The invention applies to a plug to keep a nail, screw, bolt or dowel fixed in a bore. Characteristic is that the clamping function of the plug is realized by a construction based on one or more arches, protrusions and/or cells in combination with a certain elasticity and a sufficient yield strength of the material. The construction gives an optimum between a maximal capability of compressing the plug versus a strong counter pressure from the plug against the lateral force exerted by the inserted device, all this with the objective to get one universally applicable plug.
The elasticity and yield strength also are important parameters for the capability to clamp a nail.
New Features are:
Application
The Plug is Applicable to:
1. Nails, screws and comparable items which are intended to be fixed in a bore.
2. Bores in all kinds of material which can stand some pressure such as concrete, brick, soft kinds of stone, gypsum walls and wood.
3. Bores in all common sizes in the do-it-yourself domain.
4. All situations in which there is a demand for a small device (the plug) to clamp something.
4. Use at home, in industry, surgery, building, shops, et cetera. The plug described here is primarily intended for use at home. For professional use the plug can be useful in refurbishing buildings and in general and technical services.
Material
The plug can be made of (alloys of or composites of) aluminium, carbon fiber, glass fiber, aramid fiber, vegetable fibers, copper, gold and other materials with a comparable elasticity, i.e. a comparable Young's modulus and a comparable yield strength. The said fibers are embedded in a matrix like resin. ZAMAK is a good candidate, being an alloy of zinc, aluminium, magnesium and copper. The said materials must have a good Young's modulus (not too few, not too much) and a sufficient yield strength to realize an optimum between a maximal constructive force and a maximal capability of the plug to be compressed. To clamp the common kind of (smooth) nails the plug material also must have a good Young's modulus (not too few, not too much) and a sufficient yield strength. In the next paragraph ‘Material properties, construction and design’ will be shown why no exact ranges can be given for the Young's modulus and the yield strength.
In wet situations aluminium is less convenient. The aluminium will act as an anode and dissolve in the water after a long period of time. Thus the aluminium plug will disappear. In such situations another material such as glass fiber will be preferred.
In situations in which a non-reactive plug is needed such as in surgery, the plug can be made of a non-reactive metal like (an alloy of) gold or a non-metal.
An advantage of a metal like aluminium or copper is that the plug can be deformed by the user to be suited for specific needs. For instance the plug can be deformed to the shape of a dowel pin by compressing one end.
The given material names, e.g. ‘aluminium’, mean: ‘aluminium or an alloy or composite with aluminium as predominant material’.
Material Properties, Construction and Design
This paragraph describes material variables, construction variables, design variables and some relations between them. Because the relationships between material, construction and design features are rather complex,
Material—elasticity and yield strength: The plug material must have a certain elasticity, not too much and not too few and a sufficient yield strength. In having too much elasticity (a low Young's modulus) or a yield strength which is too low, the plug material would give too few counter pressure to a nail to clamp it. This is the case with nylon and lead. Now the opposite part of the spectrum: Having too few elasticity (a high Young's modulus) and a yield strength which is too high, the material is too hard for the plug to be compressed and to allow the screw or nail make space for itself in the bore. An additional effect in using a nail is that plug material which is too stiff will not give a good adhesion to the nail. Also in using a screw a certain softness of the material is necessary so that the screw thread can bite itself into the material. An example in which the plug is too hard is a massive plug made of steel. Nevertheless, if a plug which normally would be too hard would have a fine cellular structure in cross section, then the said disadvantage of the hardness could be compensated by this cellular structure. Thus the hardness of the plug as a whole is a result of the hardness of the material and the structure and design of the plug. Therefore no exact upper boundary value can be given for the Young's modulus and the yield strength of the plug material. Also for the lowest possible value for the Young's modulus and the yield strength of the plug material no exact lower boundary value can be given because also in this case the elasticity and yield strength of the plug as a whole is not only dependent on the material but also depends on the plug design.
