The technical field of this disclosure is cutting and trimming devices, particularly, a rotary trimmer with multiple blades.
Trimmers are used to cut paper and other sheet materials such as cardboard, leather, fabric, plastics, and similar materials. In a rotary trimmer, a sharp rotary blade, mounted in a housing, is rolled across the cutting board to cut various materials.
Depending on the desired cut, different blades are being used. A straight cut may be desirable for trimming the sheet of paper. A decorative cut with a wave edge may be chosen for craft projects, such as scrapbooks. A zigzag edge may be desirable when cutting fabric to avoid fraying. A perforated cut can be used to make tear away forms. Many patterns are useful or desirable for many different applications and each application requires a different blade.
The rotary trimmers that are known to the art are of two types: those that allow blade replacement, and those having a fixed blade. Those rotary trimmers that allow blade replacement require that one blade be manually replaced with another blade.
The main drawback of the manual replacement is in its complexity: the user dismounts the installed blade, mounts the new blade, and stores the old blade. In many cases, the opening and closing of a housing of the cutting assembly is also required.
The U.S. Pat. No. 5,322,001 to Boda, issued on Jun. 21, 1994, discloses a rotary type trimmer with the replaceable blades having a recess in the cutting board for storing the various cutting blades.
Another drawback of the known trimmers lays in the fact that the user handles an exposed blade at a risk of being cut. Therefore, children are unable to change the cutter and, thereby, the cut pattern.
Still another drawback is in the need to store the blades and the risk that the blades are lost.
It would be desirable to have a rotary trimmer with two, or more then two, blades in the same housing, each blade already positioned perpendicularly to, and in line with, the cutting surface and thereby readily positioned for the immediate deployment.
One aspect of the present invention provides a rotary trimmer with multiple blades not requiring a manual blade change.
Another aspect of the present invention provides a rotary trimmer with multiple blades positioned for the immediate deployment.
Still another aspect of the present invention provides a rotary trimmer with blades that can be used by anyone without risking the injury.
The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention will become further apparent from the following detailed description of the presently preferred embodiments, read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. The detailed description and drawings are merely illustrative of the invention, rather than limiting the scope of the invention being defined by the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
The rotary trimmer with multiple blades of the present invention comprises a base with end retainers supporting a rail, and a cutting assembly moveably disposed on the rail. The movement of the cutting assembly includes a sliding motion along the rail, and a reclining motion where one side of the cutting assembly is reclining against the rail, and the other side is lifting.
The reclining motion provides for switching between different blades. The different blades can have different cutting edges such as a straight, wave, perforating, or zigzag edge. The reclining motion moves the desired blade downward to engage a self-healing strip. The same motion extends a guard into a position of complete coverage of the exposed blade. The sliding motion rolls the blade along the self-healing strip for cutting paper or another sheet material.
The right guard 9 and the left guard 11 are slidably sandwiched between the front housing 12 and the back housing 13.
The application of force to one of the sides of the cutting assembly 6 results in the reclining of this side of the cutting assembly 6 against the base with the blade on the reclining side engaging the healing strip 7. Simultaneously, the guard of the lifting side of the cutting assembly 6 is forced outward by the slider 16 into a position where it provides a full protection for user from the exposed blade.
The following sliding motion of the reclined cutting assembly 6 along the rail 5 provides for a cut with the pre-selected blade.