The technology disclosed herein relates generally to linear fastener driving tools and is particularly directed to fastener magazines of the type which sequentially feed a fastener into a driver track in a guide body of a linear fastener driving tool. At least one embodiment is disclosed as a fastener magazine that is used in a linear fastener driving tool, in which a movable guide has been mounted on the magazine. The movable guide can be set to an engaged position, in which the movable guide sequentially directs fasteners from the magazine into a guide body of the tool, such that the fasteners cannot “backtrack” during a drive stroke, thus preventing a possible jam condition. The movable guide can also be set to a disengaged position, in which the movable guide does not sequentially direct fasteners from the magazine into the guide body of the tool.
The movable guide is designed to allow a user to load the fastener magazine with fasteners of various lengths, while simultaneously preventing potential jam conditions by preventing a fastener from completely “backtracking” into the magazine during a drive stroke of the tool. This movable guide is also sometimes referred to as a magazine “block out,” because it can block certain fasteners from being fed into the tool's guide body, if in its engaged position. By providing the movable guide near the exit portion of the magazine, a shorter fastener may be used in the magazine without allowing backtracking to occur, since the guide includes a ramp portion that causes the fastener to be ‘re-aimed’ into the fastener/driver track of the tool, and thereby preventing any “complete backtracking” movements of the fastener.
A second embodiment is disclosed as a fastener magazine that is used in a linear fastener driving tool, in which the fastener magazine is removably attached to the tool. The tool has a receptacle proximal to the front end, and the fastener magazine has a fulcrum portion that corresponds to the receptacle. To attach the fastener magazine, a user holds the fastener magazine at an angle to the front of the tool, places the fulcrum in the receptacle, and then “pivots” the fastener magazine towards the tool, and then finally latching it securely to the tool. This “pivot” method of fastener magazine attachment allows a user to quickly clear a jammed fastener, without a lengthy disruption of work on the jobsite.
None.
Many conventional fastener driving tools use a fastener magazine to carry a plurality of fasteners to be fired in a sequential manner Many fastener magazines are designed to load only one length of fasteners. It becomes time consuming for a user to swap magazines out to simply change fastener lengths while operating the tool.
Some magazines can load fasteners of a variety of lengths. However, using a fastener length that is too short for the magazine may cause the fastener to “backtrack” into the magazine during a drive stroke, potentially causing a jam condition. If a fastener actually completely “backtracks” back into the magazine during a drive stroke, it can be time consuming to unjam or repair the tool.
Typical magazines available in the past are designed to handle only one size (length) of fastener, such as a nail. So, if a shorter nail is placed into the magazine, that shorter nail will be much more likely to not ‘feed’ properly into the driver track of the nailer tool, and may indeed “backtrack” into the magazine while it is being driven.
Magazines are also typically secured to the tool, and typically hold a single specific length of fastener. If a user needs to change fastener lengths, the magazine either has to be painstakingly disassembled from the tool, and a different magazine attached that will accommodate the new fastener length; or, the user will need to change tools entirely because the magazine is unremovable from the tool and only accommodates a specific fastener length.
Accordingly, it is an advantage of the present technology disclosed herein to provide a fastener magazine that has a movable guide to sequentially direct fasteners during a drive stroke of a fastener driving tool.
It is another advantage to provide a fastener magazine that has a sufficiently large fastener-receiving dimension which allows a variety of fastener lengths to be loaded into the magazine, and has a movable guide that prevents “complete backtracking,” while also preventing a potential jam condition during a drive stroke.
It is yet another advantage to provide a fastener driving tool including a magazine that has a sufficiently large fastener-receiving dimension which allows a variety of fastener lengths to be loaded in the magazine, and has a movable guide subassembly with a movable gate which exhibits a ramp portion that guides shorter fasteners into the driver/fastener track of the tool's guide body, and thereby prevents “complete backtracking” toward the magazine.
It is still another advantage to provide a fastener driving tool including a magazine that has a sufficiently large fastener-receiving dimension which allows a variety of fastener lengths to be loaded in the magazine, and has a movable guide subassembly with a movable gate which exhibits a ramp portion that guides shorter fasteners into the driver/fastener track of the tool's guide body, in which the movable gate can be positioned in an “engaged” position so that its ramp portion will guide the shorter fasteners, or the movable gate can be positioned in a “disengaged” position, in which the gate is moved into a pocket near the first end of the magazine, and thus is in a non-interfering location that will not contact the longer fasteners that can be used with this magazine/tool.
It is a further advantage to provide a fastener driving tool including a removable magazine, in which the tool has a (first) magazine attachment point, the magazine has a corresponding attachment portion, and the magazine is attached to the tool at the first attachment point while angled outward from the tool, then pivoted towards the tool via the first attachment point, and then securely latched to the tool at a second attachment point, along the elongated side of the magazine.
It is a yet further advantage to provide a fastener driving tool including a removable magazine, in which the tool has a magazine receiving area that includes a rounded opening for receiving a cylindrically-shaped fulcrum that is part of the magazine, in which the magazine's fulcrum is at an extended position from the ‘feeding end’ of the magazine (where the fasteners in the magazine exit from the magazine and into the tool's guide body), and in which the tool's rounded opening at the receiving area has a geometric center, and finally, in which the magazine's fulcrum pivots about that geometric center after the fulcrum is initially placed into that rounded opening, and then the magazine is latched into place by a separate latching mechanism, which (when combined with the fulcrum in the rounded opening) than securely holds the magazine in place against the tool, for use in driving fasteners that are fed sequentially from the magazine.
Additional advantages and other novel features will be set forth in part in the description that follows and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned with the practice of the technology disclosed herein.
To achieve the foregoing and other advantages, and in accordance with one aspect, a fastener magazine for a fastener driving tool is provided, which comprises: (a) a magazine housing including a first end and a second end, and a longitudinal axis that extends between the first and second ends, the magazine housing configured to hold a plurality of fasteners that are placed between the first and second ends and are movable therebetween; (b) a mounting bracket on the magazine housing proximal to the first end; (c) a fastener pusher that biases the plurality of fasteners toward the first end; (d) a movable fastener guide secured to the mounting bracket; (e) the movable fastener guide having an engaged position and a disengaged position; wherein: (f) if in the engaged position, the movable fastener guide sequentially directs one of the plurality of fasteners toward the first end of the magazine in a manner such that the fastener is prevented from completely backtracking, by mechanically interfering with a movement of the one of the plurality of fasteners that becomes misaligned; and (g) if in the disengaged position, the movable fastener guide does not mechanically interfere with a movement of the one of the plurality of fasteners.
In accordance with another aspect, a fastener driving tool is provided, which comprises: (a) a working cylinder that includes a movable piston, the cylinder including a variable displacement volume on a first side of the piston, and the cylinder including a variable venting volume on a second, opposite side of the piston; (b) a storage chamber; (c) an end cap that is attached to at least one of the cylinder and the storage chamber near an end portion of the fastener driving tool; (d) a movable driver that is in mechanical communication with the piston; (e) a guide body that guides movements of the driver; (f) a magazine housing including a first end and a second end, the magazine housing configured to hold a plurality of fasteners; (g) a mounting bracket on the magazine housing proximal to the first end; (h) a movable fastener guide secured to the mounting bracket; (i) the movable fastener guide including an engaged position and a disengaged position; wherein: (j) in the engaged position, the movable fastener guide sequentially directs one of the plurality of fasteners in a manner such that the fastener is prevented from completely backtracking; and (k) in the disengaged position, the movable fastener guide does not sequentially direct the plurality of fasteners.
In accordance with yet another aspect, a movable guide for use in a fastener magazine for use with a fastener driving tool is provided, the movable guide comprising: (a) a rotatable knob that is sized and shaped for actuation by a human hand, the knob being mounted on a surface of a fastener magazine, proximal to an exit end of the fastener magazine; (b) a rotatable gate that is also located proximal to the exit end of the fastener magazine; (c) a stem that resides between the knob and the gate, and has sufficient structural rigidity so that the gate is forced to move rotationally if the knob is moved rotationally; (d) a spring that creates a biasing force against the knob and against the surface of the fastener magazine; and (e) a knob holding pin that secures the knob at the surface of the fastener magazine; wherein: (f) the knob and gate are movable between a disengaged position and an engaged position, such that: (i) if the knob and the gate are in the disengaged position, then the gate resides in a non-interfering location, and a fastener moving through the magazine will not make physical contact with the guide; and (ii) if the knob and the gate are in the engaged position, then the knob holding protrusion keeps the knob in that engaged position until released by an action of a human hand, and the gate resides in an interfering location, in which a misaligned fastener will make physical contact with a ramp portion of the guide, as the fastener is being driven by a moving driver of a fastener driving tool that is adjacent to the exit end of the fastener magazine.
In accordance with still another aspect, a method for attaching a removable fastener magazine to a fastener driving tool is provided, in which the method comprises the following steps: (a) providing a fastener driving tool that includes at least a housing, a handle portion, a front end subassembly proximal to an exit end of the tool; the front end subassembly comprising a rounded receptacle subassembly, and a guide body having a bottom portion and a backplate, the rounded receptacle subassembly including at least: (i) an opening in the backplate of the guide body, the opening exhibiting a geometric center; (ii) a ramp surface; and (iii) a first corner between the opening and the ramp surface; (b) providing a removably attachable fastener magazine having a magazine housing including a first end and a second, opposite end, and a longitudinal axis that extends between the first and second ends, the magazine housing configured to hold a plurality of fasteners that are placed between the first and second ends and are movable therebetween, the fastener magazine exhibiting a fulcrum portion that includes: (i) a cylindrical outer surface; (ii) a side protrusion proximal to the cylindrical outer surface of the fulcrum; and (iii) an extension portion that extends between the cylindrical outer surface and the first end of the magazine, the extension portion having an upper surface portion and a lower surface portion; and (c) attaching the fastener magazine to the fastener driving tool by: (i) inserting the side protrusion into the opening of the backplate; (ii) rotating the fulcrum portion around the geometric center of the opening in the backplate; (iii) pressing the upper surface portion of the magazine against the bottom portion of the guide body; and (iv) engaging a mounting bracket on the tool with a latch subassembly on the magazine.
In accordance with a further aspect, a fastener driving tool having a removable fastener magazine is provided, the tool comprising: (a) a housing, a handle portion, and a nose portion that includes a guide body having a fastener track and a first mounting bracket receiving portion, the nose portion exhibiting a rounded receptacle subassembly that includes: (i) a bottom portion; (ii) a rounded opening in the bottom portion; (iii) a ramp surface proximal to the rounded opening; and (iv) a geometric center proximal to the rounded opening; and (b) a removable fastener magazine having a first end, a second end, and a longitudinal axis that extends between the first and second ends, the removable fastener magazine configured to hold a plurality of fasteners placed between the first and second ends and are movable therebetween, the removable fastener magazine including a first mounting bracket with a fulcrum portion that exhibits: (i) a fulcrum having a cylindrical outer surface; and (ii) an extension portion having an upper surface portion and a lower surface portion, the extension portion extending to the fulcrum; wherein, the removable fastener magazine pivotally attaches to the tool at the geometric center of the rounded opening of the nose portion rounded receptacle subassembly.
In accordance with a yet further aspect, a fastener magazine for a fastener driving tool is provided, which comprises: (a) a magazine housing including a first end and a second end, the magazine housing configured to hold a plurality of fasteners; (b) a means to secure a movable fastener guide on the magazine housing proximal to the first end; (c) the movable fastener guide including an engaged position and a disengaged position; wherein: (d) if the movable fastener guide is in the engaged position, then the movable fastener guide includes a means for sequentially directing one of the plurality of fasteners in a manner such that the fastener is prevented from completely backtracking; and (e) if the movable fastener guide is in the disengaged position, then the means for sequentially directing one of the plurality of fasteners does not physically contact a fastener.
Still other advantages will become apparent to those skilled in this art from the following description and drawings wherein there is described and shown a preferred embodiment in one of the best modes contemplated for carrying out the technology. As will be realized, the technology disclosed herein is capable of other different embodiments, and its several details are capable of modification in various, obvious aspects all without departing from its principles. Accordingly, the drawings and descriptions will be regarded as illustrative in nature and not as restrictive.
