The present invention relates to multipurpose folding hand tools, and particularly to such a tool in which blades may be securely locked in an extended position and in which a folding tool bit holder accepts and holds interchangeable bits of different sizes and types.
Rivera U.S. Pat. No. 6,014,787 discloses a folding multipurpose hand tool including a pair of handles, each attached to a base of one of a pair of pivotally interconnected cooperative members such as pliers jaws which can be stowed in a central channel defined by each of the handles. Folding blades can also be stowed within the central channel at the opposite end of each handle, where a selected blade can be pivoted from its stowed position within the channel to its extended position only when the respective handle is spread apart from the other handle. Other, outer blades can be stowed in outer channels facing the opposite direction from the central channel by being pivoted about a pivot axis at the end of the handle where the pivotally interconnected cooperative members such as pliers jaws are connected to each handle. Such outer blades can be moved from a stowed position in an outer channel to an extended position while the multipurpose hand tool remains in a compact folded configuration. However, they can also be opened unintentionally merely by overcoming a simple detent when the pliers are open, possibly presenting a sharp edge where it is not desired.
Also, the outer margins of the wing portions defining the outer channels are somewhat uncomfortable to grip, as when using an extended folding blade with the tool in such a compact configuration.
Berg et al. U.S. Pat. No. 6,282,996 discloses a multipurpose folding hand tool in which blades that can be pivoted between a stowed position and an extended position with respect to a handle are held in an extended position by a latch mechanism that is pivoted on the handle. Forces exerted by a blade in such a tool are sustained by the pivot on which the latch lever is mounted in the tool handle, requiring the release lever and pivots to have ample strength to withstand forces resulting from use of the blades.
Many previously available hand tools provide for use of a single handle to drive tool bits of several different sizes and configurations. Previously available tool bit holders and the bits that can be used with such holders however, have required more space than it is desired to utilize in a compact folding tool.
It is therefore desired to provide a folding multipurpose tool that includes previously available features and is safer and more comfortable to use, less subject to failure, and more versatile than previously available tools of comparable size.
The present invention provides answers to the aforementioned shortcomings of the prior art by providing a multipurpose folding hand tool including various improvements with respect to the previously available multipurpose folding hand tools as described herein and set forth in the following claims.
In an embodiment of one aspect of the present invention a tool bit driver securely holds a selected tool bit having a pair of opposite driver ends, keeping a non-selected driver end visible.
As a related aspect, the invention provides compact tool bits that function similarly to corresponding conventional tool bits, but that can be stored in a smaller space.
In an embodiment of another aspect of the invention, a blade lock spans the width of the handle and latches a blade together with both sides of a handle to keep the blade in a desired position.
As yet another aspect of the present invention, the aforementioned blade lock may be used to retain a removable pocket clip or lanyard loop associated with an end of a handle.
In accordance with a further aspect of the invention, a folded outer blade is retained in its folded position in a handle by an interlock or safety catch when a tool such as folding pliers is not in a fully folded position with respect to the handle with which such an outer blade is associated.
The foregoing and other features of the various aspects of the present invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now the drawings which form a part of the disclosure herein, in
The pliers jaw 36 has a base 46 attached to a first, or front end 48 of the handle 34. Similarly, the pliers jaw 38 has a base 50 attached to a first, or front end 52 of the handle 32. The base 46 of the jaw 36 is attached to the handle 34 by a pivot pin 54, and the base 50 of the pliers jaw 38 is attached to the handle 32 by a pivot pin 56. The pliers jaws 36 and 38 are movable between the deployed position shown in
With the tool 30 in the folded configuration shown in
It will be understood that instead of the pliers 35, the folding multipurpose tool 30 might include other pivotally interconnected cooperative tool components, such as other types of pliers or scissors-action cutting tools interconnected by a pivot joint corresponding to the jaw pivot joint 40. It will also be understood that a unitary tool member such as a special purpose wrench (not shown) might also be interconnected to both of the handles 32 and 34 by the pivot pins 54 and 56 or be connected to the front ends 48 and 52 by other mechanisms (not shown).
