The present invention refers to a snap-type corkscrew, i.e. a spring-out type corkscrew.
Corkscrews for drawing corks from bottles, as they have been known and used up to this moment, are usually provided with a handle, to which there are pivotally connected a screw, or spiral, for engaging the cork to be drawn and an arm provided with resting or abutting members. When the corkscrew is used to draw a cork from a bottle, such resting members are associated to the neck of the bottle so as to provide the fulcrum of a lever. While it is possible for the torque required to rotate the arm relative to the handle to be kept conveniently low by appropriate construction measures, so as to facilitate drawing the cork from the bottle, the torque needed to rotate the screw relative to the handle is on the contrary relatively high. This is basically due to the fact that the screw is a part that is normally subject to severe stress and forces when a cork is being drawn, so that the pivoting connection thereof must be sized and constructively designed accordingly, while also taking into due account the fact that, when in use, the screw has to perform rather short a rotation relative to the handle.
Usually, therefore, in view of arranging a corkscrew for it to be ready to draw a cork from a bottle, the user has to make use of both his/her hands in order to be able to displace the screw from the resting position thereof, in which the same screw lies extending along the handle, to a working position thereof, in which the screw comes to extend in a direction that is substantially orthogonal to the major dimension of the handle. It can be most readily appreciated that such procedure is particularly inconvenient to be carried out, especially by professional operators, such as for instance waiters or sommeliers, who are normally required to repeat the above-described procedure a lot of times during the day, possibly while having one hand already occupied in holding the bottle.
Such procedure is complicated to a further extent by the fact that it requires two separate movements to be performed, i.e. a first movement to pivotally move the arm away from the handle, and a second movement to pivotally bring the screw in a position extending substantially orthogonally to the same handle.
A further disadvantage of prior-art corkscrews lies in the fact that, in the above-described procedure followed to set the corkscrew ready for use, the screw has to be handled, i.e. taken out manually and this is neither easy nor convenient to be done, actually, considering both the fact that the screw being in the shape of a spiral does not offer any point for it to be conveniently seized with the hand, and the presence of a sharp point at the end of the same screw that may hurt the user.
The need is therefore generally felt for corkscrews to be available, which are so designed and constructed as to be able to be used in a really convenient and expedite manner using just, a single hand.
It is in fact a main object of the present invention to provide a corkscrew that is capable of doing away with the drawbacks and disadvantages generally encountered in prior-art designs.
Within such main object, it is a purpose of the present invention to provide a corkscrew that is effective in reducing the effort required for a user to be able to displace and arrange the screw in a position, in which it is capable of being inserted in a cork.
Another purpose of the present invention is to provide a corkscrew that ensures an improved convenience in use.
A further purpose of the present invention is to provide a corkscrew that is simple to manufacture and assemble.
Still another purpose of the present invention is to provide a corkscrew that is capable of making it definitely easier for a cork to be drawn from the neck of a bottle.
According to the present invention, these aims, along with further ones that will become apparent from the following disclosure, are reached in a corkscrew that incorporates the features and characteristics as defined and recited in claim 1 appended hereto.
Advantages and features of the present invention will anyway be more readily understood from the description that is given below by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to above-noted Figures, a corkscrew according to the present invention comprises a handle 1 featuring a first end portion 2, in which there are provided drawing means 4 for removing a cork from the neck of a bottle, and a second end portion 3, in which there may be provided a cutting device 5 for the removal of a film wrapped around the neck of a bottle to seal the mouth in which the cork is fitted, wherein this cutting device 5 shall be described in greater detail further on.
In the first end portion 2 thereof, the handle is provided with a cavity 6 that extends along the longitudinal direction of the handle 1. This cavity 6 is provided in view of receiving and accommodating a support structure 7 consisting of a pair of mutually facing walls 8 and 9, which are spaced from each other by a further wall 10 extending thereacross, so as to form a hollow space therebetween. The support structure 7, which is intended to enable the cork drawing means 4 to be attached to the handle 1, is preferably made by correspondingly forming and bending a sheet-metal blank at the press.
The walls 8 and 9 of the support structure 7, and correspondingly the handle 1, are provided with a pair of apertures 12a, 12b arranged so as to face each other in view of being able to pivotally receive a pin 13 associated to an arm 14. Such pin 13 extends across the cavity 6 and the hollow space 11, and enables the arm 14 to rotate relative to the handle 1 and the support structure 7 mounted within the cavity 6. The arm 14 is provided with one or more pairs of resting elements 15 that are effective in enabling the arm 14 to be associated to the neck of a bottle (not shown in the Figures) during a cork drawing operation. The pair of mutually facing apertures 12a, 12b may be provided in an appropriately elongated shape so as to allow the pin 13 to perform a translational motion that enables a cork to be drawn by displacing the fulcrum of the lever that is created by having the arm 14 resting against the neck of a bottle, and acting on the handle 1 accordingly.
