Mechanical dispensers for viscous or extrudable materials include common, piston-type caulking guns found in any hardware store as well as small, hand-held devices for rolling up a flexible tube, such as the tubes that dispense toothpaste. Most extrudable material dispensers employ a piston attached to one end of an elongated piston rod. The piston is advanced through a partial-cylinder the shape of which is reminiscent of a trough and which is hereafter referred to as a holding cylinder or simply cylinder, the function of which is to hold a cylindrical canister of extrudable material.
Extrudable material in a canister is forced from the canister through a canister tip by driving a canister-internal piston installed into the “bottom” of the canister. The piston in the bottom of canister is hereafter referred to as a canister piston.
The canister piston drives extrudable material from the canister when the canister piston is driven through the canister by the piston attached to the piston rod. The piston rod is driven by a pistol grip mechanism that forms part of the dispenser. The pistol grip mechanism can be attached to either a ratcheting or ratchetless transmission device. Actuation of the pistol grip causes the piston rod to be advanced into the cylinder, which in turn drives the first piston (attached to the connecting rod) into the second piston (in the bottom of a canister of extrudable material) forcing extrudable material from the dispensing tube. As the first piston moves away from the transmission device and into the dispensing tube, extrudable material is forced from the tip of the canister.
A problem with prior art caulking guns or other dispensers for extrudable materials is that the push rod 19 extends outwardly from the handle 14, which makes the dispenser unwieldy. The extended rod also makes the device difficult to store or set down between uses, especially when such devices are used in close quarters, as often happens when the devices are used in restaurants to dispense condiments and other extrudable food products.
A dispenser for dispensing extrudable material which eliminates the push rod 19 would be an improvement over the prior art.
A housing, which acts as a handle 14, is attached to, or integrally formed as part of the cylinder 12. A lower or bottom end of a reciprocating trigger 16 is pivotally attached to the lower or bottom end 15 of the handle 14 at a pivot point P. When the trigger 16 is squeezed, it slides into the handle 14 where a trigger return spring, not visible in
Squeezing the trigger 16, drives a chain sprocket within the handle 14 on a bearing supported by the handle. A push chain, which is wrapped part way around the sprocket, is used to exert a force against a piston 26 in the cylinder 12 when the sprocket is rotated by the trigger 16. Force exerted by the piston 26 in the cylinder 12 through the push chain 24 drives extrudable material 23 out of a tube or canister 21. Cyclically actuating the trigger 16 thus dispenses extrudable material 23 using a push chain, instead of an elongated push rod, such as the ones used in prior art dispensers.
Push chains are well known. A push chain is a chain that can be looped or folded for storage but which becomes rigid when subjected to a compressive or thrust load. Push chains can also be used to exert a tensile force. Push chains can thus be used to push as well as pull. In the figures, the push chain is stored in a magazine adjacent the cylinder 12, looped part way around a driven sprocket and connected to the back side of a piston in the cylinder 12.
The swing arm 20 is rotatably attached to the sprocket 22 via a one-way bearing, visible in
Still referring to
A “center or middle section of the push chain 24 is wrapped approximately half-way around the chain sprocket 22. A first portion of the chain 24, which is located between the sprocket 22 and first end 37 of the chain 24, extends from the teeth of the sprocket 22 part way into the cylinder 12 to where the first end 37 of the chain is attached to the back side 25 of the piston 26. A second portion of the push chain 24, which is located between the sprocket 22 and second end 38 of the chain 24, extends from the sprocket 22 into a chain magazine 24 that is located immediately below, adjacent to, and parallel to, the cylinder 12. Each actuation of the trigger 16 thus pulls a length of push chain 24 from the magazine 24, stretching the push-chain return spring 34 and pushes the same amount of chain into the cylinder 12.
A coil-type push chain return spring 34 is tethered to the second end 38 of the spring 24 and the distal end 36 of the magazine 24. The return spring 34 maintains the second part of the push chain 24 in tension as the chain 24 is driven down the cylinder 12 and acts to pull the chain 24 out of the cylinder 12 and back into the magazine 24 when the aforementioned ratchet mechanism is released.