Construction—amount of cavities (inside and/or outside the plug): When the plug has too much material in respect to the amount of cavities inside the plug or between protrusions, the plug gives too few possibility of compressing the plug to give space to the nail or screw inserted. In a formula, thinking in a simplified cross sectional 2D model: The maximum area covered by an inserted device is the area of the bore minus the area covered by the compressed plug material. The ideal plug consists of almost no plug material, giving maximum space to the inserted device. See
Construction—arch: The arch is a classical solution to give a maximum strength using a minimum of material in a situation where forces come from different directions around the arch. In plug perspective the arch is a optimal solution to give a maximum amount of cavities combined with a maximum counter pressure from the plug to the inserted device. See
Construction—protrusions: Especially in star shaped plugs with an odd number of protrusions, it will occur that there are initially no two ‘feet’ making contact with the wall of the bore, but only one protrusion making contact. This one protrusion will be the first part of the plug to collapse, giving flexibility and, indirectly, counter pressure to the inserted device. In a later phase of compression the arch construction will do its work. See
Construction—an arch acting like a spring:
Internal construction of the material itself—fibers: When using fibers like glass, carbon or aramid fibers combined with resin (for instance 70% fiber with 30% resin), the fibers must not be situated unidirectional but must be twisted. Plugs with unidirectional fibers will split easily when a nail exerts its force on it, resulting in a lack of counter pressure against the inserted device. So when fiber material is used in plugs, the fibers must be twisted.
Construction—hollow: A hollow, in cross section, where the inserted device can ‘land’ on the plug. In many designs this will be on top of an arch. See for a clear example
Construction—the end parts of the plug: When the production process is based on extrusion or pulltrusion (e.g. in the case of glass fiber or aramid) attention must be paid to the way in which the plugs are separated from the extrusion or pulltrusion profile. A result of cutting can be that the ends of the plug are deformed and will therefore have another shape in cross section than the middle part of the plug. This can make the plug work suboptimal in respect to the capability to insert in a narrow bore and in the capability to insert more than one plugs in one bore. In the contrary, those distortions in the end part of the plug can also have positive effects, visually in clamping more than one plugs together in the bore before inserting the device. The plugs will not fall easily out of a bore in the ceiling. Interesting in this respect are the fluffy end parts of aramid plugs as a result of cutting the tough fibers.
Design—size: the size of the plug must match the common drill/bore sizes.
Construction/design—shape: when using more than one plug in one bore the shape of the plug is an important feature determining the stability of the combination of plugs (this is favorable to a high clamping force in as many as possible situations) and determining the amount of cavities between the plugs (this increases the capability to compress the plug combination). The shape also determines whether or not there is left some space between the combined plugs, which determines the amount of freedom which the user has to choose a position to insert the device. See
Design—symmetry: A symmetric plug gives a maximum ease of use. When a plug is not symmetrical, the user has to think about the position of the plug compared to the nail or screw, what is less user-friendly.
Design—clasp: An optional design/construction feature is that more than one plugs in one bore can stick in each other. A protrusion of one plug clasps in a hollow of another one. Combining several plugs to one before inserting into the bore could be user-friendly. See
Construction/design—the possibility to fix a plug on the device prior to insertion: The plug can be designed in a way that the nail or screw can be placed centrally in the plug. Although the advantages of the plug concept described in this document are most prominent in a plug with the inserted device placed next to a plug, the advantage of placing the device centrally in the plug is that the plug can be placed on top of the device prior to insertion of the plug-device combination. This is convenient when a fast fixation is needed or when plugs are sold pre-mounted on the devices.
Construction/design—role or strip: It is possible to deliver the plug on a role, whereby the user can break or cut a piece to get a plug of the desired length. This concept has been described in EP 1 176 180 A1, FIG. 2. Also it is possible to deliver the plug in straight rods with predefined breaking points, for instance on each centimeter. A plug of the desired length is made by breaking a piece from the rod in the desired length.