The accompanying drawings incorporated in and forming a part of the specification illustrate several aspects of the technology disclosed herein, and together with the description and claims serve to explain the principles of the technology. In the drawings:
Reference will now be made in detail to the present preferred embodiment, an example of which is illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like numerals indicate the same elements throughout the views.
It is to be understood that the technology disclosed herein is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The technology disclosed herein is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including,” “comprising,” or “having” and variations thereof herein is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. Unless limited otherwise, the terms “connected,” “coupled,” or “mounted,” and variations thereof herein are used broadly and encompass direct and indirect connections, couplings, or mountings. In addition, the terms “connected” or “coupled” and variations thereof are not restricted to physical or mechanical connections or couplings. Furthermore, the terms “communicating with” or “in communications with” refer to two different physical or virtual elements that somehow pass signals or information between each other, whether that transfer of signals or information is direct or whether there are additional physical or virtual elements therebetween that are also involved in that passing of signals or information. Moreover, the term “in communication with” can also refer to a mechanical, hydraulic, or pneumatic system in which one end (a “first end”) of the “communication” may be the “cause” of a certain impetus to occur (such as a mechanical movement, or a hydraulic or pneumatic change of state) and the other end (a “second end”) of the “communication” may receive the “effect” of that movement/change of state, whether there are intermediate components between the “first end” and the “second end,” or not. If a product has moving parts that rely on magnetic fields, or somehow detects a change in a magnetic field, or if data is passed from one electronic device to another by use of a magnetic field, then one could refer to those situations as items that are “in magnetic communication with” each other, in which one end of the “communication” may induce a magnetic field, and the other end may receive that magnetic field, and be acted on (or otherwise affected) by that magnetic field.
The terms “first” or “second” preceding an element name, e.g., first inlet, second inlet, etc., are used for identification purposes to distinguish between similar or related elements, results or concepts, and are not intended to necessarily imply order, nor are the terms “first” or “second” intended to preclude the inclusion of additional similar or related elements, results or concepts, unless otherwise indicated.
In addition, it should be understood that embodiments disclosed herein include both hardware and electronic components or modules that, for purposes of discussion, may be illustrated and described as if the majority of the components were implemented solely in hardware.
Referring now to
The magazine 8 includes a latch subassembly 52 (to securely connect to the tool), a top portion 70 (also sometimes referred to herein as a “first end,” or as the “exit end” of the magazine), a bottom portion 72 (also sometimes referred to herein as a “second end”), and a mounting bracket 67 proximal to the first end 70. The magazine 8 removably attaches to the tool 10 at the first end 70, and is secured to the tool using the latch subassembly 52, along its elongated side, about two-thirds of the way down that side, from the first end to the second end of the magazine.
A movable (or pivotable) fastener guide subassembly (S/A) 60 (also sometimes referred to herein as a “blockout S/A”) is mounted on the mounting bracket 67 of the magazine. An adjustable knob 64 is illustrated, and the knob is used to move the guide S/A into either a first (or engaged) position or a second (or disengaged) position.
Referring now to
A spring 66 sits around a knob stem 69, and a gate 62 is mounted to the knob stem 69 by use of a gate holding pin 65. Thus, the gate 62 is positioned proximal to the exit end 70 of the fastener magazine 8. The spring 66 creates a biasing force that biases the knob 64 away from the bracket 67. The gate 62 has a ramp portion 61 which is used to direct a misaligned fastener during a drive stroke, as discussed below in greater detail. The knob stem 69 has sufficient structural rigidity so that the gate 62 is forced to move rotationally if the knob 64 is moved rotationally.
Referring now to
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The piston 20 is illustrated at a “ready” position, and it can reciprocatingly move left (in this view) towards the end cap 50, or it can move right (in this view) toward a piston stop 38. (The piston stop is also sometimes referred to as a bumper.) The variable volume “above” the piston in this view (at reference numeral 40) is referred to as the “displacement volume” which is pressurized, whereas the volume “below” the piston in this view (at reference numeral 42) is a variable volume referred to as “venting chamber” volume, which is open to atmosphere through the vents in the housing. As is understood in this area of technology, as the piston moves up and down in a reciprocating fashion, the displacement volume decreases and increases with each up and down stroke, and the venting chamber volume below the piston correspondingly also increases and decreases as the piston moves up and down (left and right in this view).
