This invention generally relates to seaming levers. Specifically, this invention relates to a micro adjusting seaming lever containing an adjusting worm which may be used to precisely position a seaming roll in relation to a chuck, in order to use the seaming roll and chuck to create a can seam.
Canning machines are known in the prior art. One type of machine used in commercial canning secures an end to a can body after the product has been placed in the can by formation of a folded double seam. An example of a double seam forming machine which secures top ends to can bodies is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 3,465,703. The disclosure of this patent is incorporated herein by reference. A second example is shown in the published PCT Application No. PCT/US97/14471 which was filed on Aug. 18, 1997. The disclosure of this Application is incorporated herein by reference.
During the process of using a commercial canning device to close a can, a seaming roll must be initially positioned with respect to a cooperating chuck. The relationship of the seaming roll to the chuck must be precise in order to make a proper seam.
One method of positioning the seaming roll is to use a seaming lever which houses a worm gear. This is used in conjunction with a worm pinion which is formed on one end of a shank. The worm pinion end of the shank is connected to a seaming lever and the other end of the shank is connected to a seaming roll lever. The seaming roll lever is attached to the seaming roll, which is used with the chuck to create the seam. The worm gear in the seaming lever engages the worm pinion on the shank. Turning the worm gear in one direction rotates the shank around its axis in one direction, moving the seaming roll either closer to or farther away from the chuck. Rotating the worm gear in the opposite direction will rotate the shank in the opposite direction, thus moving the seaming roll in the opposite direction.
Generally, the seaming roll position determines the final thickness of the can seam. Its precise placement is difficult to achieve using the current design because rotating the worm gear produces relatively large rotations of the shank used to control the position of the seaming roll. A worm gear associated with a 30 tooth worm pinion, typical for this manufacturing use, would create a 12 degree rotation of the associated shank for every 360° rotation of the worm gear. Although this is an impressive reduction, it still provides insufficient control to precisely position the seaming roll.
Further refinement of the worm gear and worm pinion can create marginal, but not sufficient, additional reduction. In part this is because any additional reduction comes at the price of structural integrity. Very fine, closely packed threads and teeth produce large reductions. Unfortunately threads and teeth which produce sufficient reduction for precise placement may not be sturdy enough to withstand the rigors of a manufacturing environment. In addition, creating additional reduction by using a finer worm gear creates a new problem by eliminating the ability to make larger rotations of the shank easily.
Thus, there exists a need for an adjustable seaming lever which has dual adjustment capabilities, a coarse adjustment with reduction which approximates the rotational reduction of a standard worm gear and a fine adjustment which produces far greater rotational reduction. There further exists a need for this adjusting apparatus to be sturdy, in order to withstand the forces to which it is subjected during the canning process.
It is an object of an exemplary form of the present invention to provide an apparatus which is capable of making minute rotational adjustments to an associated shank.
It is a further object of an exemplary form of the present invention to provide an apparatus that is capable of making dual adjustments, specifically an initial coarse rotational adjustment, followed by a precise, fine rotational adjustment.
It is a further object of an exemplary form of the present invention to provide a dual rotational adjustment apparatus which is capable of withstanding the forces associated with a typical manufacturing processes.
It is a further object of an exemplary form of the present invention to provide a seaming lever which incorporates a dual rotational adjustment apparatus.
It is a further object of an exemplary form of the present invention to provide a dual rotational adjustment apparatus which can be retrofitted into existing seaming levers without requiring that the existing seaming lever be remachined.
It is a further object of an exemplary form of the present invention to provide a seaming lever in which it is possible to preselect the desired reduction to be produced by the fine adjustment feature.
Further objects of an exemplary form of the present invention will be made apparent in the following Best Modes for Carrying Out Invention and the appended claims.
The foregoing objects are accomplished in an exemplary embodiment of the invention by a micro adjusting seaming lever that uses either rotational or axial motion of a worm gear alone for coarse adjustment, and which mechanically combines rotational and axial motion of a worm gear for fine adjustment.
