The subject invention generally pertains to adjustable spanner wrenches and more specifically to the jaws of such a wrench.
Adjustable spanner wrenches are typically used for tightening hexagonal nut and bolt heads. Although the span between the parallel jaw faces is adjustable to fit hexagonal and square heads of various sizes, some clearance between the head and the jaw is often needed in order to slide the wrench onto the head. Such clearance, however, can cause the wrench to accidentally slip off the head. If a bolt or nut is particularly tight, the wrench might round the corners of the head, which can make the head even more difficult to grip. Consequently, there is a need for a better adjustable wrench.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an adjustable wrench with slightly non-parallel jaw faces for tightly gripping opposite parallel faces of a hexagonal head.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide a tightly gripping adjustable wrench that does not rely on one jaw having to pivot relative to another.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide an adjustable wrench with a single set of jaws that can grip hexagonal, square, round, and pentagonal heads.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide a wrench that tightens its grip on a head by way of rotating the entire wrench as a unit (i.e., one wrench component does not have to move relative to another wrench component). In some cases, the resulting grip becomes so tight that even after the user releases the wrench's handle, the wrench continues to hang onto the head all by itself.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide an adjustable wrench that can engage a hexagonal head by inserting the head into the wrench's jaws in a direction nearly inline with the longitudinal axis of the wrench's handle. In other words, the angle between the handle and the direction in which the adjustable jaw moves is twenty to ninety degrees.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide a set of jaws with jaw faces that are generally planar, although one jaw face may be roughened with a series of teeth.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide an adjustable wrench with a set of jaws wherein one jaw face is smoother than the other.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide a wrench with diverging jaw faces that provide a settling-in ratio of 0.25 to 0.26 with respect to a perfect hexagon, thereby providing a tight fitting grip with an actual hexagonal head.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide a jaw design (slightly diverging jaw faces with one face rougher than the other) that can be applied to wrenches with either an adjustable jaw opening (e.g., adjustable spanner) or a fixed jaw opening (e.g., open-end wrench).
Another object of some embodiments is to provide an adjustable wrench with diverging jaws that define a vertex that extends beyond the length of the wrench's handle when the wrench is fully open, or extends at least half the wrench's overall length.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide wrench with just one relatively smooth jaw face having a surface roughness of less than 125 microinches.
Another object of some embodiments is to roughen the surface of a jaw by depositing a carbide-alloy coating (e.g., tungsten carbide) on the jaw's face.
Another object of some embodiments is to provide a wrench with a theoretical snap-in feature that in some real situations translates to a tight gripping/binding action on various shaped heads.
One or more of these and/or other objects of the invention are provided by a wrench with two jaw faces that diverge at a certain unique angle, wherein one jaw face is rougher than the other to create a certain settling-in ratio, a certain snap-in feature, and/or a certain binding action for firmly gripping heads of various shapes.
Jaws 16 and 22 are movable in substantially linear translation relative to each other so that wrench 10 can be moved in an adjustment direction 28 to receive heads of various sizes and shapes (e.g., hexagonal, pentagonal, square, round, irregular, etc.). Due to the wrench's ability to grip a variety of shapes, wrench 10 preferably includes only one set of jaws 16 and 22. For the illustrated example, first jaw 16 is fixed relative to handle 12, and second jaw 22 is adjustably movable relative to jaw 16 and handle 12; however, it is well within the scope of the invention to have either jaw 16 or 22 be the one that is movable relative to handle 12.
The adjustable jaw, such as jaw 22, could be moved by any one of a variety of known drive mechanisms including, but not limited to, manually sliding jaw 22 directly. For illustration, jaw 22 is shown being moved by a toothed gear rack 30 that meshes with a manually or otherwise rotatable worm gear 32. Rack 30 rigidly extends from jaw 22 and slides along a channel 34 in wrench 10. Depending on which direction worm gear 32 is rotated, rack 30 and jaw 22 move in or out to respectively close or open wrench 10.
Jaws 16 and 22 have a special geometry that provides wrench 10 with some unique benefits. One, the jaw's geometry can eliminate the clearance or play that typically exists during fit-up between a standard wrench and a hexagonal head just prior to rotating the wrench. And, two, the geometry can provide a tactile “snap-in” feel as wrench 10 settles into driving engagement with a hexagonal head. The geometry is also useful for gripping round or irregular shapes such as a worn hexagonal head with rounded corners.
To achieve such benefits, jaw faces 18 and 24 diverge at a slight jaw angle 36, and one jaw face is smoother than the other, e.g., jaw face 24 is smoother than jaw face 18. Angle 36 is measured with reference to planes 20 and 26. Planes 20 and 26 are defined as planes that lie along their respective jaw faces 18 and 24. In the case where a jaw face includes a plurality of teeth 38 (e.g., jaw 16), its associated plane (e.g., plane 20) would lie along the peaks of teeth 38. Angle 36 should be greater than zero degrees and preferably less than 15 degrees for satisfactory results. More solid engagement and less slippage with a hexagonal head are achieved when angle 36 is between 2 and 8 degrees. The 8-degree angle limit is approximately the angle created by two lines 40 and 42 of
Due to jaw angle 36, planes 20 and 26 intersect at a vertex 52. Angle 36 and the jaw adjustment of wrench 10 preferably place vertex 52 at a great distance from jaws 16 and 22 when the jaws are fully open (i.e., at their maximum open position). Specifically, when the jaws are fully open, a distance 54 from vertex 52 to a distal tip 56 of jaw 22 is preferably greater than an overall length 58 of wrench 10 or at least greater than half of length 58. Such a geometry provides an enhanced gripping function with respect to the workpiece and minimizes the manual pressure it take to force the wrench into a self-gripping relationship with the workpiece.
The ability of wrench 10 to effectively grip a workpiece is due in part to one jaw being rougher than the other. Making jaw face 18 rougher than jaw face 24, or vice versa, can be achieve in various ways including, but not limited to, teeth 38, knurling, random irregularities, high-friction or rough coatings, and various combinations thereof.
Although the shape, size and number of teeth 38 may vary, in a currently preferred embodiment, teeth 38 have about a 90-degree apex (peak angle) and are distributed at about a pitch distance 64 of 0.050″ increments (
The smoother jaw face, e.g., jaw face 24, preferably has an Ra value (roughness average value) of less than 125 microinches. Thus, the rougher jaw face, e.g., jaw face 18, should have an Ra value appreciably greater than that.
The operation of wrench 10 will be described with reference to hexagon 50 and planes 20 and 26. Hexagon 50 and planes 20 and 26 are mathematical representations and not necessarily physically real.
It is in
Upon wrench 10 rotating from its first state of equilibrium of
It should be noted that in the intermediate state of
Although snap-in distance 66 may or may not always provide a user with an actual tactile sensation that indicates that wrench 10 has moved from its point of initial contact (
In some cases, to initiate the wrench's binding or gripping action, particularly in the case where the gripped head is rounded and relatively hard, some manual force may be needed to push wrench 10 onto the head. Exerting such manual force tends to be easier if handle 12 is pointing generally in the same direction as the force that pushes wrench 10 onto the head; otherwise, handle 12 could present a rotational moment with a lever arm that works against the user. To minimize this concern, adjustment direction 28 is at an adjustment angle 72 (
It should be noted that all drawing figures, specified angles, and descriptions are with respect to jaws 16 and 22 being biased apart from each other (spread apart) to eliminate any backlash or incidental moving part clearances.
Although the invention is described with respect to a preferred embodiment, modifications thereto will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. The scope of the invention, therefore, is to be determined by reference to the following claims: