This invention generally comprises a trailer hitch that is used to connect a towed trailer to the hitch ball of a towing vehicle. More particularly, the invention concerns a trailer hitch that automatically locks itself to the hitch ball of the towing vehicle.
Trailer hitches for small vehicles usually include a socket that connects to a hitch ball mounted on the rear end of a towing vehicle. The trailer usually includes a forwardly extending trailer draft tongue that includes a coupler having the downwardly facing ball socket that is to be placed over and pivotally connects to the upwardly extending hitch ball.
When the towing vehicle is to be connected to the trailer, the operator typically elevates the trailer tongue so that the socket of the coupler is at a slightly higher level than the level of the hitch ball that is carried by the towing vehicle. The operator backs the towing vehicle toward the anticipated position of the socket of the coupler until the operator estimates that the hitch ball is aligned below the socket of the coupler. The operator then stops the vehicle, exits the vehicle and lowers the trailer tongue until the socket of the hitch registers with the hitch ball and the trailer is mounted to the hitch ball.
It is important that the ball socket of the coupler is properly mounted on and is locked to the hitch ball, and most trailer hitches include a lever actuated clamp that is movable to extend a locking element from the trailer hitch to a position toward the neck of the hitch ball, below the larger lateral breadth of the hitch ball, for locking the trailer hitch to the hitch ball of the towing vehicle. Without this type of lock, there is a hazard that the trailer hitch will tend to bounce off the hitch ball upon the vehicle and/or the trailer passing over bumps in the road, or upon braking or accelerating, or upon side forces received from winds, or turns of the towing vehicle, etc., or upon the trailer being out of balance. Accordingly, the driver of a towing vehicle, when in the driver's position within the vehicle, is not likely to remain in the vehicle and to allow someone else to lock the trailer hitch to the hitch ball of the towing vehicle. This means that the driver is likely to apply the emergency brakes to the towing vehicle, exit the truck, and then make sure that the lock is secure between the trailer and the towing vehicle. While this operation is likely to increase the safety of the connection between the towing vehicle and the trailer, it leaves the towing vehicle and the trailer unattended for accidental movement during the locking procedure. Also, it is possible that the conventional clamp device used to connect the trailer top to the ball hitch might be inadvertently left open or could be accidently engaged by another obstacle that causes the clamp to open.
It is to the above described problem that the following disclosure is directed.
Briefly described, the present disclosure concerns a trailer hitch for mounting the draw bar of a trailer to a conventional hitch ball of a towing vehicle. The hitch ball typically includes a dome shaped upper portion and a lower portion that converges beneath the larger lateral breadth of the dome shaped upper portion to a stem of a smaller breadth. The trailer hitch may include a socket housing that includes a downwardly facing ball socket for mounting on the upwardly facing hitch ball. The ball socket may define a downwardly facing semi-spherical upper interior surface that corresponds in size and shape to the semi-spherical hitch ball.
A ball clamp may be supported by the socket housing for engaging the hitch ball at the stem of the hitch ball below the larger intermediate lateral breadth of the hitch ball for locking the trailer hitch to the hitch ball of the towing vehicle.
The trailer hitch herein disclosed may include a ball clamp with a concave surface that is substantially coextensive with the semi-spherical interior surface of the ball socket when engaging the hitch ball at the stem of the hitch ball below the larger lateral breadth of the hitch ball.
The concave surface of the ball clamp may include an arcuate surface, and a biasing means may be supported by the socket housing for urging the ball clamp toward the hitch ball at the stem of the hitch ball for locking the ball clamp to the hitch ball.
The biasing means may include a coil compression spring that engages the ball clamp, and a clamp pin may be connected to the ball clamp with a coil compression spring surrounding the clamp pin for urging the ball clamp toward its locked position.
The trailer hitch may include a ball clamp movably supported by a ball socket assembly, a ball clamp support mounted to the ball socket assembly configured to guide the ball clamp toward and away from its locking position and for supporting the ball clamp when the ball socket is mounted on the hitch ball with the ball clamp in its locking position.
The ball clamp and the ball clamp support may include a tongue and groove connection that guides the ball clamp along the clamp support. In one embodiment a sloped guide tongue extends parallel to the path of movement of the ball clamp, and the ball clamp includes an L-shaped flange that forms a tongue groove that is sized and shaped to receive the sloped guide tongue and guide the ball clamp along the sloped guide tongue toward and away from its locking position.
A lever is mounted on the ball socket assembly that includes an intermediate portion connected to the clamp pin, a handle extending from the intermediate portion over the ball socket, and a fulcrum extending from the clamp pin opposite to the handle. The handle may include a protrusion that nests with a recess formed in the ball socket, for stabilizing the handle when not in use.