In a preferred version of the pliers 35, the jaw pivot joint 40 includes a pair of approximately elliptical oval hubs 41, oriented across the length of the pliers jaws 36 and 38. The width 43 of the hubs is thus greater than the dimension of the hubs in the direction parallel with the length of the jaws 36 and 38, preferably by a ratio of about 4:3 and more preferably by a ratio of about 5:3. The pivot joint 40 has a pivot axis 45 centered in the hubs 41. As a result, while the jaws have ample strength resulting from the amount of material on each side of the pivot axis 45, in the direction of the width 43, the throat 47 of the jaws is relatively close to the pivot axis 45, so that the mechanical advantage available to produce force in the throat 47, for wire-cutter scissors action, for example, is significantly greater than for pliers or other scissors-action tools of similar size utilizing conventional round or longitudinally-oriented non-circular hubs capable of sustaining the same forces from the handles of a tool.
Referring also to
A pivot pin 68 is similarly located at the outer end 60 of the handle 34 and a tool bit holder 70, similar to the tool bit 64, is attached to the handle 34 by the pivot pin 68. A tool bit holder 72 particularly adapted to hold relatively slender tool bits, such as the very slender tool bit 74, is also attached to the outer end 60 by the pivot pin 68. Both of the tool bit holders 70 and 72 are in their folded positions within the channel 44 defined by the main frame member 42 of the handle 34, as the tool is shown in
The handles 32 and 34 are of similar construction. The main frame member 42 of each is preferably of formed sheet metal, such as sheet stainless steel, and includes a pair of opposite channel side walls 80 and 82, a channel base or bottom portion 84, and a pair of side flanges 86 and 88 that extend outwardly away from the channel 44 at the outer or top margin of each of the channel sides 80 and 82. A handle side plate 90 abuts and extends along the side flange 86, and together with the channel side wall 80 defines an outer channel 92 facing openly in the opposite direction from the central channel 44 defined by the handle main frame member 42. A handle side plate 94 abuts and extends along the side flange 88, parallel with and spaced apart from the channel side 82 of the central channel 44, defining, together with the channel side wall 82 and the flange 88, an outer channel 96 facing in the same direction as the outer channel 92.
The side plate 90 includes a bolster portion 98 closing the outer channel 92 and abutting on the channel side wall 80. Similarly, a bolster portion 100 is included and formed integrally with the handle side plate 94 and extends inwardly across the channel 96 toward the channel side wall 82. A spacer 102 is mounted on the pivot pin 66 or 68 at the outer end of the respective handle, to establish a desired distance between the bolster portion 102 and the channel side wall 82.
As shown best in
Blade Latch and Release Mechanism
As shown in
A latch body in the form of a locking bar 118 carried on an outer end of the latch lever 112 extends into a pair of latch support notches 120 defined respectively in the channel side walls 80 and 82. The locking bar 118 preferably is very slightly tapered from a slightly greater thickness adjacent the outer end of the latch lever 112 to a slightly lesser thickness adjacent its bottom face 140, as may be seen in
Preferably, the latch lever 112 fits snugly between the opposite side walls 80 and 82 of the central channel 44, and the bottom 84 of the central channel is open far enough to leave ample room for the latch lever 112 to move into the space between the channel side walls 80 and 82 as the latch lever 112 pivots about the latch lever pivot. The latch lever 112 is mounted in the central channel 44 by snapping it into place, i.e., forcing the side walls 80 and 82 apart elastically far enough to allow the trunnions 114 to be placed into the elongated holes 116 and then allowing the sides 80 and 82 to return to their original positions.
