1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a cutting device, and more particularly to a wood splitting device having main twice-inclined splitting ribs compatible with the ribs of main upper and lower regular tetrahedral pyramids and complemented by supplementary pushing ribs compatible with the ribs of supplementary regular tetrahedral pyramid with the lesser section and revolved at 45° with respect to the main pyramids, that advances the splitting capacity and durability of the wedge and simultaneously enables the user to split a log into four.
2. Description of the Prior Art
The use of wedges to split a log is known in the prior art.
The patents FR0182174 A1, FR2666270, FR2862903, U.S. Pat. No. 1,813,033 A3 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,387,753, all of B27 L 7/00 and B26 B23/00 class, disclose wedges having limited capacity as they split a log into two pieces, and even more, the wedge can go backward during splitting and jump out from the log.
The present invention is close to known wedge presented by U.S. Pat. No. 1,813,033 A3, which has a head constructed as one piece with a tetrahedral pyramid pointed wedge having its splitting ribs compatible with the ribs of a regular tetrahedral pyramid, and four lateral triangle-shaped sides that are either smooth or concave.
The known wedge, given its capacity to split a log into four in two counter-perpendicular directions, also has the following disadvantages:
The present invention is close to known pyramidal wedge presented by U.S. Pat. No. 4,387,753 dated June 1983, which is comprised of two splitting ribs and two short ribs. The two short ribs are symmetrically positioned on the plane designed by the two splitting ribs at the pointed section of the wedge and are inclined at small angle with respect to the axis of the wedge. In the midst of the wedge, said two short ribs are combined with two rectangular pushing sides inclined at greater angle with respect to the axis of the wedge at its upper end extremity.
The latter promote splitting using two splitting ribs and pushing pieces and getting them separated from each other, and simultaneously releasing the pointed end of the wedge and diminishing its friction.
The known wedge split a log only into two pieces and has low productivity as each of two splitting ribs is straight-line and has the same inclination with respect to the axis of the wedge at all sides.
In accordance with the present invention, a wood splitting wedge differs from known wedges in high level of splitting capacity, splitting safety and productivity.
Comparing with known splitting wedges, the present invention presents a new design of a wedge that, given its advantages and capacities along with contemporary wedges, allows the user to split a log into four at once, simultaneously increasing safety, solidity, and durability of the wedge.
It is an object of the present invention to effectively split a log into four in two counter-perpendicular directions.
It is another object of the present invention to advance the splitting feature of the wedge.
It is a further object of the present invention to increase safety of wood splitting and durability of the wedge through advancing its firmness.
Along with advantages which characterize known wood wedges such as:
In accordance with the present invention, structure and the essence of a wood splitting wedge will now be described with reference to the annexed drawings wherein:
A wood splitting wedge comprises a convex head 1 adapted to receive a striking force from the hammer, pointed lower end extremity 2 having its lower portions 3 of ribs splitting a log coincided with the ribs of the lower main regular tetrahedral 2a pyramid (
Each of the upper portions 5 of the ribs splitting a log is provided with four identical notches 6 that exclude an anti-rebound feature of the wedge.
On the planes perpendicular to the axis of the wedge, each splitting rib 3 of the wedge has a section in the shape of an isosceles triangle having its pointed apex conjugated with a round arc at an r radius (
An angle γ of the apex of the isosceles triangle-shaped section of each splitting rib of the wedge is constant at all sections throughout the height of the wedge. The value of an angle falls within γ=30° . . . 80°. In contrast to the angle γ, the r radius of the said conjugated pointed apexes of the isosceles triangle-shaped sections increases linearly from bottom to top throughout the height of the wedge and ranges from 0.5 mm to 10 mm.
At its upper end extremity 4, the wood splitting wedge is also provided with pushing ribs 7 compatible with the ribs of a supplementary regular tetrahedral pyramid 4b and having four identical notches 8 (
In
Unlike the main splitting ribs 5 (leading ribs) that split a log in the line of a-a, the pushing ribs 7 of the wedge promote splitting through pushing the segments of a log to be split by b-b planes positioned within a-a splitting adjacent planes (
To split a log, the wedge with its pointed end 2 penetrates into the midst of a log and the splitting ribs 3 get a log split through a-a planes. During follow-on penetration, final splitting of the log into four occurs by means of the splitting ribs 5 of the upper end extremity 4.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
AM20060163 | Sep 2006 | AM | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AM07/00003 | 9/7/2007 | WO | 00 | 11/27/2009 |