Vise system

4418901
Add to folder: View Folders  
Keywords to Highlight:

full-text

print

pdf

permalink

Inventors

Woods, William D.
Pigman, John H.

Application #

256258

Filed

Apr-22-1981

Published

Dec-6-1983

Current US Class

269/101
269/251
269/71
269/82
408/103

International Classes

B23Q 001/04

Field of Search

269/45 269/74 269/81-85 269/97-101 269/152-155 269/104 269/240 269/246-253 269/71 269/73 269/900 269/76

Assignee

International Design Corporation (Phoenix, AZ)

Examiners

Watson; Robert C.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Ptak; LaValle D.

US Patent References

4002328   Vise
4157819   Adjustable work pi...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Citation

Cite This Patent

More From Subclass 71

5873569   Workpiece positioner
6705372   Tube connecting a...
5160125   Transmission utility...
4294440   Holding device
5575176   Three-dimensional...
4133423   Shuttle system for...
6722020   Workpiece table as...
5407184   Mechanism for rota...
5580210   Seat handling device
4613120   D-clamp vise
5385280   Adjustable bicycle...
4932639   Door and body jack
 

More From Class 269

6637737   Workpiece micro-p...
6698740   Power-actuated vis...
6736384   Operation detecting...
6598866   Workpiece support
5090608   Resilient lineup cla...
4792129   Radiator fixturing...
5460461   Manual concrete sc...
4711610   Balancing chuck
4129093   Staining apparatus
6502809   Workpiece holding...
5554067   Frame holder for p...
5913509   Clamp for a power...
 
Abstract
The vise system has a bracket section which can be secured to any flat horizontal work surface, particularly a drill press platen, with sliding and rotating degrees of freedom with respect to a bracket bolt. The bracket bolt threads into a hole in the work surface and can tighten down to rigidly hold the bracket section in position. A vise section, capable of clamping a work piece between fixed and movable jaws, is connected to the bracket section by a horizontally-oriented connecting bolt, about which the vise section can rotate, and which can be tightened to secure the vise section at any selected angle. The vise section has a rectangular cross-section, facilitating rapid self-indexing of angles 0, 90, 180, and 270 degrees with respect to the bracket section. The vise system is capable of being pivoted to a position in which the vise section extends beyond the edge of the work surface in order to accommodate work pieces in orientations which would otherwise interfere with the work surface. The vise system can be removed from or attached to a variety of work surfaces by loosening the bracket bolt without removing it from the surface, and with the vise section still clamping a work piece.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A clamping device to be used in connection with a flat work surface, including in combination:

a. an L-shaped bracket section having an end piece with a flat end surface oriented perpendicular to the work surface when the base of the bracket section is resting thereon;

b. means for attaching the base of the bracket section to the work surface in a manner to allow the position of the bracket section to be rotatably adjustable in the plane of, and rigidly tightenable against, the work surface;

c. a vise section for adjustably holding a work piece, comprising:

i. a mating surface oriented perpendicular to the work surface when the vise section is resting thereon;



Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to vises, and particularly to vises which can securely hold a work piece in a wide range of positions and angles in relation to a flat horizontal work surface such as the platen of a drill press.

DISCUSSION OF RELEVANT ART

It is frequently desirable in mechanical work to hold a work piece securely in a variety of positions, particularly to permit the accurate drilling of holes using a drill press. It is often necessary to drill holes perpendicular to a particular plane surface of an irregularly-shaped work piece, or into the end of an elongated work piece, or into a surface at angles other than 90 degrees. To accomplish these operations accurately requires a vise capable of being fastened securely with reference to the drill press platen in a wide range of positions, and which is also pivotable about a horizontal axis. A number of pivotable clamping devices are known, including those disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,633,764; 3,051,473; 3,675,916; and 4,002,328. Of these Pat. No. 2,633,764, issued to Ruser, Apr. 7, 1953, has the most in common with the present invention. The Ruser patent discloses a vise with a pivoting connection at opposite ends to a support. The support is held by a pair of elongated arms to a clamping bar which has a sliding engagement with the arms and can be tightened to secure the support against a drill press platen, and thereby secure the vise in a variety of positions on the surface of the platen. The support can also be moved beyond the edge of the platen, permitting the vise to be rotated to a 90 degree angle from its position on the platen to allow drilling into the ends of elongated work pieces. The Ruser patent, although it does clamp a work piece in a variety of positions on the platen, does not disclose a devise capable of establishing the high degree of stability required to resist the forces inherent in a drilling operation which is intended to produce dimensionlly accurate holes, particularly in the off-platen mode of operation. In addition, Ruser does not address the problem of positioning an irregularly-shaped work piece in order to drill a hole perpendicular to any flat surface, or of drilling accurate holes at angles other than 90 degrees. There is clearly an unmet need for an inexpensive, high precision vise which can be rapidly deployed to hold a work piece in a wide range of orientations in relation to a flat work surface.
 
  A vise swivel mount is disclosed for use in a vehicle which includes a swivel socket bolting directly to the bed of the vehicle. A swivel column rotatively...  Apparatus is disclosed for automatically transferring a semiconductor wafer between a horizontal and a vertical plane, beginning and ending in precisely...