A flat spring 124 preferably of sheet metal is securely mounted within the central channel 44, as by a fastener such as a rivet 126 fastening the spring 124 to the channel base 84, although the spring could be mounted in other ways, as well. The spring 124 is in the form of a finger whose tip presses against a bump 128 on the bottom or inner side of the latch lever 112, as shown in
A base portion 130 of the tool bit holder 64 has a peripheral surface 132 which is preferably arcuate over a portion subtending an angle of about 145 degrees about the central axis of the pivot pin 66. A latch engagement notch 134 is defined in the base 130, in a position aligned with and between the latch support notches 120 when the tool bit holder 64 is in its desired extended position, as shown in
A forward, or abutment wall 136 of the latch engagement notch 134 is higher than a rear wall 138, so that when the locking bar 118 is raised to the position shown in
The range of movement of the latch lever 112 about the trunnions 114 is limited, however, by a latch lever stop 142 extending into the central channel 44 from the side wall 82 of the channel. The limit stop 142 may be made by partially piercing and bending inward a portion of the side wall 82, for example. It obstructs movement of the latch lever 112 in such a position that the locking bar 118 cannot be disengaged fully from the latch support notches 120, as shown in the handle 32 in
The limit stop may take other forms, as well, such as by being formed as a portion of the bottom 84 of the central channel to extend beneath the latch lever 112 at the appropriate position, or by being included in the latch lever 112 as a part extending above the outer surface of the bottom 84 so as to engage it when the latch lever 112 is fully depressed and thereby prevent the locking bar 118 from being raised to a position completely clear of the latch support notches 120 in the side walls 80 and 82.
The front or abutment wall 136 of the latch engagement notch 134 is high enough so that with the latch lever 112 in its fully depressed position as limited by the limit stop 142, the locking bar 118 continues to confront or bear upon the abutment wall 136 to oppose rotation of the tool bit holder 64 in a clockwise direction as seen in
The latch support notches 120 preferably are shaped and made of a size to receive the locking bar 118 snugly but extending at least nearly to the full depth of the latch support notches 120. The trunnions 114 are free to move longitudinally a small distance with respect to the side walls 80 and 82 as a result of the elongated form of the holes 116, so that the locking bar 118 is free to float to a position in which it reaches snug engagement simultaneously in the latch support notches 120 of both side walls as well as in the latch engagement notch 134 of an extended tool blade. Because of the location of the elongated holes 116 and the cooperative shapes of the latch support notches 120 and the locking bar 118, the trunnions 114 are not subjected to the forces resulting from use of the outer tool blades, and those forces are transmitted through the locking bar 118 to the surfaces of the side walls 80 and 82 defining the latch support notches 120.
At the same time, the elongated holes 116 afford only minimal clearance for the trunnions 114 in the direction normal to the length of the holes 116 and thus hold the trunnions 114 snugly against undesired looseness in an up or down direction with respect to the side walls 80 and 82.
The latch engagement notch 134 in a tool base 130 is preferably shaped to contact the locking bar 118 at the mouth of the latch engagement notch 134, and along the front wall 136. As seen in
When the spring 124 is allowed to rotate the latch lever 112 about the trunnions 114, the locking bar 118 is carried into the latch engagement notch 134 of an extended tool, such as the notch 134 in the base of the tool bit holder 72 attached to the handle 34, as shown in
Not only does the locking bar 118 extend into engagement in the latch support notches 120, but it also extends into a latch support notch extension 144 defined in the bolster portion 98 of the side plate 90 and a latch support notch extension 146 defined in the bolster portion 100 of the side plate 94, as can be seen most clearly in
As may be seen in
Referring to
Outer Blade Lock and Interlock
With the folding multipurpose tool 30 in the folded configuration shown in
For example, the clip point knife 104 is shown in its fully extended position in
A detent, such as a bump 172 on the outer face of the blade locking portion 162, is located so as to extend into a dimple 174 defined in the opposing face of each outer blade such as the knife 104, and normally retains the blade in its folded position. Such a detent is relatively easily overcome by the user in attempting to open the outer blade. Thus, were that detent combination the exclusive means of retaining a sharpened blade such as the knife blades 104 and 108, it would be possible for one of those blades to be opened from its folded position when the pliers 35 or other tool also mounted on the front end 52 of the handle 32 or the front end 48 of the handle 34 is open. Since there is ordinarily no reason to have such a sharpened blade as the knife 104 or 108 opened from its folded position during use of the pliers 35, for example, a safety interlock mechanism is provided to prevent one blade from moving from its folded position relative to a handle, in response to a tool member also associated or connected with that handle being in a position other than a particular first position. Such an interlock mechanism is provided in each of the handles 32 and 34, respectively, to engage the knife blades 104 and 108 and retain them in their folded positions in the outer channels 92 and 96 whenever the pliers 35 or another correspondingly mounted tool is deployed with respect to the handles 32 and 34.
