This invention relates to a screwdriver T-handle.
The prior art is aware of T-handles, and they are useful for rotational driving while presenting a portion of the handle to lie along the palm of the user's hand and thereby induce rotation to the handle. In that arrangement, the T-handle provides rotation drive that has optimum torque compared to an in-line type handle.
The present invention improves upon T-handles in that it presents the usual T-shape with a stem portion and a cross-bar portion, all forming the T-shape. The cross-bar portion has a depression therein arranged to receive the user's thumb when the handle is being gripped for rotation action. That is, the users hand surrounds the cross-bar portion with the hand palm extending therealong and then the user's thumb also lies along the cross-bar portion.
With the aforementioned arrangement, there is greater accuracy in directing the handle and there is also greater torque exertable through the handle, all due to the included action and positioning of the user's thumb in the torquing action. That is, the thumb along the cross-bar portion is positioned to press on the cross-bar portion in exerting torque through the entire handle.
Also, this T-handle can be gripped at either side of the handle because the handle is configured the same on its two opposite sides. That is, the user need not grip the handle from only one side to achieve the advantages herein, but there can be gripping from either side for the same effect.
The drawings show this handle to include a stem portion 10 and a cross-bar portion 11, all being integral in the usual arrangement of a T-handle to present the shape of a capital letter T in front view, such as
So the stem portion 10 extends in an upright longitudinal orientation along an axis S, and the cross-bar portion 11 extends in a horizontal longitudinal orientation along an axis C, perpendicular to axis S, all as seen in
Numerous convex surfaces are shown on the handle, such as seen in the full and sections views. That is, there are no sharp corners, and the exterior surfaces shown are arranged to comfortably accommodate the user's hand. That is, the palm of the user's hand can lie along the cross-bar portion 11, and the fingers of the hand can be wrapped around the cross-bar portion 11, except for the user's thumb. The tips of the user's different fingers can straddle the stem portion 10 and be on the surface 13.
The cross-bar portion 11 can have a planar upper surface 14, and the user's palm can lie along that surface during gripping in the torque-applying mode. The user's fingers, except for the thumb, can wrap around the cross-bar portion and onto the surface 13, all for firm gripping. The handle has identically shaped upright faces 16 and 17, and there is a groove 18, in the form of a depression, in each of the faces 16 and 17. Each groove 18 extends merged with and off the top surface 14 at an angulation, as seen in the drawings, and is adjacent the top surface 14 and extends to one groove edge 19 on the respective faces 16 and 17, and the two grooves extend toward the stem portion 10. Both the grooves 18 are at a respective, and same, acute angle with respect to the horizontal in the front face view of the handle, as seen with plane C in
The user's thumb can lie in either one of the grooves 18 when the remainder of the user's hand can grip the T-handle in the manner mentioned. In that positioning, the thumb can exert a torque or pressing force on whichever face 16 or 17, depending on the particular grip employed by the user, all in the right hand or clockwise rotation action of the T-handle, as viewed from above. The disposition of the grooves is such that the user's thumb extends across the upright plane shown at S with a horizontal component, and the thumb can therefor exert a firm torquing action onto the handle.
Also, the T-handle is of a serpentine shape in its top view, as seen in
So the grooves 18 have a length L, a width W, and a depth D. The length L is dimensionally the greatest, the width W is next, and the depth D is the smallest. That relationship most efficiently receives the user's thumb for handle accuracy, comfort, and force application. The cross-bar portion has two end portions 21 and 22, and each groove 18 extends between the two ends 21 and 22 and thus across the cross-bar portion 11 and to the juncture between the cross-bar 11 and the stem 10, that is, into the concave conical surface 13.
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