Historically, the geometry of knife blades has varied significantly in length, thickness and shape of the blade. This has been particularly the case for sport, pocket knife and tactical knife blades.
In order to control the sharpening angle, the face of the knife blade is laid on a planar surface, acting as the angle guide, and held by hand, a magnet or a spring against that surface.
Because of the geometric complexity and variety of thickness of the sports and tactical knife blades, the positioning of these type of blades on such planar angle guides is unstable and ambiguous. Consequently, the precise angular control of the edge facets to be sharpened are further compromised when the knife blades are excessively thick and the blade is held in place against the guide by a spring which creates increasing friction as the blade is pulled through the sharpening slot.
An object of this invention is to provide a sharpener capable of precision sharpening a larger variety of knives, and in particular be more effective in sharpening and angle control the thicker sport, pocket knife and tactical knife that contain a partially hollow ground concave blade.
Recently, these inventors have discovered a combination of a unique spring and knife angle guide design that can effectively hold the above knives precisely and reproducibly in position during the sharpening process.
The success of this design centers on “mimicking”, in reverse, the typical profiles of the type of knife blades on the knife angle guide and preferably the spring that holds the knife against the angle guide.
Prior art on combinations of knife angle guides and springs are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,611,726 ('726 patent) and 7,686,676 ('676 patent), all of the details of which are incorporated herein by reference thereto. In both of these patents, the knife angle guides, against which the knife blade rested were planar. These type of planar angle guides are particularly effective when the surface of the knife blade is itself planar and the contact surface of the guide matches that of the knife blade. However, many of the sport, pocket knife and tactical knife blades are not planar. Many of these knives have hollow ground blades as shown in
While the conventional shaped knife holding spring works well with a flat faced blade, the typical hunting knives 2, having blade 32, shown in
The cross section A-A of these blades is shown in adjacent
Although the '676 patent addressed this inconsistency by focusing the spring guide force against the hollow ground (concave) portion of the knife blade, it only partially addressed the ambiguity of the blade's positioning on the planar knife guide. By applying the pressure in the hollow ground portion of the knife blade, it forced the opposite side of the knife blade to assume a position against the planar knife guide following a tangent line spanning the apex of the blade edge to the shoulder of the hollow ground geometry where it transitions to the flat portion of the blade. Although this improvement covered by the '676 patent, improved the guiding of knife blades over the '726 patent, the inventors noted that instability still existed in alignment of sports and tactical knives, particularly thicker ones with hollow ground blades, where the friction between knife guide and the spring increases, requiring greater force to pull the knife through. However, the guide system described in the '676 patent allowed for significant tilting of the knife blade thereby diminishing the precision of the edge formation.
An additional benefit of this guide structure is that the spine, or thicker portion, of the knife blade is in reduced contact with either the upper portion of the guide surface or the spring guide, thereby reducing the friction when sharpening thick knives. With thinner knives, contact with the upper portions of the guide surface or spring guide may be totally eliminated, thereby further reducing friction during sharpening.
In order to increase the versatility of sharpeners with the novel knife holding spring 14 and knife guide 12 design as described above, these inventors discovered that by controlling the relative stiffness of the lower and upper portions of the spring arms it is possible to stabilize the larger sporting and tactical blades as described but also to stabilize smaller pocket knives and kitchen paring knives.
Surprisingly, the inventors also discovered that by combining part of this invention, namely the non-planar knife guide 12 of this invention with the spring guide described in the '676 patent, an effective and stable positioning of the knife edge relative to the abrasive surface was achieved. This was possible because the focus of the spring guide force, as described in the '676 patent, is against the lower portion of the hollow ground knife blade. Furthermore, this combination of non-planar knife guide of this invention with the spring guide of '676 patent also effectively sharpens knives with narrower blades such as paring knives, fish filet knives and pocket knives.
As illustrated
As shown in
Although the prior description has been directed to sharpeners using abrasive coated sharpening members it is to be understood that the invention can also be practiced where the member is a steeling or conditioning member substantially free of abrasive particles. Reference is made to U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,235,004 and 7,287,445, all of the details of which are incorporated herein by reference thereto. Thus, the invention can be incorporated into sharpeners which have sharpening members which use abrasives, which steel the edge or which condition the edge. The knife holding springs will be effective regardless of what is being done to the edge facets. Accordingly, unless otherwise specified the term “knife sharpener” and the term “sharpening member” are intended to include abrasive sharpening as well as steeling or conditioning.
While the need for this improved design has been described as it is used in electric or powered sharpeners that commonly have a force applying spring urging an abrasive covered disk toward the knife edge as it is being sharpened, this novel spring design is applicable also to manual sharpeners with stationary abrading or steeling surfaces.
The guide technology of this invention can be used for sharpening metal knives or ceramic knives, even knives that do not have hollow ground blades.
This application is based on provisional application Ser. No. 62/104,138, filed Jan. 16, 2015, all of the details of which are incorporated herein by reference thereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62104138 | Jan 2015 | US |