When performing a wall painting project, a painter must reach for high and low areas to sand, clean, and paint. To work on portions of a wall that are higher than arm's length reach, painters commonly use an extension pole with an attached tool, or climb up a ladder to get close enough to reach the high portion with a hand-held tool or rag. Moving a ladder to an appropriate location, and climbing up and down, over and over, is a cumbersome task which adds time, effort and risk of accidents and injuries to the job. To work on low portions of a wall, painters commonly use an extension pole with an attached tool, or bend, kneel or crouch down in order to reach the low portion with a hand-held tool or rag. Bending, kneeling or crouching repeatedly, and for long periods of time, is fatiguing and hard on the body.
Even expert painters may make unwanted paint spots or smudges when painting at the ceiling line or floor line, and these mishaps may be rectified easily and cleanly only if addressed immediately. The inconvenience of setting aside the painting tool, finding a rag, returning to and rubbing the spot, setting aside the rag, and retrieving the painting tool each time is annoying and inefficient. A solution is needed to facilitate timely reaching and cleaning areas that may be difficult or inconvenient to reach, while minimizing slowdowns in the painter's workflow.
This disclosure relates to a painting and cleaning assembly. More particularly, the present disclosure relates to a cleaning tool that can attach to an extension pole that is used for painting.
The foregoing and other features of the disclosure are hereinafter more fully described below, the following description setting forth in detail certain illustrative embodiments, these being indicative, however, of but a few of the various ways in which the principles of the present disclosure may be employed.
The cleaning tool herein described is shaped and sized to effectively clean and sand small areas on walls, ceilings or floors, along edges and in corners. The cleaning tool (“tool”) is large enough to wipe away paint smudges and drips of a size commonly experienced by a painter, and also small enough to avoid being heavy, in the way or unwieldy when it is attached to the end of an extension pole opposite to the paint roller end. The front end of the tool is rounded rather than sharp, and includes two protuberances which are also rounded and resemble animal ears. The ears effectively guide and push the sock-covered tool into the cornice area along the ceiling line or close to the floor line, and into corners.
The tool is angled appropriately so that it may be conveniently and effectively used to rub a surface when attached to a pole. The receiving opening on the tool is sized appropriately and constructed of a material so that with a slight to firm push together by hand, it receives a standard painter's extension pole and stays firmly connected until pulled apart by hand. Alternatively, an adaptor can be placed into the receiving opening on the tool, which enables the tool to receive a broomstick or other available pole or rod which has a smaller diameter than a painter's pole, and to stay together with the same level of soundness. The receiving opening also incorporates an axial groove which acts as a pressure release mechanism, making it easier to attach and detach a pole.
For ease of use and convenience, the tool is easily and quickly attachable to and detachable from a pole by hand, and does not come loose or fall off the pole accidentally. The user may keep the tool attached to a pole, or take it on and off at will. The user may choose to use the tool without a pole, for tasks that are reachable within arm's length.
The tool requires a replaceable covering to provide utility, such as a sanding pad or a sock with microfiber mop piles or strands. The flat underside surface of the tool is covered with a layer of hook material, which may receive an appropriately sized and shaped cleaning or sanding pad which has loop material on its backing. The hook material also serves to lightly grip the inside of a sock which can be slipped onto the tool, covering the tool. The sock has microfiber mop strands or piles extending from the outer surface of the part of the sock which contacts the flat end of the tool. When rubbed on a wall, these microfiber mop strands effectively clean and remove paint smudges and drips, as well as dirt, dust and cobwebs.
The pole 3 may have an additional tool 20 as shown in
The pole 3 may be a rod, and it may also be an extension pole, and it extends between a tool end 21 that can be configured for attachment to the cleaning tool 1 and a painting end 22 that can be configured for attachment to the additional tool/painting implement 20. In traditional devices, the tool end 21 of the pole 3 would only be used for holding onto the pole 3 by the user. Further, it will be appreciated that the term “extension” indicates that a distance between the tool end 21 and the painting end 22 can be varied, thereby allowing a user to increase or decrease an overall length of the pole 3.
As previously indicated, the user can attach the additional tool/painting implement 20 to the painting end 22 of the pole 3, or the additional tool 20 may already be permanently attached to the painting end 22 of the pole 3. Typically, the additional tool/painting implement 20 could include a paint roller, a paint brush, or a paint pad. However, other additional tools are envisioned and contemplated. For example, the additional tool 20 could be a plaster stamper, sanding pad or broom head without departing from the scope of this disclosure. Generally, the additional tool 20 is threadingly attached to the painting end 22 of the pole 3 for secure engagement.
With reference to
The axis of the semi-cylindrical front portion 12 and the axis of the cylindrical back portion 9 are angled in relation to each other, such that when the flat bottom 13 rests on a table or floor, the back portion 9 is angled upwards with an acute angle between the axis of the back portion 9 and the axial line extending behind the semi-cylindrical front portion 12, as shown in
Edges of the front portion 11, 12 and ears 6 are rounded, rather than being sharp. Sharp edges may cut or poke through a sock covering 5, and rounded edges were found to be effective for cleaning and effectively rubbing the sock material into corners and along cornice areas and floor lines. The front ends of the two ears 6 reach slightly further forward than the semihemispherical front end 11; the resulting shape has been found to be preferable to alternate shapes, for cleaning and effectively rubbing the sock material into corners and along cornice areas and floor lines.