Construction—An option is to have the two ends, or one end, of the plug tapered. The value of this is that a device can be inserted easier next to a plug. For the same reason in centric plugs the end(s) can be provided with a funnel-shaped hollow to guide the inserted device to the centre of the plug. Another value of a tapered end in combination with a corresponding hollow at the other end, is that plugs can be placed well behind each other in one bore.
Shape
An endless variation of shapes is possible, based on one or more arches, protrusions and/or cells.
The snowflake of
An Optimal Design
An example of an optimal design is given. See
How it Works
There are three surfaces where clamping is necessary:
1. The surface between plug and the wall of the bore.
2. The surface between plug and inserted device.
3. When using more than one plug: the surface(s) between two plugs.
Because the surface between plug and nail is the most critical one in respect to clamping, the following description of the dynamics of the plug in contact with the inserted device is focused on the ‘nail’ situation.
Basic is the arch construction. See
The dynamics of the plug in contact with the wall of the bore are as follows.
1. When the nail (or other device) is inserted, the nail gives its pressure to the plug which gives this pressure to the wall of the bore. Where the plug is in contact with the wall of the bore, the plug material is deformed elastically. Initially the contact points between plug and wall will be the ‘feet’ of the said arch construction.
2. When the pressure becomes too high for elastic deformation, the plug material will be deformed plastically.
3. When the structure of the matrix in which the bore has been drilled is rough on a macroscopic level, the relative softness of the plug material results in the plug surface following the rough wall of the bore, preventing the plug from slipping out of the bore. Normally in a do-it-yourself situation the bore is drilled in some kind of stony material, what implies that the wall of the bore is rough.
4. When the wall of the bore is smooth on a macroscopic level, the plug must give enough pressure to the wall of the bore and the wall must have a sufficient rough surface on a microscopic or molecular level to give sufficient adhesion to prevent the plug from slipping out of the bore. Giving maximum pressure to the wall of the bore is realized by a minimum contact surface between the plug and the wall of the bore, which is realized by protrusions on the plug instead of a larger contact surface. The said arch construction automatically yields a minimum contact surface with the wall of the bore, the said protrusions in contact with the wall of the bore being the ‘feet’ of the arch or arches. See
Production
The plug designs given here are based on extrusion (e.g. aluminium or plastic extrusion) and pulltrusion (e.g. in case of glassfiber or aramid). This results in designs that only vary in the two cross section dimensions. There are no shape variations in the third (length) dimension except for the length itself, for deformations at the end parts of the plug as a result of separating the plug from an extrusion or pulltrusion profile, for the results of eventually special processing actions on the extrusion profile and for the possibility of delivering the plugs on a rod or role by incomplete separation.
Instead of by extrusion or pulltrusion the plug can be produced by injection moulding. Some features of the plugs described here, such as internal cavities, are not or difficult to realize with injection moulding. In the contrary differentiation within the length dimension, for instance knobs or a tapered shape of the two ends or of one end of the plug, becomes easily to realize with injection moulding.
Advantages Compared with Existing Plugs
Advantages compared with classical nylon plugs using nails:
1. At the moment there are no or almost no plugs for the common kind of nails. Closest to a plug for nails is a little piece of wood or a soft metal rod like thick copper wire. But wood is too soft to give a strong fixation, and both alternatives are not designed in a way which gives optimal strength, an optimal capability for compression and an optimal shape to place more plugs next to each other in one bore. Fischer has quite big nails (10 cm length) in its assortment which are especially designed to fit in a special nylon plug. The new plug described here is designed for common, smooth nails, not for especially designed nails like those of Fischer.
2. Especially for very small nails or screws there are no plugs available. The plug described in
3. The new plug described here is not only fit for nails and screws, but also for bolts, for dowels of which the bore is too wide and for several other applications which require some small clamping device. As an example I have fixed a metal arm in a soft stone wall carrying a television screen, using prototype plugs of 3 mm×1 mm in cross section to fix three thick bolts.
