Palm stapler

Elongated-member-driving apparatus – With means to move or guide member into driving position – Including supply magazine for constantly urged members

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C227S134000, C227S156000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06386418

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
(1) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to hand-held staplers, and in particular to a hand-held stapler that can be held against the palm of the user's hand, so that the user can use both hands to position items to be stapled without the need to release the stapler.
(2) Description of the Prior Art
Hand-held staplers are well known in the prior art, and are generally comprised of a staple-delivery head that is hinged to a base, which serves to support the stapler on an surface. A staple magazine with side and bottom walls hold a strip of aligned, adjacent staples, and a staple positioner urges the staple strip to one end of the magazine, where a plunger carried by the stapler head forces the leading staple through a slot in the magazine bottom wall when the head is pressed downwardly.
These staplers are designed to insert the points of the staple entirely though the material to be stapled, e.g., a stack of papers, with the ends of the staple being bent after insertion to prevent removal of the staple. Thus, the base includes an anvil positioned beneath the slot to deflect the ends of the staple, either inwardly or outwardly.
These staplers can also be used to drive staples into surfaces without bending the staples by pivoting the base, which is usually held toward the head with a releasable catch, out of the staple pathway.
Staplers of this configuration are exemplifed by the following U.S. patents:
U.S. Pat. No. 2,462,623 Flamm
U.S. Pat. No. 5,183,196 Miyashita
U.S. Pat. No. 5,690,268 Evans et al.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,992,724 Snyder
Other staplers are designed to only drive staples, generally of a heavier design than the staplers used in the above staplers, through a first material and into an underlying surface without bending the ends of the staples. These staplers, often referred to as impact staplers, also include a staple magazine to hold a strip of staples, a staple positioner to urge the staple strip to one end of the magazine, and a plunger to force the leading staple through a slot in the magazine bottom. However, the plunger instead of being attached to the surface pushed downwardly by the user, as is normally the case with the above staplers, is spring-loaded and released by a trigger mechanism to drive the plunger, and thus the trigger with greater force. A base and anvil is not used with this type of stapler, since the points of the staples are not turned.
Staplers of this configuration are exemplifed by the following U.S. patents:
U.S. Pat. No. 5,407,118 Marks
U.S. Pat. No. 5,497,932 Brewer et al.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,988,478 Marks
Either stapler design can be easily used to staple a plurality of articles or items to each other or one or more items to a surface. However, if the items are not first arranged in the manner in which they are to be stapled, the user must discontinue stapling in order to arrange the items. Unless the items can be arranged with one hand, the user must release the stapler in order to use both hands to position the items in the desired arrangement.
In many circumstances, releasing the stapler to free both hands for manipulation of the items to be stapled can significantly increase the time required to staple a plurality of items, especially if the only available surface for placement of the stapler is remote from the area where stapling is being performed. For example, when there is a need to staple a plurality of items or workpieces to a vertical surface, the user must position a first item with one hand while holding the stapler in the other, or place the stapler on a nearby surface until the item is position, and then reach for the stapler once the item is positioned. In either event, the item must be held in place with one hand while being stapled. The complexities of these maneuvers can be even more pronounced if the user is also trying to hold several other items that need to be stapled to the vertical surface.
For instances, many teachers, particularly elementary school teachers are required to staple artwork, posters and other paper items to bulletin boards or to other surfaces on the walls of a class room. Often, the teacher must stand on a stool, or reach above his or her head, to place the items at a desired height. Thus, the teacher must hold several papers and a stapler, position one of the papers while juggling the other papers and the stapler, and then staple the first paper with one hand without letting it slip out of position.
These manipulations, which must be preformed not only by teachers, but by numerous other individuals for a variety of purposes, are at a minimum inconvenient and increase the time required to perform the task. In some instances where the item to be stapled cannot be positioned or held with one hand, the chore can be impossible to perform. Thus, there is a need for a stapler that can be held by the user while still permitting the user to position the item to be stapled.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention addresses this need by providing a stapler that is held in the palm of the user's hand, while permitting the user to user his or her fingers to manipulate and hold the item to be stapled, even when the item is being stapled.
Generally, the stapler of the invention is comprised of an elongated staple magazine that is supported on the lower surface of a stapler head having an upper surface generally conforming to the shape of a user's palm, and an attachment strap used to hold the upper surface in the palm of the user.
The elongated staple magazine includes a staple housing configured to hold a plurality of adjacent, aligned staples, and a staple positioner to urge the staples toward the forward end of the magazine. The housing is comprised of a pair of spaced side walls separated by a width approximately equal to the width of the staples to be positioned in the magazine, and a lower wall connecting the bottom edges of the side walls. The bottom wall includes a staple discharge slot having a width approximately equal to the thickness of a single staple. The housing also includes an end wall at its forward end to position the leading stapler over the staple discharge slot.
The staple positioner is generally comprised of a contact block to engage the rear end of the aligned staples and a spring to urge the block toward the front of the staple magazine. The positioner can be inserted through the top of the magazine, or though the rear end of the magazine.
The staple magazine is moveably positioned on the lower surface of a uniquely designed cover or head that can be supported in the palm of the user's hand, permitting the stapler to be carried and used, while freeing the user's fingers for other manipulations. Specifically, the stapler head includes a convex or domed upper surface adapted to fit within the user's palm, and a generally planar lower surface. The outer periphery of the cover is rounded, the term being used to include circular, oval, elliptical, and ovate configurations.
The head includes a plunger that is positioned over the staple discharge slot in the magazine housing lower wall, to push a staple through the slot when the head is moved toward the magazine. The magazine can be slidable positioned within a recess in the lower surface of the head. The plunger can extend downwardly from the upper wall of the recess to engage staples positioned over the discharge slot. If desired, the head can include a separate magazine cap that fits into the head recess and over the magazine housing. This cap can be slidable relative to the magazine, or one end of the cap can be hinged to the rear end of the magazine housing.
Alternatively, the head can pivotally attached to the rear of the magazine, so that the front end of the magazine is compressed into the head recess to force the plunger end against the leading staple. Other attachment means permitting the head to move between uncompressed and compressed positions relative to the magazine will be apparent to one skilled in the art.
The stapler can also be used like a

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