Pneumatic fastening tools

4346831
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Inventors

Haytayan, Harry M.

Application #

110776

Filed

Jan-9-1980

Published

Aug-31-1982

Current US Class

227/130
227/156
227/8

International Classes

B25C 001/04

Field of Search

227/8 227/130 227/120 227/156

Examiners

Bell; Paul A.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Schiller & Pandiscio

US Patent References

4040554   Pneumatic apparat...
4227637   Pneumatic fastenin...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
Improved forms of pneumatic tools of the type shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,040,554, 4,098,171 and 4,122,904 are provided for driving nail-like fasteners into a workpiece. The tool may be used for attaching small articles such as washers or name tags to the workpiece, in which event the tool may be combined with a device for holding the article and positioning it so that it will be engaged and penetrated by a fastener as the latter is discharged by the tool into a workpiece. The tools are provided with novel handle means designed to make the tool convenient and safe to use where the operator cannot or should not engage or be close to the workpiece. A further novel inventive feature is an improved form of poppet valve for causing operation of the tool.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. In a fastener driving tool for holding and attaching parts to a workpiece, said tool comprising a driver and a parts holder attached to said driver;

said driver comprising a nozzle having a hammer travelway, means for positioning a fastener in said travelway, a hammer mounted for reciprocal movement along said travelway, a piston attached to said hammer, a cylinder slidably containing said piston, operating means for causing said hammer to move through a drive stroke and a return stroke along said travelway, said operating means comprising means including a control valve and means responsive to said control valve for selectively (a) applying a high pressure gas to one side of said piston so as to urge said piston to move said hammer through its drive stroke or (b) removing high pressure gas from said one side of said piston so as to permit said piston to move said hammer through its return stroke, and safety means for preventing said operating means from causing said hammer to move through its said drive stroke until said safety means is operated, said safety means comprising means including a safety valve for selectively (a) applying a high pressure gas to the other side of said piston so as to urge said piston to move said hammer through its return stroke or (b) removing high pressure gas from said other side of said piston so as to permit said piston to move said hammer through its drive stroke, said safety means comprising an actuating member arranged to operate said safety valve when said actuating member is depressed; and



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to pneumatic tools in general, and more particularly to improved forms of pneumatic fastening tools.

Pneumatic fastening tools per se are not new in the art. Various examples of such tools are shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,122,904, 4,098,171, 4,040,554, 3,498,577, 3,905,535, 3,776,445, 3,512,454 and 3,708,096 and the references cited therein. These tools typically comprise a housing, a cylinder disposed in the housing, a piston slidably mounted in the cylinder, a hammer connected to the piston, means for causing the piston to reciprocate within the cylinder so as to drive the hammer from a first retracted position to a second extended position, and a nozzle section for receiving a fastener and positioning it for engagement with the hammer in order to permit the hammer to drive the fastener from the nozzle into a workpiece.

It is sometimes desired that the fastening tool be used to attach small articles such as washers or name tags to the workpiece. Some tools known to be in use require the tool operator to manually position the small metal member against the workpiece and hold it there by hand or some other means while he fastens it on. This fastening technique is not satisfactory when the member being attached is small in size (thereby making it difficult and dangerous to manually hold the member in place during fastening) or when the member being attached is a washer which has a small center hole to be penetrated and therefore requires critical fastening alignment. Efforts have been made to provide tools which have means for supporting the article to be fastened so that it will be suitably secured to a workpiece by a fastener driven by the tool. However, in certain cases there still exists the need for the operator to be able to manipulate the tool into engagement with the workpiece without subjecting himself to excessive strain or risk of losing his balance and incurring injury from a fall. It also may be essential that the operator not come into contact with the workpiece in cases where the workpiece is excessively hot. The latter requirement exists in the steel industry where it is desired to attach metal identification tags to hot steel ingots or to attach insulation liners to the inside surfaces of molds used in casting steel ingots. In this connection it is well known in the steel industry that undesired large voids may appear in an ingot if premature solidification takes place in the region of the upper edges of the mold while the mold is still being filled or while the metal in the center of the mold is still molten. The typical method of preventing this solidification is to apply a liner of suitable insulation, generally available in the industry under the names Hot-Top and Riser, to the inside surface of the mold at its upper end. The insulation acts to prevent heat loss through the mold at its upper end, thereby assuring that the melt will not prematurely freeze in the mold. The preferred manner of attaching the insulation to the mold is to fasten it on by means of nail-like fasteners, with the point of the fastener penetrating the insulation and fixing itself in the wall of the mold and the head or shank of the fastener engaging a washer which in turn engages the insulation liner and holds it firmly against the mold.
 
  A pneumatic fastening tool assembly that employs an engine having a sliding sleeve arrangement to control the supply of air to and exhaust from the pneumatic...  A pneumatic hammer includes a cap connected to a base member with tubular member received in an interior between the cap and the base member. A piston...