The invention relates to a shaft of a tool or the like according to the preamble of claim 1.
Tools provided with shafts are used in various spheres of life from work to hobbies. What is relevant to the function and use of equipment provided with long shafts is the length of their shafts. Different applications and users require different shaft lengths, and thus it is often advantageous to provide a tool with an adjustable shaft, which allows each user to adjust the shaft length to suit him/her and the application. The use of adjustable shafts in tools provided with long shafts is a prior art solution. Adjustable shafts are used, for example, in shovels, mops and crutches. Furthermore, sticks and poles with long shafts are used in various sports, such as floorball sticks, ski poles and Nordic walking poles which have an adjustable length. Adjustability of the shaft length allows the length of equipment to be adjusted according to each user and application, which facilitates carrying out of the task at hand. Traditionally, problems associated with the shaft length have been solved by interchangeable handles of different lengths or by mechanisms enabling the adjustment of the shaft length.
When the shaft length is adjusted by means of adjusting mechanisms, the sections of the shaft consisting of two separate sections move inside each other so that the tool shaft can be shortened by pushing one section of the shaft inside the other and lengthened by pulling the sections within each other apart in opposite directions. The shaft length can be adjusted and the shaft locked at the desired length by an adjusting mechanism which is provided in the shaft and by which the shaft sections can be locked into the desired position and released for the adjustment of the shaft length. An example of a mechanism for adjusting the length of a tool shaft is described in U.S. Pat. No. 1,411,195. The length of the shovel shaft described in this publication can be adjusted by a movable upper shaft. The upper shaft is partly provided inside a hollow tubular lower shaft, and it can be tightened to the desired position by a clamping band. An example of another adjusting mechanism based on friction is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,460,458. U.S. Pat. No. 5,795,000 describes an adjusting mechanism based on a spring pin arrangement where the outer shaft section is provided with appropriately spaced holes and the user arranges the spring pin provided in the inner shaft section in the desired hole when adjusting the length of the tool shaft.
A problem associated with the solutions described above is that adjusting mechanisms based on friction cannot usually hold the tool shaft in place sufficiently tightly during use or they loosen during use. Furthermore, such tools are often stored outside, and therefore the metal parts of the spring pin arrangement may rust and become useless.
The object of the invention is to provide an adjustable shaft for tools, hobby equipment or the like which solves the above-mentioned problems. For the sake of simplicity, only the term “tool shaft” will be used in the following description. The object of the invention is achieved by a shaft which is characterized by what is stated in independent claim 1. The preferred embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims.
The problems described above are solvable by a tool shaft whose length is adjustable and which comprises a first shaft section and a second shaft section, which are attached to each other by adjusting means and which move telescopically with respect to each other when the shaft length is adjusted. The adjusting means for adjusting the shaft length comprise a sleeve provided in the first shaft section and an at least partly toothed spindle provided in the second shaft section, the first end of the spindle being taken through the sleeve. The sleeve and the spindle attach the first and the second shaft section adjustably to each other so that the sleeve and the spindle can be turned with respect to each other into a position where the adjustment of the shaft length is prevented and into a position allowing the adjustment of the shaft length where the spindle can move in the sleeve in the longitudinal direction.
The spindle toothing consists of cog pairs transverse to its longitudinal direction and the areas between the spinle cogs form a cog-free area. The opening provided in the sleeve is shaped so as to allow, when the spindle taken through it is turned around its longitudinal axis, locking of the tool shaft at the desired length by means of the opening provided in the sleeve and the spindle toothing or unlocking of the shaft for the adjustment of the shaft length. When the shaft length is adjusted, the spindle is turned around its longitudinal axis into a position where the spindle can move in the direction of its longitudinal axis in the opening provided in the sleeve. The shaft sections that are within each other are moved telescopically to achieve the desired shaft length. After the shaft length has been adjusted, the user of the tool can lock the shaft at the adjusted length by turning the spindle in the sleeve into a position where the spindle cannot move in the direction of its longitudinal axis.
An advantage of the system according to the invention is that the locking of the tool adjusting mechanism does not loosen during use, it is easily manageable by the user and the mechanism does not require metal parts, which may rust outside, but it can be made completely of plastic, for example.
The invention will now be described in greater detail by means of preferred embodiments, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which
a is a partly sectional view of an adjusting shaft according to an embodiment of the invention, the adjusting mechanism of the shaft being in the position preventing the adjustment of the tool length.
b illustrates the adjusting mechanism of the adjusting shaft of
c illustrates the position of the spindle and sleeve of the adjusting mechanism of
a illustrates a spindle according to an embodiment of the invention.
b is a cross-sectional view of the spindle of
a is a cross-sectional view of a sleeve according to an embodiment of the invention.
b is a top view of the sleeve of
a is a partly sectional view of the adjusting shaft of
b illustrates the adjusting mechanism of the tool of
c illustrates the position of the spindle and sleeve of the adjusting mechanism of
a illustrates a tool shaft with an adjustable length according to an embodiment of the present invention. The shaft comprises a first shaft section and a second shaft section, which are attached to each other by adjusting means and which move telescopically with respect to each other when the shaft length is adjusted. The adjusting means for adjusting the shaft length comprise a sleeve 4 provided in the second shaft section 10 and an at least partly toothed spindle 6 provided in the first shaft section 2, the first end of the spindle being taken through the sleeve 4. The sleeve 4 and the spindle 6 attach the first 2 and the second 10 shaft section adjustably to each other so that the sleeve 4 and the spindle 6 can be turned with respect to each other into a position preventing the adjustment of the shaft length and into a position allowing the adjustment of the shaft length where the spindle 6 can move in the sleeve in the longitudinal direction. The tool used in this embodiment may be a shovel or a fork, for example.
In the solution exemplified in
To adjust the tool shaft length and lock the shaft into the desired position, an adjusting mechanism is attached to the shaft in accordance with
a and 3b illustrate a sleeve 4 according to the invention. The sleeve 4 according to this embodiment comprises a case portion 28 and a flange 30.
The thickness of the edges of the opening 34 in the flange 30 approximately corresponds to the distance between the successive cogs 12 on the same side of the spindle 6. Consequently, the flange will stay tightly between successive cog pairs when the spindle 6 is in the locked position according to
In this embodiment, the sleeve 4 is attached to the end of the inner shaft section 10 closest to the outer shaft section 2 as shown in
In the embodiment shown in
According to
The spindle 6 can also be provided with a few additional properties to facilitate the shaft length adjustment. As shown in
The adjusting means for adjusting the shaft length may further comprise a locking member 8 for turning the sleeve 4 and the spindle 6 with respect to each other into a position preventing the adjustment of the shaft length or into a position allowing the adjustment of the shaft length where the spindle 6 can move in the sleeve 4 in the longitudinal direction. In this embodiment, the locking member 8 is attached to one end of the spindle 6 and taken through the lower part of the handle 16 provided in the upper shaft section as shown in
Furthermore, a limiter 36 is formed according to
In this embodiment, one end of the spindle 6 is provided with a collar portion 38, to which the locking member 8 is attached. The length of the collar portion 38 from the locking member 8 to the limiter 36 approximately corresponds to the length of the lead-through extending inside the shaft section 2 from the handle 16. Furthermore, both ends of the groove provided in the shaft section for the limiter 36 are provided with cavities in which the end of the limiter 36 fits in the extreme positions. When the collar section is slightly shorter than the lead-through so that stiffness is generated when the spindle 6 is turned, the cavities provided in the groove can be utilized. When the lead through is pressed between the locking member 8 and the limiter 36, the limiter end easily sinks into the cavities provided at the ends of the groove. In that case, the cavities form notches in the extreme positions, which help the spindle to stay in the locked position and in the position allowing the adjustment of the shaft length with respect to the sleeve. As a result, the spindle cannot accidentally turn when the tool is used, and the spindle also stays in the correct position during the adjustment of the shaft length.
a to c and 2a to c illustrate an adjustable tool shaft according to the embodiment described above. The shaft comprises a handle 16, an outer shaft section 2, an inner shaft section 10 and adjusting means 4, 6, 8 for adjusting the shafts length. In this example, the spindle 6 is arranged in the tool shaft as follows: the locking member 8 attached to the first end of the spindle 6 is in the handle 16 as shown in
When the shaft length is to be adjusted, the spindle 6 is turned by means of the locking member 8 into the position shown in
The embodiment used as an example above can be modified in several ways within the scope of the invention. The locking member to be attached to one end of the spindle can be shaped in the desired manner and placed at a point deemed advantageous regardless of the tool. The locking member can also be made as an integral part of the spindle so that it cannot be detached from it. The handle or the tool portion of the instrument may also function as a locking nut such that the user may bring the tool shaft into the locked position and adjustable position by turning the handle or the tool portion, such as the blade portion of a shovel or the blade of a floorball stick. The locking member 8 can also be integrated into the tool handle or tool portion, in which case the user may turn the spindle 6 in the sleeve 4 by turning the handle or the tool portion. In an embodiment where the cross section of the shaft section is circular and the spindle and the sleeve are fixed to the shaft sections, the locking member is not necessarily needed but the spindle can be turned in the sleeve by turning the outer shaft section and the inner shaft section with respect to each other.
Depending on the manufacturing method, the spindle toothing can be formed of notches or grooves, for example, which are capable of performing the tasks of the toothing of the embodiment described above. The toothing may also consist of one row of successive cogs in the longitudinal direction which cover half of the spindle area, for example. The spindle toothing can also be implemented such that it is not even along the whole length of the spindle but the adjusting notches defined by the toothing may differ from one another in the longitudinal direction of the spindle. In that case, the adjusting notches are close to each other near the locking nut but the distance between them increases towards the other end of the spindle. Furthermore, the end flange or toothing provided at the spindle end towards the sleeve can be shaped into a proper flange which cannot be pulled out of the sleeve in any position. The flange can also be the kind of flange described above which substantially corresponds to the rest of the toothing but which is shaped so as to allow the spindle to be pulled completely out of the sleeve, if desired. The end flange can also be made of a separate part which is attached to the spindle end towards the sleeve by a screw, thread or the like.
The sleeve can be made as an integral part of the inner shaft section during manufacture. In a solution similar to the one described in the above example, the sleeve could thus be provided at the end of the inner shaft section towards the outer shaft section so that it resembles a separate sleeve. In this case, the sleeve could be a mere flange or the like formed at the end of the inner shaft section and provided with a suitably shaped opening for the spindle.
It will be obvious to a person skilled in the art that, as the technology advance, the inventive concept can be implemented in various ways. The invention and its embodiments are thus not limited to the examples described above but they may vary within the scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20020999 | May 2002 | FI | national |
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