The present invention relates to gas-fueled portable soldering iron heaters.
In the construction industry, a sheet metal worker often uses a device for heating a soldering iron, which can easily be carried up a ladder and across a rooftop, hoisted up with a rope (prior to activating the heating element), or handed to or from a coworker. Preferably, such a device should have storage for tools and supplies needed in soldering, require little setup time, and be transportable with tools and supplies in place to eliminate extra trips up and down a ladder or to and fro across a rooftop. Past solutions had used a torch attached to a large propane tank that was heavy and bulky, or liquid fuels that were dangerous. A separate toolbox or bucket was used for carrying tools and supplies.
Prior art shows a number of devices for heating a soldering iron at a residential or commercial construction site, for example atop a roof, as is needed for soldering sheet metal. For portability, some of these devices employ a disposable or refillable propane canister, that is smaller than the type commonly used for barbecue grills. A torch, for heating the soldering iron, is attached to and receives gas from the propane canister. A heating flame, from atmospheric combustion of the propane, forms at the flame end of the torch. Both flame and flame end of the torch are typically partially or fully enclosed in an oven, the oven being constructed of metal with inside insulation. In the various devices, the propane canister may be fully enclosed and adjacent to or beneath the oven, or held in a sleeve that is attached as part of the device, or the canister may reside external to the apparatus, optionally enclosed in a removable sleeve. The soldering iron, the tip of which is being heated by the flame, may rest with its tip inside the heating oven, handle protruding partially or fully outside of the device so that it may be gripped and removed by the worker and with its shaft resting on a horizontal plate with side plates or a pair of vertically mounted plates with or without notches. One device, seen in U.S. Pat. No. 1,680,776 to Fahlberg, includes a storage compartment below the soldering iron rest area, for supplies. Another device, seen in U.S. Pat. No. 4,424,795 to Plessner, has a compartment for storing a soldering iron and a soldering material as well as an open rectangular container used to hold soldering flux.
An embodiment of the present invention provides a portable soldering system that includes a caddy collar, a bucket, a torch and a gas canister. The gas canister protrudes from the bucket through a seating opening in the side wall of the bucket. A caddy collar sits atop the rim of the bucket. A torch mount connects to the torch, positioning the torch and the gas canister. The gas receiving end of the torch connects to the gas canister. A soldering iron can be seated in a cradle in the caddy collar. When the torch and gas canister are so positioned, and the soldering iron is seated in the cradle, the flame end of the torch is near to and can heat the tip of the soldering iron.
In one preferred embodiment, the cradle is a recess in the caddy collar for seating the handle of the soldering iron. The cradle may also include a cradle plate with a slot for holding the tip of the soldering iron.
In another preferred embodiment, the torch mount is a torch upper plate attached to the caddy collar. The flame end of the torch extends through a torch opening in the torch mount. The torch mount may also include a torch lower plate attached to the caddy collar. The gas receiving end of the torch extends through a connection opening in the torch lower plate.
Also in the preferred embodiment, the caddy collar has a recess for holding soldering supplies.
The portable soldering system may also include an access opening through the side wall of the bucket, allowing the user to access the torch adjustment valve.
Moreover, there may be structural features for allowing a variety of materials and supplies to be placed in and carried with the soldering system, such as one or a combination of brackets, attached or removable containers, and a middle plate with a middle plate opening.
In further preferred embodiments, there is a pivoting handle on the bucket or a clip attached to the bucket, so that the soldering system may be transported easily.
An advantage of the present invention is that the torch, torch adjustment valve and gas receiving end connected to the gas canister are all protected from damage by being within the apparatus, while the gas canister, nested in the seating opening, protrudes outside of the bucket and is thus exposed to ambient air and is less susceptible to overheating.
A further advantage of the invention is that a bucket, being part of the apparatus, is open at the top and of large volume, allowing more or larger tools and supplies to be carried than would be possible in a smaller or enclosed compartment.
