The disclosure generally relates to an apparatus, system, and method for a touchless utensil used to serve drinks.
Drinks are served by one person to another person. In a commercial setting, a server or bartender pours a drink into a glass and hands the drink to a customer. However, such personal contact from a server to the glass and then from the customer to the glass is a potential condition where germs may be passed from a first person to a second. For example, in relation to the Coronavirus outbreak of 2020, social distancing standards are set to reduce or eliminate personal contact from a first person to a second.
An apparatus including a touchless utensil used to serve drinks is provided. The apparatus includes the touchless utensil operable to enable a user to move a drinking glass without the user touching the drinking glass. The touchless utensil includes an elongated handle portion and an engaging portion attached to the handle portion and including a C-shaped gripper including a major arc spanning more than 180 degrees. The handle portion and the engaging portion are coplanar.
In some embodiments, the C-shaped gripper is oriented in a horizontal plane, and the touchless utensil is constructed of material with a constant thickness in a vertical direction.
In some embodiments, the material includes plastic.
In some embodiments, the material includes wood.
In some embodiments, the material includes metal.
In some embodiments, the material includes glass.
In some embodiments, the engaging portion includes two C-shaped grippers, each C-shaped gripper including a major arc spanning more than 180 degrees.
In some embodiments, the engaging portion includes four C-shaped grippers, each C-shaped gripper including a major arc spanning more than 180 degrees.
According to one alternative embodiment, a system including a touchless utensil used to serve drinks is provided. The system includes a tapered drinking glass including side walls with a more narrow portion at a vertically lower portion of the tapered drinking glass and with a more wide portion at a vertically higher portion of the tapered drinking glass. The system further includes the touchless utensil operable to enable a user to move the drinking glass without the user touching the drinking glass. The touchless utensil includes an elongated handle portion and an engaging portion attached to the elongated handle portion and including a C-shaped gripper including a major arc spanning more than 180 degrees. The C-shaped gripper is operable to nest against a vertically central portion of the tapered drinking glass. The handle portion and the engaging portion are coplanar.
In some embodiments, the C-shaped gripper terminates at a first end at an engaging portion first tip and terminates at a second end at an engaging portion second tip, and a distance between the engaging portion first tip and the engaging portion second tip is greater than a width of the drinking glass at the more narrow portion. This enables the C-shaped gripper to engage the drinking glass at the more narrow portion without disturbing the drinking glass.
In some embodiments, the system further includes the engaging portion including a plurality of C-shaped grippers and a drinking glass for each of the plurality of C-shaped grippers.
In some embodiments, the C-shaped gripper is oriented in a horizontal plane, and the touchless utensil is constructed of material with a constant thickness in a vertical direction.
In some embodiments, the material includes plastic.
In some embodiments, the material includes wood.
In some embodiments, the material includes metal.
In some embodiments, the material includes glass.
According to one alternative embodiment, a method including a touchless utensil used to serve drinks is provided. The method includes holding a handle portion of the touchless utensil. The touchless utensil includes an engaging portion attached to and coplanar with the elongated handle portion, includes a C-shaped gripper including a major arc spanning more than 180 degrees, and is operable to enable a user to move a tapered drinking glass without the user touching the tapered drinking glass. The method further includes engaging an engaging portion of the touchless utensil to the tapered drinking glass. The tapered drinking glass includes a more narrow portion at a vertically lower portion of the tapered drinking glass and further includes a more wide portion at a vertically higher portion of the tapered drinking glass. The engaging includes positioning the more narrow portion within the C-shaped gripper. The method further includes lifting the touchless utensil vertically upward relative to the drinking glass such that the C-shaped gripper nests against a vertically central portion of the tapered drinking glass and using the handle portion to move the tapered drinking glass.
In some embodiments, the method further includes moving the drinking glass to a surface at which the drinking glass is to be served, setting the drinking glass upon the surface, and lowering the touchless utensil vertically downward relative to the drinking glass. The method further includes then disengaging the touchless utensil from the drinking glass.
The above features and advantages and other features and advantages of the present disclosure are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the best modes for carrying out the disclosure when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
An apparatus, system, and method for serving drinks with a touchless utensil are provided. A server holds the utensil, grips a drinking glass with the utensil, fills the drinking glass without personally touching the drinking glass, uses the utensil to provide the drinking glass to a customer, and disengages the utensil from the drinking glass. The touchless utensil is touchless in so far as the user does not need to touch the drinking glass in order to serve the drinking glass to another person.
A circle includes a polygon extending 360 degrees about a center point. An arc includes a portion of a circle extending some portion of the full 360 degrees of the circle. A major arc of a circle extends more than 180 degrees of the circle.
Drinking glass engaging portion 30 includes a C-shaped gripper including a major arc 40 of a circle upon an inner surface of the gripper. A gripper or gripping feature may include two finger-like extensions configured to wrap around a drinking glass or other object. Between the finger-like extensions, the gripper creates a round opening through which a drinking glass may be inserted and securely held. Major arc 40 extends more than 180 degrees around the circle and terminates at a first end at an engaging portion first tip 42 and at a second end at an engaging portion second tip 44. Major arc 40 enables the touchless utensil 10 to nest or couple to a tapered drinking glass, with the major arc 40 contacting and lifting against an outer surface of the drinking glass at a portion of the drinking glass where an outer diameter of the drinking glass matches the inner diameter of the major arc 40.
In the embodiment of
Major arc 40 includes an inner diameter in the shape of a partial circle spanning greater than 180 degrees. By including more than 180 degrees in the major arc 40, the drinking glass may be held stably by the engaging portion of the touchless utensil. If the arc was instead semi-circular or limited to 180 degrees, the drinking glass could slide out of the open side of the circle and potentially be dropped, thereby reducing an effectiveness of the touchless utensil.