The piston 20 is typically attached to a driver 90 by a pin that is inserted through a small channel that also extends through an opening in the driver. The driver itself goes through an opening of the piston stop 38, and further into a guide body 36, which guides the driver in its movements for driving a fastener, along a driver track.
There is a main storage chamber that is pressurized with gas, generally designated by the reference numeral 30, which is also referred to herein as the “pressure chamber.” In this embodiment, the pressure chamber 30 comprises an annular space that at least partially surrounds the working cylinder wall 44, and the pressurized space at 30 is essentially between the outer surface of the working cylinder wall 44 and the inner surface of the pressure chamber outer wall 46.
The main purpose of the pressure chamber 30 is to hold additional pressurized gas for use in driving the piston 20 in its rightward or “driving stroke” direction (in this view), in which it will be driving a fastener such as a nail or a staple. This additional pressurized gas in the pressure chamber provides a sufficient force to be imparted against the upper surface of the piston, while forcing a nail or staple into a target surface, such as a piece of wood. This storage volume 30 that comprises most of the pressure chamber allows a lower overall gas pressure to be used in the overall workings of this fastener driving tool to provide a gas spring effect without requiring an extremely high pressure that would otherwise be required in the displacement volume above the piston within the working cylinder, if there was no pressure chamber to hold additional pressurized gas.
After the fastener driving tool has been used to drive a fastener, the tool now must cause the driver 90 to be “lifted” back to its top-most position for a new firing (driving) stroke. This is accomplished by rotating a rotary-to-linear lifter 100 (also referred to herein as a “lifter”), which is actuated by a motor 32 (not shown on
At least one printed circuit board that contains a controller is generally designated by the reference numeral 34, and is placed proximal to the battery connector 26 in this embodiment. The controller will typically include a microprocessor or a microcomputer device that acts as a processing circuit. At least one memory circuit will also typically be part of the controller, including Random Access Memory (RAM) and Read Only Memory (ROM) devices. To store user-inputted information (if applicable for a particular tool model), a non-volatile memory device would typically be included, such as EEPROM, NVRAM, or a Flash memory device.
The magazine 8 is configured to hold a fastener strip, generally designated by the reference numeral 24. The fastener strip 24 typically holds a plurality of fasteners, and these fastener strips can hold fasteners of a variety of lengths, such as between a half inch and one and one quarter inches long, for example. (Of course, each individual fastener strip only holds one specific length of fastener.) The magazine 8 is configured to hold these fastener strips, and fastener strips are loaded from the second end 72.
For longer fasteners 25, such as a one inch nail, for example, the gate 62 is moved to its disengaged position so that it does not block the movement of the nails.
For shorter fasteners 24, such as a half inch nail, for example, the gate 62 is moved to its engaged position to help direct the movement of the nails as they are being driven into the nosepiece, and then into a workpiece.
Referring now to
Note that the gate 62 is positioned in a “first plane” in
As can be seen in
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When in the depressed position as illustrated in
It should be noted that
In
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In
For the tool 10 that is illustrated in
Finally: smaller nails, especially nails with very small heads—commonly referred to as “finishing nails”—may also be used with the technology disclosed herein. However, such nails are typically lightly glued together along their shafts, instead of being mounted in a plastic collated strip, and spaced-apart. Since such finishing nails actually have a small head, however, when they are glued together they therefore become arranged in a shape that is slightly curved, and thus, their magazines must also be slightly curved to match that shape. Nevertheless, if the designer of the magazine wishes to make it possible to use more than one length of finishing nails with a single magazine, then the guide/blockout S/A 60 disclosed herein may be used with such finishing nails to prevent the shorter nails (that are usable with that magazine) from completely backtracking as they are being pushed into the driver/fastener track of that tool. (The guide S/A 60 also has the ability to “block” longer nails (otherwise usable with that magazine) from being fed through the top of the magazine, into the guide body, hence the term “blockout” can be used for this subassembly 60.)
