Handling: hand and hoist-line implements – Hand bars and hand barrows – Opposing jaws
Reexamination Certificate
2000-02-24
2001-04-17
Cherry, Johnny D. (Department: 3652)
Handling: hand and hoist-line implements
Hand bars and hand barrows
Opposing jaws
C294S099200
Reexamination Certificate
active
06217092
ABSTRACT:
This invention relates to a pair of food tongs, in particular a pair of ice tongs, comprising two legs of tongs each forming a gripper portion and a stalk portion, which legs are pivotally mounted at each other in the end portion of the stalk portions facing away from the gripper portion so as to be relatively movable about a transverse axis in a stop-limited way.
Such tongs are used for handling foodstuffs such as ice cubes, pieces of sugar, but also sausage, pastries and the like, where the legs of tongs have so far mostly been held together via a separate hinge with hinge pins and have been spring-loaded via a leg spring put onto the hinge pin. Due to the different individual parts of such tongs the manufacture thereof is rather complex and creates difficulties in cleaning the same above all in the hinge and spring area. The same is true for an eating utensil known from DE 40 40 730 A, comprising two oblong elements which are pivotally mounted at each other via a joint and each have a receiving portion and an actuating portion, where the one element constitutes a spoon and the other one constitutes a stalked ring adapted to the spoon, so that the foodstuffs picked up with the same, in particular spaghetti, can be cut into lengths by pressing the elements together. Spoon bowl and ring cooperate in the manner of shears, and a spring tongue fixed at one of the elements serves as opening spring.
Moreover, there already exist one-piece tongs, where the legs of such tongs are connected with each other by a spring clip in the vicinity of the ends of the stalk portions, so that because of the risk of material fatigue of the spring clip the entire tongs must consist of a high-quality spring material, or the function of the tongs remains unsatisfactory due to the poor spring properties, and a correspondingly high risk of breakage must be accepted.
It is therefore the object underlying the invention to create a pair of food tongs as described above, which with a comparatively simple and inexpensive manufacture is characterized by its longevity and functional reliability and last but not least is good and easy to clean.
This object is solved by the invention in that the two legs of the tongs made of plastics have meshing hinge flaps with bearing lugs on the one hand and bearing pins snapping into the bearing lugs on the other hand, and at )east at one leg of the tongs in the vicinity of the stalk portion there is molded a spring tongue known per se, which projects towards the other leg of the tongs at an acute angle. By means of these measures, the tongs can be composed of two components, which may each be made of plastics in one piece, for instance by an injection molding process, where these components comprise the gripper and stalk portions of the legs of the tongs, but also the hinge portions for pivotally mounting them at each other and the spring tongue for spring loading. These two components, which can be prefabricated in an economic way, need only be pressed together so that the hinge pins and bearing lugs of the meshing hinge flaps can snap into each other, and the pair of tongs is ready for operation. As material, any suitable food-compatible plastic material may be used, the spring tongue is hardly liable to ageing due to the favorable load conditions and the inherent elastic properties of the plastic material, and the one-piece design of the legs of the tongs and their simple shape as well as the permanent decomposability of the tongs provide optimum possibilities for cleaning.
When the one hinge flaps with the bearing lugs and the bearing pins of the other hinge flaps have inclined stop faces adjusted to each other, pressing the hinge flaps together for composing the legs of the tongs is facilitated and simplified, as due to their wedge action the inclined stop faces at the same time involve a lateral bending up of the flaps until the bearing pins snap into the bearing lugs, when the hinge flaps are pressed together.
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patent: 5199756 (1993-04-01), Bartlett et al.
patent: 37 05 570 (1988-03-01), None
patent: 40 40 730 (1992-06-01), None
patent: 1104919 (1968-03-01), None
Cherry Johnny D.
Collard & Roe PC
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