The present invention is in the technical field of tools. More particularly, the present invention is in the technical field of tools altering material including pipe, conduit, fittings, or other material. Currently there is no tool on the market that will provide a finished surface on said varied material when cut, bent, or otherwise modified.
The following is intended to be a brief summary of the invention and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
The present invention is a tool for users to provide a flush, finished surface free of burrs or other defects on material including pipes and conduit. The tool may either attach to a device such as a drill or be a stand-alone tool. A guide slides over the material end, enveloping said material end that has been cut or otherwise altered. The guide holds the material end in place. Inside the tool is an abrasive surface, typically opposite of the open end where material is inserted. Force is applied to create friction between the inserted material end and the abrasive surface. Through this force material fragments are removed to create a finished surface on the material end.
In one embodiment and best mode, the present invention includes a cylindrical guide with one end open, an abrasive surface inside the guide, and a shaft which may be an arbor-type machinery tool affixed to the guide. An external means for rotation such as a drill may be used.
A guide fits over an alterable material, such as a PVC pipe. The best mode invention shows a guide in cylinder shape minimally larger in diameter than the material. The guide is minimally larger as to not allow the present invention to shift its axial orientation relative to the material. This fit enables the user to remove unwanted material through pressure from the close guide end toward the open end when the material is inserted. This results in a sanded, flush material end. Additionally, the guide may be used to house the other components.
Furthermore a guide may include a port or ports for venting and material discharge. When pressure is applied while the best mode invention is being rotated, friction is generated. To prevent pipe warping or deformation, the sanded debris should be discharged and ambient air be exchanged. The port or ports accomplish not only discharging material but provides heat outtake and ambient air intake. The port quantity and shape may vary;
The construction details of the guide are that the guide may be made of a PVC end cap or of any other sufficiently rigid and strong material such as high-strength alloy, metal, and the like. Further, the various components of the inventive tool can be made of the above or different materials.
An abrasive surface may be on the interior end of the guide cylinder opposite the opening. One embodiment of the abrasive surface is a sanding disk. The sanding disc adheres to the guide cylinder by an adhesive, a circumferential notch, friction, or other means. The sanding disc may be permanently installed or may be replaceable.
An arbor shaft may be affixed to the guide by threading, welding, or other means known by a person having ordinary skill in the art. In the best mode, the shaft connects the guide to the external rotation means such as a drill.
The force may be applied rotationally as in the best mode case though it may be through vibration, longitudinal movement, latitudinal movement, or other directional force.
The process as shown in best mode follows. A shaft, shown as an arbor, is connected to a drill. The arbor is then connected onto the invention by threading it onto a guide. The guide is put over an altered PVC pipe until sandpaper disc makes contact with the PVC pipe end. Force is applied to maintain the PVC pipe and sandpaper disc mating, and the drill trigger engages to begin rotation. The rotating invention grinds down the PVC pipe end as long as force is applied. The grinding removes non uniform edges and burrs in a perpendicular orientation to the applied force. The guide enables the applied force to not shift. Sanded material exits the guide area through the port or ports. The grinding should stop once a finished, flush edge results that is as close to a manufacture edge as possible. The tool is pulled away and off from the material and the desired edge is achieved.
While the present invention has been described in terms of particular embodiments and applications, in both summarized and detailed forms, it is not intended that these descriptions in any way limit its scope to any such embodiments and applications, and it will be understood that many substitutions, changes and variations in the described embodiments, applications and details of the method and system illustrated herein and of their operation can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of this invention.
The tool may attach to a drill, or it may be a stand-alone tool. One embodiment would be a permanently connected rotational force, such as a drill, connected to the tool. The tool may then be removable for different sizes. The shaft, such as an arbor, may be removable with a permanently affixed tool.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/241,006, entitled “Smooth Finish Tool”, filed Oct. 13, 2015 by Richard W. Knutson, the entire contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62241006 | Oct 2015 | US |