An exemplary adjustment apparatus of one exemplary embodiment fits into a standard seaming lever and may comprise three parts. The first is a shank with a worm pinion on one end and a seaming roll lever on the other. The second is a coarse adjusting nut which can rotate within a cavity in the seaming lever, but does not otherwise move. The third is an adjusting worm which can both rotate and move along its axis. An adjusting worm of this exemplary embodiment, is threaded on one end and has a worm gear on the other. The threaded end of the adjusting worm is referred to herein as a screw. The coarse adjusting nut is threaded onto the screw of the adjusting worm and engages a worm pinion on the shank.
As noted, in this exemplary embodiment the coarse adjusting nut can rotate but cannot move axially. Because of this, when the coarse adjusting nut is turned about the screw on the adjusting worm, it moves the adjusting worm into or out of the seaming lever along the axis of the adjusting worm. As the adjusting worm moves in or out of the seaming lever, the worm gear acts as a rack, turning the worm pinion on the shank which also turns the connected seaming roll. Once the seaming roll is approximately positioned relative to the chuck, the coarse adjusting nut is locked in place to prevent any further motion.
After the coarse adjusting nut is locked in place, the adjusting worm is turned to precisely position the seaming roll. As the screw of the adjusting worm rotates within the fixed coarse adjusting nut, it moves the adjusting worm in the opposite axial direction that it had moved when the coarse adjusting nut was turned in the same direction. Acting alone, this motion would also cause the worm gear to act as a rack, turning the associated worm pinion in the opposite direction.
In addition, as the adjusting worm turns, the worm gear also rotates. The rotational motion of the worm gear, acting alone, would cause the associated worm pinion to rotate in the opposite direction from the rotation caused by the rack action of the worm gear. Because the axial motion and the rotational motion would each independently create opposite rotations of the worm pinion, the mechanical combination of the two creates a rotation of the worm pinion which is equal in magnitude to the difference between the rotations each motion would produce independently. The direction of the motion corresponds to the direction associated with the independent resulting rotation of larger magnitude. As will be discussed in detail later, the magnitude of the resulting motion is a function of the difference between the pitches of the threads on the worm gear and of the screw on the adjusting worm. In exemplary embodiments this magnitude may be made quite small by making the pitch of the worm gear threads differ only slightly from the pitch of the screw threads.
Because of this, both the worm gear and the screw can be made with sufficiently wide threads and with a pitch that is appropriate for use in manufacturing without sacrificing the ability to make microscale adjustments. Because an adjusting worm of this exemplary embodiment uses the axial motion to produce coarse adjustments and the combination of axial and rotational motion to create fine adjustments, the feature produces dual adjustment capabilities. Another exemplary embodiment, described in detail below, uses rotational motion to make the initial coarse adjustment and then uses the same differential reduction principles to combine the axial and rotational motions to make the subsequent fine adjustment.
Referring now to the drawings, in particular to
As can be seen in
An exemplary embodiment of the shank 110 is shown in
In an exemplary embodiment which includes the exemplary adjusting worm 130, the adjusting part 106 of the seaming lever 100 comprises an adjusting assembly 120, discussed below. As shown in
The cavity 122 may be generally perpendicular to, and intersects, a generally cylindrical passage 108 into which the shank 110 may be inserted in the seaming lever 100. This intersection creates an opening 124 connecting the cavity 122 and the cylindrical passage 108. In this exemplary embodiment, because the opening 124 is created by the generally perpendicular intersection of two generally cylindrical passages, the opening 124 will be generally circular. In other embodiments, the passages may have different shapes or may intersect at a different angle to create a non-circular opening.
