1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to tension rods, and in particular to tension rods for expanding against opposite walls or other support surfaces for holding curtains, hangers or other articles in place on the tension rod.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Tension rods incorporating telescoping tubes for being installed between walls having different distances between them are well known in the art. Typical tension rods are known for hanging shower curtains. A number of such rods are known having long coil compression springs which are compressed as the telescoping tubes are pressed together and then released so the spring can expand and press the tubes against the walls. However, those rods show the least amount of tension force when the spring is in its expanded state when advantageously it should have its greatest strength, and show the highest tension force when the spring is in its compressed state. In some cases, threaded inner and outer rods are known. However, such of the rods often require a great number of rotations to get the desired length, and often cannot maintain a tight enough fit over time to maintain the rod in place, essentially under downwardly transverse loads. Such constructions are described in U.S. Pat. No. 704,403 (Thill), U.S. Pat. No. 2,079,267 (Vroom), U.S. Pat. No. 2,919,134 (Zuro) and U.S. Pat. No. 3,521,758 (Guilfoyle, Sr.). In some instances a biasing spring is combined with combinations of threaded rods, such as in U.S. Pat. No. 670,585 (Fowler), U.S. Pat. No. 856,316 (Thurston), U.S. Pat. No. 1,548,053 (Mead), U.S. Pat. No. 2,199,851 (Culver), CH 625601 (Baumann) and JP 2055100 (Wada), but these have not been found effective. Compression spring arrangements in tension rods are very well known, but involve a compromise in being reasonably easy to compress while providing sufficient holding force to keep the tension rod in place between opposing walls while the tension rod is under downward transverse loads. This type of tension rods area disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 468,987 (Lingley et al.), U.S. Pat. No. 519,840 (Edsall), U.S. Pat. No. 536,272 (Edsall), U.S. Pat. No. 645,543 (Birch), U.S. Pat. No. 647,986 (Roberts), U.S. Pat. No. 841,062 (Snyder et al.), U.S. Pat. No. 961,352 (Walters), U.S. Pat. No. 988,200 (Logsdon), U.S. Pat. No. 1,140,570 (Buckley), U.S. Pat. No. 1,178,994 (Crump), U.S. Pat. No. 1,425,247 (Galbreath), U.S. Pat. No. 1,639,551 (Booth), U.S. Pat. No. 2,032,842 (Gould), U.S. Pat. No. 2,519,996 (Blake), U.S. Pat. No. 2,973,870 (Schoos), U.S. Pat. No. 3,350,120 (Hinrichs), U.S. Pat. No. 3,952,877 (Kindl), U.S. Pat. No. 4,6037,726 (Schweers), U.S. Pat. No. 4,147,199 (Cameron), U.S. Pat. No. 5,242,065 (Hoban) and U.S. Publication Nos. 2008/0156952 (Nathan) and 2009/0101609 (Batshon). A flexible threaded rod without a spring is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,330,601 (Geltz). Rods are also known which are initially put between opposing walls, and later tightened against those walls. This can be difficult to do where there is no easy access between the walls and may not produce a tight fit. Other tension rods exist where the rods tend to “walk” or slip as outward tension force is applied to the tension rods.
None of the foregoing patent disclosures discloses a compression coil spring in a tension rod which maintains nearly constant tension before, during and after the tension rod is installed. No tension rods are known where a compression spring is located in a holding device disposed in one of a pair of telescoping tubes, wherein the tubes are compressed using low manual force, then twisting one of the tubes to tightly lock the compression spring in place, and then releasing the tubes between the walls. The present invention lacks the shortcomings of the prior art, including long compression springs, compression springs whose springs vary from being relatively high when in a compressed state and relatively weak in an expanded state. The present invention in its preferred form is easy for the average person to compress when required for installation, as is not true for the tension rod having a flexible worm gear for providing the tension force rather than a spring. Tension rods according to the preferred embodiments of the present invention do not tend to “walk” or slip along the surface during installation.
An object of the present invention is to provide an improved tension rod which can be expanded in a quick and easy way against opposing surfaces to hold the tension rod in place.
Another object of the invention is to provide a tension rod which can be easily adjustable for different lengths, yet can hold the tension rod in place between opposing walls with sufficient tension force to remain immovable under ordinarily expected forces.
It is also an object to provide a tension rod which can be adjusted to desired lengths without putting undue strain on the component parts of the tension rod.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an improved spring-loaded tension rod where the spring force is equal and constant for any length of the tension rod.
It is yet still another object of the present invention to provide a tension rod which can be adjusted to desired lengths without requiring more than easy-to-apply manual force, and then to require higher but yet easy-to-apply manual force for the final adjustment of the length of the tension rod.
