The present invention relates to multipurpose hand tools, and in particular to such a tool which has over-center locking pliers and can be folded into a compact configuration.
Folding multipurpose hand tools have become well known in recent years. Representative tools of this sort are disclosed in, for example, Leatherman U.S. Pat. No. 4,238,862, Leatherman U.S. Pat. No. 4,888,869, Sessions et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,212,844, Frazer U.S. Pat. No. 5,267,366, MacIntosh U.S. Pat. No. 5,697,114, Gardiner et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,791,002 and Frazer U.S. Pat. No. 5,809,599. While many of such tools have included folding pliers, only Thai U.S. Pat. No. 5,029,355 discloses pliers capable of being locked by an over-center locking arrangement, and whose jaws can be folded to make such a tool more compact. The Kershaw Multi-Toolâ„¢, now on the market, has over-center locking pliers, but the jaws do not fold. Of course, the best known of locking pliers is the Peterson Vise-Grip7, but it is not foldable for compact storage, nor is it multipurpose.
Previously-known multipurpose tools with over center locking pliers have been of operable design, but have lacked strength, or useful features, or have been unattractive in appearance, or have not been able to be folded into a suitably compact configuration; and thus such tools have been less than completely satisfactory for their intended purpose.
In multipurpose folding tools, various latch mechanisms have been utilized in the past, as represented, for example, by Seber et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,765,247, and Swinden et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,781,950, to retain folding tool bits and blades in desired positions, either folded and stowed within a cavity provided in a tool handle, or rigidly and safely extended ready for use. The previously available latching arrangements, however, have had various drawbacks, either from the standpoint of operability, strength, and reliability, or from the standpoint of manufacturing costs.
Socket wrenches and hex bit drivers are well known. Adaptors to connect hex bits or sockets or both to multipurpose tools are also well known. See, for example, Heldt U.S. Pat. No. 4,519,278, Chen U.S. Pat. No. 5,033,140, Lin U.S. Pat. No. 5,251,353, Park U.S. Pat. No. 5,280,659, and Cachot U.S. Pat. No. 5,809,600. Tool bit drive adaptors, however, are an additional item which must be carried and kept together with the multipurpose tool to enable it to be used to drive such tool bits. Also, currently available drivers do not work well with special bits, such as corkscrews, which must be pulled, rather than pushed, in use.
What is desired, then, is an improved folding multipurpose tool including pliers with over-center locking jaws capable of exerting significant gripping force and whose jaws can be folded. Also desired are a folding multipurpose tool including an improved mechanism for locking and unlocking various blades, and a folding multipurpose tool including an improved holder for hex bit tools. Preferably, such a tool should be of sturdy, reliable construction, be able to be manufactured at a reasonable cost, and have a pleasing appearance, and be capable of folding into a compact storage configuration so as to be easily carried and readily available for use when needed. Also preferable in such a tool is that most of the motions and positionings of the various components that are required when using the tool occur automatically or are intuitive to the user.
The present invention overcomes some of the aforementioned shortcomings of the prior art and answers some of the aforementioned needs by providing a folding multipurpose tool incorporating adjustable locking pliers jaws that can be extended into an operational configuration in which the tool may be adjusted to grip objects of different sizes and may be locked by an over-center mechanism while still providing gripping force against an object or objects located between the jaws.
In one preferred embodiment of such a tool a pair of jaws are mounted on a jaw pivot shaft on one end of a first handle, and a corresponding end of a second handle is removably connected to a lower one of the jaws to control its movement toward an upper one of the jaws.
In one preferred embodiment of the invention, a jaw-moving linkage includes a pair of struts extending between the handles, and the jaws extend between the struts when the tool is folded into a compact folded configuration.
As another separate aspect of the present invention, a folding tool including locking pliers has a jaw-moving linkage including a thrust body which interconnects a portion of the jaw-moving linkage to one jaw of the pliers through a pivot joint including mating concave and convex surfaces contacting each other, through which the jaw-moving linkage pushes against a heel portion of that jaw.