The exemplary adjusting assembly 120 is located in the cavity 122, and may protrude slightly through the opening 124 into the cylindrical passage 108. The adjusting assembly 120 may comprise a coarse adjusting nut 144, an adjusting worm 130, a locking bolt 142, and a keeper assembly 150. An alternative exemplary embodiment of an adjusting assembly 280 is illustrated in
The exemplary embodiment of the adjusting worm 130, for use in the exemplary embodiment of the adjusting assembly 120, is shown in more detail in
Adjacent the opposite end of the shank of the adjusting worm 130 from the worm gear 132, is a screw 136. The screw 136 has a uniform diameter, and is threaded to match and permit engagement with the internal threading on a coarse adjusting nut 144. The fine adjustment head 138 is formed on the end of the adjusting worm 130 adjacent to the screw 136. The fine adjustment head 138 may be a standard hex head of a size adapted to fit within the first part of coarse adjusting nut 144, which is illustrated in
Through the axial center of the adjusting worm 130 may be a roughly cylindrical hole 140. The hole 140 may be stepped, and the inner portion of the hole 140 passing approximately from the outer edge of the screw 136 through the worm gear 132 may have a diameter approximately equal to the diameter of a stem of a bolt 142. The remaining outer portion of the hole 140 may have a diameter approximately equal to the diameter of a head of the bolt 142. The bolt 142 is discussed in more detail below. In this exemplary embodiment the adjusting assembly 120 is held in place using the bolt 142 inserted through the adjusting worm 130, and fastened to a threaded hole in the seaming lever 100. In other embodiments the adjusting assembly 120 may be held in place within the cavity 122 by other means.
The pitch of the worm gear 132 generally varies slightly from the pitch of the screw 136. In an exemplary embodiment, the pitch of the worm gear 132 is slightly less than the pitch of the screw 136. Although in this exemplary embodiment, the pitch of the worm gear 132 is slightly less than the pitch of the screw 136, in other embodiments the relationship between the two pitches may be different. For example, the pitch of the worm gear 132 may be slightly more than the pitch of the screw 136 or the difference between the pitches may be too large to be described as slight. In an exemplary embodiment, both the worm gear 132 and the screw 136 are machined with right-handed threads. In other embodiments, either the worm gear 132 or the screw 136, or both may be machined with left-handed threads.
The screw 136 on the adjusting worm 130 is threaded into the coarse adjusting nut 144 (
As shown in
The keeper assembly 150, may be a further locking device which is operative to lock the coarse adjusting nut 144 in place. The keeper assembly 150 may comprise a keeper 152 and an attachment 154, which are located on the seaming lever 100 adjacent to the coarse adjusting nut 144. In an exemplary embodiment illustrated in
In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
The exemplary adjusting assembly 120 described above may be manufactured as part of a new seaming lever 100, or may be retrofitted into an existing seaming lever 100. If it is to be used with a seaming lever 100 that is already in use, the seaming lever may require additional machining, such as enlarging the outer portion 126 of the cavity 122 to accept the coarse adjust nut, or removing a portion of the surface to receive the keeper assembly 150.
An exemplary embodiment of the adjusting assembly 280, illustrated in
The interior of the first end 202 of the adjusting worm 200 is threaded. The pitch of the threads on the interior of the first end 202 of the adjusting worm 200 generally varies slightly from the pitch of the threads of the worm gear 208 on the exterior of the first end 202 of the adjusting worm 200, for reasons which are discussed below. The interior of the second end 204 of the adjusting worm 200 may be cupped, with a central hole at a base which connects to a passage through the adjusting worm 200 to the internally threaded second end 202. The second end 204 may be thus adapted to seat the locking nut 220 as shown in
The locking nut 220 has a first end 222 and a second end 224. The first end 222 of the locking nut 220 is generally cylindrical and hollow and has an exterior diameter approximately equal to the internal diameter of the second end 204 of the adjusting worm 200. The interior of the first end 222 of the locking nut 220 is threaded. When assembled, the locking nut 220 may nest within the second end 204 of the adjusting worm 200. The exterior of the second end 224 of the locking nut 220 is enlarged, and has a lip 226 of sufficient diameter to prevent it from being drawn into the second end 204 of the adjusting worm 200 when the locking nut 220 is nested within the adjusting worm 200. When fully inserted, the lip 226 of the locking nut 220 is locked against the rim 206 of the adjusting worm 200. In this position, which may be seen in
