SUPPORT STRAP DISPENSERS AND METHODS
A dispenser for storing and dispensing a rolled support strap, including but not limited to hanger straps (sometimes referred to as “plumber's tape”) such as those sold under the trade name TAB TAPE®, as well as assemblies that include a dispenser and a rolled support strap therein, and associated methods.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/701,692, filed Sep. 16, 2012 and entitled “Support Strap Dispenser,” which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
BACKGROUND1. Field
The present inventions relate generally to dispensers for support straps.
2. Related Art
Support straps are commonly used to secure mechanical and electrical building components, such as plumbing pipes, conduit, heating and air conditioning ducts, and water heaters, to building support structures or to suspend these components from building support structures. In the exemplary context of hanger straps (sometimes referred to as “plumber's tape”), a flexible strip of material, such as sheet metal (e.g., a 24 or 28 gauge strip of copper-plated steel or galvanized steel) or polypropylene, is attached at one end to a support member such as a beam, post, or wall stud. The other end of the strip is wrapped around the pipe or conduit and attached in some manner to the first end, thereby forming a loop which supports the conduit. Support straps will often include regularly spaced holes along the length of the strap, and some support straps include fasteners to facilitate the connection of one portion of the strap to another after the formation of the loop.
Support straps are commonly distributed in roll form. The length of the support strap in the roll is such that many individual straps will be cut from the roll. The installer will unroll a portion of the strap and remove it from the remainder with a metal cutting tool. Exemplary roll lengths include, but are not limited to, 10 feet, 25 feet and 50 feet. The support strap rolls are commonly held with one hand and cut with a tool held in the other hand during the unrolling and cutting process. The support strap rolls are also commonly stored within tool boxes or the like during periods of non-use. The present inventor has determined that conventional usage and storage methodologies associated with support strap rolls are susceptible to improvement. For example, the resiliency of the rolled support strap can cause the support strap to move as the user is trying to cut it. The thin metal material that forms the support strap may also have sharp side edges that can injure the user. The support strap roll may also unwind or be otherwise disfigured, and/or the support strap may be bent, when stored in a tool box.
SUMMARYA support strap dispenser in accordance with at least one of the present inventions includes a housing with an internal storage region and an outlet, and an apparatus, associated with housing, that is configured to frictionally engage the support strap to prevent unwanted movement of the support strap. The present inventions also include an assembly which has such a support strap dispenser and a support strap roll located therein. The present inventions also include methods of dispensing a support that include the steps of storing the support strap in rolled and frictionally engaging the support strap to prevent movement of the support strap relative to the outlet absent user-applied force.
Detailed description of preferred embodiments of the inventions will be made with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The following is a detailed description of the best presently known modes of carrying out the inventions. This description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of illustrating the general principles of the inventions.
As illustrated for example in
Although the present dispensers are not limited to any particular shape, the exemplary housing 102 illustrated in
The exemplary housing 102 is defined by a pair of housing members 102a and 102b. The housing members 102a and 102b may, in some instances, be partially or fully separable from one another in order to facilitate placement of the support strap roll into the storage region 110. The housing members 102a and 102b respectively include one of the end walls 104 and 106, and portions 108a and 108b of the side wall 108. In the illustrated implementation, the housing members 102a and 102b pivot relative to one another. A hinge about which the housing members 102a and 102b pivot is located adjacent to the flat surface 114, and a latch mechanism that locks the housing members 102a and 102b in the closed state illustrated in
Turning to
The exemplary support strap dispenser 100 is also configured to automatically lock when the housing members 102a and 102b pivot from the open position to the orientation illustrated in
The stiffness of the beam 140 will maintain the latch in the latched state until the beam is deflected (upwardly in the illustrated orientation) to such an extent the flat surface 154 on the projection 144 is free of the latch surface 140. This may be accomplished by, for example, placing a thumb in the recess 120 and then pushing the latch member 138. The housing members 102a and 102b can then be separated by pivoting them about the aforementioned hinge.
It should be noted here that the present dispensers are not limited to any particular hinge or latch arrangement. For example, the hinge may be omitted and two separable housing members may be provided that can be attached and detached as necessary.
