This application claims priority from Chinese Patent Application No. 201510163744.X, filed on Apr. 8, 2015 in the State Intellectual Property Office of the People's Republic of China, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Wrenches can be divided into two categories: closed-end—also known as ring-type—and open-end wrenches. Closed-end wrenches are those which must be applied axially to a nut, bolt head, or other torque-receiving surface, while open-end wrenches are those which can be applied either axially or radially to a torque receiving surface.
Closed-end wrenches typically have four to eight contact faces, and are usually designed to contact all torque-receiving surfaces at the same time. Such wrenches are typified by common box or socket type wrenches. This category of wrench generally comprises a torqueing head solidly attached to a slender arm. The torqueing of a nut by a closed end wrench, especially in confined areas, generally entails the continuous placement and removal of the wrench head to the nut to complete a torqueing operation.
Another version of closed-end wrenches is the ratcheting type, whereby the head comprises a nut-engaging slot or socket cog wheel with a ratcheting mechanism which allows continuous torqueing of a nut through 360° ad infinitum without the need for disengaging it from the torque-receiving surface. However, closed-end wrenches in both solid and ratcheting forms cannot be used for torqueing nuts or fasteners axially placed on hydraulic or similar lines in view of the geometry of the torqueing head.
Open-end wrenches typically engage two sides of a nut, perform the same function as closed-end wrenches, and, in view of the geometry of the head, allows for engagement to nuts or fasteners axially placed on hydraulic or similar lines. However, torqueing such nuts or fasteners, especially in confined environments, entails continuous placement and removal of the wrench head to the nut to complete a torqueing operation, which can be arduous and time-consuming. An ideal tool that would facilitate such operations would be a ratcheting wrench that can be securely engaged on axially-placed nuts or fasteners and remain engaged throughout the torqueing operation in a manner identical to normal ratcheting ring wrenches. Such wrench will have to satisfy various criteria such as tool integrity, reliability, size, simplicity and economy to be commercially viable. The apparatus taught herein is such a tool designed for ratcheting hard-to-reach nut fasteners in an efficient and convenient manner by ensuring efficient secured encapsulation of the nut throughout the wrenching and ratcheting process using a relatively small tool that is easy to engage, use and remove by the user, with a small ratcheting swing-angle, as well as being easy to navigate in confined spaces, such as under a car's hood or amongst a bathroom's plumbing fixtures. The tool has been designed with focus on economy and reliability through having minimal moving parts that are simple to manufacture and assemble, which makes it affordable to anyone from hobbyists to DIY persons as well as professionals.
Ratcheting wrenches designed for torqueing axially placed nuts on hydraulic or similar lines are taught by many in the prior art. However, none seem to satisfy all of the basic qualities required of such a wrench as described above:
U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,712,256 and 5,501,124 present solutions whereby two pairs of pawls are used to provide bidirectional torqueing, resulting in excessive head size and use of moving parts that unduly increase production cost and susceptibility of tool to dysfunction with use. Further, the tool lacks any mechanism for disengagement of the wrench other than having to rotate the head by up to 90° to align cog wheel and head openings together.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,851,914 suffers all the above-listed disadvantages. Furthermore, as the tool's cog wheel engages only four faces of a nut fastener, that can result in the nut slipping out of position when the tool is in open configuration, thus jamming the torqueing operation and possibly damaging the tool and assembly.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,895,920 tool wrench has too many components and can therefore be costly to manufacture and is susceptible to early wear with use. The disengagement of the wrench from the fastener can be problematic in confined spaces as the ratcheting wheel would have to be turned by up to 30° to align the ratcheting inserts to the open position for the swinging collars to open up.
U.S. Patent No. 5,960,679 relies on a complex mechanism that would be costly to manufacture and is susceptible to early wear with use. It also functions by repetitive engagement and disengagement thus exposing tool and nut to possible wear or damage. During ratcheting, the tool's ratcheting swing-angle of 60° can render the tool impracticable for use in confined spaces.
The invention taught herein is an unidirectional open-ended small swing-angle (half of that of many standard ratchet wrenches) ratcheting wrench of practical size designed to assist in assembling, removing and tightening/loosening axially-placed fasteners or nuts attached to hydraulic or similar lines. The design concept is based upon simple criteria with minimal moving parts to ensure reliability, longevity and economy.
The invention comprises a peripherally-notched cog wheel of solid material of definite face width with a concentric hexagonal slot designed to circumscribe a single standard sized nut. The slot is peripherally circumscribed on both sides of the wheel by two integral rings of definite thickness and width forming bearing rotation shoulders for the cog wheel. The hexagonal slot is with an axial opening to the wheel's perimeter through one of its corners of a width short of the nut/fastener's “across flats” width but exceeding the hole or tie diameter of the nut/fastener.