The knife blades 104 and 108 both define holes 180 extending through their blades to be engaged by a user's thumb or finger to push the blades open from their folded positions in the outer channels 92 and 96. An interlock catch in the form of a latch finger 182, however, extends into the hole 180 of respective blade 104 or 108, preventing the blade from being opened outwardly from its folded position whenever the base of the tool housed in the central channel 44 of the particular handle 32 or 34 is moved at least a predetermined distance away from its fully stowed position within the central channel of the handle. It will be understood that for outer blades that have no holes extending entirely through them as do the holes 180, a suitable blind hole or ledge could be provided to be engaged by the finger 182, or the finger 182 could be located so as to engage the back of a blade.
Referring again to
A first prong 186 of the spring 184 extends within the channel 44 alongside the side wall 82 and closely along the channel base 84. A second prong 188 of the spring 184 has a tapered outer end 190 and carries the interlock latch finger 182.
A cam 192 extends around part of the base portion 50 of the pliers jaw 38. The cam 192 has a flat side 194 facing toward and oriented generally parallel with the channel side wall 82. The opposite side of the cam 192 is sloped with respect to the flat side 194, with a generally helical surface 196 centered on the pivot pin 56. When the folding tool 30 is in its folded configuration as shown in
When the handle 32 is moved away from the folded configuration of the multipurpose tool 30, so that the base 50 of the pliers jaw is pivoted with respect to the handle 32 about the pivot pin 56 away from the position shown in
It will be understood that other cam arrangements are also possible to carry the latch finger 182 or an equivalent into a place of engagement with a folding outer blade in response to movement of a pair of pliers or other tool member away from a stowed position in the central channel 44. For instance, a finger might extend from the second prong 188 into a suitably located groove defining a cam. Such a groove might be defined in the base portion 46 or 50 of a pliers jaw 36 or 38 instead of the cam 192 shown herein. A corresponding cam that could be followed by such a finger might also be defined in a sliding portion of a tool member which rather than being pivoted, moves longitudinally in a handle 32 or 34 to or from its stowed position within the central channel 44.
Rather than being carried on a prong 188 of a forked spring, the latch finger 182 or its equivalent could be carried on a lever (not shown) arranged to pivot about a fulcrum attached to the interior of the central channel 44. Other arrangements would also be feasible, with the key requirement being that a latch finger be forced to move in response to movement of a tool away from its normal stowed position within the central channel.
An identical forked spring 184 is present in the handle 34 to retain the blade 108 in its closed position when the handle 34 is moved with respect to pliers jaws by pivoting about the pivot pin 54. Thus, so long as the folding multipurpose tool 30 is in the folded configuration as shown in
As seen in
The first prong 186 of the fork-like spring 184 rides along the flat side 194 of the cam 192 and acts through the base portion of the spring 184 to pull the second prong 188 into the center channel 44 as the base of the tool housed in the central channel 44 of the particular handle is moved back to its fully stowed position within the central channel 44. Additionally, the first prong 186 presses radially inward toward the pivot pin 54 or 56 and against the base 46 or 50 of the respective pliers jaw 36 or 38 so as to urge the respective jaw by cam action to remain in either a fully extended or fully stowed position and to provide friction to resist movement between the fully extended and fully stowed positions.
Tool Bit Holder and Interchangeable Bits
Returning to
For example, a bit 212 includes a working portion such as a first driving end 214 adapted to fit into a hexagonal socket of a first standard size and an opposite driving end 216 that is also hexagonal but of a smaller standard size. A tool bit 218 has straight blade screwdriver tips 220 and 222 of different sizes. A tool bit 224 has a pair of opposite ends 226 and 228 including Phillips screwdriver tips of different sizes. The smaller Phillips screwdriver bit 228 is essentially complete; however, the larger Phillips screwdriver bit 226 is reduced in width, with one pair of opposite arms of the cruciform tip of the bit reduced from the usual size while the other pair are of normal configuration.
