The present application relates to scissors-action tools, and in particular to such a tool in which the blades are normally able to open to a restricted angle during use, and in which a simple adjustment permits the blades to be opened to a greater angle than normal.
Berg, et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,745,997 discloses scissors including folding handles. A spring urges scissors blades apart from each other to a position of readiness for a cutting stroke so that it is unnecessary to include a loop in the handles of the scissors, and the scissors can therefore be folded to a relatively small size when not in use. The scissors include rockers that prevent the blades from opening beyond an angle at which the handles can be manipulated easily, but this angle is less than 90 degrees and does not expose the entire edge of each blade to be resharpened, so long as the blades are held together by their pivot joint. With the scissors blades held to a limited angle, however, the handles can be folded by overcoming the force of a spring pressing on a cam to keep each handle extended.
Berg et al. also disclose scissors with non-folding handles that can be moved to a stowed position in the handle of a folding multipurpose hand tool. In such scissors a rocker can be rotated to a position providing clearance to open the scissors blades to about 90 degrees to facilitate resharpening.
Hayden, U.S. Pat. No. 1,296,660 shows scissors including a thumbscrew attached to one handle and adjustable to limit the blades to being opened to an acute angle or to allow them to be opened to at least 90 degrees.
Frazer, U.S. Pat. No. 6,282,997 discloses small scissors included in a folding multipurpose tool. The blades of the scissors are urged apart from each other by a spring which has an end engaged in a slot defined in one of the handles. The slot limits the angle to which the blades can be opened apart from each other during normal use, but the end of the spring can be removed from the slot to permit the blades to be opened farther, to an angle which provides access to the edges of the scissors to permit them to be sharpened readily.
What is desired, then, is a scissors-action tool in which blades or pivoted jaws are urged open by a spring and normally are limited to a predetermined blade-separation angle, but in which a blade-separation limiting element can be moved to a second position, permitting the blades to be opened to a greater angle to facilitate maintenance of the tool such as resharpening cutting portions of scissors blades or shaping gripping faces of pliers jaws.
The present invention overcomes the aforementioned shortcoming of prior art spring-opened scissors action tools, by providing a scissors-action tool in which a limiting device, when in its usual first or forward position, allows the handles and blades of the scissors-action tool to move through a predetermined, relatively small angle between a fully closed position and an open position preparatory for a working stroke. When it is necessary to resharpen edges or otherwise repair surfaces of the blades or jaws of such a tool, however, the limiting member or stop can be moved to a second position allowing movement of the blades or jaws with respect to each other to a wider blade-opening angle so that, for example, a cutting portion of each blade can be sharpened without interference by the other blade.
In a tool which is one preferred embodiment of the invention, each blade of such a scissors-action tool has attached thereto a respective handle which can be pivoted, between an extended, operational, position and a folded position with respect to the blade, and a spring carried in one handle urges a rocker against the opposite blade, the blade associated with the other handle thus urging the blades apart from each other in a blade-opening direction. The same rocker also acts on the opposite blade so as to prevent the blades from being opened beyond an angle at which the handles are located close enough to each other to be squeezed together easily to use the tool, when the rocker is in its forward, or normal operational, position.
The rocker in such a tool can also be moved to a second, rearward, or retracted, position providing additional clearance between the rocker and the opposite blade, allowing the blades to be moved apart from each other in the blade-opening direction to a blade separation angle larger than that to which the blades can be moved when the rocker is in its first, or normal operational, position.
In a tool which is one preferred embodiment of the invention, the blades of the scissors-action tool interact with the rocker to move the rocker back into its normal position as a result of moving the blades in a blade-closing direction, so that no tools are required to return the scissors-action tool to an operational configuration once the blades have been sharpened or repaired as required.
In a tool which is one preferred embodiment of the invention, such a rocker includes a slot defining both a first, or normal, pivot axis for the rocker and also providing space allowing the rocker to be moved rearward with respect to a pivot pin to a second position of the rocker, in which the pivot pin is in a different place within the slot and the rocker rotates about a different pivot axis.
The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to
Preferably, each of a pair of identical rockers 36, 38 defines an elongated pivot hole, referred to herein as a slot 40, through which a respective one of the handle pivot pins 24 extends, permitting each of the rockers 36, 38 to pivot smoothly about the respective handle pivot pin 24, which thus defines a respective rocker pivot axis coinciding with the handle pivot axis. As shown in
Each rocker 36, 38 includes a connecting element, which in the tool depicted is a laterally projecting pin 42, preferably formed by swaging the rocker. The pin 42 projects toward the adjacent blade base 26 or 28 and extends into an opening 44 in the blade base 26 or 28. The opening 44 is larger than the pin 42, and space surrounding the pin 42 in the opening 44 permits the rocker 36 or 38 to rotate about the handle pivot pin 24 through an angle 46 with respect to the blade base 26 or 28. The angle 46 thus is limited by the relationship between the pin 42 and the opening 44. For reasons that will be explained below, the opening 44 may be generally triangular, as shown in the drawings.