In one embodiment of that aspect of the invention a spring detent arrangement is provided to keep the pivot joint assembled as desired but permit it to be disconnected easily in order to fold the jaws into the handle to place the tool into its compact folded configuration.
Another separate aspect of the present invention is to provide a latch mechanism to retain one or more folding blades or tool bits in a selected position with respect to a handle of a multipurpose folding tool.
In a preferred embodiment of this aspect of the invention such a mechanism includes a latch release lever carried on a pivot in a channel-configured portion of one of the handles, and a spring formed as a portion of the handle keeps a catch body carried on the latch release lever engaged with at least one of the blades.
In one preferred embodiment of this aspect of the invention each of the blades includes a base portion defining a notch from which the catch body can be released to permit the blade to be moved between its folded and extended positions, while the catch body still prevents the blade from being moved beyond its intended extended position, and the handle and the latch release lever cooperate to prevent the catch body from moving beyond its intended blade-releasing position.
Yet another separate aspect of the present invention is that it provides a tool bit drive socket, with a threaded bore at an inner end of the socket, allowing the tool bit drive socket to receive not only conventional tool bits but also special bits threaded at one end.
The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Folding Jaws:
Referring now to drawings which form a part of the disclosure herein, in a preferred embodiment of the invention a folding multipurpose tool 30 shown in
An over-center jaw-locking mechanism is included in the tool, and can be adjusted using an adjustment knob 40 located at the rear end 45 of the upper handle 32 to permit the jaws 36 and 38 to be locked while gripping objects of various sizes. Various folding tool blades are normally stored within the lower handle 34 and can be rotated about an axis defined by a pivot shaft 42 extending transversely at the rear end 44 of the lower handle 34. The tool blades are kept either in a folded position or an extended position by a latch mechanism including a latch lever 46. The latch lever 46 may be metal injection molded and is carried on a latch lever pivot pin 48 extending transversely through bores in the sides of the lower handle 34.
The multipurpose folding tool 30 can be folded into a compact folded configuration, shown in
It will be appreciated that a different arrangement might be used instead to allow the lower jaw 38 to pivot with respect to the upper jaw 36 about an axis not necessarily coincident with the pivot axis 50, if desired.
When the multipurpose tool 30 is in the folded configuration as shown in
When the folding multipurpose tool 30 is in the compact, folded configuration shown in
The locking pliers jaws 36 and 38 are unfolded from the folded configuration shown in
With the lower handle 34 in the position shown in
The lower handle 34 is then brought forward, and its front end 64 is mated releasably with the heel 54 of the lower jaw 38 so that the front end 64 of the lower handle 34 can rotate about the heel 54 of the lower jaw 38. This can be done most easily with the adjustment knob 40 turned in to the position shown in
Movement of the lower handle 34, or operating lever, toward the upper handle 32 is limited, maintaining a space between the upper and lower handles 32 and 34 so that they can be manipulated easily to move the jaws 36 and 38 apart from or toward each other as desired. This limitation of the movement of the lower handle 34 is accomplished by a pair of limit stops 84 in the lower handle 34. Preferably, the limit stops 84 have a form resembling wings, defined by a slit in each side of the lower handle 34 and are bent inward slightly to extend into the space between the sides 73 of the lower handle 34, as shown in
Referring also to
A stop arm 92 of each of the struts 86 is aligned with the limit stops 84 when the jaws 36 and 38 are in the extended and operative positions shown in
A U shaped portion of the strut 86 beside the stop arm 92 may be beveled to a sharp edge as shown in
The upper and lower jaws 36 and 38 are both rotatably mounted on the jaw pivot shaft 52, as shown in
As seen in
A short torsion spring 108 has radially-extending ends 110 each engaged with a notch provided in a respective one of the jaws 36 and 38 so that the torsion spring 108 urges the outer ends 112, 114 of the jaws 36, 38, respectively, apart from each other with sufficient force to overcome friction between the lower jaw 38 and the adjacent surfaces of the upper handle 32 and the upper jaw 36 and the jaw pivot shaft 52. The jaws 36, 38 thus tend to open apart from each other as limited by the shape of the bases of the jaws at 115 in
As the jaws 36 and 38 are rotated about the jaw pivot shaft 52 in moving them from the extended, operational positions to the folded positions depicted in
As seen in
Referring next to
A central portion of a detent spring 126 of thin spring material is sandwiched between the thrust block 124 and the inner surface of the back 62 of the lower handle 34, and a pair of parallel side portions of the detent spring 126 extend therefrom closely along respective sides of the thrust block 124, as may be seen best in
Located on the thrust block 124 are a pair of coaxial pivot arms 132, one on each side of the thrust block 124, extending laterally to the inner face of the adjacent side 73 of the lower handle 34, as shown best in
The thrust block 124 includes a concave forward surface 134, and the heel 54 includes a convex rear surface 136. The two surfaces 134 and 136 are preferably both cylindrical and of nearly the same radius of curvature so that they fit slidingly and concentrically together to permit the thrust block 124 to rotate with respect to the heel 54 about an axis of rotation 138 extending transversely of the tool 30.
