This invention is related to the device for distribution and dispensing of liquid upon the surfaces for the purposes of writing, marking etc.
There are a large number of types of non electronic, handheld devices for marking or writing with ink, dye, pigment or paint, etc. Such devices include pencils, ballpoint pens, fountain pens, felt tip pens, capillary tube pens and others. There are also a large number of non electronic devices for dispensing various other viscous and non viscous liquid products including but not limited to oil, grease and insect repellant and others. One common type of marking device has been the ubiquitous “felt tip marking pen”. While the tips of pens used to be made of felt, today they are usually made from an acrylic material, a polyester fiber or other suitable material. Marking pens have a barrel or reservoir for holding a quantity of ink. The ink may be water based; alcohol based or made using any number of other types of solvents. The barrel typically has a flat bottom or base so that the pen may stand. Opposite the base is a shoulder that tapers to a neck. In an opening in the neck there is a felt tip for writing. The porous tip or nib has one end which is used to write with while the other end is in contact with the ink supply. Capillary action permits the ink to flow from the reservoir to the writing end of the tip. One type of marker has one end of the writing nib directly in contact with the ink reservoir. As the pen is used, ink flows by gravity down the barrel to the end of the tip. The ink flows through the tip or nib to the writing surface. In another type of marking pen the end of the tip opposite the writing surface does not contact the reservoir directly. In order for ink to contact the tip, the tip must be pushed towards the reservoir which causes ink to flow from the reservoir to the tip thereby providing the tip with a quantity of ink for use. When the tip is released a spring forces the tip outwardly of the container and closes off the ink passageway from the reservoir to the tip. Examples of prior art marking pens of this type are shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,685,820, U.S. Pat. No. 4,792,2252, U.S. Pat. No. 4,848,947 to Kremer et. al. The disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. These patents relate to devices which use a valve to dispense a liquid or a powered solid to a brush or hard tip.
Many conventional markers have an embodiment where a fiber tip or other similar applicator of writing liquid is directly connected with a liquid supply container. In some variations of this embodiment the applicator becomes moisturized and is able to apply writing liquid to a writing surface as long as one end of an applicator communicates with writing liquid. Usually it occurs when a writing device is positioned with the tip downwardly such as contacting a writing surface. Because a porous material is used for manufacturing of applicators of markers, a writing liquid is consumed not only through the application of such liquid to a writing surface but also through vaporization of such liquid from the surface of writing applicator that remains exposed to the air during a process of writing or when marker is not in use but remain uncapped. Usually, when marker is not in use, the cap may be attached to the latter to isolate the writing applicator from the surrounding atmosphere and to prevent or reduce vaporization of the writing liquid from a surface of the felt tip or other writing applicator. For household use, it is possible for consumer to attach such cap every time the marker is not used. On the other hand, when used for commercial purposes, it may be inconvenient for a user to remove and then to attach a cap every time a user wants to use a marker, particularly when the nature of the job requires relatively frequent use of such marker. Moreover, frequent repeated operation of removing and replacing of a cap may result that the cumulative time spent by a user upon such operations increases substantially thus reducing productivity. In contrast, if a user decides to keep a marker uncapped from use to use in order to save time, a writing liquid from a liquid container would vaporize; because in most conventional markers the writing applicator is directly connected with the supply container and if left uncapped, the writing liquid freely vaporizes through the felt tip or other similar applicator capable to transmit direct communication between container with writing liquid and a writing surface through the process of moisturizing of the applicator.
Continuing efforts have been made in the past to improve a design of such markers to improve flow of ink and reduce evaporation and particularly in the mechanism through which the writing liquid may flow from a container or any other member that allows storage of such liquid to a writing surface. Most inventions employ valve mechanisms with bias means that allow a writing liquid to flow from a container with such liquid to a writing applicator. In many embodiments a depression of a writing end of a writing applicator upon a writing surface causes a valve to open allowing a flow of a liquid. A valve closure in such mechanisms provides sealing of a container through bias means usually incorporated into such sealing. Many prior art devices employ relatively complicated structure of the valve, very often consisting of several interrelated parts that require complex assembly, driving up cost of manufacturing of such markers. In the past, assembly of the prior art devices was a large issue due to the complexity of the prior arts internal mechanisms. The more intricate the internal mechanism of a marking device was the more it was expensive to produce such device. Prior art required hand assembly or intricate automated assembly method to assemble the devices. As the complexity of assembly increases, so does the cost to perform quality assurance to detect defective units and diagnose what caused those units to be defective. Therefore, the reduction of complexity and number of parts necessary to assemble a marking device will decrease the cost of such marker.
The purpose of a prior art was having a valve mechanism which controlled the flow of the liquid product contained in the marking device was so that a large amount of said marking liquid could be contained in the device without being exposed to air. The valve acts as a shield against exposure to air so that the unused liquid would not dry up inside of the device, thus rendering the device useless. In some prior art devices problems arise when the liquid dries up in the valve, thus causing the valve to malfunction allowing all of the liquid to escape or allowing air to enter the liquid reservoir and dry out the marking liquid. The current invention defines reasonably simple and inexpensive design for a valve mechanism of a marker that allows easy assembly and completely refillable.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved marker that has long life and low cost.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an improved applicator device for dispensing an applicator material which may include but not be limited to die based materials and pigment based materials.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an improved applicator device with a valve which will increase the usable life of the material to be applied.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an improved applicator device which utilizes a valve which is less likely to become clogged.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a simpler valve which will reduce cost and complexity of assembly.
A further object of the invention is to provide a marker that may be used for a variety of water based inks.
A still further object of the invention is provide a marker that may be used for a variety of petroleum based inks including aromatic and aliphatic based inks, alcohol based inks and ether based inks including glycol ethers.