Mounted within each of the handles 20, 22 are a scissors blade spring 48, which acts as a jaw spring in a tool including jaws or jawlike members instead of scissors, and a rocker spring 50. As may be seen in
When each handle 20 and 22 has been moved to its fully extended position with respect to the associated blade base 26 or 28, a tip 52 of the respective scissors blade spring 48 engages an abutment surface 54 on the respective blade base 26 or 28, preventing the handle 20 or 22 from pivoting further with respect to the blade base. Further force exerted in the same direction by the handle then moves the associated blade 16 or 18, so that movement of the handles 20 and 22 toward each other results in movement of the scissors blades 16 or 18 about the scissors pivot joint 32, moving cutting portions 30 of the scissors blades toward each other in a scissors blade closing direction as indicated by the arrows 56.
Each of the rockers 36, 38, includes a finger-like tip 58 which rests against a cam surface 60 on the margin of the blade base 26 or 28 of the opposite scissors blade. Thus the rocker spring 50 carried in the handle 22 presses against a cam lobe 62 of the rocker 36, urging the rocker to pivot in a clockwise direction around the handle pivot pin 24 as shown in
As the handles 20, 22 are separated further from one another and the blades 16, 18 are thus opened apart from each other, the outer end 64 of each rocker 36 or 38 encounters a heel 66 defined by the outer margin of the opposite blade 16 or 18, as shown in
The resulting limitation of the separation of the blades 16 and 18 from each other when the rockers 36 and 38 are in their first, or normal operational position as shown in
Because of the slot 40 in each rocker, each rocker 36 and 38 can be moved away from the scissors blade pivot 32, toward a second, or rearward, position of each rocker, when the handle 20 or 22 is in its extended position with respect to the adjacent blade base 26 or 28. A rocker can be moved rearward on the pin 24 by using a tool such as an appropriately small screwdriver 70, of which only the blade shown in
In a preferred embodiment of the folding scissors 14, merely moving the handles 20, 22 back toward each other in a blade-closing direction, as in a cutting stroke of the scissors, returns the rockers 36 and 38 to their forward, or normal operational positions. The tip 58 of each rocker 36 or 38 is brought into contact with the opposite blade base 26 or 28 as shown in
Referring also to
As the handles 20, 22 are squeezed together the tip 58 of each rocker is moved by the blade base 26 or 28 with which it is in contact, causing the rocker to rotate around the handle pivot pin 24 and, by reaction, to flex the respective rocker spring 50. This movement of the rocker brings the pin 42 into contact with the interior surface of the aperture 44 into which it projects. The interior surface of the aperture 44 acts as a cam followed by the pin 42 and thus urges the rocker toward its first, or forward, normal operating, position, as the pin 42 moves toward the outer side 71 of the scissors blade defining the aperture.
Additionally, the shape of the cam portion 60 of the blade base is designed to cooperate with the surface of the rocker tip 58 so that the rocker tip 58 can slide forward along the cam portion 60 of the blade base. The angle at which the rocker spring encounters the cam lobe 62 of the rocker preferably also produces a net force urging the rocker forward, toward its forward or normal operational position with respect to the blade base 26, 28 and the associated handle pivot pin 24. As a result, as the scissors blades 16 and 18 approach being fully closed, the rocker 36 or 38 is urged forward, returning fully into its forward, or normal, position, as shown in
Referring to
An imaginary line 75 extends between the axis of rotation of the blade pivot joint 32 and the central axis of the pivot pin 24, which coincides with the axis of rotation of the rocker 36 or 38 mounted on the pin 24. An imaginary line 77 is parallel with the line 75, and the shapes of the tip 58 of each rocker and of the cam surface 60 of the blade or other jaw-like element should be such that the locus of the moving point of contact between the tip 58 and the cam surface 60 lies no closer to the line 75 than along the line 77 or an extension of that line as the handles are moved in a blade-closing direction, in order not to have a camming action urging the rocker 36 or 38 in a rearward direction with respect to the pivot pin 24. Preferably, the locus of the point of contact between the tip 58 and the cam surface 60 lies along the line 79 diverging away from the line 75 by an angle 81. As the angle 81 increases, the tendency for the rocker 36 of 38 to be moved rearwardly as a result of operation of the tool 14 decreases. On the other hand, if the locus of the points of contact between the tip 58 and the cam surface 60 lies along a line 82 converging toward the line 75, there is an undesirable tendency for cam action of the surface 60 on the tip 58 to urge the rocker 36 or 38 rearwardly toward the pivot pin 24. That tendency increases with the increase in size of the angle 83 between the line 82 and the line 77.
