This application claims the benefit of Finnish Patent Application No. 20115856, filed Sep. 1, 2011 and Finnish Patent Application No. 20116306, filed Dec. 22, 2011, both of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
The invention relates to a sharpener for sharpening a cutting tool, such as a knife, the sharpener comprising a body part, a rotatable sharpening roll supported by the body part, and a first guide groove above the sharpening roll for receiving a blade of a first tool and for guiding it in relation to the sharpening roll.
Such a sharpener for sharpening household knives is commonly known. When the blade of a knife to be sharpened is placed into the groove of the sharpening roll and the blade is moved a number of times back and forth in relation to the body part of the sharpener, the sharpening roll, at the same time as it rotates, sharpens the blade of the tool. For the sharpening to be carried out correctly and for the blade to be sharpened rapidly and easily, the blade of the tool to be sharpened must be at a specific angle to the groove of the sharpening roll. To facilitate the placing of the blade to the correct angle in relation to the sharpening roll, the sharpener comprises a wedge-like guide groove above the sharpening roll for receiving the blade and guiding it to the correct angle. The guide groove keeps the blade in the correct position when the blade is moved back and forth on the sharpening roll. If the guide groove is made too wide, i.e., there is a gap that is too large between the guide groove and the blade side, it is possible that the blade to be sharpened sets inclined at a wrong angle in relation to the sharpening roll, in which case the blade to be sharpened becomes lopsided. This means that for narrow blades, a narrow guide groove must be provided.
As is understood from the above disclosure, a sharpener designed for narrow blades must have a guide groove that is narrow enough so that a wider blade, such as an axe blade, becomes tightly wedged to the walls of the guide groove and the portion of the blade to be sharpened does not reach the groove of the sharpening roll. Thus, sharpening is naturally impossible. In fact, because of this there are sharpeners with a wider guide groove for axes and wide blades than in sharpeners designed for knives. Such sharpeners for axes cannot be used without problems—for the above reasons—for sharpening knives.
It is an object of the invention to provide an easy to use and structurally simple sharpener that is applicable for sharpening both narrow blades, such as knife blades, and wide blades, such as axe blades, without a need for two separate sharpeners.
For this to be achieved, the invention provides for use a sharpener for sharpening a cutting tool, such as a knife, the sharpener comprising a body part, a rotatable sharpening roll supported by the body part, and a first guide groove above the sharpening roll for receiving a blade of a first tool and for guiding it in relation to the sharpening roll, the sharpener further comprising a second guide groove, which is wider than the first guide groove, to be arranged above the sharpening roll to allow a blade of a second tool to be received and guided in relation to the sharpening roll.
The invention is based on an idea of providing one and the same sharpener with guide grooves of different width, which grooves can be positioned at a desired location above one and the same sharpening roll for guiding a blade in relation to the appropriate sharpening roll. This allows the one and the same sharpening roll to be utilized for sharpening both narrow blades and wide blades. The narrower one of the guide grooves is arranged above the sharpening roll when a narrow blade is to be sharpened and guided, and the larger one of the guide grooves is arranged above the sharpening roll when a wider blade is to be sharpened and guided.
The sharpener preferably comprises a frame part movable in relation to the body part and provided with the first guide groove and the second guide groove, the frame part being preferably further movable in relation to the body part optionally between a first and a second position, a first guide groove thereof being above the sharpening roll in the first position and in the second position its second guide groove is above the sharpening roll.
The body part is preferably fastened to an outer cover which surrounds the frame part, the outer cover being provided with an opening setting above the body part, the opening having a width larger than that of the second guide groove, and by moving the frame part in relation to the body part optionally the first guide groove or the second guide groove are placeable at the opening to allow the tool to enter the guide groove at the opening, the outer cover being arranged to cover the one of the guide grooves not placed at the opening. This type of outer cover prevents the tool from being accidentally placed into a guide groove that is not above the sharpening roll and, at the same time, prevents the bottom of the groove in question from being damaged by a blade hitting it or in some other way coming into contact with it.
The outer cover is preferably tubular and arranged to guide the movement of an inner body between the first and the second positions. A tubular outer cover is easy to get a hold of when the sharper is used. In addition, the tubular outer cover is easy to manufacture.
The sharpener preferably comprises positioning means for positioning the inner body under a spring or magnetic load optionally to the first position or the second position. When the frame part is under spring load or magnet load in one of the positions of use, the spring load keeps it in the desired place in relation to the sharpening roll. An advantage of an embodiment in which the loading takes place by a magnetic force is that the moving of the sharpener from one position of use to another is more silent than if a spring is used for implementing the movement.
The preferred embodiments of the sharpener are disclosed in the accompanying claims.