A further object is the provision of an improved tension rod which requires no tools for the installation or removal thereof.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide a tension rod incorporating a compression spring whose spring force remains nearly constant as the tension is adjusted for installation and after installation between opposing walls or between other support surfaces.
An additional object is to provide a tension rod which does not “walk” or slip along the walls during or after installation.
Also an object of the present invention is to provide a tension rod which does not scratch or otherwise mar or damage the surface of the walls between which it extends.
Another further object of the invention is to provide a tension rod on which it is easy to apply the necessary forces to achieve the desired length, yet does not involve the possible buckling of the rod during or after installation of the rod between opposing walls.
It is also another object to provide a tension rod with spring-force loads that can be changed depending on wall strength, such as between dry wall and tiled walls.
An additional object is to provide an improved tension rod requiring simple and few parts.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide an improved tension rod which does not require the user thereof to understand the mechanism to be able to properly use the tension rod.
A still other object is to provide a tension rod which does not require undue access for installing the tension rod between opposing surfaces.
A yet further object of the invention is to provide a tension rod to be capable of measuring distances for the proper operation of the rod.
A general object is to provide a tension rod which can be made efficiently and economically and which is effective and practical to use.
These objects are achieved by the invention described below. The invention in its preferred form comprises a tube structure having an outer tube and an inner tube in a partially telescoping arrangement. A biasing device, preferably in the form of a compression spring located in the tube structure, provides a biasing force that puts a tension force on the inner tube and the outer tube. An expansion joint structure is fixable within the outer tube having outwardly expanding members which are engageable with the inner surface of the outer tube to hold the expansion joint structure in place. A spring stem-wedge-rod structure has a stem for extending through the spring and a wedge portion having a threaded rod which is an adjustable expansion control device, and the wedge portion moves partially through the expansion joint structure under the control of the threaded rod. The wedge expands the expansion joint assembly to fix it in the outer tube, and to then fix the end of the compression spring. In another version of the invention, a cam expansion structure is used wherein a cam body is twisted with a twisting of the inner tube to force the cam collar against the inner surface of the outer tube to fix the cam expansion structure in the outer tube. To use the inventive tension rod, one pulls the tubes away from each other to thereby set the overall length of the tension rod to be just longer than the space between the walls or other support surfaces between which the tension rod is to be disposed. The tubes of the tension rod are twisted relative to each other to fix the expansion joint structure in the outer tube. The tension rod is then placed between the opposing walls. The tubes of the tension rod are then released, and the spring pushes the tubes away from each other, and the free ends of the tubes engage the respective walls and hold the tension rod in place. The latter effect does not require twisting of the tension rod against the wall with which it is engaged and avoids such problems as they exist with prior tension rods.
The invention relates to tension rods, and comprises structure for locating a biasing device in the outer tube of a telescoping arrangement of an inner tube slidable in an outer tube, compressing the biasing device and fixing a biasing support structure at a predetermined location in the outer tube to enable the biasing device to expand the tubes to mount the tension rod between support surfaces. In its basic form, the invention includes a compressible biasing device which is preferably a compressible coil spring. The invention further has a biasing device support structure for initially being locatable at a predetermined position in the outer tube, assisting in the compression of the biasing device, and having members for fixing the biasing device support structure in the outer tube, after which the biasing device releasably mounts the tension rod in place. In its preferred form, the biasing device support structure is an expansion joint structure having resilient leaves for initially locating the expansion joint structure in place due to a manual adjustment of the outer and inner tubes. A set of expansion members are subsequently urged against the inner surface of the outer tube to fix the expansion joint structure at the predetermined location in the outer tube. A fixing structure cooperates with the biasing device support structure to compress the biasing device and to fix the latter structure in the outer tube. According to the preferred form of the invention, the fixing structure activates a fixing structure actuating device, the latter device being a spring stem-wedge-rod structure having a wedge from which extends a threaded rod for being screwed into a nut contained in the expansion joint structure, and a stem for extending through the coil spring. The includes a fixing-structure actuating device actuates the biasing device support structure in the predetermined location in the outer tube. The fixing structure pursuant to the preferred embodiment is a spring-retainer structure which is fixed in a rotational sense to the spring stem of the spring stem-wedge-rod structure, and is fixed to the inner tube. The inner tube is initially pressed towards the outer tube to be slightly wider than the support surfaces, and this also effects the initial location of the expansion joint structure. The inner tube is then twisted, and this forces the threaded rod into the nut causing the wedge to expand the expansion members to lock the expansion joint structure. The inner tube is then manually compressed into the outer tube, and the tension rod is placed between the support surfaces for expansion to mount the tension rod between the surfaces. The spring force of the compressible coil spring remains essentially uniform during the installation process regardless of the overall length to which the tension rod is set.