Referring now to
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Note that the longer fastener 25 is sufficiently long that, if the movable gate 62 was not out of the way and positioned in the pocket 68, the longer fastener would not be able to feed into the guide body 36. Therefore, to use the longer fasteners in the illustrated embodiment, the knob 64 and gate 62 must be in the disengaged position to be able to feed the longer nails from the magazine fastener track 74, and out the top (the first end) of the magazine.
Referring now to
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The tool 10 has a nosepiece 92, and the rounded receptacle subassembly (“S/A”) 110 on the guide body 36 proximal to the nosepiece. This rounded receptacle S/A is also sometimes referred to herein as a first attachment point.
The magazine 8 exhibits the fulcrum 130 proximal to the fastener exit portion of the guide body. The magazine 8 also includes a magazine latch release handle 160 (manually operated), a magazine latch pivot pin 162, a magazine latch pin 164, and a magazine latch contact support 166. The magazine latch contact support 166 mates with a tool bracket 172 (also sometimes referred to herein as a second attachment point). A tool contact support structure 170 holds the tool bracket 172. A curved opening 174 on the tool bracket 172 receives the magazine latch pin 164. These components 160, 162, 164, and 166 are all part of the latch subassembly 52.
Referring now to
Note that the magazine 8 can only pivot towards the tool 10 in a single plane of motion, without significant deviation from that single plane, because the fulcrum 130 is engaged with the rounded receptacle S/A 110. This engagement prevents significant movement of the magazine outside the pivotable plane of the magazine as it is moved toward the tool. That is, the overall shape and structure of the fulcrum 130 and the cylindrical opening 112 of the receptacle S/A 110 (see
Referring now to
The physical shapes of the upper portion of the magazine and the lower “receiving portion” of the guide body must, of course, correspond with each other, so as to be physically mate-able. The guide body includes a bottom portion 122 that receives the upper portion 150 of the magazine's mounting bracket, to accomplish that goal. The opening 116 in the backplate is sized and shaped to receive the side protrusion 136 of the fulcrum portion, and the rounded (cylindrical) opening 112 of the receiving portion (or receptacle portion) of the guide body is sized and shaped to receive the fulcrum's cylindrical outer surface 134. Further, there is a geometric center that is proximal to that rounded opening 112, which comes into play during the attaching of the magazine 8 to the tool 10.
To disengage the magazine 8 from the tool 10, a human user first manually actuates the magazine latch release handle 160. This movement disengages the magazine latch pin 164 from the tool bracket 172. Next, the human user then pivots the magazine 8 outwards and away from the tool 10, while the magazine's fulcrum 130 is still engaged with the tool's rounded receptacle S/A 110.
Referring now to
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When a human user begins attaching the magazine 8 to the tool 10, the fulcrum 130 is engaged with the rounded receptacle S/A 110 by moving the magazine's forward “male” extension portion 140 that includes the fulcrum 130 past the first corner 124, and then the magazine is pivoted toward the tool until it is securely latched. The “pivot point” of the magazine 8 with the tool 10 is at the geometric center 114. The fulcrum 130 portion of the magazine is secured not only with the rounded receptacle S/A 110, but also with the substantially flat bottom portion 122, helping to contain and engage the magazine in place when it is securely latched via the magazine latch pin 164 and the tool bracket 172.
Referring now to
When the fulcrum 130 is engaged with the rounded receptacle S/A 110, the “pivot point” is at the geometric center 114 of the tool 10, and also simultaneously at the fulcrum center 132 of the magazine 8. Also, when engaged, the second corner 146 slides past the first corner 124, and the upper flat surface 142 is pressed against the (flat) bottom portion 122 of the guide body. (Note that the second corner 146 is an ‘inner corner’ while the first corner 124 is an ‘outer corner.’) These details about this construction help ensure that the magazine 8 will stay engaged with the tool 10, even though the primary secure latching point is the magazine latch pin 164 and the tool bracket 172 (i.e., at the second attachment point between the tool and the magazine). These physical details also help to guide a human user to naturally pivot and engage the magazine 8 with the tool 10 without a struggle to “fit” the magazine into place.