In
As shown in
The locking pawl 42 shown in
In
In
Γ1=F0×L1
Driving the sprocket 22 counterclockwise (as shown in the figures) by squeezing the trigger 16 thus creates a reaction force F1 in the push chain 24, which is exerted on the piston 26. The reaction force F1 can be calculated by assuming that just before the chain moves in response to squeezing the trigger, the sum of the moments around the axis of the sprocket is zero. The force F1 on the chain 20 will therefore be equal to:
Since L2 is smaller than L1, the quotient of L1 to L2 will be greater than one. The magnitude of the force F1 exerted on the chain 20 (and hence the piston 21 and extrudable material in a canister) by the force F0 will therefore be proportionately greater than the force F0 exerted by a user on the trigger 16, however, the horizontal or lateral displacement of the chain 24 by the actuation of the trigger 16 will be less than the lateral displacement of the trigger 16. Stated another way, the torque multiplication provided by the longer moment arm L1 vis-à-vis L2, multiplies the force F1 applied to the chain 24, to the piston 26 and to extrudable material 23 in a canister 21 within the dispenser 10 but at a “cost” of a reduced horizontal displacement of the chain 24 in the cylinder 21. The ratio of the length of the torque arms L1 and L2 can thus effectuate both a torque/force multiplication as well as a division of the horizontal displacement. Stated another way, the length of the trigger 16 and the diameter of the sprocket 24 can be selected such that a full actuation of the trigger 16 dispenses a fixed or substantially fixed amount of extrudable material 23 from the canister 21. The dispenser 10 can therefore dispense fixed amounts of extrudable material by the full actuation of the trigger 16.
A “full actuation” of the trigger 16 is considered herein to be the rotation of the trigger 16 about its pivot point P, to a point where the locking pawl 42 can engage the next notch in the gear 40. The number of notches or teeth on the gear 40 and the length of the trigger 16 thus effectively determine the angle through which the trigger 16 can be rotated and thus determine the maximum amount of material that can be dispensed with each trigger actuation.
In
Those of ordinary skill and in mechanical arts will appreciate from the foregoing figures and description that actuation of the trigger 16 around its pivot point P, causes the sprocket 22 to rotate through an angle of rotation around the sprocket's central axis A. The size of the angle of rotation is determined by the length of the moment arm L1 and the angle through which the trigger 16 can rotate about its pivot point. Since the sprocket 22 is provided with a fixed number of teeth that can engage corresponding links of the chain, rotation of the sprocket by the complete actuation of the trigger causes the piston to move down the cylinder 12 by a fixed and identical distance on each actuation of the trigger. The trigger and its angular actuation thus becomes a measurement device. By controlling the angle through which the trigger rotates, it is therefore possible to control the amount of extrudable material dispensed.
For purposes of claim construction, the push chain 24 is considered herein to be a linear actuator, in the sense that it is capable of exerting a compressive force in a substantially straight line without buckling. In a preferred embodiment, the push chain is stored in a magazine shown in the figures as being parallel to and attached alongside the cylinder 12. In an alternate embodiment, the push chain 20 can also be stored into the handle as those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize.
The cylinder, handle, trigger and push chain can be fabricated from metal, plastic or carbon fiber. While the return springs 34 and 50 are preferably metal, an elastic band can be substituted for the return spring 34 or 50.
The foregoing description is for purposes of illustration only. The true scope of the invention is defined by the appurtenant claims.
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DE 4216541 A1 Translation (Abstract and Description). |
European Search Report—Application No. EP 11 15 2687. |
State of Intellectual Property Office of the People's Republic of China the First Office Action Issue date Jun. 25, 2012; Application No. 20111003407.X; Issue No. 2012061901025260; Applicant: Prince Castle LLC; Title: Rodless Dispenser for Extrudable Materials and Having a Contents Indicator. |
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