Referring to the drawings,
The preferred embodiment of the invention basically requires adjusting the overall length by the relative pulling or pushing, twisting and moving towards each other of inner tube 14 and outer tube 16 with the structure described below to locate and fix a spring, and then to compress the spring for expanding the tubes against the opposing surfaces.
Viewing
Expansion joint structure 24 is rotatably connected to a spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60. Spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60 has a longitudinal axis which is the same as axis 36 of tension rod 10 and includes a wedge portion 62 and a stem portion 64, shown most clearly in
Wedge portion 62 of spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60 has a closed, unthreaded bore 71 extending along longitudinal axis 36 from a free end surface 68 of wedge portion 62. Disposed within and extending from closed bore 71 is a partially threaded rod 72 which extends through an unthreaded open bore 74 of cylindrical portion 40, as well as through unthreaded bores 50 and 52 of disk portions 44 and 46. Partially threaded rod 72 is fixed to and part of spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60 such as by being molded in place. The portion of rod 72 which extends into wedge portion 62 and stem portion 64 is not threaded since it is molded with portions 62 and 64. Each of bores 71, 74, 50 and 52 is of the same diameter, which is wider than the diameter of threaded rod 72, and has as their coincident longitudinal axis, longitudinal axis 36. A bore 76, wider than either of bores 50 and 52 of nut holder 42, is disposed between disk portions 44 and 46, and a threaded hex nut 78, through which rod 72 is threaded, is located in bore 76. Another nut or fixed end portion 80 is disposed on the end of threaded rod 72. The outer diameter or outer dimension of fixed nut or end portion 80 is larger than the diameter of bore 52, and is provided to prevent the withdrawal of threaded rod 72 (and the entire spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60) from being withdrawn through hole 52 of expansion joint structure 24.
Stem portion 64 of spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60 has opposing, flattened outer surfaces 82 on opposite portions of stem portion 64 distal wedge portion 62, and opposing curved portion 83 (curved about longitudinal axis 36) to assist in keeping the coil spring discussed below in proper position symmetrical about stem portion 64. There are another pair of opposing surfaces of stem portion 64, namely opposing, recessed ribbed surfaces 84, and the widest portion between surfaces 84 are each less than the outer portion of an inner end surface 86 (proximate stem portion 64) of wedge portion 62. Spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60 is advantageously made from nylon.
A compression spring 88 is provided on stem portion 64 of spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60, and an end coil 90 of spring 88 abuts inner end surface 86 of wedge portion 62. Compression spring 88 is preferably zinc-coated spring steel having a wire diameter of 0.062 inches, a pitch of 0.25 inches and having a 25 pound force when compressed two inches.
A spring retainer 92 is provided for a number of purposes, including when coupled to inner tube 14 as described below, to operate spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60, and to hold spring 88 in position to effect the provision of tension to tension rod 10. Spring retainer 92 includes a spring-receiving bore 94 having a shoulder or abutment 96 as a stop for spring 88, and an exterior abutment 100 for engaging the end of inner tube 14. An end portion 101 of stem portion 64 extends through an open bore 102 of spring retainer 92, and a transverse hole 104 in end portion 101 receives a set pin 106 for retaining spring retainer 92 on spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60. Spring retainer 92 is preferably constructed as molded nylon Inner tube 14 has a series of inwardly extending dimples 107 (
Shower rod retainer sleeve 108, described hereinafter, is provided at part of an interface 110 (
Finial 20 of inner tube 14 and finial 22 of outer tube 16 can be made from stainless steel, as are inner tube 14 and outer tube 16, or of an appropriate plastic, or rubber or an artificial rubber. Finials 20 and 22 are dimensioned to slide on inner tube 14 and outer tube 16, respectively, with a tight fit. The ends of finials 20 and 22 are recessed at respective recesses, and plastic inserts 120 and 122, respectively, are press fit in the respective recesses to avoid marring the walls or other support surfaces to which tension rod 10 is affixed. Finials 20 and 22 should be made from a non-marring material, and suction cups could be used for walls such as ceramic tile walls or smooth metal walls.
In order to operate tension rod 10, one simply manually pulls inner tube 14 relative to outer tube 16 to a distance of about 1.25 inches wider than the distance between the walls where (for a compression spring as set forth above as a preferred spring) tension rod 10 is to be affixed. Ridges 56 of expansion leaves 54 initially fix expansion joint structure and spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60 in place in outer tube 16. The manual force required to do this can be done easily by older children and adults. The person adjusting rod 10 then twists inner tube 14 relative to outer tube 16 without changing the overall length of tension rod 10 to drive partially threaded rod 72 (and the spring stem-wedge-rod structure) partly through hex nut 78. This is an easy operation to perform. This causes wedge portion 62 to engage and force outwardly expansion members 32 to bind expansion joint structure 24 firmly in place inside of outer tube 16. The user then moves inner tube 14 further inside of outer tube 16 by a small amount (1.25 inches was discussed above), and tension rod 10 is placed between the opposing walls or other support structure. The person then releases inner tube 14 and allows compression spring 88 to bias tubes 14 and 16 against the support surfaces. Tension rod 10 is then in position for use as a curtain rod, a clothes rod or any other purpose. To remove tension rod 10 from between two support surfaces where it is positioned, one applies linear compressive force to outer tube 16 and inner tube 14 to enable them to be removed from between the support surfaces, and once removed tension rod 10 can be reused following the foregoing procedure.
In some instances, it is desirable to change the force load of compression spring 88. For example, a strong force load would be desirable for walls with strong support such as tiled walls, whereas a lower force load may be advantageously applied for weaker walls such as dry walls. This is easily accomplished by lessening the separation of tubes 14 and 16 for drywalls or other weaker walls to less than 1¼ inch prior to installment of tension rod 10, but to maintain it at 1¼ inches for stronger walls.
Alternatives are available instead of expansion joint structure 24 and spring stem-wedge-rod structure 60 which are used to lock inner tube 14 and outer rube 16 in place and to allow the compression of compression spring 88 in order to mount tension rod 10 between two support surfaces. One example is a cam expansion structure incorporating a cam assembly as shown in
Cam collar 134 has a C-shape, and comprises a first section 152, a second section 154 and a living hinge 156 connecting sections 152 and 154. A gap 158 separates the free ends of sections 152 and 154. Cam collar 134 is held on cam body 142 by free end wall 144 and inner wall 146.
Stem portion 136 is preferably integral with cam assembly 132, and is cylindrical in shape for passing through compression spring 140 which is loosely wound around it. Stem portion 136 is fixed in spring retainer and anchor structure 138. The latter is accomplished by the structure shown in
Spring retainer and anchor structure 138 has a spring retainer and anchor structure 138. An integral collar 168 is provide for cooperating with inner wall 146 to contain compression spring 140 therebetween, and for assisting in retaining cam fixing structure 130 in place in inner tube 14. Inner tube 14 has dimbles 107 referred to earlier for holding spring retainer and anchor structure 138 fixed to inner tube 14. Therefore, any movement of inner tube 14 is reflected in the movement of spring retainer and anchor structure 138.
In order to mount tension rod 10 having cam fixing structure 130 incorporated therein between opposing support surfaces, the length of tension rod 10 is initially adjusted so that it is slightly larger than the distance between the opposing support surfaces, for example 1.25 inches if compression spring 140 has characteristics like those of compression spring 88 described earlier Inner tube 14 is then twisted relative to outer tube 16. This causes the rotation of spring retainer and anchor structure 138, causing anchor structure 138 to rotate stem portion 136 and cam 132 to rotate. The rotation of cam 132 brings abutment surface 150 into engagement with a free end of cam collar 134, and cam 132 forces the outer surface of cam collar 134 into engagement with the inner surface of outer tube 16. The latter engagement locks cam fixing structure 130 and inner tube 14 in place. The user then contracts inner tube 14 and outer tube 16 enough to fit tension rod 10 between the support surfaces, and the tubes are then released to enable compression spring 140 to force inner rod 14 and outer rod 16 in place between the support surfaces.
The tension rod according to the invention is effective in operation and can be manufactured and assembled using ordinary manufacturing operations. The inventive tension rod can easily be operated and provides strong support when used between vertical walls or other support surfaces.
The present invention in its preferred embodiment is easy to operate and attractive in appearance. To mount the tension rod between a pair of opposing walls, one simply adjusts the length to a short distance wider than the walls, twists the inner rod by a small amount, and compresses the rods against a spring with a uniform spring force. There are no openings in the respective tubes so the internal working components are not visible. The free ends of the tubes are covered with finials.
Although the tension rod has been described for use between vertical support surfaces, it could be used in other situations as between a ceiling and a floor. For example, the inventive tension rod could be used as a support post from which shelves extend as in a bathroom or kitchen.
The invention has been described in detail with emphasis on its preferred embodiment, but variations and modifications may occur to those skilled in the art from the description set forth above and from the appended claims.
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