The present invention is directed to a writing liquid application device comprising a barrel container for such writing liquid secured to the body of the marker, and a valve mechanism. The body of the marker has a protective cap attached to its end. The valve mechanism may comprise a stem, a resistance providing member and a stem closure. The stem is movably positioned within the stem closure from a first or at rest position to a retracted or ink releasing second position. The stem also is frictionally secured to the writing applicator of the marker. The stem closure is secured within the body of the marker.
The valve mechanism provides the flow of the writing liquid from the barrel when the valve mechanism is in an open position and prevents such flow when the valve is in a closed position, respectively. A valve mechanism includes a resistance providing member for exerting force upon the stem to keep the valve mechanism in closed position. A writing applicator has one end for applying a writing liquid to a writing surface and the other end for receiving the stem and writing liquid. The stem is movable from the closed position to the open position when the writing applicator is depressed against a writing surface, allowing writing liquid to flow from the barrel and to communicate with the other end of the writing applicator.
The barrel includes open end, closed end and a sidewall. An open end of the barrel is secured to the body of the marker. The stem closure is press fitted into the open end of the body of the marker although in an alternative embodiment the body of the marker may have threads cut upon its outer surface threadably engaging with threads cut upon the inner surface of the body of the marker. The stem closure has an internal cavity that extends through its body and the stem may move back and forth toward and away from the tip of the marker within such cavity. Side walls of the stem closure have openings to provide a flow of the writing liquid into the internal cavity of the stem closure. The stem includes an annular projection at one end for engaging the annular collar of the body of the marker to form a seal when a resistance providing member forces the stem toward the body of the marker. A fiber tip applicator is frictionally attached to the stem trough one end and the other end is used as a writing applicator. A cap is provided for covering a writing end of the writing applicator.
The present invention is particularly useful because of the variety of inks that may be used in the marking pen without leaking. The inks that may be used, include but are not limited to water based inks, petroleum based inks including aromatic and aliphatic based inks, alcohol based inks and ether based inks including inks using glycol ethers.
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The shape of the circumferential surface 27 and the conical projection 30 are designed so that the movement of the spring forcing the stem member upwardly creates a mating between the circumferential surface 27 and the conical projection 30.
The depression of the felt applicator 16 will compress the spring member 14 to separate the sealing seat, or collar 35 of the second end 25 of the plug portion 18 of the stem 13 from the sealing outer surface 32 of the conical projection 30 of the marker's body in order a liquid to flow into the chamber 31.
A plurality of strengthening ribs 36 may be formed on the outer walls 21 of the plug portion 18 of the stem member 13 and extend along the outside surface of such cylindrical sidewalls 21, as shown in
As depicted in
It may be seen in
The stem closure 15 is joined with marker's body 12 in the current embodiment by the press or friction fit engagement. The marker's body 12 inner walls 47 may be provided with a circumferential inner recess 51 capable of receiving and retaining an annular projection 52 extending from the distal edge 53 of the first end 37 of the stem closure 15. In the assembled configuration, the annular projection 52 engages the inner circumferential recess 51 made in the inner wall 47 of the marker's body 12, thus the stem closure 15 may be joined together with marker's body 12 into a snap locking engagement.
The cylindrically shaped second end 38 of the stem closure 15 may have circumferential side wall 54 and an open face 55. The internal cavity 42 has a tapered section 50 which integrates into generally cylindrically shaped portion 40. The inner diameter 56 of the second end 38 is adopted to engage friction-free the projection 19 extending from the closed end 20 of the plug portion 18 of the stem member, 13. However, such inner diameter 56 of the first end 38 may be smaller than the diameter of the coil spring 14. Such embodiment may allow the movement of the stem member, 13 relative to the stem closure 15 while coil spring 14 positioned upon the portion 19 of the stem member, 13, may be compressed between the inner end 57 of the portion 40 of the stem closure 15 and surface of the closed end 20 of the plug portion 18 of the stem member, 13.
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In another embodiment, the marker's body 100, as depicted in
Another embodiment of the marker's body is depicted in
Yet another embodiment of the invention is depicted in
The second end 78 may have cone-shaped projection 81 with inner circumferential surface 82 and outer circumferential surface 83. This cone-shaped projection 81 may be adopted to receive the collar 84 of the marker's body 85 to form a seal between the barrel 86 and felt applicator surface 98. In this embodiment the liquid may flow from the barrel 86 into the internal cavity 88 of the stem closure 89 then between inner circumferential wall 90 of the stem closure 89 and outer wall 91 of the plug portion 76 of the stem member 75 into internal cavity formed by and extending therebetween the inner circumferential surface 93 of the marker' body 85, distal edge 94 of the second end 95 of the stem closure 89 and outer circumferential surface 83 of the projection 81 of the plug portion 76 of the stem member 75. The inner surface 82 cone-shaped projection 81 may circumvent around the outer surface 96 of the collar 84 of the marker's body 85. The depression of the felt applicator, as may be seen in
In yet another embodiment of the stem member, as depicted in
The other portions of the stem member 75 and/or the second end of such member 111 as depicted in
As shown in
Although only few embodiments of improved marker have been in details described above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications of the exemplary embodiment are possible without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of this invention. For example, other embodiments of a stem member, spring member and/or stem closure and/or their interrelations and arrangements may be used instead of those described above. Additionally, forms, embodiments and configurations with certain degree of particularity of a barrel, a marker's body and/or a cap, including their combination and arrangements, variations and modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this invention as defined in the claims.
Other modifications, substitutions, omissions and changes may be made in the design, size, materials used or proportions, operating conditions, arrangement or positioning of elements and members of the preferred embodiment without departing from the spirit of this invention as described in the claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5411345 | Ueji et al. | May 1995 | A |
6599046 | Fukushima et al. | Jul 2003 | B1 |