The threaded insert 240, illustrated in
As shown in
When the adjusting assembly 280 is assembled, the first end 242 of the threaded insert 240 is threaded through the internally threaded first end 202 of the adjusting worm 200. The locking nut 220 is threaded around the second end 244 of the threaded insert 240 and nested in the second end 204 of the adjusting worm 200. The adjusting assembly 280 may be held in place by means of a locking bolt 260 which passes through the threaded insert 240 and screws into openings which may be machined into the seaming lever 100. In this exemplary embodiment the adjusting assembly 280 may be held in place using a locking bolt which attaches directly to the seaming lever. In other embodiments different locking devices may be used such as a bolt which passes completely through the seaming lever and engages a separate nut. As with the exemplary embodiment previously described, and as can be seen by a comparison of
An exemplary configuration of a standard seaming lever generally contains a single worm gear for positioning the seaming roll. The worm gear engages and rotates a worm pinion on one end of an associated shank. When the worm pinion is rotated, it rotates the shank, which in turn rotates an attached seaming roll lever about the axis of the shank. Attached to a seaming roll lever is a seaming roll, which must be rotated to a position which is a precise distance from a chuck in order to form a solid seam on a can.
In a traditional seaming lever without a micro adjusting element, there is generally a single fairly coarse adjustment capability. Because of this, adjusting the precise position of the seaming roll is a time consuming task. It generally requires making numerous repeated and imprecise adjustments in order to obtain the correct distance between the seaming roll and a chuck. If the placement is not sufficiently precise, it causes manufacturing waste in the form of improperly sealed cans.
An exemplary embodiment of a seaming lever 100 with micro adjusting capabilities, as further described below, permits easy and precise placement of a seaming roll 116. Methods of using the previously described embodiments of the micro adjusting seaming levers are discussed in detail below.
In the exemplary embodiments illustrated generally in
Initially, as illustrated in an exemplary manner in
In an exemplary embodiment which includes a screw 136 with right-handed threads, rotating the coarse adjusting nut 144 clockwise draws the associated adjusting worm 130 out of the seaming lever 100, without rotating the adjusting worm 130. This movement pulls the worm pinion 115 counterclockwise because a tooth pulled by the worm gear 132 is moved toward the front, in the orientation depicted in
Once the seaming roll 116 is placed in approximately the correct position using the coarse adjusting nut 144, the coarse adjusting nut 144 is locked to prevent any movement. In an exemplary embodiment, this is accomplished by fitting the shaped edge of the keeper 152 around one angle of the coarse adjusting nut 144 and fixing its position using the attachment 154.
The fine adjustment head 138 may then be used to complete the precise positioning of the seaming roll 116. Rotating the fine adjustment head 138 causes two motions to occur. Each motion, alone, would cause the associated worm pinion 115 to rotate. Rotating the fine adjustment head 138, on one end of the adjusting worm 130, rotates the worm gear 132 on the other end of the adjusting worm 130 causing it to act as a traditional worm gear. Each full rotation of the worm gear 132, if it took place in the absence of any other motion of the worm gear 132, would cause the worm pinion 115 to advance or retreat by the single tooth.
In an exemplary embodiment using a right-handed worm gear 132, a clockwise rotation of the worm gear 132 produces counterclockwise motion in the associated shank 110, in the orientation illustrated in
The rotational motion does not, however, occur without other motion of the adjusting worm 130. Because the coarse adjusting nut 144 is fixed in position, when the fine adjustment head 138 on the adjusting worm 130 is rotated the interaction between the threads of the coarse adjusting nut 144 and the threads of the screw 136 cause the adjusting worm 130 to move along its axis into or out of the seaming lever 100. As a result, the worm gear 132 acts as a rack to turn the worm pinion 115. This movement is identical in magnitude to the movement caused by the initial rotation of the coarse adjusting nut 144, but in the opposite direction.
