Paintbrush rotation control system
A system for rotating a paintbrush that connects handle (31), which may also be connected to an extension pole, to a paintbrush (10) comprises a rotary connection device (36) or silicone tube sections (80, 81) including a first member (56) having an internal cylindrical surface (57) and a second member (33) located within and substantially coaxial with the member (56) and having an external cylindrical surface. One member is attached to the handle (31), and the other to the paintbrush. If the bristles of the brush (10) are place in a painting position against a surface with the axis of the brush extending substantially perpendicular to the surface and the handle (31) is moved with a circular motion substantially coinciding with the axis of the brush, the cylindrical surfaces of the two members will interact and cause the brush to rotate about its axis.
The present invention relates to a method of causing a paintbrush to rotate as required during the course of painting without the need to touch the brush.
A crucial aspect of the operation of a paintbrush is the capacity to rotate it about its axis, which is a line extending from the bristles of the brush through the centre line of the handle, during the course of applying paint. This is done frequently with a hand held brush in order to manage the paint within it and with changes of direction of brush strokes and this is an important factor in the accuracy, speed and general efficiency of the use of a paintbrush.
There are occasions when it would be useful to be able to rotate the brush in the course of painting without the need to touch the brush with the hand as in the case of a brush that is connected to the end of an extension pole and out of reach of the user. When a paint brush is connected to the end of an extension pole much of the useful malleability of the brush is lost due to its fixed position on the end of the pole and the invention can be used to rotate the brush and select different angles of rotation during the course of using the brush on the end of the extension pole without the need to touch the brush by moving the extension pole with a circular action.
Paint brushes often accumulate paint on the handle and the invention can be used to operate the brush including rotating it about its axis as required without the need to touch the brush and thereby avoiding paint getting on the hands. A special brush may be required to rotate continuously in order to produce a special decorative effect and the invention can enable this continuous rotation to take place that would be difficult to achieve with the brush held in the hand.
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide a system that enables the user of the paint brush to rotate the paint brush and stop rotating the paint brush as required in a suitably controllable manner during the course of applying paint by moving the handle of the brush rotation control system with a circular action and it is also an objective of the invention to provide a system that can be connected to the end of an extension pole that enables the user to rotate the brush by operating the extension pole with a circular action.
Although this system can be used in different ways, it will be described mainly in relation to its optional use on the end of an extension pole as a system that connects a paintbrush to the end of an extension pole that enables the user to rotate the brush as require during the course of applying paint by operating the extension pole with a circular action.
It should be noted that any reference to the use or operation of the extension pole will also apply to the use or operation of the handle of the paint brush rotation system when the system is not connected to an extension pole.
According to the invention a paint brush rotation system is provided that comprises a rotary connection system including a first rotary member having a concave internal cylindrical surface and a second rotary member located within and substantially coaxial with the first rotary member and having a convex cylindrical surface positioned adjacent to the concave cylindrical surface of the first rotary member, means for attaching one of the rotary members to the extension pole, and means for attaching the other rotary member to the paint brush. If the bristles of the paint brush are placed in a painting position against the surface with the axis of the brush extending substantially perpendicular to the surface and the extension pole is moved with a circular motion about an axis substantially coinciding with the axis of the brush, the cylindrical surfaces of the two rotary members will interact and cause the brush to rotate about its axis.
According to one version of the invention, the first rotary member is attached to the paintbrush and the second rotary member is attached to the extension pole. If the extension pole is moved with a circular motion in a clockwise direction this results in the brush rotating about its axis in a clockwise direction and if the extension pole is moved with a circular motion in an anti-clockwise direction this results in the brush rotating about its axis in an anti-clockwise direction.
In order that the invention may be more readily understood, embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
The brush 10 can be removed from the wall and rotated to a required angle by releasing wing nut 25, turning the brush about its axis to the required position and then tightening wing nut 25 again but this is a relatively time consuming and laborious procedure to have to do repeatedly and it interrupts the flow of the work.
With reference to
A rotary connection device 36 (not illustrated in
Receiving hole 55 needs to be deep enough to adequately support brush 10 by rod 33 for the purpose of a smooth and controllable rotation of the brush 10. In a 37 mm brush, the receiving hole 55 may be 5 mm deep and 10 mm in diameter. The silicone tube sections 80 and 81 may be 10 mm in diameter to fit the inside of hole 55 and may have an inner diameter (the diameter of the hole 57 in the silicone tube 80, 81) of 6.25 mm. Surface of hole 57 provides the necessary contact area for the dynamic interaction between the brush 10 and the rod 33 for the control of the rotation of the brush 10.