The front portion 11, 12 and ears 6 may be solid or hollow, so long as the structure of the tool 1 is strong and sturdy enough to keep its shape and strength while in use. The method of manufacture may dictate whether the interior of the front end 6, 11, 12 is solid, or contains holes or cavities or some pattern including empty space. In a preferred embodiment, the entire tool 1 is made of polypropylene, using an injection molding technique. In this preferred embodiment, the injection molding process requires that the interior of the front portion 12 not be completely solid, so that the tool will harden properly and retain its shape and strength.
A tool 1 made of wood, for example, could be solid. A tool 1 made with an additive manufacturing technique might be solid, or may have any interior structure which adequately creates, supports and retains the desired outer shape.
In a preferred embodiment, the entire cleaning tool 1 is of unitary construction, and one uniform material. The tool 1 could also be made of a plurality of components, all being attached together and combined to make a tool 1 with the shape described herein. The components could be made of the same or different types of material, or the same type of material with varying properties.
In a preferred embodiment, the tool 1 is 7.11 inches long (measured along the axis of the semicylinder 12,) 2 inches wide measured at the semicylinder 12 or cylinder 9 portions, 2.42 inches wide measured at the widest part of the ears 6, and 2.74 inches high, when resting on its flat bottom surface 13.
The receiving opening 7 in the cylindrical back portion 9 of the tool 1 is also cylindrically shaped, as shown in
The bottom side 13 of the tool 1, as shown in
A removable and washable sock 5 is provided. The word “sock,” when used herein, is meant to refer to the general shape of the object, and how the manner of installation and removal of the sock 5 described herein onto the cleaning tool 1 is very similar to how a sock is usually pulled onto and off of a person's foot. The “sock” described and referred to in this disclosure herein is not meant to suggest an actual intended use of covering a person's foot.
In a preferred embodiment, the sock 5 is sized and shaped to be pulled onto and snugly cover the entire tool 1, leaving an opening at the receiving opening 7. The sock 5 could also be configured to cover less of the tool 1, for example partially cover the top surface of the tool 1, but will normally cover the bottom 13 of the tool 1 completely. In a preferred embodiment, at least the bottom outer surface of the sock 5 includes a layer of microfiber mop-like piles 23 which extend outward, as shown in
In a preferred embodiment, the inner surface of the sock 5 which contacts the hook layer 14 on the cleaning tool does not include a layer of loop material. The hook layer 14 grabs the inner surface fabric of the sock 5 well enough to keep the sock 5 in place. The grip between the sock 5 and the hook layer 14 does not make it difficult to remove the sock 5. A loop layer inside the sock 5 is undesirable, as it may make removal of the sock 5 quite difficult.
In a preferred embodiment, the inner diameter of the receiving opening 7 is 1.551 inches. This diameter is appropriate to receive a standard painter's pole, so that when pushed together by hand, the tool 1 and painter's pole 3 stay sturdily connected until purposely pulled apart by hand.
An adaptor 4 is provided which allows poles and rods of smaller diameters, like a household broomstick, to be easily attached to the tool 1 using hand pressure. The adaptor 4, shown in
In a preferred embodiment shown in
In a preferred embodiment, the inner diameter of the adaptor 4 at the tool end 18 is 0.81 inches, and the outer diameter of the adaptor 4 at both ends is 1.48 inches. In a preferred embodiment, the inner surface 16 of the adaptor 4 has 16 axial ridges. In a preferred embodiment, the outer surface 17 of the adaptor has 8 pairs of alternating sections, and the alternating sections extend from the tool end 18 to a circumferential group of points which is approximately 19% of the adaptor's height away from the pole end 19.
The adaptor 4 should have some level of flexibility and deformability, which properties allow plastic radial deformation and improve the adaptor's grip on the tool 1 and the pole or rod 3. In a preferred embodiment, the adaptor 4 is made of TPV (thermoplastic vulcanizate) material.
In a preferred embodiment, and as shown in
Operation of the tool 1 and several embodiments of the assembly 2 will now be discussed. If a user wishes to use the cleaning tool 1 to work on a surface within arm's length, then a sock 5 can be slid onto the tool 1, or an appropriate pad 15 attached to the hook layer 14 of the tool 1, and then the assembly 2 is ready for use. To clean or sand, the user grips the cylindrical back portion 9 of the tool 1 with the user's hand, similar to a tennis racket grip, and rubs a surface with the covered flat bottom side 13 of the tool 1, as shown in
If a user wishes to use the tool 1 with a pole 3 that fits snugly into the receiving opening 7, such as a standard painter's pole, then the user simply inserts the tool end 21 of the pole 3 into the receiving opening 7. If a user wishes to use the tool 1 with a pole 3 that has a smaller diameter, then the user inserts the adaptor 4, tool end 18 first, into the receiving opening 7, and then inserts the tool end 21 of the pole 3 into the pole end 19 of the adaptor 4. The pole 3 may already have a painting implement or other additional tool 20 attached to its painting end 22, as shown in
Once the pole assembly 2 is complete (covering, tool, optional adaptor, pole and optional additional tool), it can be used to clean and sand surfaces which are within reach of the combined length of the user's arms and the length of the pole 3. If a painting implement 20 is included, then the assembly 2 can be seamlessly utilized to paint surfaces, while also having the ability to clean surfaces without setting the assembly 2 on the ground or requiring further adjustments.
A painting and cleaning multi-tool has been described above with particularity. Modifications and alterations will occur to those upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. The disclosure, however, is not limited to only the embodiments described above. Instead, the disclosure is broadly defined by the appended claims and the equivalents thereof.
Moreover, it will be appreciated that various of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives or varieties thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Also that various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63234371 | Aug 2021 | US |