Not Applicable
Technical Field
This invention relates generally to hand-held tools of the type having a tool head attached to the end of a handle. More specifically, this invention relates to tool heads configured to easily attach and detach from roughly formed handles and precision formed handles.
Prior Art Discussion
Tool heads, having tool features such as axe blades, hammer surfaces, pick points, are commonly fitted with handles made of wood. Relatively light, durable, and readily available, wood historically has been the preferred handle medium for hand-held tools. The conventional fixation of a tool head to a wood handle involved shaping a handle end to fit within the body of the tool head, followed by wedges being driven into the end of the handle to make up for any minor imperfections and to compressively wedge the handle within the tool head. Handles installed with wedges tend to be permanent for the life of the handle, are not easily removed, and the handle must be exactly formed to fit within the tool head.
Not all wooden handles install within a tool body. Previous inventors have improved the handle configuration by setting the tool head within a notch in the handle end. As taught in U.S. Pat. No. 1,336,185 to Bantjes, the tool head inserts within a slot that fittingly holds the handle on either side, the handle being further secured to the head with threaded through pins or rivets. The handle's cross section closest to the tool head is substantially increased, thereby making the Bantjes handle less susceptible to failure when leveraged rotational forces are applied. However, the Bantjes tool head is not easily removable, nor does it present as being usable with a roughly formed handle. As similarly disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,768,956 to Coonrad, the receiving handle is constructed having a slot for the tool head. But again, the wood handle machining must be precise to tightly fit the sides of the handle head, and once the tool head is installed in the handle, it remains attached for the handle's useful life.
Being unable to remove a tool head from a handle was addressed by Alfred Harding U.S. Pat. No. 5,152,065 “Tool head having an easily replaceable handle attached thereto” using the conventional “handle in head” configuration, with the improvement being a removable tool head side that removably engages the tool head with a plurality of threaded fasteners. The threaded fasteners requiring a second set of tools in order to install or remove a handle. The Harding tool head further requires a handle that is exactly formed to fit within the tool head and the removable tool head side.
Another example of a removable tool head is provided in U.S. Pat. No. 4,347,883 titled “Easily removable handle means for axes and the like” to James D. Fariss. The Fariss tool head attachment also followed the conventional configuration of the wooden handle end being inserted within a void within the tool body. The improvement involving a slot in one end of the handle, through which a lag type screw forcibly spread the handle sides against the tool body interior when tightened. The Fariss tool head replaced wedges with a lag screw, thereby allowing the user to easily unscrew the lag to remove the handle. However, the Fariss handle required exact shaping to make fit within the tool body, and additional machining to form the receiving slot for the screw lag. Another deficiency in the Fariss handle is the requirement of a second tool required by the user to tighten or loosen the screw lag.
Therefore, an unfulfilled need exists for an improved tool head that easily attaches and detaches from a precision machined or a roughly formed handle, without the need of any additional tools.
In view of the foregoing disadvantages and inherent deficiencies in the known types of removable tool heads using currently practiced attachment apparatus, the tool head according to one or more embodiments described herein departs from the conventional concepts and designs of the prior art, and in doing so provides a clamping apparatus that removablely attaches the tool head to an unlimited variety of handle options. The tool head further having integrally formed tool features that are usable with and without attachment to a handle that provide among other things, handle crafting functions when forming a rough handle in the field. For compact carry when not attached to a handle, the clamps rotate to a flat nested position within the tool head. When nested, the tool head is functionally usable as a multi-tool tool, enabling the user to chop, scrape, cut, wrench, and generally use the tool features that are integrally formed in the tool head when not on a handle.
The improved tool head disclosed has two clamp attachment, one clamp on either side of the handle. A first clamp is threadingly engaged on a shaft that is located within an internal cavity in the tool head. When the shaft is rotated, the first clamp moves closer to a second clamp, and further away when the shaft is counter-rotated. The user rotates a knob that is fixated to the shaft to compress the handle between the first and second clamps, thereby attaching the handle to the tool head, and counter-rotates the shaft to decompress the clamps for detachment.