Thus, in an exemplary embodiment with a right-handed screw 136 and a right-handed adjusting worm 130, the axial motion of the worm gear 132 would cause the associated worm pinion 115 to rotate in one direction and the rotational motion of the worm gear 132 would cause the associated worm pinion 115 to rotate in the opposite direction. Because both axial movement of the worm gear 132 and rotational movement of the worm gear 132 are mechanically combined, and each would independently rotate the associated shank 110, the resulting movement of the associated shank 110 is the sum of the movements each would cause alone. Thus, the magnitude of the resulting worm pinion 115 rotation is equivalent to the difference between the opposite rotations which would be produced independently by the axial and the rotational motions of the worm gear 132. The direction of the worm pinion 115 rotation is the same as the direction of the greater rotation that would have been produced by the independent movement of either the axial or rotational motions of the worm gear 132.
As used in standard seaming levers, and other places, worm gears inherently produce impressive gear reduction. Each rotation of a worm gear advances the associated worm pinion a single tooth, providing an N:1 reduction, where N is the number of teeth on a worm pinion. Previously, increasing the reduction caused by a worm gear for a worm pinion of a fixed diameter has been difficult because it required the use of finer threads, which were closer together in order to increase N. Worm gears which are finely enough threaded to produce the necessary reduction for fine adjustment may be too fine to withstand production rigors. Another alternative is to increase the diameter of the associated worm pinion, however this decreases the ability to use it in relatively small manufacturing settings. In addition, both options require the sacrifice of either the coarse adjustment or the fine adjustment in favor of the other.
Here, as specifically discussed below, the increased reduction in rotation of the worm pinion 115 and the associated shank 110 is dependent only on the difference between the pitch of the screw 136 threads and the pitch of the worm gear 132 threads. Because of this, the ability to make very fine adjustments can be created using a reasonably sized industrial strength worm gear 132 threads, the pitch of which varies minutely from that of similarly sturdy screw 136 threads. An exemplary embodiment of an adjusting assembly 120 as described above is capable of producing reductions several orders of magnitude larger, because each rotation of the fine adjustment head 138 creates the equivalent of a fractional rotation of the worm gear 132.
In an exemplary embodiment of the adjusting assembly 120 as illustrated in
When used as exemplarily described above, the axial motion caused by of each rotation of the coarse adjusting nut 144 is 1/S. This creates an axial motion that is equivalent to W/S rotations of the worm gear 132, making S/W rotations of the coarse adjusting nut 144 equivalent to 1 rotation of the worm gear 132. It takes N rotations of the worm gear 132 to create one rotation of the worm pinion 115, thus it takes N×S/W rotations of the coarse adjusting nut 144 to create one rotation of the worm pinion 115. The reduction associated with the coarse adjusting nut 144, then, is N×S/W:1. Where W and S are approximately the same, this is roughly the equivalent to the N:1 reduction obtained by using the worm gear 132 alone.
As noted above, each rotation of the fine adjustment head 138 causes a rotation of the associated worm pinion 115 which is equivalent in magnitude to the difference between the rotations that would have been caused by each motion independently. A full rotation of the adjusting worm 130 causes a full rotation of the worm gear 132, and rotates the associated worm pinion 115 1/N of a full rotation. A full rotation of the adjusting worm 130 causes an axial movement of 1/S. As noted above, this is equivalent to W/S rotations of the worm gear 132. Absent the rotational motion, the axial motion would rotate the associated pinion W/(N×S) of a full rotation. Because the rotations are in opposite directions, the magnitude of the rotation of the worm pinion which results from a single rotation of the fine adjustment head 138 is (W−S)/(N×S). N rotations of the worm gear 132 would rotate the worm pinion 115 one full rotation, therefore W/S rotations of the worm gear 132 would rotate the worm pinion 115 one tooth, or (W/S)/N of a rotation. Thus, the worm pinion 115 rotation caused by one rotation of the fine adjustment head 138 is (W−S)/(N×S) of a rotation. To produce a single rotation of the worm pinion 115 would thus take (N×S)/(W−S) rotations of the fine adjustment head 138. Thus, the reduction associated with rotating the fine adjustment head 138 is (N×S)/(W×S):1. Where W and S are close, and W is larger than S, S/(W−S) will be larger than one, making (N×S)/(W−S):1 a significantly greater reduction than using a standard worm gear alone.