The housing 102 may also be provided with various alignment and support features. In the illustrated implementation, and referring to
When a support strap roll is placed into the storage region 110, the outer portion of the roll will be located radially inward of the posts 156 and 160 and the lower guide 168 (discussed below) but for the portion of the support strap roll that has entered the dispenser head 126. In many instances, the portion of the support strap roll that is approaching the dispenser head will rest against the inner surface 164 (
Turning to
In some implementations, including the illustrated implementation, the lower guide 168 may also have a recess 184 that accommodates protrusions that may be found on some support straps (e.g., the support strap illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 5,522,571 and sold under the trade name TAB TAPE®). As a result, the exemplary lower guide 168 has a pair of spaced guide surfaces (or rails) 186 that are separated by the recess 184.
The materials and size of the dispenser 100 will depend on the intended usage. Suitable materials include, but are not limited to, thermoplastic polymers such as polypropylene. A dispenser 100 that is configured for 26-28 gauge support strap rolls that range from 10 to 25 feet in length (unrolled) may be about 5 to 6 inches in height and width. The thickness will depend on the width of the intended support strap.
The support strap 200 is wound into a spiral roll, with the radially outermost portion 200a entering the dispenser head 126 by way of the gap 170. As a result of being wound into a spiral roll, the support strap 200 defines a first curvature. The magnitude of the first curvature may vary over the length of the support strap and may even be zero (i.e. support strap 200 may be straight) just prior to entering the gap 170 at the lower guide end 178. The lower guide end 178 and support strap portion 200b engage one another with enough force, in a direction generally perpendicular to support strap portion 200b, to bend the support strap 200 at the point of engagement into a second curvature. As a result, there is a friction force between the lower guide end 178 and support strap portion 200b that resists outward and inward movement (note arrows A and B) of the support strap 200 relative to the dispenser head 126. The relative thicknesses of the gap 170 and support strap 200, and the undulating shape of the upper guide 166 and the lower guide 168, results in the support strap being spaced apart from (and out of contact with) the upper guide and the lower guide between the upper guide apex 176 and the lower guide end 178. The upper guide apex 176 and support strap portion 200c engage one another with enough force, in a direction generally perpendicular to strap portion 200c, to bend the support strap 200 at the point of engagement into a third curvature. The second and third curvatures are in different directions in the illustrated embodiment, and may be of the same magnitude or different magnitudes. A friction force is created between the upper guide apex 176 and support strap portion 200c that also resists outward and inward movement of the support strap 200 relative to the dispenser head 126. It should also be noted that friction force is applied to both the top and bottom surfaces 206 and 208 of the strap main body 202.
The combined magnitude of the friction forces between the dispenser head 126 and the support strap 200 is large enough to prevent unwanted movement of the support strap in or out of the dispenser 100. The rolled support strap 200 may, for example, store potential energy that is created when the support strap is rolled, when the support strap is placed into the dispenser 100, and/or when a portion of the support strap is pulled through the outlet 112 by the user. Absent the friction force, the support strap 200 could move after the user has pulled the desired length support strap through the outlet 112, released the end of the support strap, and is holding the dispenser 100 with one hand and a cutting tool with the other. The overall friction force should not, however, be so high that it precludes the user from pulling the support strap through the outlet 112.
The friction force may also be adjusted in a variety of ways. For example, the thickness of the gap 170 (or a portion thereof) may be reduced to a thickness substantially equal to the thickness of the support strap 200, thereby increasing the amount of dispenser head/support strap contact. The upper guide 166 and/or the lower guide 168 may also be reconfigured such that the bending of the support strap is more or less severe and/or occurs at additional or fewer points along the support strap. The smooth, undulating curvatures of the upper guide 166 and/or the lower guide 168 may be replaced with sharper corners and more abrupt changes in direction. Surface roughening may also be employed. Additionally, or alternatively, friction generating forces may be applied to the side edges 210 and 212 of the support strap 200 to control its position within the dispenser head 126.
It should also be noted that the first and second guides 166 and 168 may be reoriented from their illustrated upper/lower orientation. For example, there may be instances where the portion of the support strap 200 within the dispenser head 126 is rotated to some extent from its illustrated orientation (e.g., ninety degrees) about its longitudinal axis. Here, the first and second guides would be correspondingly rotated and, therefore, could be referred to as “right” and “left” guides, or simply “side,” guides.