Each of the tool bits 212, 218, and 224 includes a base or driven body portion 230 between its two opposite driving outer end portions 214, 216, etc. Each central driven body or base portion 230 has a pair of relatively wide parallel opposite sides 232. The parallel sides 232 mirror each other on opposite sides of each tool bit 212, 218, 224, etc. and are preferably substantially flat and separated by a thickness 233 which is great enough so that the tool bit has sufficient stiffness and strength, but the thickness 233 is significantly less than the across-flats dimension of the corresponding regular hexagonal shape. Preferably the thickness 233 is no more than one half the corresponding nominal across-flats dimension.
The parallel flat sides 232 are interconnected with each other by relatively narrow margin portions 234 and 236 which each preferably include narrow flat surfaces 238 and 240 that intersect each other with an included angle of about 120 degrees. Similarly, each of the flat surfaces 238, 240 preferably intersects the adjacent flat side 232 with an included angle of about 120 degrees. Opposite edges 242 defined by the intersections of the flat surfaces 238 and 240 with each other along each of the margins 234 and 236 are separated by a height 244 (
The thickness 233 separating the parallel flat sides 232 from each other is significantly less than the height 244, and preferably is about ⅛ inch, although it could be as little as 0.075 inch. As a result, the tool bit holder 64 can be made narrow enough to fit easily in a handle such as the handles 32 and 34, and several tool bits such as the bits 212, 218, and 224 can be carried in a much smaller space than required by the corresponding tool bits with conventional regular hexagonal shanks.
The body 210 of the bit holder 64 has a second, outer end 250 opposite its base 130. The body 210 also has a pair of flat opposite sides 252 parallel with each other and extending from the outer end 250 toward the base 130. The opposite sides 252 are separated from each other by a thickness 254 that is greater than the thickness 233 of the tool bit, and may, for example, be 0.198 inch. The thickness 254 is thus significantly less than it would have to be were the bit a regular hexagon with a thickness 233 across flats equal to ¼ inch. This allows the tool bit holder 64 to be folded into the central channel 44 of the tool handle 32 or 34 as shown in
A tool bit receptacle 256 extends into the body 210 from the outer end 250 and includes an open-ended bit-receiving cavity 258 having generally the shape of a narrow hexagonal prism extending longitudinally within the body 210 from the outer end 250 toward the base 130. The bit-receiving cavity 258 is made slightly larger than the central driven body 230 of the bits 212, 218, etc., in order to slidingly receive the body portion 230 of each tool bit with interior surfaces of the cavity 258 engaging each of the flat surfaces 238 and 240 and portions of the parallel flat sides 232. This enables the tool bit holder 64 to drive the tool bit 212, etc. and spread the resulting pressures and loads over a sufficiently large area of the interior surfaces of the bit-receiving cavity 258. While the cross section of the bit-receiving cavity 258 could be different, and the shapes of the base or central driven portions 230 of the tool bits could correspondingly be different from those shown herein, the shapes shown herein permit use of the tool bits 212, 218, and 224 in conventional ¼ inch hexagonal drive sockets.
An access opening 260 extends transversely through the body 210 from one to the other of the opposite sides 252, at a location spaced apart from the outer end 250 by a distance 262 of, for example, 0.47 inch. As a result, an end of a tool bit opposite the driving end in use can be seen while the bit is held in the tool bit holder 64. The access opening 260 also permits any dust or other foreign material that has entered into the bit-receiving cavity 258 to be dislodged or to fall free from the body 210. Shallow troughs 262 may be provided extending longitudinally along the side walls of the bit-receiving cavity 258 to accommodate possible distortion of the body 210 during manufacture by metal injection molding methods, and to keep dust from becoming impacted in the bit-receiving cavity alongside the parallel flat sides 232 of a bit held in the bit holder 64. The body 210 has a height 255 that is greater than the thickness 254. The bit-receiving cavity 258 has a width 259 that is less than the thickness 254, and has a depth 261 that is greater than the width 259 but less than the height 255 of the body 210.