For purposes of illustration only, and not for purposes of limitation, if W, S, and N are 9, 8, and 30 respectively, it would take approximately 29.7 turns of the coarse adjusting nut 144, moving the adjusting worm 130 axially, to turn the worm pinion 115 a full turn. It would take 240 turns of the fine adjustment head 138, which creates a combination of axial and rotational movement of the worm gear 132, to turn the worm pinion 115 a full turn. This exemplary illustration results in a 240:1 reduction, an 8-fold improvement over using the associated standard worm gear alone.
As seen above, the resulting reduction for any particular adjusting worm 130 combination can be calculated. Because of this, if a specific reduction is desired, appropriate pitches for the incorporated worm gear 132 and screw 136 may be selected which will achieve the desired reduction.
An exemplary embodiment of a adjusting assembly 280 as illustrated in
The adjusting worm 200 and the associated worm gear 208 may be rotated by turning the rim 206. The worm gear 208 engages and turns the worm pinion 115 on the shank 110, moving the attached seaming roll 116 toward or away from the chuck. Because of the operation of the worm gear 208 on the worm pinion 115, turning the adjusting worm 200 one full rotation turns the shank 110 one tooth. If the adjusting worm 200 is turned clockwise, the shank 110 will turn counterclockwise. When the seaming roll 116 is in approximately the correct position, the locking nut 220 may be loosened or removed. To accomplish this, the locking bolt 260 is tightened against the threaded insert 240 sufficiently to lock the threaded insert 240 in position between the head 261 of the locking bolt 260 and the seaming lever 100. The lip 226 of the adjusting worm 200 may then held in place while the locking nut 220 is unscrewed around the threaded insert 240. This unlocks the locking nut 220 from the adjusting worm 200. The locking nut 220 may be loosened, or it may be removed completely.
With the locking nut 220 removed or loosened, and the locking bolt 260 holding the threaded insert 240 in position, the adjusting worm 200 is free to move both axially and rotationally. Because of this, when the adjusting worm 200 is turned, it not only rotates about its axis, but also moves along it. As in the exemplary embodiment discussed above, this mechanical combination of the axial and rotational movement of the worm gear 208 can be used to create a much greater rotational reduction than the reduction caused by either axial or rotational motion alone.
In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
In part, rotating the adjusting worm 200 causes the worm gear 208 to act as a traditional worm gear. Each full rotation of the adjusting worm 200 turns the worm gear 208 a full turn. If the rotation of the worm gear 208 were to take place in the absence of any other motion of the worm gear 208 the rotation would cause the worm pinion 115 to advance or retreat by a single tooth.
In an exemplary embodiment using a right-handed worm gear 208, a clockwise rotation of the worm gear 208 produces counterclockwise motion in the associated shank 110 in the orientation illustrated in
The rotational motion does not, however, occur without the other motion caused by turning the adjusting worm 200. Because the threaded insert 240 is fixed in position, when the adjusting worm 200 is rotated about the threaded insert the interaction between the internal threads of the adjusting worm 200 and the threads on the threaded insert 240 cause the worm gear 208 on the adjusting worm 200 to move along its axis into or out of the seaming lever 100. The magnitude of this movement, for a full rotation, is equal to the distance between two threads on the threaded insert 240. If the adjusting worm 200 is turned clockwise, it is pulled into the seaming lever 100. In the absence of rotational movement, this would cause a clockwise rotation of the worm pinion 115 and the associated shank 110.