Another exemplary support strap dispenser is generally represented by reference numeral 300 in
The exemplary housing 302 is defined by a pair of housing members 302a and 302b that pivot relative to one another about a hinge 328 (
Turning to
As illustrated for example in
Although the present inventions have been described in terms of the preferred embodiments above, numerous modifications and/or additions to the above-described preferred embodiments would be readily apparent to one skilled in the art. By way of example, but not limitation, the present inventions include assemblies that comprise a support strap dispenser as described above or claimed below in combination with a support strap roll located in the internal storage region of the support strap dispenser. The dispensers described above and claimed below may also be used in conjunction with wire and other dispensable objects that are stored in roll form and cut to length as they are consumed. It is intended that the scope of the present inventions extends to all such modifications and/or additions.
Claims
1. A dispenser for use with a support strap, the dispenser comprising:
- a housing including an internal storage region configured to store a support strap roll and an outlet; and
- an apparatus, associated with housing, that is configured to frictionally engage the support strap to prevent movement of the support strap relative to the outlet absent user-applied force.
2. A dispenser as claimed in claim 1, wherein
- the apparatus is adjacent to the outlet.
3. A dispenser as claimed in claim 1, wherein
- the apparatus comprises a dispenser head.
4. A dispenser as claimed in claim 1, wherein
- the apparatus includes a upper guide and a lower guide that define a gap therebetween through which the support strap passes; and
- at least one of the upper guide and the lower guide is configured and positioned to frictionally engage the support strap.
5. A dispenser as claimed in claim 4, wherein
- the upper guide and the lower guide are configured and positioned to frictionally engage the support strap at respective locations that are spaced from one another.
6. A dispenser as claimed in claim 5, wherein
- the upper guide and the lower guide undulate.
7. A dispenser as claimed in claim 1, wherein
- the apparatus includes a first guide and a second guide that define a gap therebetween through which the support strap passes; and
- at least one of the first guide and the second guide is configured and positioned to frictionally engage the support strap.
8. A dispenser as claimed in claim 7, wherein
- the first guide and the second guide are configured and positioned to frictionally engage the support strap at respective locations that are spaced from one another.
9. A dispenser as claimed in claim 7, wherein
- the first guide has a pair of spaced guide surfaces that are separated by a recess.
10. A dispenser as claimed in claim 7, wherein
- the first guide and the second guide undulate.
11. A dispenser as claimed in claim 1, wherein
- the housing includes first and second housing members that are pivotably connected to one another by a hinge.
12. A dispenser for use with a support strap, the dispenser comprising:
- a housing including an internal storage region configured to store a support strap roll and an outlet; and
- means, associated with housing, for frictionally engaging the support strap and preventing movement of the support strap relative to the outlet absent user-applied force.
13. A dispenser as claimed in claim 12, wherein
- the means is adjacent to the outlet.
14. A dispenser as claimed in claim 12, wherein
- the housing includes first and second housing members that are pivotably connected to one another by a hinge.
15. A method of dispensing a support strap, the method comprising the steps of:
- storing the support strap in rolled form within a housing that includes an internal storage region and an outlet; and
- frictionally engaging the support strap to prevent movement of the support strap relative to the outlet absent user-applied force.
16. A method as claimed in claim 15, wherein
- the support strap includes a top portion, a bottom portion and side edges; and
- the top portion and the bottom portion is frictionally engaged at longitudinally spaced locations.
17. A method as claimed in claim 15, wherein
- the step of frictionally engaging the support strap comprises engaging the support strap at a first location with enough force to bend the support strap at the point of engagement from a first curvature to a second curvature.
18. A method as claimed in claim 17, wherein
- the step of frictionally engaging the support strap comprises engaging the support strap at a second location, that is longitudinally spaced from the first location, with enough force to bend the support strap at the point of engagement from the second curvature to a third curvature.
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 22, 2013
Publication Date: Mar 20, 2014
Inventor: Marc Franklin Foreman (Woodland Hills, CA)
Application Number: 13/774,717
International Classification: B65H 16/00 (20060101);