The present invention concerns a water jetting gun having a valve cartridge removable from a gun body; the gun also has an adjustable hand grip and an adjustable shoulder stock.
Water jetting guns are known. One type of water jetting gun, also called a hand lance, has a dump tube. U.S. Pat. No. 5,349,982 discloses a water jetting gun having a dump tube. The gun has a gun housing or block. A valve cartridge is maintained within a valve chamber of the block. To service the valve cartridge inside the block, one must remove a dump adaptor from the block with a hand tool such a crescent wrench. One would use a hand tool to tighten the adaptor to the block to ready the gun for operation.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,636,785 also discloses a water gun with a dump tube. The gun has a shoulder support which is adjustable. The gun has a valve cartridge assembly which is removable from a housing with a hand tool. The hand tool couples with a hex head of the valve cartridge. One would use a hand tool to tighten the cartridge to the housing to ready it for operation.
Prior art
As seen in prior art
A barrel 36 which can also be called a nipple is threadably engaged with the supply conduit 30 at a second end 33. The barrel 36 carries a hand grip 28. The hand grip is also adjustably coupled to the barrel 36 by way of a cam stud 40. The cam stud 40 is loosened and tightened with a hand tool. When loosened, the grip may be adjusted back and forth along the length of the barrel.
One aspect of the invention concerns an adjusting assembly adjustably coupling (1) a hand grip to a barrel of a water jetting gun or (2) a shoulder stock to a supply tube of a water jetting gun. The adjusting assembly includes a cam pin having a cut out portion. The cam pin (1) couples to said grip and is proximate the barrel or (2) couples to the shoulder stock and is proximate the supply tube. A knob is rotatably coupled to the cam pin.
Another aspect of the invention concerns an assembly of a water jetting gun. The assembly has a body, a valve cartridge in a valve cartridge chamber of the body, an access port leading into the valve cartridge and an adaptor extending through said access port. The portion of the adaptor extending through the access port has threads engaged to the body. A head is formed by the adaptor. The head is above the body. The water jetting gun is in an operable state ready to be used without further tightening of the adaptor. The adaptor is removable from the body by a person gripping the head with its hand and unscrewing the adaptor by hand without the aid of a hand tool.
A further aspect of the invention includes a method for removing an adaptor from an access port of a water jetting gun. The method includes providing a water jetting gun in an operable state ready to be used without further tightening of an adaptor. The adaptor is threadably engaged to a body. The head of the adaptor is gripped by the hand of a person. The adaptor is unscrewed by the hand without the aid of the hand tool. The adaptor is removed from the access port.
The invention includes further methods, assemblies and features which are further described below in the detailed description and the attached drawings.
In more detail the gun's block, housing or body 54 holds a valve cartridge 58 in a valve chamber 60 defined by the block 54. The chamber 60 has its access port 56 sealed off by the adaptor. The adaptor is coupled to a valve cartridge 58 at a coupling end 51 of the adaptor 50. Threads 62, proximate coupling end 51, threadably engage the adaptor to the block. The head 64 of the adaptor rises above the blocks external surface 66 and access port 56. The adaptor 50 is removed from the block 54 by gripping the head 52 by hand and rotating the adaptor in a loosening direction with the hand. Rotation loosens the adaptor 50 from the block 54. The adaptor 50 with the cartridge 58 coupled thereto can then be removed from the block by hand without the aid of a hand tool. The removal can be done without tools and from a gun in a fully operable state, i.e., the gun is ready to be used without further tightening of the adaptor.
Once removed the cartridge 58 can be inspected and serviced or replaced. To reinstall or install the cartridge into the block 54, the cartridge 58 is coupled to the adaptors 50 coupling end 51. The cartridge 58 and coupling end 51 are inserted into the valve chamber 60 via the access port 56. The operator then, by its hand gripping the head, tightens the adaptor 50 to the block 54 with a torque obtainable by hand without the use of a hand tool. The torque can be as little as 1 IN.LB. The gun 49 is then in operable condition ready for use.
The head 52 of the adaptor has a circumferential side wall 67 bounding an open space 68. The head includes a floor 69 bounded by the circumferential wall 67. The floor 69 has a conical recess 70. The wall has knurling on its outer surface. The circumferential wall has an outer diameter of 1.75 IN.