Major advantages of the sharpener of the invention is that is allows blades of different thicknesses to be easily sharpened and yet the sharpener is structurally simple and easy to use.
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to two preferred embodiments thereof and to the accompanying drawings, in which
The sharpener of the invention as shown in
The body part 1 is attached to the bottom of the outer cover 3 by means of a resilient locking stud 5. The bottom of the outer cover 3 is provided with a hole 6 for receiving the locking stud 5. When the body part 1 is attached to the outer cover 2, the locking stud 5 is surrounded by the hole 6 and the walls of the hole 6 prevent the body part 1 from moving in relation to the outer cover 3. If the body part 1 is to be removed from the outer cover 3, the stud 5 is pressed through the hole 6 in the direction of arrow A to such an extent that it is released from the hole 6, after which the body part 1 may be moved in a longitudinal direction of the outer cover 3 and be removed from the outer cover. The locking stud 5 has been rendered flexible by connecting it to the bottom of the body part 1 by a flexible neck part 7. The body part 1 with its neck part 7 and stud 5 is made of plastic as a single piece. The neck part 7 is flexible because it is narrow and thin. The stud 5 and the neck part 7 are surrounded by a gap 8 similar to a key hole.
The frame part 4 comprises a wedge-like guide groove 11 for receiving a blade 10 to be sharpened and for guiding it against the groove 9 of the sharpening roll 2 (the groove 9 is well visible in
The frame 4 part is movable in a longitudinal direction of the body part 1 so that it is placeable from the position of
When the frame part 4 is in the position shown in
When the frame part 4 is in the position shown in
The compression spring 17 keeps the frame part 4 spring-loaded either in positions of
The compression action in question of the compression spring 17 has been obtained by compressing it between protrusions 23 and 24 provided in the body part 1 and by allowing it to expand and curve to opposite lateral directions towards the stopper means 19 and 22. The compression spring 17 tends to expand towards the stopper means 19 of the body part 1 and to push the stopper member 18 towards the stopper means 19 of the body part, if an external force moves the compression spring to the right of line S-S defined by the protrusions 23, 24.
The protrusions 23 and 24 enter into ends 25, 26 of the compression spring 17 and thus prevent the compression spring 17 from coming loose from its biased, compressed state. Instead of the protrusions 23, 24, other kind of support means may be used for supporting the spring ends, such as recesses which the compression spring ends enter. Reference numerals 27 to 30 denote curved supports against which the periphery of the compression spring 17 may rest. In the case of
The frame part 4 is made to move from the first position of
The frame part 4 can be made to move from the second position shown in
The sharpener is made of plastic by injection moulding. The outer cover 3 is preferably a mixture of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and polycarbonate (PC). Alternatively, it may be ABS or PC, for example. In order to increase friction between the outer cover 3 and the base to facilitate the use of the sharpener, the bottom of the outer cover 3 is preferably provided with protrusions 35 made of an elastomer material; alternatively, the bottom of the outer cover 3 may be provided with a larger surface made of thermoplastic elastomer (TPE), i.e. a rubber-like thermoplast or a mixture of plastic and rubber. The body part 1 and the frame part 4 are preferably of ABS. Alternatively, they may be made of polypropylene (PP) or polyoxymethylene (POM), for example.
The sharpener is used by placing it onto a surface, by holding the outer cover 3 and pushing the blade 10 to be sharpened back and forth in the guide groove 11 or, if the blade 15 is wide, back and forth in the guide groove 14. The back and forth movement makes the sharpening roll 2 rotate and as the roll rotates it sharpens the blade 10, 15 of the tool.
The invention has been presented above with reference to only two embodiments and it is therefore pointe out that the details of the invention may be implemented in various ways within the scope of the accompanying claims. Consequently, the shape of the sharpener, for example, may deviate from the one disclosed. The outer cover 3, 3′ is not necessarily needed, although it is highly recommended, because it provides a number of advantages: it supports the frame part 4, 4′ (to the inner body) and keeps the frame part against the body part 1, 1′, it is easy to take hold of by hand when the sharpener is used and it allows the sharpener to be provided with an excellent outer appearance. The frame part 4, 4′ does not need to be supported by a spring or a magnet in its different positions of use, although this is extremely recommendable from the point of view of use of the sharpener, because a spring or magnet support allows to provide the necessary lateral support of the blade 10, 15 to be sharpened against the walls of the guide grooves 11, 14. The guide grooves 11 and 14 do not necessarily have to be wedge-like, although a wedge shape is most preferable for supporting the blade to be sharpened. Instead of a ceramic sharpening roll, a diamond sharpening roll may be used.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20115856 | Sep 2011 | FI | national |
20116306 | Dec 2011 | FI | national |
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