The present invention provides a snap-off blade knife having a fixed feature that restricts the amount of the blade that may be extended from the knife handle.
Commercially available snap-off blade knives, sometimes referred to as is box cutters, use a specially designed blade that includes several connected segments, each separated by a score line. This design allows a user to intentionally break off and discard dull segments, thus providing a new, sharp point or edge at the end of the knife blade. Once the dull segment has been removed, the blade may be advanced by the user to fully expose the new point and blade edge from the blade handle. With this design, however, more than one blade segment can be advanced from the blade handle at a time, which may in turn result in inadvertent and/or unintentional breakage of the exposed segments.
Briefly, the present invention provides a snap-off blade knife having a handle including a proximal portion, a distal portion, and a handle axis extending between the proximal portion and the distal portion. The knife also includes a blade slidingly disposed within the handle along the handle axis. The blade comprises a plurality of scored segments. A blade stop fixedly extends from the distal portion of the handle. The blade stop includes a stop arm disposed to engage blade to limit extension of the blade from the handle.
The invention further provides a kit including the knife and a blade snap-off tool. The blade snap-off tool includes an elongated body having a tool proximal end and a tool distal end. The body has a slot extending therein from the distal end toward the proximal end.
The invention also provides a snap-off blade knife comprising a handle having a proximal portion, a distal portion, and a handle axis extending between the proximal portion and the distal portion. A blade is slidingly disposed within the handle along the handle axis. The blade comprises a plurality of scored segments. The knife also includes means for preventing the blade from extending from the handle farther than a predetermined limit.
The foregoing summary, as well as the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments of the invention, will be better understood when read in conjunction with the appended drawings, which are incorporated herein and constitute part of this specification. For the purposes of illustrating the invention, there are shown in the drawings exemplary embodiments of the present invention. It should be understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the precise arrangements and instrumentalities shown. In the drawings, the same reference numerals are employed for designating the same elements throughout the several figures. In the drawings:
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein with reference to specific embodiments, the invention is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the disclosure without departing from the invention. As used herein, the term “proximal” is intended to mean a direction closer to a user of the inventive knife, and the term “distal” is intended to mean a direction farther from the user of the inventive knife.
Referring to
Referring specifically to
Handle 110 includes a generally elongated handle body 112 that has a proximal portion 114, a distal portion 116, and a handle axis 117 that extends between proximal portion 114 and distal portion 116.
Handle 110 further includes an upper blade track 118, which extends distally from an upper portion 119 of distal portion 116 of handle 110, and a lower blade track 120, which extends distally from a lower portion 122 of distal portion 116 of handle 110. Blade 130 rides along handle 110 between upper and lower blade tracks 118, 120.
Handle 110 also includes a blade advance slider 124, which is coupled to blade 130 and is mounted for sliding movement between upper and lower blade tracks 118, 120. Blade advance slider 124 is used to advance and retract blade 130 out of and into handle 110.
Blade 130 is generally elongated, with a sharp cutting edge 132. An exposed side 134 adjacent to cutting edge 132 extends obliquely from cutting edge 132 at an angle of about 60 degrees. A point 136 is formed at an intersection of cutting edge 132 and exposed side 134.
Blade 130 includes a plurality of score lines 138 that extend from cutting edge 132 generally parallel to exposed side 134. Score lines 138 divide blade 130 into discrete segments 139, and allow blade 130 to be snapped therealong, allowing the snapped off segment of blade 130 to be disposed of, while generating a new exposed side 134. In an exemplary embodiment, a length of blade segment 139 along handle axis 117 between adjacent score lines 138 may be about 5 mm, measured along cutting edge 132. Blade 130 also includes an axis of extension 144 that extends along handle axis 117.
As shown in
Typically, blade 130 has a thickness of between about 0.6 mm and about 0.7 mm. In order to prevent blade 130 from inadvertently being extended beyond blade stop 150, blade stop 150 may have a thickness of about 3 mm, such that about 1 mm of blade stop 150 extends on either side of blade 130 when blade 130 engages blade stop 150. In an exemplary embodiment, the thickness of blade stop 150 is about four (4) times greater than the thickness of blade 130. The location and thickness of blade stop 150 significantly reduces the likelihood that blade 130 will be able to be extended beyond blade stop 150.
While an exemplary blade 130 used in the embodiments described above has a height along exposed side 134 of about 9 mm, those skilled in the art will recognize that knives using blades having exposed side heights of different sizes, such as, for example, 18 mm, 25 mm, or other sizes, are within the scope of the present invention.