The adaptor 50 has a shoulder 150 beneath the head 52. The shoulder abuts up against the block 54. Formed within the adaptor beneath the shoulder is an o-ring receiving groove 151. When fit with an o-ring, the o-ring seals against the block.
The water jetting gun in
The cam pin 78a or 78b is threaded at one end to receive a threaded end of the knob. The cam pin, along a portion of its axial length, is cut out. The surface 80a or 80b of the cut out portion, starting from one end of the cut out portion, forms a downwardly sloping incline. A cross sectional profile of the inclined surface appears as a ramp. The incline is gradual. It is between 10 to 20 degrees measured from a horizontal, parallel to the cam's axis. The surface 82a or 82b of the cut out portion, at an end opposite the end with the gradual incline, is arcuate and has a central angle. Another surface 84a or 84b forming the cut out portion is parallel to the cam's axis. It extends between the inclined surface 80a or 80b and the arcuate surface 82a or 82b.
The grip 72 coupled to the adjusting assembly has a first orientation wherein the grip can be slidably moved back and forth along the length of the barrel. The grip has a second orientation where the grip is fixedly coupled to the barrel. See
The stock 74 also has a first orientation wherein the stock 74 can be slidably moved back and forth along the length of the supply tube 92. The stock has a second orientation where the stock is fixedly coupled to supply tube 92. It is no longer slidably movable relative to the shoulder stock. An operator to orient the stock 74 from the first orientation to the second orientation turns knob 76b clockwise in a first direction. Turning the knob 76b in the first direction moves pin 78b axially towards the knob 76b by virtue of the threading 85b on the pin 78 and in the knob 76. As pin 78b moves, the inclined surface 80b moves closer to the knob. As the pin moves closer to the knob, the taller part of the inclined surface 80b moves closer to the axis 93 of the supply tube. As the taller part of the inclined surface 80b moves towards the axis, the pin 78b exerts an increasingly strong wedge like force. The pin's inclined portion 80b exerts a force against the supply tube 92, and the surface opposite 90b the inclined surface, exerts a force against the stock. The force, when the stock is in the second orientation, is strong enough to keep the stock in place. Accordingly, when the stock is in the second orientation the inclined surface 80b is closer to the knob 76b than when it is in the first orientation. Indeed the parallel surface 84b and the arcuate surface 82b are also closer to the knob in the second orientation as opposed to the first orientation.
To adjust the 72 grip or stock 74 from the second orientation to the first orientation an operator or servicer turns knob 76a or 76b with his hand in a second direction opposite the first direction. The pin 78a or 78b moves axially away from the knob. The operator also pushes the knob towards the member being adjusted (grip or stock). If the grip 72 is being adjusted to the first orientation, the base of the pin's inclined surface 80a moves away from the side of the barrel closest to the knob. The arcuate surface 82a and parallel surface 84a move towards the barrels central axis. The wedge force between the barrel 88 and grip 72 is now reduced and the grip is free to move along the length of the barrel. If the stock 74 is being adjusted to the first orientation, the base of the pin's inclined surface 80b moves away from the side of the supply tube 92 closest to the knob 76b. The arcuate surface 82b and parallel surface 84a move towards the supply tubes central axis 93. The wedge force between the supply tube 92 and stock 74 is now reduced and the stock 74 is free to move along the supply tube 92.
The water jetting gun which embodies the present invention has other features. A supply conduit 97 passing through the block is fluidly coupled to the valve chamber 60 and intersects the valve chamber 60. A water dump conduit is also fluidily coupled to the valve chamber and intersects the chamber. The supply conduit 97 is threaded at both ends.
As seen in
Although a preferred embodiment has been shown and described it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications might be made without departing from the scope of the invention, as defined in the appended claims.
All of the features disclosed in the specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the steps or any method or process disclosed may be combined in any combinations where at least some of the features and/or steps are mutually exclusive.
Each feature disclosed in the specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), may be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent or similar purpose, unless expressly stated otherwise. Thus, unless expressly stated otherwise, each feature disclosed is one example only of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.
The invention is not restricted to the details of the foregoing embodiment. The invention extends to any novel, or any novel combination, of the features disclosed in the specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawing), or to any novel, or any novel combination, of the steps of any method or process so disclosed.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61448109 | Mar 2011 | US |