The preferred embodiment of the portable soldering system is shown in
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
The gas receiving end 409 of the torch 413 connects to the gas canister 139 in a manner well-known in the arts, for example by threads on the gas canister 139 engaging corresponding threads on the gas receiving end 409 of the torch 413.
In one embodiment, as shown in
As best shown in
Also shown in
Prior to using the soldering system 100 for heating a soldering iron 147, the torch 413 must first be installed as part of the system, followed by the gas canister 139. To install the torch 413, a worker pushes the flame end 119 of the torch 413 upwardly through the torch opening 415 in the torch upper plate 121. With the torch adjustment valve 405 closed and facing the access opening 509, the gas receiving end 409 of the torch 413 is pushed through the connection opening 411 of the torch lower plate 407. A filled gas canister 139 is pushed through the seating opening 213 and connected to the gas receiving end 409 of the torch 413. It should be verified that the torch 413 and gas canister 139 are held securely in the apparatus, with the gas canister 139 partially protruding from the bucket 103 through the seating opening 213, and that the connection of the torch 413 and gas canister 139 is free from gas leakage. Following verification, tools, containers and soldering supplies may be placed in the bucket. Brackets 115, 302, 305, 515 and attached or removable containers 113, 125, 123 can help secure supplies or tools. Soldering materials may be put in recesses 137, 145 in the caddy collar 101. One or more brushes may be placed with the handle down through the middle plate opening 503, 505 or in a container 113, the bottom of which is pushed down through the middle plate opening. Other tools or supplies may be carried likewise.
The soldering system may then be transported with all supplies in place, by lifting the handle 129 or attaching the clip to the belt of a worker. After arranging tools and materials as needed at the job site, and when ready to heat a soldering iron 147, the worker may open the torch adjustment valve 405 and ignite the torch 413 with a suitable ignition device such as a spark producing tool or a match. A soldering iron 147 may then be placed with the soldering iron handle 143 resting in the handle recess 149 and the soldering iron tip 111 resting in and projecting past the soldering iron cradle plate 105, so that the soldering iron tip 111 is heated by the torch flame. The torch flame may be adjusted or extinguished by the worker reaching through the torch valve access opening 509 and adjusting or closing the torch adjustment valve 405.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
538704 | Seaman | May 1895 | A |
1092725 | Leitner | Apr 1914 | A |
1354065 | Pruessing et al. | Sep 1920 | A |
1680776 | Fahlberg | Aug 1928 | A |
3198415 | Taylor | Aug 1965 | A |
3724444 | Varona | Apr 1973 | A |
4340029 | Kelly, Jr. | Jul 1982 | A |
4424795 | Plessner | Jan 1984 | A |
4826007 | Skeie | May 1989 | A |
4867332 | Mains | Sep 1989 | A |
4923394 | Fumino | May 1990 | A |
5048742 | Fortune | Sep 1991 | A |
5174447 | Fleming | Dec 1992 | A |
5186329 | Fogelberg | Feb 1993 | A |
D345237 | Stein | Mar 1994 | S |
5350065 | Darrey | Sep 1994 | A |
5441163 | Carrasco | Aug 1995 | A |
5472133 | Lin | Dec 1995 | A |
D396912 | Maire et al. | Aug 1998 | S |
5833095 | Russell et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
5924568 | Zajonc | Jul 1999 | A |
6294759 | Dunn, Jr. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6315310 | Hurt | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6321929 | Weshler et al. | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6360891 | Rideout | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6536590 | Godshaw et al. | Mar 2003 | B1 |
6823998 | Fabregas | Nov 2004 | B2 |
6880552 | Veret | Apr 2005 | B1 |
7159735 | Morse | Jan 2007 | B2 |
7337901 | Phillips | Mar 2008 | B2 |
20070029215 | Martinez et al. | Feb 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100089975 A1 | Apr 2010 | US |