A shoulder 264 extends longitudinally along a top of the body 210. A retainer portion 266 defines a slot extending alongside the shoulder 264 and intersecting a generally cylindrical cavity at an end of the slot. A flat retainer spring 268 is provided with a small cylindrical rolled portion at one end. The retainer spring 268 is received within the slot, with the cylindrical rolled end in the cylindrical cavity defined between the retainer 266 and the remainder of the body 210.
An outer end 270 of the spring 268 includes a tip 272 extending through a small channel into the bit-receiving cavity 258. The tip 272 is preferably oriented inward at an oblique angle away from the outer end 250, and the spring 268 is biased elastically into the interior of the bit-receiving cavity, so that when a tool bit such as the bit 218 is slid into the bit-receiving cavity 258 as indicated in
Preferably, a catch 274 is provided on the bottom of the body 210 to be engaged by one's fingernail to open the tool bit holder 64 from a folded position within the central channel 44.
While the spring 268 will retain a tool bit and prevent it from falling out of the tool bit holder 64, it is not intended to withstand pulling forces such as those needed for use of a tool such as a cork puller. A suitable shank or base portion that can be used for any of a variety of small tools such as awls, chisels, or even cork pullers, can be retained more definitely in the tool bit holder 64 by various mechanisms such as those shown in
For example, a tool bit may include a spring-biased hook 387 fastened to its shank at a small distance away from the base portion 386 to be inserted into the tool bit holder 64, as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Returning to
Projecting into the access opening 286 is a retainer 288 in the form of a small ear that extends into the access opening 286 and partially into space aligned with an imaginary extension of the tool bit receptacle 284 into the access opening 286. A very slender screwdriver bit 74 extends through the tool bit receptacle 284 from the front end 282 toward the base 130 and to an opposite, or inner, end of the access opening 286. The retainer 288 extends into space aligned with the tool bit receptacle 284 and thus interferes slightly with the screwdriver bit 74, requiring it to be elastically bent, or flexed, a small amount such as about 0.005 inch in order for the bit 74 to be inserted fully to the inner end 292 of the access opening 286. The force needed to flex the bit 74 creates sufficient friction to reliably retain the bit 74 in the tool bit holder 72.
A small finger 294 extends from the body 280 to be used to assist in moving the tool bit holder 72 about the pivot pin 68, from its folded position within the channel 44 of the handle 34, to its extended position shown in
The body 280 has a thickness 296 (
As may be seen most clearly in
Pocket Clips and Lanyard Loops
A slot 312 is established by the spacer 102 as an accessory receptacle between the bolster portion 100 and the side wall 82 of the handle 32 as may be seen in
A throat 320 of the fork 319 preferably fits snugly about the smaller-diameter cylindrical portion of the spacer 102, alongside the radial flange portion of the spacer 102, with a notch 321 engaged releasably by the locking bar 118 carried on the latch lever 112. The spacer 102 provides room between the bolster 100 and the facing side wall 82, and also provides a cylindrical surface to engage the interior of the throat 320, by covering the flats 154 on the pivot pin 66. A guide surface 322 engages a surface of the flange 88 within the outer channel 96, and an abutment surface 323 engages an end surface of the flange 88 to prevent the clip 314 from rotating about the spacer 102.
In
To release the multipurpose hand tool 30 from the lanyard loop 324 for use, as when the multipurpose folding tool 30 is carried on a lanyard attached to the lanyard loop 324, it is only necessary to depress the pressure pad 122 of the latch lever 112 to raise the locking bar 118 from the notch 329. Thus, the tool 30 can be carried on any of several lanyards each equipped with a releasable lanyard loop 332. Other accessories can also be releasably attached to the tool 30 by being inserted into the slot 312 and latched in place by engagement of the locking bar 118.