When the lower handle 34 is engaged with the heel 54, the detent spring 126 retains the heel 54 adjacent the thrust block 124 with the surfaces 134 and 136 in mated relationship with one another for relative rotation about the axis 138. The detent protrusions 128 are preferably located with their centers slightly closer than the axis 138 to the concave surface 134 of the thrust block 124, so that cam action of the surfaces of the dimples 130 on the detent protrusions 128 will keep the surfaces 134 and 136 snugly together during use of the locking pliers.
The detent spring 126 can be flexed by cam action of the dimples 130 to disengage the detent protrusions 128 from the dimples 130 by simply rotating the lower handle 34 counterclockwise from the position shown in
Jaw Adjustment and Locking:
The strut assembly 74 is connected with the thrust block 124 as a part of the jaw-moving linkage by engagement of each of the pivot arms 132 in a respective elongated hole 144 in each of the struts 86, at the front end 82 of the strut assembly 74. In one method of assembly, the pin 76 is inserted from outside the upper handle 32 through one of the slots 78 into the bores 90 in the struts 86 and through the strut block 88 after the struts 86 have first been placed on opposite sides of the thrust block 124 with the pivot arms 132 engaged in the elongated holes 144.
In an alternative construction (not shown) the strut block 88 could be attached to the struts 86 by a separate fastening, and the pin 76 could be fitted removably or even be made as a spring-loaded pin to permit complete separation of the handles 32, 34 from each other.
The rear end 80 of the strut assembly 74 is moveable longitudinally along the upper handle 32 of the folding multipurpose tool 30 within the slots 78 in which the opposite ends of the pin 76 are engaged. Movement of the rear end 80 is limited further by the location of the forward end 146 of the adjustment screw 148, which limits rearward movement of the strut block 88.
As shown in
The jaw control linkage, then, controls the position of the lower jaw 38 with respect to the upper jaw 36 when the upper jaw 36 is in its extended position and the lower jaw 38 is in its operative position with the front end 64 of the lower handle 34 connected with the heel 54 of the lower jaw 38 by the heel 54 being mated with the thrust block 124. Movement of the lower handle 34, to which the thrust block 124 is connected, moves the pivot arms 132 with respect to an imaginary force line 162 extending from near the axis of rotation 138 to a location near the central axis of the pin 76. The exact places of application of the forces in the jaw moving linkage, it will be understood, are determined principally by the contact between the surface 134 of the thrust block 124 and the surface 136 of the heel 54, and by the resolution of forces among the end 146 of the adjustment screw 148, the outer surface of the strut block 88, and inside surfaces of the handle 32. With the pivot arms 132 riding in the ends of the elongated holes 144 nearer to the rear end 80 of the strut assembly 74, as the central axis 164 of the pivot arms 132 approaches the imaginary line 162, the heel 54 is urged away from the pin 76 by the thrust block 124, and thus the lower jaw 38 is urged to pivot about the jaw pivot shaft 52 toward the upper jaw 36.
