uniform with the bottom of the rectangular board 40 and the rip fence 30 is positioned slightly lower than the bottom of the board 40 so that the lower edge of the rip fence 30 may lean on an edge of a working table 60 or engage with a longitudinal groove of the working table 60 (as shown in
Referring to
The improved lumber positioning device of the present invention is characterized in the positioning plates 43 which is freely sliding in the guide grooves to accommodate the cutting lumber 50 to achieve a non-step positioning action. After the lumber is exactly gripped between the positioning plate 43 and the rip fence 20, rotate the positioning rod for about 180° to have the teeth of the symmetrical expanding plates 44 engaged with the rack of the guide groove 42, the positioning is being fixed without movement so that the lumber 50 is completely gripped for cutting with a hacksaw. No matter how large or how small is the size of the lumber 50. The non-step positioning arrangement omits the problems of selecting the exact positioning holes and/or repeatedly trying to accommodate the lumber 50 as did by the prior art lumber cutting bench which proves the novelty of the present invention.
Note that the specification relating to the above embodiment should be construed as an exemplary rather than as a limitative of the present invention, with many variations and modifications being readily attainable by a person of average skill in the art without departing from the spirit or scope thereof as defined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.