A retractable tool-retaining lanyard loop 332 provided in the handle 34 is shown in its retracted position in
The retractable lanyard loop 332 may be made of sheet metal cut to a shape such as that shown best in
Alternative Embodiments of the Tool
A folding multipurpose tool 340 shown in
Various tool blades are provided at the rear or outer end of each of the handles 342 and 344, opposite the attachment of the pliers jaws. For example, a knife blade 354, a straight screwdriver blade 356, a smaller straight screwdriver blade 358 and a lanyard loop 360 are mounted on the handle 342, and all are pivotable about a pivot pin 362 between respective extended and folded positions. Attached similarly to the handle 344 as shown in
The margins 352 of the side walls 349 are shaped to a reduced thickness at one or more places, as by coining, for example, as shown at 370 in
A blade latch and release mechanism is provided in the folding multipurpose tool 340 in a form similar to that of the latch and release mechanism in the folding multipurpose tool 30 described above. A latch lever 369 is similar to the latch lever 112, except for having a greater width to fill the space between the side walls 349 of the handle 342 or 344, which are separated further than the side walls 80 and 82 of the handles 32 and 34 of the tool 30. The latch lever 369 includes trunnions 114′ which are engaged in elongated holes 116′ in the side walls 349 in the same fashion as that in which the trunnions 114 are engaged in the elongated holes 116 in the folding multipurpose tool 30 as described above. A locking bar 118′, similar to the locking bar 118, is carried on an outer end of the latch lever 369. The side walls 349 of each handle 342 and 344 define respective latch support notches 120′ similar to the latch support notches 120 in the handles of the folding multipurpose tool 30. The locking bar 118′ thus cooperates with the latch support notches 120′ in the same fashion described above with respect to the locking bar 118 and the latch support notches 120.
Preferably, the various tool blades 354, 356, 358, etc. are the same as, or interchangeable with, the blade 62 or tool bit holders 70 and 72, or similarly located blades, and their base portions 376 are preferably substantially the same as the base portions 130 and 130′ with which the locking bar 118 cooperates as described previously. The bottom 348 of the channel part 347 is shaped to define a finger-like spring 373 that acts on the inner end of the lever 369, urging it to rotate about the trunnions 114′ to move the locking bar 118′ into engagement in the latch support notches 120′ and also into the engagement notch 134 of any of the various tool blades that is extended. Movement of the latch lever 369 about the pivot axis defined by the trunnions 114′ is limited at the appropriate position by the margins 383 of the inserts 350, as may be seen in
As shown in
The offset portion 378 of the spring 374 engages the respective notch 134 when one of the several blades is rotated to its extended position. The offset portion 378 is interconnected with the remainder, or inner part of the spring 374 in each of the handles 342′, 344′, by a transition part 382 oriented at a slope or angle 384 of, for example, about 30°. The transition part 382 enters the notch 134 adjacent the edge of the rear wall 138 and acts as a detent, while an end face 380 of the offset portion 378 engages the abutment wall 136 of the notch 134. Because of the slope of the transition part 382, the offset portion 378 can be removed from the notch 134 by application of a moderate amount of force to move the respective blade about its pivot pin 362 or 366 in the direction of its folded position, and the rear wall 138 lifts the offset portion 378 free of the notch 134 by cam action on the transition part 382.
Tubular Bit Driver
Referring next to
As a result of the taper, when the driving end 398 is inserted into the drive socket 404, the bit driver 396 fits snugly, and is mated therewith with sufficient friction so that the bit driver 396 sticks in place on the driving end 398 of the Phillips screwdriver 364, from which it will not unintentionally fall free simply because the tool is handled as in the course of normal use. At the same time, however, the bit driver 396 can easily be separated from the driving end 398 merely by pulling them apart.
Preferably, grooves 406 may be provided about the outer surface of the outer end 408 of the bit driver 396, to aid in gripping it.
The outer end 408 defines a bit-receiving socket 410 such as a ¼ inch hexagonal socket capable of receiving and driving conventional tool bits and the compact reduced thickness tool bits 212, 218, and 224 mentioned above. The socket 410 preferably includes an internally located circumferential groove 412 shown in
The terms and expressions that have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims that follow.