This invention pertains to the field of tools, such as tools designed to carry sharp blades for scraping or stripping surfaces.
Hand-held or manual scraping tools have long been used to remove materials such as paint, wall coverings and flooring material from walls, floors and other planar surfaces. Commercially available hand-held scraper devices generally have a handle portion and an attached clamp portion in which is clamped or otherwise held a metal blade. The majority of the current scraping tools are fashioned to be strictly manually operated, thus limiting their utility.
Other known tool systems that provide for use in a handle or in power tool rely on multi-component systems to attach the tool or tool holder to a handle and may need additional tools such as a screw driver to remove the tool from the handle portion. Multiple pieces of the tool or handle add to the complexity and cost to the manufacturing of the tool. Also tools adapted for use in a power tool, such as a power reciprocating saw tend to be a single piece, so when the cutting edge becomes dull or damaged, the tool must either be replaced or the cutting edge needs to be skillfully sharpened. A damaged edge or a poorly sharpened edge may result in gouging the surface being scraped, therefore it is important to maintain a sharp edge in good condition.
One aspect of this invention is a handle member that may be fashioned as a single piece that needs no other tools to attach the tool or tool clamp to the handle member providing an easy quick method for switching between uses. Since the handle member is a single piece, it is easy and cost effective to manufacture, and this also dispenses with the problems of multiple pieces to produce and then having to assemble to make the final product. This embodiment can use a plastic handle member with a tapered hole in one end where the tapered hole only retains tools using the elastic properties of the plastic handle against the externally tapered engaging portion of the tool to be held.
Another embodiment of the invention is a tool clamp that provides the ability to be used either as a hand tool by using with a handle member or with a power tool, such as a power reciprocating saw. An advantage of this embodiment is that no other tool is needed to remove the tool clamp from the handle member and the tool clamp member is immediately ready for use in a power tool. The tool clamp also provides for easy exchange of tools or blades that can be fitted into its clamp, for example, the use of replaceable blades, so that sharpening is not necessary when the cutting edge becomes dull or damaged. The tool clamp has an extension that is adapted for use with a handle member and a power reciprocating saw. The extension may be tapered to match a taper in the receiving hole of the handle member to make a rigid fit.
In other embodiments an extension can be added to the handle and the tool clamp member can simply be inserted into a matching shaped hole of the handle without the use of tools to provide a rigid fit.
The foregoing “Summary of the Invention,” as well as the following detailed description of preferred embodiments will be better understood when read in conjunction with the appended drawings. For the purpose of illustrating the invention, there is shown in the drawings an embodiment which is presently preferred, it being understood, however, that the invention is not limited to the specific arrangements and instrumentalities disclosed.
In the preferred embodiment as shown in
In this embodiment, the tool handle 11 is shown with 4 cavities 13 that have a depth about the same as slot 12. These cavities allow less material to be used in making the handle as well as providing for faster cooling during the molding process. Using less material allows handle 11 to be lighter weight and produced cheaper than without such holes. Even though 4 round cavities are shown in the preferred embodiment, other arrangement of cavities could be utilized to produce a similar effect. The cavities are preferably arranged such that at least one section of handle material extends from near the center of the wide dimension of either side of slot 12 to the outside of handle 11 to provide strength to support the tool while being used. Another arrangement of cavities between the slot and the outside of the handle could incorporate honeycomb shaped cavities. The cavities 13 are shown open to the outside of handle 11 as in
The clamping method described here, while it is preferred, is but one of any number of ways that a tool, in this case, a straight blade, can be clamped into the tool clamp. Those practitioners in the art will recognize other methods of clamping a tool could be utilized without departing from the invention.
The tool clamp 40 is releasably engaged with the handle member 11 as displayed in