Drinking glass engaging portion 130 includes a C-shaped gripper including a major arc 140 of a circle upon an inner surface of the gripper. Major arc 140 extends more than 180 degrees around the circle and terminates at engaging portion first tip 142 and engaging portion second tip 144.
Drinking glass engaging portion 230 includes two C-shaped grippers, a first including a major arc 240 of a circle upon an inner surface of the first gripper and a second including a major arc 250 of a circle upon an inner surface of the second gripper. Major arc 240 and major arc 250 each extend more than 180 degrees around each respective circle. Major arc 240 terminates at engaging portion first tip 242 and engaging portion second tip 244. Major arc 250 terminates at engaging portion first tip 252 and engaging portion second tip 254.
Drinking glass engaging portion 330 includes four C-shaped grippers, a first including a major arc 340 of a circle upon an inner surface of the first gripper, a second including a major arc 350 of a circle upon an inner surface of the second gripper, a third including a major arc 360 of a circle upon an inner surface of the third gripper, and a fourth including a major arc 370 of a circle upon an inner surface of the fourth gripper. Major arc 340, major arc 350, major arc 360, and major arc 370 each extend more than 180 degrees around each respective circle. Major arc 340 terminates at engaging portion first tip 342 and engaging portion second tip 344. Major arc 350 terminates at engaging portion first tip 352 and engaging portion second tip 354. Major arc 360 terminates at engaging portion first tip 362 and engaging portion second tip 364. Major arc 370 terminates at engaging portion first tip 372 and engaging portion second tip 374.
Drinking glass engaging portion 530 includes four C-shaped grippers, a first including a major arc 540 of a circle upon an inner surface of the first gripper, a second including a major arc 550 of a circle upon an inner surface of the second gripper, a third including a major arc 560 of a circle upon an inner surface of the third gripper, and a fourth including a major arc 570 of a circle upon an inner surface of the fourth gripper. Major arc 540, major arc 550, major arc 560, and major arc 570 each extend more than 180 degrees around each respective circle. Major arc 540 terminates at engaging portion first tip 542 and engaging portion second tip 544. Major arc 550 terminates at engaging portion first tip 552 and engaging portion second tip 554. Major arc 560 terminates at engaging portion first tip 562 and engaging portion second tip 564. Major arc 570 terminates at engaging portion first tip 572 and engaging portion second tip 574.
The distance between the engaging portion first tip 42 and the engaging portion second tip 44 may be selected based upon a most narrow portion 72 of the drinking glass 70 or a portion of the drinking glass 70 at a bottom, closed end 71. In one embodiment, the touchless utensil 10 may be configured to be initially engaged to the drinking glass 70 at or near a bottom of the drinking glass 70, with the distance between the engaging portion first tip 42 and the engaging portion second tip 44 being wider than the bottom of the drinking glass 70. The engaging portion first tip 42 and the engaging portion second tip 44 may be maneuvered around the bottom of the drinking glass 70, such that a horizontal center of the drinking glass 70 is situated in the center of major arc 40. Once the major arc 40 is situated with the glass at the center of the major arc 40, the touchless utensil 10 may be lifted and used to carry the drinking glass.
Other shapes of drinking glasses may be utilized. For example, a drinking glass may be utilized with a bulge in a center portion of the drinking glass. The diameter of major arc 40 may be selected to fit under the bulge and carry the drinking glass from under the bulge. In another example, a wine glass including a wide base, a wide cup portion, and a thin stem connecting the wide base and the wide cup portion may be utilized. The diameter of major arc 40 may be selected to fit under the wide cup portion, with the distance between the engaging portion first tip 42 and the engaging portion second tip 44 being selected to be wider than the stem portion of the wine glass.
In one embodiment, the disclosed touchless utensil may be used universally in an upright or upside-down orientation or to grip to an initially upside-down empty drinking glass. In order to grip an initially upside-down empty drinking glass, the touchless utensil may be engaged to or moved over a top of a narrow bottom portion of the upside-down drinking glass, which is vertically at a top of the drinking glass because the drinking glass is upside-down. The drinking utensil may then be moved vertically downward to a central portion of the drinking glass to a portion of the drinking glass where an outer diameter of the drinking glass matches the inner diameter of the major arc. In particular, when the touchless utensil is plastic and may deform slightly or when the touchless utensil is wooden and the grains of the wood may present a rough surface to the glass, the touchless utensil may grip to the glass, such that when a torque or rapid twisting motion is applied to a handle portion of the touchless utensil, the utensil and the attached drinking glass will flip to an upright orientation. Such a flipping motion is further enabled by the utensil including an elongated handle portion and an engaging portion that are coplanar with each other. Additionally, if the material of the utensil is constructed with a constant thickness throughout the device, flipping the glass may be simplified. Additionally, if the elongated handle portion and the engaging portion are coplanar and the utensil is constructed with a constant thickness throughout the device, the device may be usable whether the device is upright or flipped upside down. The elongated handle may include a rectangular cross section that has an identical ergonomic presentation to a hand of the user whether the device is upright or upside down. This reversible use or usefulness to flip the glass may speed use of the device and increase productivity of the user as compared to a device with a non-coplanar handle or other complex shape that may only be reasonably used in one orientation.
The disclosed touchless utensil may be constructed of a number of different materials, including but not limited to food grade plastics or polymer, wood, metal, glass, or other similar materials used in the food industry.
While the best modes for carrying out the disclosure have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this disclosure relates will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the disclosure within the scope of the appended claims.