The cog wheel is deployed to rotate peripherally around its rotation shoulders inside the head of an open-end wrench assembly made of two solid flat mirror image bident-shaped skins with elliptical heads having concentric circular apertures with axial end openings riveted facing each other along the handles to a solid filler element of a thickness minimally greater than the face width of the cog wheel. Two pawls deployed in the neck section of the wrench assembly alternately engage the cog wheel to provide uninterrupted unidirectional torqueing. Pins deployed between pawls and cog wheel check the sinking of pawls inside the cog wheel opening when the two are aligned, thus preventing the jamming of the cog wheel's rotation. The wrench's head width is of the same dimension as the root diameter of the cog wheel, thus allowing the protrusion of the cog wheel's teeth at the sides for direct and simple manual aligning of the cog wheel opening with that of the wrench for engagement and removal of the tool. Said head's axial opening's width is the same as that of the cog wheel to allow for the engagement and removal of the tool to a hydraulic or similar line.
For torqueing a hexagonal nut fastener axially placed on a hydraulic or similar line, the cog wheel opening is first aligned with that of the wrench head by manually rotating the cog wheel via the protruding cog wheel teeth at the sides. The wrench head is then pushed across the line and then sideways to engage the nut. Unidirectional ratcheting can then be performed.
Upon completion of the task, the wrench is disengaged by moving the head slightly sideways away from the nut and along the hose or line. The cog wheel opening is aligned with that of the wrench's head by manually rotating the cog wheel from the protruding cog wheel teeth at the sides, thus allowing the removal of the tool from the line. Torqueing in the opposite direction can be performed simply by flipping the wrench over to its opposite face prior to inserting the head onto the line.
A clearer understanding of the invention will become apparent from the following drawings and their descriptions, wherein:
For the sake of convenience and clarity, and unless otherwise specified, the invention, in all its configurations and variations, will be generically referred to as the “tool”, while similar elements or components appearing in different figures will have the same reference numbers.
As shown in
Cog wheel 110 contains a hexagonal slot 111 of definite standard nut size with an axial cut-out through one corner forming an opening of a width short of the hexagonal slot's “across flats” but exceeding the hole or tie diameter of the nut or fastener, thus maintaining five corners to the slot. Both sides of wheel 110 have round shoulder projections 114 of definite thickness and width central with its axis circumscribing the central hexagonal slot for confined peripheral rotation of cog wheel within the circular apertures in skins (101 and 101a) of the wrench head section.
Cog wheel 110's rotation shoulder 114's external diameter is minimally smaller than skins 101's and 101a's circular apertures' diameter to allow for the wheel's free rotation therein, and the axial openings in the skin heads are of the same width as the axial opening in the cog wheel. Said shoulder 114 also aids in the integrity of cog wheel 110 and supplements its strength through sharing operational stresses with the outer skins.
Pawls 115 and 119 are biased towards engagement with cog wheel 110 through tension spring 123 and compression spring 124 respectively, which are both anchored to filler 127 through ring anchor 129 and support nub 130 respectively. Filler 127 is placed onto skin 101 such that its three through-holes 128 are aligned with skin 101's three holes 104 along handle section 103 and such that its spring ring 129 is aligned with pawl 115 and its spring nub 130 is aligned with pawl 119 as shown in
The ratcheting mechanism and filler are sandwiched between top skin 101a over bottom skin 101, with the skins' through-holes sides aligned. Two stiffeners/spacers 131 of the same thickness as filler 127 are placed between the skins' tips, aligned with through-holes 105 on bottom skin 101's head region 102 and through-holes 105a on top skin 101a's head region 102a. Blind holes on top skin 101a's face match the relevant pawl pivots 125 and retainer pins 126 protruding from the assembled ratcheting mechanism. The tool is then secured via 10 rivets: six body rivets 137, three on each external skin face via through-holes 104 and 104a along handle sections 103 and 103a, all meeting half way within filler 127's through-holes 128, as well as four small rivets 138, passing skins' through holes 105 and 105a and settling within stiffeners 131 in head sections 102 and 102a.
Pawls 115 and 119 are of the same thickness as the “face width” (wheel thickness) of cogwheel 110, while filler 127 and stiffeners 131—both the same thickness—are minimally greater to allow for the free movement of cogwheel and pawls between skins 101 and 101a during ratcheting operations
The tool's basic operating steps are described in
Upon completion of ratcheting, the tool is disengaged from the nut by moving it sideways along the nut's axis of rotation along the line (
For reverse torqueing, the tool is flipped over to the opposite face prior to engagement to the line.
According to a second embodiment of the invention, designed for smaller sized versions of the tool, and as illustrated in
According to a third embodiment of the invention illustrated in
According to a fourth embodiment of the invention illustrated in
According to a fifth embodiment of the invention illustrated in
Although the invention has been described with reference to particular embodiments, it is to be appreciated that various adaptations and modifications may be made within the spirit of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201510163744 | Apr 2015 | CN | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160297054 A1 | Oct 2016 | US |