Thus, in an exemplary embodiment with right-handed threading on all screws and worm gears, the axial motion would cause the associated shank 110 to rotate in one direction and the rotational motion would cause the associated shank 110 to rotate in the opposite direction. Because the axial movement of the worm gear 208 and rotational movement of the worm gear 208 are mechanically combined, and each would independently rotate the associated shank 110, the resulting movement of the associated shank 110 is the combination of the movements each would cause alone. Thus, the magnitude of a resulting shank rotation is equivalent to the difference between the opposite rotations which would be independently produced by the axial and the rotational motions of the worm gear 208. The direction of the shank 110 rotation is the same as the direction of the greater rotation that would have been produced by the independent movement of either the axial or rotational motions of the worm gear 208.
For the coarse adjustment in this exemplary embodiment, the adjusting assembly 280 functions as a traditional worm gear, producing an N:1 reduction in rotation in the associated shank 110. For the fine adjustment, the magnitude and direction of motions are identical to those of the exemplary embodiment previously described. Thus the algebraic formula describing the resulting reduction is also applicable here, where S now represents the number of teeth per inch on the internal threads of the adjusting worm 200 rather than the coarse adjusting nut 144. Therefore, the desired reduction for fine adjustment of this exemplary embodiment may be achieved by choosing a suitably small difference between the pitch of the worm gear 206 threads and the pitch of internal threads of the adjusting worm 200.
Seaming levers may also use the mechanical combination of the axial and rotational motion of the adjusting worm for other purposes, as well. As observed, in an exemplary embodiment in which the number of threads per inch on a worm gear is greater than the number of threads per inch on either the coarse adjust nut, or the threaded insert, the seaming roll moves in the same direction for both the fine adjustment as for the coarse adjustment. Although in this exemplary embodiment this relationship may be desirable, in other embodiments it may be desirable to reverse directions for the fine adjustment. This can be accomplished by selecting a worm gear with fewer threads per inch than the number of threads per inch on the associated coarse adjusting nut or threaded insert.
This embodiment will require one or more rotations of the member associated with fine adjustment before any rotation of the associated shank. This is because the fit of a worm pinion to a worm gear must be loose in order to work properly. Because it is loose, a worm gear must rotate from its position against the leading tooth to a position against the trailing tooth before it can push the trailing tooth to reverse direction.
In still other embodiments, it may be useful to configure the adjusting apparatus to increase the rotation of the shank over that of a traditional worm gear, rather than to reduce it. In an exemplary embodiment a screw or threaded insert may be formed with left-handed threads while the worm gear is formed with right-handed threads. In such an embodiment, using the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
Although two exemplary embodiments of a micro adjusting seaming lever assembly have been described in detail, other embodiments which produce a coarse adjustment equivalent to the adjustment of a standard worm gear, and a selectable fine adjustment created by the mechanical combination of both axial and rotational movement of a worm gear, will be obvious to those skilled in the art.
Thus, the micro adjusting seaming lever achieves the above stated objectives, eliminates difficulties encountered in the use of prior methods, solves problems and attains the desirable results described herein.
In the foregoing description certain terms have been used for brevity, clarity, and understanding, however no unnecessary limitations are to be implied therefrom because such terms are used for descriptive purposes and are intended to be broadly construed. Moreover, the descriptions and illustrations herein are by way of examples and the invention is not limited to the exact details shown and described.
In the following claims any feature described as a means for performing a function shall be construed as encompassing any means known to those skilled in the art to be capable of performing the recited function and shall not be limited to the structures shown herein or mere equivalents thereof.
Having described the features, discoveries and the principles of the invention, the manner in which it is constructed and operated and the advantages and useful results attained; the new and useful structures, devices elements, arrangements, parts, combinations, systems, equipment, operations, methods and relationships are set forth in the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of Provisional Application No. 60/323,614, filed Sep. 19, 2001.
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2540001 | Laxo | Jan 1951 | A |
3465703 | Arnott et al. | Sep 1969 | A |
5149239 | Honma et al. | Sep 1992 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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60170543 | Sep 1985 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60323614 | Sep 2001 | US |