The cylindrical body 56 forms a first rotary member and the rod 33 forms a second rotary member. Together the two rotary members form the rotary connection system 36.
The user connects the paintbrush 10 to the rod 33 by inserting rod 33 through rotary connection device 36 to the point at which it comes to a stop at end of hole 55. Collar 61 is expandable and grips rod 33 to a degree that prevents unwanted slip between rod 33 and collar 61. Rod is tapered or rounded at the end 63 to open collar 61 as it enters at end 62. Collar 61 prevents rod 33 from coming out of the connection device 36 too easily because collar 61 is trapped within chamber 58. Rod 33 is retained firmly within connection device 36 because collar 61 grips rod 33 firmly due to its elastic properties with the result that rod 33 will not come out of connection device 36 without a firm pull because the outer diameter of collar 61 is greater than the diameter of hole 57.
Rod 33 is inserted in the same manner as in
The axial hole 57 formed within the body 56 of the rotary connection device 56 or by an arrangement of silicone tube sections as illustrated in
Rod 33 is positioned within cylindrical hole 57. In an actual embodiment of the invention the diameter of the convex outer cylindrical surface of the rod 33 will be slightly less that the diameter of the concave inner surface of the hole 57. The difference between outer diameter of the rod 33 and the inner diameter of the hole 57 in this illustration is greatly exaggerated for the purpose of illustrating the principle by which the circular motion of the extension pole 11 causes a rotation of the paint brush 10 and therefore the divergence of angle of brush 10 from 45 degrees from the wall (this divergence being the difference between axis 37 and axis 72) caused by the circular movement of the extension pole 11 is greatly exaggerated compared to an actual embodiment of the invention.
In
In an actual embodiment the outer diameter of the rod 33 may be 6 mm in diameter and the inner diameter of the hole 57 may be 6.25 mm, although all dimensions are capable of variation.
In order to rotate the brush 10 about its axis 37, the user positions the brush 10 substantially perpendicular to the wall 71 with the tips of the bristles 25 against the wall 71 and moves the extension pole 11 with a circular action that causes the straight end section off rod 33 within the cylindrical hole 57 in the handle 13 of brush 10 to move in a clockwise direction around an imaginary axis 72 which extends perpendicular to the wall 71. Axis 72 is the axis about which extension pole 11 and the rod 33 are moved around whenever this action takes place. The circular movement of rod 33 about axis 72 causes the brush 10 to rotate about its own axis 37 because the connection at contact areas 78 and 76 that take place between the outer surface of rod 33 and the interior surface of the hole 57 cause interior surface of hole 57 and therefore the brush 10 to rotate around the rod 33.
The pressure of the brush 10 against the wall 71 causes a resistance to the movement of the brush 10 which is acted against in the cause of the circular movement of the extension pole 11 about axis 72 resulting in continuously moving contact points within contact areas 78 and 76 between rod 33 and the inner surface of cylindrical hole 57 during the course off the circular movement.
In
The position of rod 33 within the hole 57 as illustrated in cross section in
At the point of contact at 73, 74 and 75 in 11A, 11B and 11C respectively which correspond to the points of contact in 10A, 10B and 10C respectively, between rod 33 and inner surface of hole 57, the body 56 of the rotary connection device 36 or the silicone tube section 80 is caused to rotate in the direction of the circular movement of rod 33. This is because when rod 33 progresses in a clockwise direction from the position in
The contact of rod 33 at contact points with the cylindrical surface of hole 57 as rod 33 travels around surface of hole 57 thus causes the body 56 of the rotary connection device 36 or silicone tube 80 and thereby the paint brush 10 to rotate around rod 33 in the manner described above.
The action of the rod 33 at front contact area 77 in
As rod 33 follows the circular action around axis 72 it makes contact with surface of hole 57 in a progressive manner around the surface of hole 57. As the contact point between rod 33 and surface of hole 57 changes in the course of this action, the point of contact (between rod 33 and hole 57) on the circumference of rod 33 and hole 57 also progressively changes. With a circular action of rod 33 in a clockwise direction, the point of contact that rod 33 makes with hole 57 on the circumference of rod 33 will move around the circumference of rod 33 in a clockwise direction and the point of contact that the surface of hole 57 makes with rod 33 will move around the circumference of hole 57 in a clockwise direction.