A screw 16, which is adapted to be screwed into the body of a cork, is pivotally associated to the support structure 7, and correspondingly to the handle 1, by means of a pin 13a, which is in turn inserted in a pair of holes 17 provided in the walls 8 and 9 of the support structure 7.
The screw 16 and the arm 14 form the afore-cited drawing means 4, which—when the corkscrew is not being used—are folded, i.e. turned back in the direction of the arrow A shown in
The screw 16 is kept in the resting position thereof by the action of appropriate retaining means 20, 220, 320, 420, which are provided in order to temporarily retain the arm 14, or the same screw 16, against the handle 1. The arm 14 and the screw 16 being arranged to at least partially lie upon each other when in the resting position thereof and the instability of the screw 16 in such position ensure that, when the retaining means 20, 220, 320, 420 are released, the screw 16 and, as a result, the arm 14 tend to automatically move, i.e. swing out into the operative position thereof, thereby setting the corkscrew in the ready-for-use configuration thereof.
In a first embodiment of the inventive corkscrew, which is illustrated in
Illustrated in
The retaining means 220 releasably retain the arm 14 against the handle 1 and comprise a detent device 41 that is adapted to set itself in an arrangement in which it is oriented orthogonally relative to the longitudinal extension of the handle 1, between the walls 8 and 9 of the support structure housed into the cavity 6 of the handle 1. When the arm 14 is displaced in the direction indicated by the arrow A in
As soon as the arm 14 reaches a position close to the resting one, the detent device 41 causes the arm 14 to displace towards the second end portion 3 of the handle 1, as indicated by the arrow B in
For the retaining means 220 to be then released, all it takes is displacing the arm 14 from the resting position thereof towards the second end portion 3 of the handle 1, as indicated by the arrow B in
Illustrated in
Releasing the retaining means 320 will cause the screw 16 to displace from its resting position, which is a position of unstable equilibrium for the same screw 16, towards the operative position thereof, owing to the action of the actuation means 18, thereby setting the corkscrew in an arrangement in which it is ready for use.
The actuation means 18 preferably impart an impulsive movement to the screw 16 and, owing to the screw 16 and the arm 14 lying at least partially upon each other, also to the arm 14. Anyway, the actual movement imparted by the actuation means 18 may be so selected as to more appropriately comply with particular needs or requirements, such as for instance a slow-sliding motion.
Illustrated in
This cutting device 5 is effective in allowing for a convenient removal of the film wrapped around the neck of the bottle in view of sealing the mouth in which the cork is fitted. To this purpose, the cutting device 5 comprises a stationary portion 38 provided in or integral with the handle 1, and a support 34 that is slidably associated to the latter by means of two guide members consisting of arms 36 that are integral with the support 34 and capable of sliding within apertures 37 provided in the stationary portion 38. The support 34 is movable relative to the stationary portion 38 between a resting position, in which the support 34 lies close against the stationary portion 38 and the arms 36 are fully inserted into the apertures 37, and a second operative position, in which the support 34 is spaced away from said stationary portion 38 and the arms 36 are fully extracted from the apertures 37, as this is best illustrated in
The cutting device 5 comprises some cutting lips or blades 33, 32 having preferably a rounded shape. A first couple of cutting lips 33 is located on the stationary portion 38 of the handle 1, and a second couple of cutting lips 32 is located on the support 34.
The support 34 and the stationary portion 38 comprise cavities 35 configured in the shape of an arc of a circumference and so arranged as to face each other, so that, when the support 34 is in its working position (
It will be readily appreciated that the number of the cutting lips 32, 33 used, as well as the conformation of the support 34 and the way in which it is connected to the stationary portion 38 of the handle 1, may of course be so selected as to best comply with actual needs and requirements. So, for instance, the support 34 may be hinged on to the handle 1 and the cutting lips or blades may be comprised of one or more rounded elements.
Fully apparent from the above description is therefore the ability of the present invention to effectively reach the aims and advantages cited afore, through the provision of a corkscrew that is able to facilitate cork drawing operations, i.e. to make it definitely easier, more convenient and expedient for a cork to be drawn from a bottle. The corkscrew according to the present invention is simple in its construction and overall structure, is easy to assemble, and may further be embodied in a variety of different forms, all of which equally effective. Furthermore, the movement of the cork drawing screw has been properly conditioned in view of reducing the effort required for the user to be able to set the screw in the operative position thereof. With a corkscrew provided in accordance with the present invention, a user is in fact able to use just a single hand to get the corkscrew ready for drawing a cork from the neck of a bottle.
It shall be appreciated that the materials used, as well as the shape and the sizing of the various parts, may each time be selected so as to more appropriately meet the particular requirements or suit the particular application.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PN2006A000088 | Nov 2006 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/060650 | 10/8/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/19/2009 |