The present invention relates to the field of mechanic devices in the industry of household maintenance tools, particularly those for swimming pool maintenance.
Many household maintenance tools, particularly those for swimming pools, need connection to a pole for reaching a further distance, such as to the ceiling or the bottom of the swimming pool. Such connection does not need to be permanent but should be detachable for easy storage when not in use. At the present time, the most common connection for such purposes is the telescopic type where the end of the tool handle is slid into a pole with a longer length. Particularly, for swimming pool maintenance tools, the industry has standardized the telescopic poles and tool handles with certain diameters and tool handles are generally equipped with a standard V-clip locking mechanism so that the telescopic pole is interchangeable with each other and can be attached to difference tools, such as, brushes, leaf skimmers, vacuum head, etc.
Specifically, in order to allow different tools to be used on a single telescopic pole, and to easily exchange them, maintenance tools are usually produced with a handle of a standard diameter, which can be inserted into a telescopic pole of a standard inner diameter. The handle of the maintenance tool is secured in the telescopic pole by a standard V-clip. As shown in
While simple, the V-clip design has an inconvenience that the pins must be pressed down by the user's fingers in order to connect or disconnect the tool from the pole. For connection, the fingers are pressing the pins and sliding the handle into the pole at the same time. As the fingers must be on the pins all the time until the pins starts entering into the pole, they easily get caught pinched at the entrance between the pin (as well as the outer surface of the handle) and the rim of the pole, which can be painful and occasionally causes serious injuries to the skin. The similar incidence can also happen while performing the disconnection. When the fingers press the pin to cause it retract, the skin of the fingers can easily get caught between the pin and the bore of the pole while the pin is retrieving into the pole.
To avoid such pinch incidence, alternative designs for the clip have been developed over the years, which include a separate means to squeeze the clip while assembling or disassembling the tool handle from the pole. While effective to avoid pinching of the fingers, these alternative clips require a longer handle on the tool to accommodate the clip, which increases the size and cost of the handle. As a result, many tool manufacturers continue to produce swimming pool maintenance tools using the simple and standard V-clip.
Accordingly, one object of the present invention is to provide a simple connection accessory to facilitate attaching and detaching the pole from the tool and to avoid the pinch incident during the assemble or disassemble process. The connection device as an accessory may be made with standardize sizes and dimensions for the purpose of retrofitting the existing maintenance tools having a standard handle and a corresponding pole, or customarily made with special sizes and dimensions for particular demands where non standardized sizes are necessary.
This object is achieved with a connection accessory device which is a simple sleeve shaped hollow structure having a hollow main body and a center bore, and is to be fitted externally over the pole at the end to receive the tool handle. The device has two external flexible arms on opposing side of the main body, springily protruding outward. Each arm has two ends, one attached to the main body and the other is an unattached end (referred to as press end hereinafter). The press end has an external surface and an inner surface and on the inner surface there is provided a small protruding tip. Underneath of the press ends, there are two opening windows provided through the main body on opposing sides to allow the protruding tips to pass through when the arms are pushed. In use, once the device is put in position (or installed) on the pole, the press ends of the arms are generally aligned with two bores of the pole on each side respectively. The center bore accommodates the end of the pole and, in installation, the pole end is inserted into the center bore from one end but does not passing through the other end of the center bore. In other words, at the end to receive the tool handle, the pole's rim is covered by the main body's rim. The main body's rim has two recessed and tapered ramps extending across the rim from the outer surface of the main body to the center bore. The recessed ramps are generally aligned with the arms on the opposing sides respectively and serve as the guides for the pins on the tool handle when they are entering into the pole.
For disconnecting the tool handle from the pole equipped with the connection device of the present invention, where the V-clip's pins are extending from the tool handle through the bores of the pole and locking the handle in place inside the pole, the user squeezes the flexible arms with two fingers, which causes the protruding tips on the inner surface of the press ends to pass through the opening windows of the main body, come into contact with the pins of the tool handle, and further push the pins inwardly until the pins are out of the bores. Once the pins are pushed completely out of the bores, the tool handle is unlocked and can freely slide out of the pole for disconnection. During the process, the user's fingers are on the external surface of the press end, not in direct contract with the pins so it would not get pinched by the pins.
Similarly, during the connecting process, with the connection device of the present invention attached to the end of the pole, there is no need for using the fingers to press down the pins on the tool handle for insertion into the pole, because the tapered ramps on the device main body's rim guides the pins and gradually push them down so that the tool handle can be easily inserted into the pole (as the tapered ramps transfer the lateral insertion force into the inwardly pushing force on the pins). Because the fingers are further away from the pins and would not get pinched.
By way of example, but not limitation, the elastic flexibility of the arms can be originated from cantilevered shapes that are integral part of the device made by plastic injection. Of course, other methods may be used to make the springy arms to practice the present invention. The device and arms may be made integrally or made separately from different materials and then put together by an attaching means, such as screws, adhesives, etc. Selection of the material for making the device and arms is not part of the invention. In other words, it can be any materials known to be suitable for the purposes by people of ordinary skill in the art in the current time or a further time. Preferably, the connection device is made from a polymer such as ABS (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene) via injection molding.
The center bore of the main body has a diameter matching the pole, preferably between 1.0-5.0 cm. However, any diameter is suitable as long as it matches with the pole to be used, that is, it is slightly larger than the outer diameter of the pole so that it can be inserted into the center bore.
The recessed ramps may be optional if the entire rim of the main body is tapered from the outer surface towards the center bore. This simplifies the structure of the connection device but loses its function of aligning and guiding the pins for insertion, which may or may not be important under given situations.
As another aspect of the present invention, the connection device may serve another function as a protector for the pole. By placing the connection device at the end of the telescopic pole, it protects the pole's end from damage in case the pole is subjected to impacts during shipping, storage, or handling by the user. Thus, the connection accessory servers a secondary function as a pole protector.
Another object of the present invention to provide a multi-functional connection device which can be conveniently used to pick up metallic objects that have dropped to the bottom of a swimming pool. The object is realized by incorporating one or more pieces of magnet into the connection device so that metallic debris may be picked up at the same time the attached tool performs its work. Or, the pole may be used for such purpose (picking up metals) on its own without having the tool attached.
The various features of novelty which characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this disclosure. For a better understanding of the invention, its operating advantages, and specific objects attained by its use, reference should be made to the drawings and the following description in which there are illustrated and described preferred embodiments of the invention.
The present invention is now further described in connection particular embodiments together with accompanying drawings thereof.
Preferable, as shown in
In operating, as shown in
The device 10 is molded by plastic injection, which is a technology well known in the art and needs no further description. The plastic material used is acrylonitrile butadiene styrene, a polymer commonly known as ABS. The magnets, which is commonly available off-the-shelf, may be over-molded within the plastic injected part, or glued on during a secondary opening in the molding process.
While there have been described and pointed out fundamental novel features of the invention as applied to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes, in the form and details of the embodiments illustrated, may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention. The invention is not limited by the embodiments described above which are presented as examples only but can be modified in various ways within the scope of protection defined by the appended patent claims.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/940,819, filed Feb. 17, 2014, the content of which is incorporated herewith by reference.