Assuming there is a good connection between rod 33 and hole 57 without slip the change of point of contact between the circumference of hole 33 and the circumference of hole 57 will mean that cylindrical body 56 will move around the circumference of rod 33 in such a way that the distance covered of the progressively continuing contact point on surface of hole 57 around the interior surface of the circumference of hole 57 will be equal the distance covered of the progressively continuing exterior contact point around the exterior surface of the circumference of rod 33. Therefore if the circumference of rod 33 is half that of the circumference of hole 57, a 180 degree progression of contact point around rod 33 will correspond to a 90 degree progression of contact point around interior of hole 57 and if there is no slippage between the surfaces of rod 33 and hole 57, the rod 33 will need to do two 180 degree circular motions to cause one 180 degree rotation of cylindrical body 56.
The rate of rotation of cylindrical body 56 around rod 33 in response to circular actions of rod 33 is thus related to the relative sizes rod 33 in relation to hole 57. The greater the difference in size of the rod 33 in relation to the hole 57, the less distance of the circumference of the hole 57 is used to cause the cylindrical body 56 to travel around the circumference of rod 33 to complete a 180 degree rotation and the smaller the difference between the circumference of the rod 33 compared to the circumference of the hole 57 the greater the distance around the circumference of rod 33 that the cylindrical body has to travel in order to complete a 180 degree rotation. Therefore more circular actions of the rod 33 will be required to rotate cylindrical body 56 (and therefore the brush 10) 180 degrees with less difference in size between the rod 33 and hole 57 and fewer circular actions of rod 33 will be required to rotate cylindrical body 56 180 degrees with greater difference between the size of rod 33 and hole 57.
In an embodiment of the invention a degree of slip between rod 33 and interior surface of hole 57 may exist but as the surfaces of rod 33 and hole 57 are even and consistent throughout 180 degrees, the degree of slip is consistent and therefore there is a consistent relationship between the circular action of the extension pole and the rotation of the paint brush 10.
In an embodiment of the invention in which the rod is 6 mm in diameter and the interior surface of hole 57 is 6.25 mm, it may take in the region of eighteen circular actions of the extension pole 11 to produce one 180 degree rotation of the paint brush 10.
The circular movement of the extension pole 11 will cause the brush 10 to follow the circular movement of the extension pole 11 as well as to rotate about its axis 37. The tips of the bristles 25 of the brush will thus tend to make a circle on the wall. The circle that the brush 10 makes on the wall 71 is minimal and in most painting jobs there is room for this. The diameter of the circle moved through by the extension pole 11 about axis 72 may be in the region of 30 mm to 40 mm. The user continues this action until the paintbrush 10 reaches a point in rotation about its own axis 37 that is desired, at which point the user stops the circular movement of the extension pole 11 and resumes normal brush strokes.
The paintbrush rotation control system may be made with a brush 10 of any suitable size with a handle 13 of any design or length provided that it can incorporate a suitable hole 57 in accordance with the principles of the invention. Rod 33 can be of any shape or length provided that it supports the brush adequately and appropriately and it may be attached to an angle adjustment system to enable the rod 33 and thereby the brush 10 to be adjusted and the paintbrush rotation control handle 31 may also have any appropriate size or shape.
Claims
1. A paintbrush rotation control system including a first rotary member (56) having a concave cylindrical surface and a second rotary member (33) located within and substantially coaxial with the first rotary member (56) and having a convex cylindrical surface positioned adjacent to the concave cylindrical surface of the first rotary member (56),
- means for attaching one of the rotary members to paintbrush control system handle (31), and means for attaching the other rotary member to the paintbrush (10), whereby if the bristles (25) of the paintbrush (10) are placed in a painting position against a surface (71) with the axis (37) of the brush extending substantially perpendicular to the surface (71) and the paintbrush control system handle (31) is moved with a circular motion about an axis (72) substantially coinciding with the axis (33) of the brush, the cylindrical surfaces of the rotary members (56, 33) will interact to cause the brush (10) to rotate about its axis.
2. A paint brush rotation control system as claimed in claim 1, in which the first rotary member (56) is attached to the paintbrush (10) and the second rotary member (33) is attached to the control system handle (31), whereby the circular motion of the paintbrush control system handle (31) in a clockwise direction results in the brush (10) rotating about its axis in a clockwise direction.
3. A paintbrush rotation control system substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 23, 2003
Publication Date: Sep 21, 2006
Inventor: Michael Ridgway (HAMPSHIRE)
Application Number: 10/553,530
International Classification: A46B 5/00 (20060101);