The relationship between the pin 42 and the interior surface 85 of the opening 44 in the blade base has an effect on the tendency of folding the handles 20 and 22 of the tool to move the rockers 36 and 38 rearwardly toward the pins 24. The surface 85 of the inside of the opening 44 defines an angle 87 which could be close to 0° and still be of some benefit, but preferably is larger and at least about 7° with an imaginary line 89 interconnecting the central axis of the pivot pin 24 with the central axis of the projecting pin 42, as shown in
In order that the action of pivoting the handles 20 and 22 respectively about the bases 26 and 28 of the blades to unfold the handles does not urge the rockers 36 and 38 rearwardly from their normal forward positions toward the handle pivot pins 24, the angle 91 between an interior surface 93 of the opening and an imaginary line 95 interconnecting the central axis of the handle pivot pin 24 with the central axis of the projecting pin 42 when that pin is in contact with the surface 93 should be as large as possible, and preferably at least about 20.5° in the tool 14 shown herein.
In another preferred embodiment of the tool 14, the pin 42 may have three intersecting convexly arcuate sides rather than being of a circular cylindrical shape, and the opening 44 may be circular. This combination provides a pin that still fits with enough freedom of movement in the required directions within the opening 44 to accommodate necessary angular motion of the rocker 36 or 38 and movement between its normal and retracted positions. The shape also helps the pin 42 follow such a circular surface defining the opening 44 in restoring the rocker to its forward position.
While it is critical that the slot 40 be long enough to permit the rocker to be moved rearward far enough to provide clearance for the blade to pass by the outer end 64 of the rocker, in one preferred embodiment of the rocker, shown in FIGS. 1012, the slot 40 is also widened slightly at its rear end 72, to form a pair of shallow arcuate indentations, or saddles, 73 and 74 to resist unintended movement of the rockers 36 and 38 with respect to the pivot pins 24. The saddle 74 engages the handle pivot pin 24 when the associated handle 20 or 22 is fully extended, and the saddle 73 engages the handle pivot pin 24 when the associated handle is fully folded, as a result of the respective rocker spring 50 urging the rocker toward the pin 24 when the rocker 36 or 38 is in its first, or forward position and the respective handle 20 or 22 is in or near either its fully extended or its folded position. The saddles 73 and 74 may be provided by forming the rear end of the slot 40 to have a slightly larger radius than the pivot pin, while the front end of the slot 40, near the outer end 64 of the rocker, is slightly narrower than the rear end, having a width 78 barely greater than the diameter of the handle pivot pin 24. A pair of opposite shoulders 76, which resist movement of the rocker 36 or 38 from its normal operational position to its retracted position, are present between the front and rear ends of the slot 40. Since the rocker spring 50 presses the rocker 36 or 38 toward the handle pivot pin 24, during movement of the rocker 36 or 38 toward its second or rearward position, the shoulder 76 adjacent the pivot pin 24 acts as a wedge, and movement of the pivot pin 24 onto the shoulder 76 requires the rocker spring 50 to be forced further away from the handle pivot pin 24 as the rocker 36 or 38 moves along the rocker spring 50.
When the rocker is being moved in the opposite direction, from its rearward position back to its forward, or normal operational position, the rocker spring 50 flexes elastically back toward the handle pivot pin 24 as the rocker 36 or 38 moves toward its normal position. The slope of the shoulder 76 then helps to urge the rocker back to the normal position at the rear end 72 of the slot 40, where the handle pivot pin can again rest in the saddle 74.
It will be understood that other shapes for the slot 40 would also function similarly to make the rocker more stable in its normal, operational, position than in its rearward position, at least when the handles are extended with respect to the blades.
While the folding tool 14 shown herein includes the handles 20 and 22 which can be moved about the handle pivot pins 24 as mentioned above, a tool incorporating rockers 36 and 38 need not include handles that are able to fold with respect to the base 26 or 28 of the blade, so long as there is an appropriate pivot pin on each handle properly located with respect to the blade pivot 32.
The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/794,245, filed Mar. 5, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,204,022, of which the disclosure is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10794245 | Mar 2004 | US |
Child | 11786844 | Apr 2007 | US |