Blade stop 150 extends distally from upper blade track 118. Blade stop 150 includes a longitudinal portion 152 that extends from upper blade track 118 of handle 110 parallel to the axis of extension 144. A stop arm 154 extends obliquely from longitudinal portion 152 relative to axis of extension 144. Longitudinal portion 152 is sufficiently long such that blade 130 may be extended along axis of extension 144 from handle 110 only sufficiently far enough to expose blade 130 from lower blade track 120 a length from point 136 to the first score line 138 before blade 130 engages stop arm 154. Blade stop 150 is a finger-like appendage that provides sufficient clearance so as not to interfere with normal cutting operations with knife 100 or not to interfere with breaking used and/or dull blade segments 139 from blade 130.
In an exemplary embodiment, stop arm 154 extends from longitudinal portion 152 at an angle such that, when blade 150 engages stop arm 154, blade 130 engages stop arm 154 only with a point contact.
In an alternative exemplary embodiment of a safety knife assembly 200 illustrated in
Referring now to
Blade segment snap-off tool 170 may include a generally elongated body 172 having a proximal end 174 and a distal end 176. A longitudinal segment blade snap-off tool axis 177 extends through body 172 from proximal end 174 to distal end 176. Distal end 176 includes a slot 178 that extends along cutting tool axis 177 from distal end 176 toward proximal end 174. Slot 178 is at least long enough to fully engage the length of exposed side 134 of blade 130. In an exemplary embodiment, slot 178 has a slot length greater than the height of blade 130.
In use, a user grips knife 100 by handle 110 and uses his/her thumb to engage slider 124. Slider 124 is advanced distally along axis of extension 144 such that blade 130 is extended from handle 110 along axis of extension 144. Blade 130 is extended until exposed side 134 engages stop arm 154, allowing only one full segment of blade 130 to be exposed from distal end of lower blade track 120.
Knife 100 may then used to cut a substrate (not shown). When the user determines that the exposed portion of cutting edge 132 is too dull to cut the substrate, the user engages blade segment snap-off tool 170 to break blade 130 along the first score line 138. The user inserts the exposed segment 139 of blade 130 into slot 178 in blade segment snap-off tool 170 along the direction of arrow “A”, as shown in
As shown in
Knife 100 may be pivoted relative to cutting tool axis 177 while holding one of knife 100 and blade segment snap-off tool 170 stationary, or, alternatively, while rotating both knife 100 and blade segment snap-off tool 170 about cutting tool axis 177, but in opposite directions. Knife 100 is rotated relative to blade segment snap-off tool 170 until blade 130 snaps along the first score line 138, cutting off the first segment 139 of blade 130. Blade segment snap-off tool 170 is then removed from knife 100, and the snapped off segment 139 of blade 130 may be discarded as described above.
After snapped off segment 139 of blade 130 is discarded, the user may then engage slider 124 to again advance blade 130 distally along axis of extension 144 as discussed above. After user is finished with knife 100, user may retract blade 130 proximally along axis of extension 144 into handle 110 until blade 130 is fully retained within handle 110.
Although illustrated in
Mechanical testing has been conducted to determine an amount of force required to exert on a blade to cause a blade segment fracture.
For a single exposed blade segment using a knife 100 with a blade stop 150 according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention or without using a blade stop according to two different embodiments of prior art knives, the measured force necessary to break the segment averaged about 25.5 pounds.
Because the knife according to the present invention does not allow as many as two blade segments to be exposed, the knife according to the present invention was not able to be used for tests with two or three exposed blade segments. For two exposed blade segments using the two prior art knives, the force necessary to break both of the exposed segments together was as low as about 8 pounds. For three exposed blade segments, the force necessary to break all three of the exposed segments was as low as about 4 pounds.
An analysis of variance indicated that the forces measured with two and three exposed blade segments were significantly lower in excess of the 99% confidence level when compared to the force necessary to break a single exposed blade. While the two embodiments of the prior art knives allow a single segment to be exposed, only the present invention includes the fixed stop that prevents more than the single segment to be fully exposed.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein with reference to specific embodiments, the invention is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the invention.
This application claims priority to provisional application number U.S. 61/083,529, filed Jul. 25, 2008, which is incorporated herein, in its entirety, by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61083529 | Jul 2008 | US |