1. Field of the Invention
The invention pertains to an assembly and method for removing a head from a shaft of a golf club. More particularly, the invention relates to using tools for removing the head of a golf club mechanically from the shaft.
2. Description of Related Art
With golf being such a popular sport, fans of the game are constantly looking for ways to improve their shot. One way of making improvements to their game is altering or personalizing the clubs in which the player is using. As shown in
There are various devices used in the prior art for removing the head of the club. One example is Wettlaufers's U.S. Pat. No. 2,160,395. Wettlaufer uses a device having a partial hex nut with a handle and a partially threaded sleeve-like body, where the hex nut sits up against a washer which is placed on the shaft adjacent to the terminal portion of the shank of the club head. The nut is then turned using the handle and the nut pushes on the washer, which in turn pushes against the terminal portion of the club head. The device eventually pushes the head off of the golf club. The problem with this device is that the turning of the nut is limited in travel to the partial threading on the sleeve-like body.
Other devices used to remove golf club heads from their shafts are described in Marshall's U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,687,464 and 4,910,849. Marshall's apparatus disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,687,464, consists of an externally threaded sleeve slipped over the handle of the club from which the head needs to be removed, and placed near the hosel of the club. On top of the threaded portion of the threaded sleeve is a drive member in the form of a coil spring or a rigid tube. A turnstile connected to the drive member is used to advance the drive member, increasing the pressure placed on the hosel. After the hosel is heated, the pressure from the drive member pushes the club head off of the shaft. Marshall's U.S. Pat. No. 4,910,849 discloses a puller for removing the head of a golf club from the shaft. To remove the head of the golf club, the shaft is inserted into a tube and aligned. Once aligned, pins are inserted to maintain the shaft in a proper position. A nut is then rotated proximal-to-distal to compress a spring, which urges a second washer and shaft engaging member to travel in the distal-to-proximal direction. After the nut has traveled an inch or two the spring applies pressure against the flange, urging the shaft to separate form the hosel. Both of Marshall's patents can cause side-loading to occur in the shaft of the golf club.
Weiss' U.S. Pat. No. 6,336,263 uses hydraulic means to separate the golf club head from the shaft. Machado et al. U.S. Pat. No. 4,901,418 uses removal tool that includes a vise and pins which uses a force plate to push the club head off of the shaft. Farino's U.S. Pat. No. 4,783,893 is a method of removing a head from a golf club using a device that has a L-shaped head grasping mechanism and a securing mechanism. The head grasping mechanism is rotated about the securing mechanism and the axis of the shaft of the club being fixed. As the drive mechanism rotates it applies pressure to the head of the club away from the direction of the shaft. The L-shaped head grasping mechanism does not fit the bigger club heads now on the market and does not provide a way of varying the size of the L-shaped grasping mechanism.
Other solutions sold in popular magazines such as GolfSmith® is a giant pry bar, which can leave marks on the shaft and cause side loading to occur, a shaft keeper using spring action, which is hard to use, and other shaft extractors which are very expensive.
Therefore, there was a need for a shaft extractor tool, which was inexpensive, easy to use, and does not cause side-loading or damage the shaft of the golf club.
A shaft extractor for removing a golf club head from a golf club shaft without causing side-loading to occur comprising: a central body piece having two split screw portions threaded in opposite directions, at opposite sides of a split central hex nut section. The threaded screw portions receive a pair of end split hex nuts, each threaded to fit on one of the oppositely-threaded screw sections of the central body, such that when the central nut is rotated with the end nuts held against rotation, the end nuts move outward or inward together. The split in the central body piece of the shaft extractor forms a central cavity for receiving the golf club shaft. An extractor wrench is used to hold the end nuts against rotation.
The method of using the shaft extractor to remove a golf club head from a golf club shaft comprises the steps of: removing a ferrule from the golf club shaft if one is present, placing the golf club shaft in the central cavity of the shaft extractor such that one end nut of the tool is adjacent to the hosel of the club, securing the shaft extractor and the golf club shaft using a vice, with the opposite end nut adjacent to the vice jaws, placing the extractor wrench on the end nuts of the shaft extractor and using a separate wrench to rotate the central hex nut to apply a pre-load force on the shaft extractor, removing the extractor wrench, heating the hosel, placing the extractor wrench back on the shaft extractor, and using the separate wrench to rotate the partial central hex nut until the golf club head is pressed off, or nearly off of the golf club shaft.
The present invention exerts an axial force along the shaft centerline, and uses a minimal amount of torque to remove the club head. The present invention eliminates any side loading, which is prevalent in prior art club head removers.
a and 7b show the start and end of the method using the extractor tools to remove the club head from the shaft of the golf club respectively.
As shown in
As an alternative to the completely removable wrench shown in
By rotating the central hex nut section 16 with the extractor wrench 36 in position, the threaded screws 42, 44 urge the end hex nuts 12, 14 outwards as shown in
a and 7b show the start and finish positions of the shaft extractor 10 for removing a golf club head 32 from a golf club shaft 26. Prior to placing the golf club shaft 26 into the shaft extractor 10, the ferrule 28 is removed from the shaft 26 of the golf club, if one were present (reference number 28 in
Once the ferrule 28 has been removed, with the openings in the end nuts 12, 14 aligned with the central cavity 24 and the end nuts 12, 14 threaded as close to the central nut portion 26 as possible, the shaft extractor 10 is placed onto the shaft 26, with end nut 12 adjacent to the hosel 34 of the golf club. While holding the tool 10 securely to the shaft 26, the golf club is placed in a vise 30, with end nut 14 against the face of the vise 30, as shown in
After heating the hosel 34, the extracting wrench 36 is placed back on the shaft extractor 10. While holding the extractor wrench 36, the central hex nut 16 is turned again, until the club head 32 is off (or nearly off) of the shaft 26. As shown in
Accordingly, it is to be understood that the embodiments of the invention herein described are merely illustrative of the application of the principles of the invention. Reference herein to details of the illustrated embodiments is not intended to limit the scope of the claims, which themselves recite those features regarded as essential to the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2160395 | Wettlaufer | May 1939 | A |
D137909 | Blanchard | May 1944 | S |
2403718 | Hauck | Jul 1946 | A |
3858300 | Borel | Jan 1975 | A |
4783893 | Farino | Nov 1988 | A |
4901418 | Machado et al. | Feb 1990 | A |
4910849 | Marshall | Mar 1990 | A |
5687464 | Marshall | Nov 1997 | A |
6336263 | Weiss et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040134057 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |