The present invention relates to hand tools, and in particular to an adaptor for use with pliers or multipurpose hand tools to turn screwdriver bits, small socket wrenches, and the like.
It is well known to use a single handle to drive a selected one of a set of screwdriver bits or wrenches of various sizes, to save the cost of having several handles. It is also often desirable thus to minimize the weight and number of tools used or carried. Adaptors intended to be gripped by drill chucks are also available to receive such bits. Some multipurpose hand tools previously available have also included drive members for driving small socket wrenches. Some of these drives, while useful, add undesirably to the size of the multipurpose tools of which they are part, making the multipurpose tools less convenient to carry.
Folding multipurpose tools are disclosed, for example, in Leatherman U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,238,862, and 4,888,869. Many generally similar tools are available.
Most such multipurpose tools do not include more than two or three sizes of straight screwdriver blades and one or two sizes of Phillips screwdrivers. Such multipurpose tools do not usually include any socket wrench drives, and thus they are not readily useful to drive many of the various different types or sizes of screwdriver bits and socket wrenches available. However, it would be advantageous to be able to drive such screwdriver bits, socket wrenches or other small tools using an available multipurpose tool as a drive handle. This would be particularly advantageous to avoid carrying several special drive handles where it is important to minimize the weight of tools carried, as in bicycle touring.
Depending on the space available around a screw, bolt, or nut it may be necessary or desirable for a socket or screwdriver to be adjustable optionally to be aligned with a handle or to extend at an angle to one side. While some adaptors have been available previously to enable screwdrivers or small socket wrenches to be driven by a folding multipurpose tool, these arrangements have not been strong enough, or have been limited to axially aligned engagement with a screwdriver included in a multipurpose tool, or have been otherwise limited in their usefulness.
What is needed, then, is a suitably strong adaptor by which various small tool bits, screwdrivers, or sockets can be driven, using another hand tool as a handle for the adaptor, and with which such tool bits can be aligned at selected angles with respect to the hand tool. Preferably, such an adaptor could be used with multipurpose tools such as those which are already well known and widely available and would be small enough to be carried conveniently.
The present invention overcomes the aforementioned shortcomings of the prior art and supplies an answer to the need for a small and easily used, but strong, adaptor to enable various tool bits to be driven by a single hand tool. As used herein a tool bit means a screwdriver bit or a small wrench socket, or a similar tool which may be one of a set of such tools of several sizes, all of which can be driven in rotation when mated with a suitable drive member. An adaptor according to the present invention includes a drive plate having a driven end and a driving end, with a tool bit-engaging member attached to the drive plate near its driving end. A pair of generally parallel arms are included at the driven end of the drive plate and are available to engage or be engaged by a hand tool which is to be used as a handle for the adaptor.
In one embodiment of the present invention the tool bit-engaging member includes a hexagonal socket of an appropriate size for receiving the shanks of interchangeable screwdriver bits and other tool bits of the same size.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention the tool bit-engaging member is able to pivot with respect to the drive plate, between an in-line orientation and an offset or angled position.
Another aspect of the invention is a locking mechanism provided to hold the tool bit-engaging member in an in-line orientation or in a selected angled orientation with respect to the drive plate when the adaptor is being used. In one such locking mechanism a spring-loaded tooth engages a selected notch on the drive plate, while a collar surrounding the body of the tool bit-engaging member keeps the tooth aligned and is useful to disengage the tooth from a notch.
Preferably, the driven end of the drive plate includes a projection arranged to engage a handle of a multipurpose tool to keep the adaptor securely mated with the multipurpose tool.
In one embodiment of the invention, the parallel arms defined on the driven end of the adaptor drive plate are arranged to fit snugly along opposite sides of a pair of jaws of a multipurpose tool with which the adaptor is mated.
A feature of one embodiment of the invention is a stiffener portion of the drive plate that increases the amount of torque that can be transmitted to a tool bit in an offset or angled position.
The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
Within the socket 26, a circular spring 30 is located within a radial groove deep enough to allow the circular spring 30 to expand to permit the base 28 of the screwdriver or other tool bit to enter into the socket 26, after which the elastic grip of the spring 30 helps to retain the base 28 within the socket 26.
The drive plate 24 includes a pair of substantially parallel fork arms 32 and 34, located at a driven end 36 of the drive plate 24 and defining a jaw-receiving throat 39 between them. A hole 35 is provided in the fork arm 32 to receive a lanyard to keep the adaptor 20 handy. The drive plate 24 is formed as by stamping or pressing an appropriately shaped unitary blank cut from a sheet of metal such as steel of an appropriate thickness, for example 0.094 inch. A retaining tab 38 is bent to extend generally perpendicularly upward from the fork arm 32, and a portion of the drive plate 24 is bent similarly upward to form a stiffener 40 extending along the length of the drive plate 24 including the fork arm 34. The stiffener 40 may have a width 41 of about 0.25 inch, for example. Provision of the stiffener 40 adds significantly to the ability of the adaptor 20 to transmit torque to a tool bit without damage to or failure of the drive plate 24, particularly when the tool bit-engaging member is in an angled position rather than in line with the length of the drive plate 24.
As may best be seen in
As shown in
Referring next to
At the same time, the corresponding margins 90 and 92 of the other or bottom handle 74 extend closely parallel with the bottom surface 61 of the drive plate 24, and the base 82 of the jaw 78, adjacent the pivotally interconnected portions of the jaws 76, 78, presses against the bottom surface 61 of the drive plate 24 adjacent the throat 39. The bottom surface 61 thus acts as a spacer in opposition to the spacer surface 42 and spacer bumps 44. The margin 92 of the handle 72 also presses against the spacer surface 42, counterbalancing the forces of the margins 90 against the spacer bumps 44 and keeping the handle 72 parallel with the principal plane 37 of the drive plate 24 and with the bottom handle 74. Pressure on the handle 74 thus squeezes the base 82 of the jaw 78 against the bottom surface 61, while pressure against the upper handle 72 presses its margins 90, 92 against the spacer bumps 44 and spacer surface 42, so that a firm grip squeezing the handles 72 and 74 together holds the drive plate 24 firmly between the handles 72 and 74 to provide a solid interconnection of the multipurpose tool 70 to the adaptor 20.
With the handles 72 and 74 so located the inner surface 60 of the fork arm 34 rests snugly alongside the pivotally interconnected portions of the jaws 76 and 78, while the inner surfaces 62 and 66 of the fork arm 32 rest snugly along the pivotally interconnected portions of the jaws 76 and 78 on the opposite side of the multipurpose tool 70.
Referring now also to
The tool bit-engaging member 22 is ordinarily kept located in the in-line position, or in either of a pair of optional offset-angled positions A, B shown in
The collar 132 and ring 134 as a unit are slidably disposed about the tool bit-engaging member 22, but are prevented from moving with respect to one another or with respect to the locking member 126, as by the margin of the outer wall 130 being crimped inward against the ring 134 at 136, as shown in
In a tool bit drive adaptor 150 which is an alternative embodiment of the present invention, as shown in
A ball 160 is located within the bore 142 in the tool bit-engaging member 22, in contact with the outer end 162 of a spring 140, which urges the ball 160 toward the margin of the drive plate 152. Substantially semicircular detent notches 164, 166, and 168 are defined by the margin of the drive plate 152, in an in-line position, a 45° offset angle position, and a 90° offset angle position with respect to a central axis of rotation 170 located at an outer end of the pivot hole 156. The combination of the spring 140, the ball 160, and the detent notches 164, 166, and 168 permits the tool bit-engaging member 22 to be pivoted with respect to the drive plate 152 in much the same way as it can be pivoted with respect to the drive plate 24 described previously. At each of the positions established by the detent notches 164, 166, 168, the ball 160 is urged into the respective notch by the spring 140, tending to retain the tool bit-engaging member 22 in that position of rotation with respect to the axis 170.
Furthermore, when the tool bit-engaging member 22 is in the in-line position shown in
The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/443,475, filed May 22, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,779,212, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/952,494, filed Sep. 11, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,578,222, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/459,742, filed Dec. 10, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,289,541, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/785,525, filed Jan. 17, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,000,080.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10443475 | May 2003 | US |
Child | 10922389 | Aug 2004 | US |
Parent | 09952494 | Sep 2001 | US |
Child | 10443475 | May 2003 | US |
Parent | 09459742 | Dec 1999 | US |
Child | 09952494 | Sep 2001 | US |
Parent | 08785525 | Jan 1997 | US |
Child | 09459742 | Dec 1999 | US |