Advantages Compared with Classical Nylon Plugs using Screws:
1. The plug described here needs a borehole that is only as wide or slightly wider than the thickness of the screw. The bore in the case of the classical plug is remarkably wider than the screw itself and therefore causes more damage to the wall. Especially in bathroom or kitchen walls with tiles drilling narrow bores is an important feature; the chance of damage to tiles is reduced by drilling in the (narrow) space between the tiles. When drilling through a tile is necessary, the chance of damage is reduced using a narrow drill instead of a thick one.
2. Because of the narrow bore, working with the new plug is easier than working with a classical plug. It takes less effort to drill a narrow bore than a wider one.
3. In classical plugs the width of the bore must exactly match with the outer size of the plug. In the plug described here the diameter is less critical; the plug can be much smaller than the bore and the bore can be much wider than the screw.
Therefore the new plug gives much more freedom in the choice of the drill measure and of the diameter of the screw. This freedom is augmented by the possibility to use more than one plug in a bore. The plug can be designed in such a way that the plugs are placed neatly next to each other giving a strong basis for fixation of the screw, see
4. A common problem with doors, mounted by screws which are driven into wood, is that the quality of fixation reduces after years. To fix the screw again, one can use the new plug. The new plug will give stability to the screw which was moving in its hole. A classical nylon plug is not ideal for this application because this is a centric plug with a rather smooth outer surface. The nylon plug easily will slip out of the wood.
5. For very large screws there are no classical nylon plugs available in the common DIY stores. It appears that one tiny new plug can fix a big screw in a soft stone wall to mount an arm carrying a television.
Advantages in General:
1. An advantage occurs in mounting something like a piece of gypsum board to a wall. In the classical situation first a bore must be drilled in the wall to make a hole for the plug to insert. A hole with a smaller diameter must be drilled in the gypsum board. This is elaborate and it can cause quite a problem because the holes in the wall must be drilled exactly in place compared with the holes in the gypsum board. Using the new plug you only need one drill action to drill simultaneously through the gypsum board and in the wall.
2. Because the diameter of the bore is not as critical as with the conventional plug, you do not need a complete range of drills.
3. Because the diameter of the plug is less critical and more than one plug can be used in one bore, you only need one plug size, not a whole range of plugs in stock. This reduces the amount and complexity of plugs in stock and reduces the logistic complexity in all links of the supply chain.
4. A metal plug, compared with a nylon plug, is better fit for very hot conditions.
5. In many of the given plug designs the device is inserted eccentric in respect to the bore. This seems to be a disadvantage because the user cannot fix the device precisely in the middle of the bore. On the contrary this is an advantage because, especially in a stony matrix, the bore often is not exactly in place. With the new plugs, the user has the possibility to choose different positions to insert the device, as shown in
Benefits using a Dowel:
1. When a dowel is somewhat too narrow for the bore, the plug described here can be used to give the clamp effect needed.
Benefits using a Bolt:
1. When a bolt is too narrow for the nut, the plug described here can be used to give the fixation needed.
2. In a situation where a bolt is fixed in a bore using mortar, composite mortar or glue a problem can be that this method does not give instant fixation. The plug described here can give this instant fixation while the mortar, composite mortar or glue is hardening. See also conclusion 7.
3. Using the new plug, a bolt can be screwed in a bore, which results in a strong fixation of the bolt. In classical plugs this will not give good results in most cases because of the discrete diameter of the plug needed, the lack of clamping because the thread of a bolt bites less deep in the plug material than the thread of a screw, the absence of the possibility to arrange several plugs in one bore and the lack of compression capability keeping sufficient lateral counter pressure to clamp the bolt.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1038761 | Apr 2011 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/NL12/00028 | 4/18/2012 | WO | 00 | 12/5/2013 |