When the handles 32 and 34 are separated and the jaws 36 and 38 are opened apart from each other the central axis 164 is on the side of the imaginary line 162 closer to the lower handle 34. With the central axis 164 of the pivot arms 132 located on the imaginary line 162, the distance between the upper and lower jaws 36 and 38 is at the minimum established by the particular position of the forward end 146 of the adjustment screw 148. As the lower handle 34 is rotated further toward the upper handle 32 about the axis of rotation 138 the central axis 164 moves over-center across the imaginary line 162 a small distance. At that point the stop arms 92 come into contact with the limit stops 84, as shown in
Movement of the adjustment screw 148 rearward by rotation of the adjustment knob 40 provides for greater spacing between the outer ends 112 and 114 of the jaws 36 and 38. The adjustment screw also acts as an extension of the upper handle 32 to give greater leverage to be applied to the upper handle 32 as the jaws 36 and 38 are separated further.
It will be understood that the forces urging the lower jaw 38 toward the upper jaw 36 are compressive forces carried from the rear end 45 of the upper handle 32 through the adjustment block 154 and adjustment screw 148, and through the strut assembly 74 from the forward end 146 of the adjustment screw 148, through the strut block 88, the pin 76, the struts 86, and the rear ends of the elongated holes 144 and the pivot arms 132 into the thrust block 124, and that these forces are then carried by the thrust block 124 into the heel 54 of the lower jaw 38 through the mutually contacting surfaces 134 and 136. Because of the geometry between the thrust block 124 and the remainder of the jaw-moving linkage, the attachment of the lower handle 34 to the thrust block 124 need never be subjected to an extremely large amount of force, and the screw 122 therefore need not be large.
As shown in
Once the jaws 36 and 38 are placed as shown in
A bump 168, shown in
As may be seen in
The projecting part 174 may be, for example, a portion of the base or tang 210 of one of the folding tool blades carried on the blade pivot shaft 42, and preferably is part of the tang 210 of the Phillips head screw driver 176, as may be seen in
Referring still to
The portion of the adjustment block 154 nearest the rear end 45 of the upper handle 32 defines a tool bit driving socket, for example a hexagonal socket 182 preferably, but not necessarily, at least slightly larger in its minimum dimensions than the outer diameter of the threads 150 of the adjustment screw 148, although threads 150 could also be formed to some extent in the walls of the tool bit driving socket. The tool bit driving socket is of an appropriate size to receive a shank of a tool bit such as the hexagonal shank 184 shown aligned with the open end of the socket 182 in
It will be appreciated that engagement of the projecting part 174 in the hole 172 is useful in keeping the upper and lower handles 32 and 34 aligned with each other when the tool 30 is used to rotate a tool bit whose shank 184 is engaged in the socket 182.
Latch Mechanism for Folding Tool Blades:
Referring to
In addition to the file blade 194 with its straight screwdriver tip, there may be additional tool blades, such as a narrow straight bladed screwdriver 196 combined with a bottle cap remover, a medium width screwdriver 198, and a knife blade 200, as well as the previously mentioned Phillips head screwdriver 176. So that adjacent blades do not move with each other, these tool blades are preferably separated from one another along the blade pivot shaft 42 by thin spacers (not shown) that rest on the interior of the handle 34 and thus cannot rotate about the shaft 42. Between the file blade 194 and the combined small screwdriver and bottle cap remover 196, a lanyard eyelet 201 of thin sheet metal is provided. It will be appreciated that the lanyard eyelet 201 need not be in that location, but the screwdriver 196, because of its small size, may be of reduced thickness to provide space conveniently for the lanyard eyelet 201 alongside the small screwdriver 196. The lanyard eyelet 201 is preferably of a shape which is symmetrical about an imaginary line 203 shown in
The small screwdriver 196 and medium screwdriver 198 are preferably flat on their sides facing apart from each other, while the opposite faces, adjacent the centrally-located Phillips head screwdriver 176, are tapered to the desired thickness of the edge of each of the screwdrivers 196 and 198, leaving room for the cruciform tip of the Phillips head screwdriver 176 between them.
