The present invention is directed to an apparatus for sharpening scrapers of the type that are used in the finishing of woodwork and, especially for scrapers with linear or non linear scraping edges commonly known as cabinet scrapers.
Wood scrapers are tools that have been used by non commercial and commercial woodworkers for many years to finish wood surfaces of cabinets. Such scrapers are generally planar sheets of metal having at least one side where a scrapping edge is formed by biasing a side against a hardened material, especially at an angle, and forming a curl with a sharp edge. The edge extends outward and at varying angles from the plane of the scraper in accordance with the angle formed between the edge and the hardened material. The edge may be originally factory formed; however, the edge becomes nicked and/or loses sharpness with usage and must be sharpened. Therefore, woodworkers normally have a tool or set of tools for resharpening the edges of the scrapers.
When the edge is nicked, it is often best to start with a side having a squared side edge and then reform the entire side from it. Therefore, typically, the side of the scrapper is first filed or ground flat. This removes the old edge and restarts the edge forming process. The side edge is then passed along a hardened tool or burnisher that is held so that the side is at a selected angle relative to an axis of the burnisher. This causes the edge to turn and become sharpened. Additional passes may be made past the burnisher at increasing relative angles to vary the angle of the sharpened edge relative to the body of the scraper.
There are a number of prior tools designed to sharpen the blades. Such tools typically form an enclosed path for the body along with the edge to be sharpened to transverse a linear path past the hardened tool. This functions to sharpen linear edges, but does not work well with curved edges. Such devices are not able to sharpen curves that go inwardly or are concave in nature. The prior art sharpeners do not allow unobstructed access to the burnisher by the piece being worked. For example, one type of scraper takes on the shape similar to a french curve and has inwardly directed curves that can not be sharpened with traditional sharpening tools that require the edge being sharpened to travel along a linear path. Consequently, it is desirable to have a sharpening apparatus that is simple and works well for sharpening edges of all shapes, especially concave edges.
A sharpening apparatus for sharpening wood scrapers of the type used as cabinet scrapers. The apparatus includes a burnisher or hardened cylindrical shaped rod past which a scraper is driven or urged by a user of the apparatus to curl one edge of the scraper and form a sharp wood scraping sharpened edge therealong.
The apparatus further includes a block for holding the burnisher. The block has a plurality of cylindrical shaped openings or bores extending inwardly from at least one end thereof that snugly, but alternatively, slidingly receive the burnisher at the selection of the user. Each opening is drilled at a different angle relative to the other openings so as to provide a user with openings having different angles of inclination to receive the burnisher, so as to provide different sharpened curls depending on the need of the woodworker using the scraper. The block also preferably includes a recess for receiving a file or other grinding device to be held against the block on edge and allow a user to smooth or remove old sharpened edges to dress the edge or prepare for initially sharpening or resharpening the scraping edge.
The apparatus further preferably includes an abrasive media for initially filing or grinding the edge to a generally flat surface or, where curved to being generally linear from front to back and a clamping device or vise for holding the block in configurations for both preparing and sharpening the scraper. The abrasive media can include files of different types, sandstone, sand paper, diamond stone, oil wetstone and Japanese water stones. The clamping device has an upper surface and secures the block below the upper surface. The burnisher extends above the clamping device and is horizontally free of surrounding obstructions, so that the scraper being worked can move about the burnisher in an unobstructed manner in a horizontal or other working plane. Because of this, the scraper can be laid on the clamping device surface and the edge worked against the burnisher so as to sharpen the edge with the burnisher at a fixed angle dependent upon the opening used to receive the burnisher. Because the sharpener is not obstructed horizontally, the edge being sharpened can be curved and, especially can be concave, such that the scraper passes at least partly around the burnisher when concave regions of the edge are being sharpened. The person sharpening the scraper moves the scraper relative to the burnisher and maintains a radius of the burnisher in line with a radius of the curve of the edge being sharpened. Thus, the sharpener can sharpen scrapers of almost any shape.
Therefore, the objects of the invention are: to provide a sharpening kit for carpentry wood scrapers, including a burnisher, a block with variously aligned openings for slidingly receiving the burnisher and holding the rod at various selected angles relative to vertical, a file and a clamp; to provide such a kit wherein the burnisher is accessible to sharpen both linear edged scrapers and scrapers having curved edges, especially those having concave scraping edges; to provide such a kit that allows a user to both prepare or dress the scraper edge and then reshape and sharpen the edge for use in scraping wood; to provide such a kit that is easy to use, comparatively inexpensive to produce and especially well adapted for the intended usage thereof.
Other objects and advantages of this invention will become apparent from the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein are set forth, by way of illustration and example, certain embodiments of this invention.
The drawings constitute a part of this specification and include exemplary embodiments of the present invention and illustrate various objects and features thereof.
As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention, which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed structure.
In accordance with the present invention, a kit is provided that is generally included by the reference numeral 1. The kit 1 includes a block 5 and a rod or burnisher 6. In some instances the kit also includes a file 7 and a vice or clamp 8. The kit 1 is utilized to sharpen scrapers 10 and 11.
The block 5, as best seen in
Located in the top 15 and at least partially penetrating the block 5 along the length thereof between the top 15 and bottom 16 are a plurality of burnisher receiving openings 30, 31, 32 or 33. When the burnisher 6 is received in a selected one of the openings 30, 31, 32 or 33, the burnisher 6 partly extends upwardly and outwardly therefrom, such as is seen in
Each of the openings 30, 31, 32 and 33 is cylindrical in shape and has an axis of rotation that is aligned such that each axis A, B, C and D respectively is at a different angle relative to each other and to the top 15. The angle of each opening 30, 31, 32 and 33 can be varied, but preferably such are aligned such that there is 0, 5, 10 and 15 degrees between a line perpendicular to the top 15 and the axes A, B, C and D, respectfully. The block 5 is constructed of aluminum, magnesium, a high impact polymer plastic such as high density polyethylene or other suitable material.
The burnisher 6 is a cylindrical rod that is constructed of hardened steel or the like that has a hardness that is substantially greater than the scrapers 10 or 11 to be worked by the kit 1. While the burnisher 6 is illustrated as being comparatively short, longer burnishers can be used with or without handles. As noted above, the burnisher 6 is sized to be held snugly in a selected opening 30, 31, 32 or 33.
The file 7 is a flat surfaced file that is also constructed of a metal that is harder than the scrapers 10 and 11. The file 7 is used in conjunction with the block 5 in a first preparation configuration, as seen in
The clamp 8 has two spaced parallel bars 60 and 61, the spacing between which is controlled by a screw 62 with a turn handle 63. The bars 60 and 61 have upper surfaces 64 and 65 respectfully that are generally planar and horizontal so as to form a discontinuous surface 67 of the coplanar surfaces 64 and 65.
Shown in
It is foreseen that many types of clamps 8 can be used in accordance with the invention, including carpentry gluing clamps, vices and the like. As most carpentry shops have such, the clamp 8 is not provided with all kits and the file 7 may also be preexisting and not sold with the kit.
Seen in
It is to be understood that while certain forms of the present invention have been illustrated and described herein, it is not to be limited to the specific forms or arrangement of parts described and shown.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/879,753 filed Jan. 10, 2007.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60879753 | Jan 2007 | US |