The Moon Trowel will be a useful and efficient tool to anyone involved in the construction field.
It retrieves material such as joint compound for sheetrock (tapers trade), cement or mortar including thin-set mortar for ceramic tile ( masonry and laborers trade) and tar (roofers trade)out of five gallon buckets with absolutely zero waste. All the material inside the bucket is efficiently retrieved. Five gallon buckets are the most commonly used because they are so abundant and are just the right size for handling and transporting materials from one place to another.
Pesently, and prior to my invention, the only tool available to get materials out of a five gallon bucket is any trowel with a straight edged blade. Using a straight edged tool to get something out of a round bucket is awkward, time consuming, and wasteful.
The marketing of the Moon Trowel will save contractors and do-it-yourselfers time and money.
Prior to my invention, anyone wishing to get materials such as joint compound, mortar or cement, thin set mortar, or tar out of a five gallon bucket, would have to settle to use a trowel with a straight blade.
Because the inside of a five gallon bucket is curved (5⅝″ radius) the straight blade trowel would have to be manipulated in a manner as to retrieve the material, thus some of the material would fall off the trowel and remain in the bucket.
The Moon Trowel cures this. Its blade is shaped to the exact contour of the inside of the bucket.
The Moon Trowel is a very simple tool. Simple to both use and make. To use it, grasp the tool by the handle and use it to retrieve whatever material you need to get out of a five gallon bucket. The blade is shaped to meet and match the inside walls of a five gallon bucket. When retrieving materials with the Moon Trowel, you press the blade of the trowel against the inside of the bucket and using an upward motion, scrape the walls of the bucket clean. By the time the materials are used up, the Moon Trowel will have scraped out ALL (100%) of the material from the inside of the bucket.
The making of the Moon Trowel is just as easy as using it. To make or manufacture it, all you need to do is design a concave shaped die in which you stamp out a convex shaped blade. The die in this case will have a concave curve of 5⅝″ radius. When the die stamps the blade, you are left with a convex shaped blade consisting of the same 5⅝″ radius curve.
In the past and present, anyone wishing to get materials out of a five gallon bucket has to settle for a trowel with a straight blade. This would be ideal if materials came in square five gallon buckets with flat straight sides, but they don't. They come in round five gallon buckets with curved sides.
The specific improvement is really the shape of the blade.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10268389 | Oct 2002 | US |
Child | 11015802 | Dec 2004 | US |