Edge-restraint systems are usually used in building patios, driveways, walkways and the like to maintain the pavers (e.g., bricks and blocks) against lateral displacement. Such systems generally comprise elongate components having a flat base wall and an upstanding restraining wall. It is most important that, upon installation, the base wall of the edge-restraint components rest upon a stable surface.
Paver beds normally consist of a compacted, coarse particulate bottom layer of gravel, crushed stone, aggregate, or the like, covered by a layer of sand in which the pavers are set. To provide the necessary stable support for the edge-restraint components, it is necessary that a swath of the sand bed adjacent the paver edge be displaced to uncover (or at least substantially uncover) the surface of the coarse particulate base; of course, the depths of sand layers, and the heights of pavers, vary considerably.
Accordingly, it is a broad object of the present invention to provide a hand tool that is effective for displacing material, such as sand, constituting an upper layer of a setting bed for pavers and the like.
A more specific object of the invention is to provide such a tool which can be used effectively, by movement in either a forward or a backward direction, and which can readily and accurately be adjusted to accommodate various layer depths and paver dimensions.
Additional objects of the invention are to provide a tool, having the foregoing features and advantages, which is convenient and facile to use and which is of incomplex construction and economical manufacture.
It has now been found that the foregoing and related objects are attained by the provision of a manual tool that includes a plow head of generally triangular cross section; a guide piece having an underlying guide surface, adjustably attached to the plow head and comprising an element extending rearwardly therefrom (in the orientation of normal use); means for attaching a mounting portion of the plow head to the guide piece, for relative movement and for selectively affixing the plow head at a desired level; and means for attaching a handle to the tool. The plow head of the tool is comprised of a mounting plate and first and second working plates. A lateral edge of each working plate is joined to one of the opposite lateral edges of the mounting plate, and the other lateral edges of the working plates are joined to one another to form a frontally disposed, generally apical portion on the head. Each working plate has a blade edge that extends transversely between its opposite lateral edges, which blade edges lie substantially on a common plane. The guide piece is attached to the plow head for movement in a direction generally perpendicular to the common plane on which the bottom blade edges lie, and it can be affixed, by the means for attaching, in selected positions in which an underlying surface of the rearwardly extending element of the guide piece is generally parallel to, and spaced above (in the orientation of normal use), the common plane.
The plates of which the plow head is comprised will normally be substantially planar and with flat exterior surfaces, and the underlying guide surface of the guide piece will normally be disposed substantially perpendicular to the exterior surface of the mounting plate. Preferably, the plates of the plow head will form an isosceles right triangle, and the bottom blade edges on the working plates will be rectilinear.
The mounting plate will advantageously be of one-piece construction, to integrally provide the mounting portion thereon, which portion will most desirably have a scale with indicia that indicate the distance between the underlying guide surface on the guide piece and the common plane on which the blade edges lie. Typically, the mounting plate will be formed with a pair of parallel slots, extending in the direction of relative movement of the plow head and the guide piece (generally, perpendicular to the reference plane), and the means for attaching the plow head and the guide piece will typically comprise a pair of elongate fasteners, extending from a panel of the guide piece and slidably received in the parallel slots. The guide piece will advantageously take the form of a bracket comprised of first and second panels disposed perpendicular to one another, one of the panels having the underlying guide surface thereon and the other serving to engage the means for attaching the guide piece to the plow head. An end portion of the handle employed, and the second panel of the guide piece, will have cooperating engaging structures thereon; disengageable fastener means will desirably join the engaging structures to one another in such a way as to enable pivotal movement of the handle relative to the plow head.
Turning now in detail to the appended drawings, therein illustrated is a manual plow tool embodying the present invention and consisting of a plow head, a mounting bracket (or guide piece), and a handle, generally designated respectively by the numerals 10, 12, and 14. The plow head 10 consists of a mounting plate 16 and two working plates 18, which are joined to one another to form an isosceles right triangle (i.e., having 45° corners 20 and a 90° apex 22 at the front). The three plates 16, 18 are all of planar form, with flat exterior surfaces, and will typically be made of steel.
The bottom blade edges 24 on the working plates 18 are rectilinear and, as is best seen in
The mounting plate 16 includes an integral, upstanding mounting portion 28, in which is formed a pair of parallel slots 30; the slots 30 extend on axes that are perpendicular to the common plane P (but again, that is not essential). A distance scale 32, including (as is best seen in
As is best seen in
A pair of mounting legs 44 extend upwardly from the support panel 34 of the mounting bracket 12 (being affixed thereto by means such as swaging of elements received in holes of the panel, not shown). The legs are joined to one another by a short tie-bar 45, to provide added strength, and they have square apertures 38 in their free upper end portions.
The legs 44 receive a bifurcated mounting fixture, generally designated by the numeral 48, provided on the end of the handle 14, and are embraced thereby. A carriage bolt 40 extends through the apertures 38 in the mounting legs 44 and through aligned apertures (not visible) in the elements of the bifurcated end fixture 48; it also threadably engages a hand knob 46 on its free outer end. As will be appreciated, this arrangement pivotably attaches the handle 14 to the mounting bracket 12, thereby enabling facile adjustment (in a vertical plane, in the orientation of normal use of the tool) for most convenient and effective use; the knob 46 may be tightened to secure the handle at a desired attitude.
As can be seen in
As will be appreciated, the tool of the invention is normally used by running it along an outer course of pavers, with the guide surface 50 of the support panel 34 and the exterior surface of the mounting plate 16 bearing against the top and side surfaces of the pavers, respectively. Because of the unique triangular shape of the plow head 10, sand displacement can be effected by movement of the tool in either or both directions (i.e., reciprocally).
It will be appreciated that many variations can be made in the tool depicted and described without departing from the concepts and definition of the invention. For example, although the working plates of the plow head are described as being of flat, planar construction, curved plates, or indeed multiple plates capable of producing equivalent plowing actions, can be substituted. Similarly, although the mounting portion of the head is described as being an integral element of the mounting plate, separate elements, joined together, can be used as well. Finally, it will be appreciated that the means for joining the plow head and/or handle to the guide piece may take a variety of different forms and, while metal construction has been mentioned above, the parts of the tool may be fabricated from suitable plastics, and the like, if preferred.
Thus, it can be seen that the present invention provides a hand tool that is effective for displacing material, such as sand, constituting an upper layer of a setting bed for pavers and the like. The tool is convenient and facile to use, by movement in either a forward direction or a backward direction; it can readily and accurately be adjusted to accommodate various layer depths and paver dimensions, and it is of incomplex construction and economical manufacture.
The application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional patent Application No. 61/004,338, filed Nov. 27, 2007, the entire specification of which is incorporated hereinto by reference thereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61004338 | Nov 2007 | US |