The ball socket may define a lock pin opening that is directed through the path of movement of the ball clamp, and a lock pin sized and shaped to extend through the lock pin opening for locking the ball clamp in position below the larger lateral breadth of the hitch ball. The ball socket assembly may include a shield mounted to the ball socket beneath the ball clamp and shaped to cover the bottom surface of the ball clamp and define a circular recess for admitting a hitch ball to move into engagement with said ball clamp.
The above described features of this disclosure, as well as the others hereinafter described, provide a trailer hitch that, when applied to the hitch ball, is self-locking. The trailer hitch has a clamp that is urged out of the way when the hitch socket is lowered onto the hitch ball to allow the socket to become properly placed on the hitch ball, and once properly positioned on the hitch ball, the clamp is biased into locking engagement with the hitch ball.
This provides the vehicle operator with the knowledge that once the trailer hitch is mounted to the hitch ball, it is locked in place and does not require his personal attention to properly secure the trailer hitch to the hitch ball. This reduces the hazard of improper locking of the trailer hitch to a hitch ball.
Referring now in more detail to the drawings, in which like numerals indicate like parts throughout the several views,
Trailer hitch 10 includes a mounting sleeve 18 that is mounted to the forward end of a draw bar (not shown) that extends back to the trailer that is to be towed. The mounting sleeve 18 typically will be formed in an inverted U-shape, with a horizontal top wall 20 and opposed vertically oriented side walls 23. Mounting sleeve 18 supports at its forward end the trailer hitch 10, and may also support the brake cylinders, electrical wiring and other components not further described herein.
As shown in
The trailer hitch 10 includes a ball socket assembly 22 for mounting on the hitch ball, with the ball socket assembly including a ball socket 24 that is to be mounted to the hitch ball.
The ball socket includes a concave interior upper surface 26 that corresponds in size and shape to the semi-spherical upper portion 14 of the hitch ball 12 for mounting about the semi-spherical upper portion of the hitch ball.
As shown in
Coil compression spring 34 surrounds the clamp pin and its lower end fits into the counter bore 41. The clamp pin 32 extends up through horizontal top wall 20, and the lock lever 36 is positioned on the top wall 20 of the ball socket and is connected intermediate its ends by means of the connector pin 38 to the upper end of the clamp pin so that it pivots about the connector pin at the top of the clamp pin 32.
The connector pin 38 and the upper end of the clamp pin 32 are displaced laterally from the rear end of the lock lever 36 so that the rear end of the lock lever includes a bearing point 40 that functions as a moving fulcrum when the lock lever 36 is raised, as shown in
The lifting end 46 of the lock lever 36 is directed forwardly of the mounting sleeve 18, and the lower surface of the lock lever has a downwardly facing protrusion 48. A recess 50 is formed in the horizontal top wall 20 of the mounting sleeve 18 that receives and nests with the protrusion 48 of the lock lever. The nesting between the protrusion 48 and recess 50 tends to provide stability to the lock lever 36 so that the lock lever tends to remain in its nested configuration when the lock lever is lowered back to its locked position shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Ball clamp 30 includes a laterally extending L-shaped flange 73 that forms a groove 75 that is sized and shaped to receive the sloped guide tongue 69 of the ball clamp support 65. This forms a tongue and groove relationship between the ball clamp support 65 and the ball clamp 30 so that the L-shaped flange 73 requires the ball clamp 30 to move in an upwardly sloped direction as indicated by arrow 77 when the trailer hitch 10 is to be withdrawn from or mounted onto the hitch ball 12, as indicated in
The main body portion 52 of the ball clamp 30 further includes a semi-spherical bearing surface 78 that corresponds in size and shape to the adjacent surface of the hitch ball 12 so that when the ball clamp 30 is moved by its coil compression spring 34 downwardly against the direction of arrow 77 in
The tongue and groove relationship established between the ball clamp support 65 and the ball clamp 30 assures that the movement of the ball clamp 30 is always sloped toward or away from its locking position with respect to the hitch ball 12. Further, the L-shaped flange 73 limits the downward movement of the ball clamp 30, assuring that the ball clamp will be moveable between the desired up and down positions within the trailer hitch 10.
As shown in
As shown in
When it is desired to remove the ball socket assembly 22 from its mounting position on the ball hitch 12, the lock lever 35 is lifted so that it moves in the direction indicated by arrow 77 which, in turn, lifts the ball clamp against the bias of its coil compression spring 34 as shown in
The sloped guide tongue 69 tends to stabilize the ball clamp 30 during its up and down movements, and also when the trailer tends to over-run the hitch ball resulting from the braking force applied by the towing vehicle to the trailer.
Although preferred embodiments of the invention have been disclosed in detail herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that variations and modifications of the disclosed embodiments can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/172,014 filed in the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office on Jun. 29, 2011.