The integral tool features allow the user to fashion a handle in the field from various mediums such as saplings, bundles of branches, or even a section of PVC pipe. To cut a sapling and form a handle for example, the axe blade is used to chip away and cut through a suitably sized sapling, then cuts the handle to the desired length. Once cut to length, sharpened scraper blade is used to form the handle and handle surfaces. The handle is finished by splitting or cutting a notch in one end of the handle using either the axe blade or scraper. The tool head is received within the notch such that the handle material projects between the first and second clamps on either sides of the tool head. To attach, the shaft is rotated, thereby compressing the handle end between the clamps. To detach the tool head from the handle, the shaft is counter-rotated.
When not on a handle, the tool head has a flat profile with the clamps nesting within the body for compact packing, storage, or transport. With the clamps nested, the tool head is easily held in the user's hand similar to a fixed knife blade, providing supplementary function as a hand-tool, making it ideal for survival or emergency preparedness kits.
While the following disclosure and preferred embodiments are particularly directed to a tool head that removably engages a handle, it will be understood by those familiar in the hand tool arts that the present invention also relates to most any implement that needs attachment to a handle. Some of the objects of the present invention are to provide a tool head that is for: Removable use with roughly formed handles; Engaging and disengaging a handle without additional tools; Compact flat storage when not attached to a handle; Manually forming a handle in the field; Striking such as with hammers, axes, hatches, mallets, or picks; Leveraging, pushing, or lifting such as with pitchforks, shovels, or rakes; and Attachment and use on the end of a pole, branch, PVC pipe, or cable.
Upon review of the following descriptions taken in combination with accompanying figures, other objects, advantages, and features of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art.
In the drawings:
Referring now to the preferred embodiment shown in
The tool head shown in
The tool head embodiment shown in
As shown in
As depicted in
As first shown in
The tool head shown in
As depicted in
The embodiments disclosed in
While the invention has been disclosed in certain embodiments and detailed descriptions, it will be clear to one skilled in the art that modifications or variations of such details can be made without deviating from the essence and substance of this invention, and such adaptions or variations are considered to be within the scope of the claims provided herein.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e)(1) to U.S. Ser. No. 61933130 filed Jan. 29, 2014, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
316528 | Davis | Apr 1885 | A |
626285 | Metzger | Jun 1899 | A |
861127 | Frank | Jul 1907 | A |
1049249 | Martini | Dec 1912 | A |
1336185 | Bantjes | Apr 1920 | A |
2114149 | Irving | Apr 1938 | A |
2435556 | Curatole | Feb 1948 | A |
3355226 | Portz | Nov 1967 | A |
4089356 | O'Connor | May 1978 | A |
4334565 | Stokes | Jun 1982 | A |
4347883 | Fariss, Jr. | Sep 1982 | A |
4558726 | Clay | Dec 1985 | A |
4773286 | Krauth | Sep 1988 | A |
5152065 | Harding | Oct 1992 | A |
5211085 | Liou | May 1993 | A |
5768956 | Coonrad | Jun 1998 | A |
20130197489 | Rister | Aug 2013 | A1 |
Entry |
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“wrench.” https://www.mso.anu.edu.au/˜ralph/OPTED/ The Online Plain Text English Dictionary, 2016. Web. Dec. 27, 2016. |
“nested.” Merriam-Webster.com. Merriam-Webster, 2016. Web. Dec. 27, 2016. |
“lever.” Thesaurus.com. Thesaurus, 2016. Web. Dec. 27, 2016. |
Tim Stetzer; Innovative Essential; Knives Illustrated Magazine; Dec. 2014; pp. 18-27; vol. 28, No. 7; Publisher Engaged Media by Beckett; Yorba Linda, CA 92887 USA. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150209953 A1 | Jul 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61933130 | Jan 2014 | US |