Each of the folding tool blades 176, 194, 196, 198, and 200 has a tang or base portion 210 defining a respective bore 214 through which the blade pivot shaft 42 passes with a close fit permitting each of the tool blades to rotate smoothly about the blade pivot shaft 42. The base or tang 210 of each of the tool blades also includes a respective notch 202 to receive the catch body 204 located at one end of a catch carrier arm 206 portion of the latch lever 46. On the opposite side of a pivot axis defined by the ears 192 and pivot pin 48 is a rear end or latch release push button portion 208 of the latch lever 46, whose outer side preferably is provided with a non-slip surface such as the parallel grooves illustrated in
Approximately opposite the notch 202 on the tang or base 210 of each of the tool blades 176, 194, 196, 198 and 200, separated from the notch 202 by an angle of about 1601801, is an arcuate surface 216, adjacent which is a cam lobe 218. Between the cam lobe 218 and the notch 202 is a substantially arcuate margin surface 220 of a radius greater than that of the arcuate surface 216 preferably centered on the shaft 42. A projecting face or kick 217 on each tool blade is provided to prevent each tool blade from moving too deeply into the channel of the lower handle 34.
Within the notch 202 is an arcuate bottom surface 222, adjoining an anti-folding face 224 extending inwardly from the surface 220 to define one side of the notch 202. Opposite the anti-folding face 224, and thus defining the opposite side of the notch 202, is an abutment surface 226. A radial dimension 228, between the blade pivot shaft 42 and the arcuate surface 216, and a radial dimension 230, between the blade pivot shaft 42 and the arcuate bottom surface 222 of the notch 202, are preferably equal to each other and at least as great as a minimum required for the tang 210 to be of ample strength. The arcuate surfaces 216 and 222 are preferably circular and concentric with the tool pivot shaft 42 to provide the greatest radial dimensions 228 and 230 for practicality, but other slightly different curvatures or locations of those surfaces could also be used in accordance with this invention.
As seen in
The push button end 208 of the latch lever 46 overhangs the back 62 of the handle 34 beyond the aperture 188, as shown in
When the rear or push button portion 208 of the catch lever 46 is depressed fully to the position shown in
When the upper handle 32 is separated from the lower handle 34, if the push button end 208 of the latch lever 46 is depressed to its limited position as shown in
When all of the tool blades 176, 194, 196, 198 and 200 or such blades as are located in the lower handle 34 in place of those specific blades, are folded, the spring 190, acting against the protrusion 193, keeps the folded tool blades in their respective folded positions by urging the catch body 204 against the arcuate surfaces 216, and against the cam 218 of the tang 210 of any blade beginning to rotate away from the folded position.
The presence of the arcuate surface 234, corresponding with the shape of the arcuate surfaces 216 and 222, provides room between the catch body 204 and the blade pivot shaft 42 for ample material for strength of the tangs 210. This shape also leaves room for an anti-folding surface 224 of ample size, and provides for the front face 236 to extend radially further into the handle 34 than the rear face 232, so that the rear face 232 can be disengaged from the anti-folding face 224 without disengaging the front face 236 from the abutment 226 in the limited space available in a compact folding tool.
It will be noted that the Phillips screwdriver 176, in its folded position, is inclined upward toward the margins of the sides 73 of the lower handle 34 so that its outer end is available to be engaged to lift the Phillips screwdriver 176 from its folded position. Accordingly, a notch 202 in the tang 210 of the Phillips screwdriver is aligned at a slightly different angle with respect to the kick 217 in order to have the shank of the Phillips screwdriver 176 aligned properly with the lower handle 34 in its extended position.
The terms and expressions which 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 which follow.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/643,098, filed Aug. 18, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,039,974, which is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/816,622, filed Mar. 23, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,691,357, which is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/240,204, filed Jan. 29, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,282,996.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09816622 | Mar 2001 | US |
Child | 10643098 | Aug 2003 | US |
Parent | 09240204 | Jan 1999 | US |
Child | 09816622 | Mar 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10643098 | Aug 2003 | US |
Child | 11430435 | May 2006 | US |