Referring now to
Also shown in
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Note that some of the embodiments illustrated herein do not have all of their components included on some of the figures herein, for purposes of clarity. To see examples of such outer housings and other components, especially for earlier designs, the reader is directed to other U.S. patents and applications owned by Kyocera Senco. Similarly, information about “how” the electronic controller operates to control the functions of the tool is found in other U.S. patents and applications owned by Kyocera Senco. Moreover, other aspects of the present tool technology may have been present in earlier fastener driving tools sold by the Assignee, Kyocera Senco Industrial Tools, Inc., including information disclosed in previous U.S. patents and published applications. Examples of such publications are patent numbers U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,431,425; 5,927,585; 5,918,788; 5,732,870; 4,986,164; 4,679,719; 8,011,547, 8,267,296, 8,267,297, 8,011,441, 8,387,718, 8,286,722, 8,230,941, 8,602,282, 9,676,088, 10,478,954, 9,993,913, 10,549,412, 10,898,994, 10,821,585 and 8,763,874; also published U.S. patent application No. 2020/0156228, published U.S. patent application No. 2021/0016424, published U.S. patent application No. 2020/0070330, and published U.S. patent application No. 2020/0122308. These documents are incorporated by reference herein, in their entirety.
As used herein, the term “proximal” can have a meaning of closely positioning one physical object with a second physical object, such that the two objects are perhaps adjacent to one another, although it is not necessarily required that there be no third object positioned therebetween. In the technology disclosed herein, there may be instances in which a “male locating structure” is to be positioned “proximal” to a “female locating structure.” In general, this could mean that the two male and female structures are to be physically abutting one another, or this could mean that they are “mated” to one another by way of a particular size and shape that essentially keeps one structure oriented in a predetermined direction and at an X-Y (e.g., horizontal and vertical) position with respect to one another, regardless as to whether the two male and female structures actually touch one another along a continuous surface. Or, two structures of any size and shape (whether male, female, or otherwise in shape) may be located somewhat near one another, regardless if they physically abut one another or not; such a relationship could still be termed “proximal.” Or, two or more possible locations for a particular point can be specified in relation to a precise attribute of a physical object, such as being “near” or “at” the end of a stick; all of those possible near/at locations could be deemed “proximal” to the end of that stick. Moreover, the term “proximal” can also have a meaning that relates strictly to a single object, in which the single object may have two ends, and the “distal end” is the end that is positioned somewhat farther away from a subject point (or area) of reference, and the “proximal end” is the other end, which would be positioned somewhat closer to that same subject point (or area) of reference.
It will be understood that the various components that are described and/or illustrated herein can be fabricated in various ways, including in multiple parts or as a unitary part for each of these components, without departing from the principles of the technology disclosed herein. For example, a component that is included as a recited element of a claim hereinbelow may be fabricated as a unitary part; or that component may be fabricated as a combined structure of several individual parts that are assembled together. But that “multi-part component” will still fall within the scope of the claimed, recited element for infringement purposes of claim interpretation, even if it appears that the claimed, recited element is described and illustrated herein only as a unitary structure.
All documents cited in the Background and in the Detailed Description are, in relevant part, incorporated herein by reference; the citation of any document is not to be construed as an admission that it is prior art with respect to the technology disclosed herein.
The foregoing description of a preferred embodiment has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the technology disclosed herein to the precise form disclosed, and the technology disclosed herein may be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. Any examples described or illustrated herein are intended as non-limiting examples, and many modifications or variations of the examples, or of the preferred embodiment(s), are possible in light of the above teachings, without departing from the spirit and scope of the technology disclosed herein. The embodiment(s) was chosen and described in order to illustrate the principles of the technology disclosed herein and its practical application to thereby enable one of ordinary skill in the art to utilize the technology disclosed herein in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to particular uses contemplated. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the technology disclosed herein using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this technology disclosed herein pertains and which fall within the limits of the appended claims.
The present application claims priority to provisional patent application Ser. No. 63/312,129, titled “MAGAZINE FASTENER GUIDE FOR A FASTENER DRIVING TOOL,” filed on Feb. 21, 2022.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63312129 | Feb 2022 | US |