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| United States Patent Application |
20090094937
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Podish; Robert
|
April 16, 2009
|
Mortar finishing tool
Abstract
Provided is a mortar finishing tool specifically adapted to use for
touching up and finishing brick-work jobs. A plate has a left edge, a
right edge, a front edge, and rear edge. A left beveled lip is formed
integral to the left edge along the length thereof projecting upwardly
from the left edge obliquely towards the plate. A rear beveled lip is
attached proximate to the rear edge along the length thereof, the rear
beveled lip being generally L-shaped in cross-section having a base
attached to the plate with its upper portion angled obliquely towards the
plate. A handle projects from the rear edge of the plate situated
co-planar to the plate.
| Inventors: |
Podish; Robert; (Sycamore, PA)
|
| Correspondence Address:
|
MCKAY & ASSOCIATES, PC.
801 MCNEILLY ROAD
PITTSBURGH
PA
15226
US
|
| Serial No.:
|
250029 |
| Series Code:
|
12
|
| Filed:
|
October 13, 2008 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
52/749.13 |
| Class at Publication: |
52/749.13 |
| International Class: |
E04F 19/00 20060101 E04F019/00 |
Claims
1. A mortar finishing tool, comprising:a plate having a left edge, a right
edge, a front edge, and rear edge;a left beveled lip formed integral to
said left edge along the length thereof projecting upwardly from said
left edge obliquely towards said plate;a rear beveled lip attached
proximate to said rear edge along the length thereof, said rear beveled
lip generally L-shaped in cross-section having a base attached to said
plate with its upper portion angled obliquely towards said plate; and,a
handle projecting from said rear edge of said plate situated co-planar to
said plate.
2. The mortar tool of claim 1, wherein said left beveled lip includes a
slanted lip front angled obliquely towards said plate away from said
front edge such that said finishing tool can be placed directly against a
wall and angled down toward said wall to urge mortar from said plate.
3. The mortar tool of claim 1, wherein a channel is defined between a
rearmost edge of said left beveled lip and a left side of said base of
said rear beveled lip at a bottom left corner of said plate to allow
excess water to be drained from said plate while still maintaining mortar
on said plate.
4. The mortar tool of claim 1, wherein said base of said rear beveled lip
is attached to said plate using rivets.
5. A mortar finishing tool, comprising:a rectangular plate having a left
edge, a right edge, a front edge, and rear edge;a left beveled lip formed
integral to said left edge along the length thereof projecting upwardly
from said left edge obliquely towards said plate at an angle in the range
of forty-five degrees and ninety-degrees relative to said plate;a rear
beveled lip attached proximate to said rear edge along the length
thereof, said rear beveled lip generally L-shaped in cross-section having
a generally rectangular, flat base attached to said plate with its upper
portion angled obliquely towards said plate at an angle in the range of
ninety-degrees and one-hundred thirty-five degrees relative to said base,
said base raised from said plate such that one edge of said base forms a
channel border proximate to a rearmost edge of said left beveled lip to
define a channel to allow excess water to be drained from said plate when
said mortar is present thereon; and,a handle projecting from said rear
edge of said plate situated co-planar to said plate adapted to allow for
movement of said finishing tool merely by wrist-action of said user.
6. The mortar tool of claim 1, wherein said left beveled lip includes a
slanted lip front angled obliquely towards said plate away from said
front edge such that said finishing tool can be placed directly against a
wall and angled down toward said wall to urge mortar from said plate.
Description
SPECIFIC REFERENCE
[0001]The instant application claims benefit of provisional application
Ser. No. 60/980,204 filed Oct. 16, 2007, the entire disclosure of which
is incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND
[0002]1. Field of the Invention
[0003]The present invention relates to mortar hawks or mortar holding
apparatuses for retaining mortar while using a trowel to finish brick
work. In particular, the instant invention is a plate-like mortar hawk
utilized for touch-up jobs having two angled lips for urging mortar on to
the trowel and a means for allowing water to drain from the plate, as
will be further described. The instant invention further includes a
handle which is well-suited to maneuver small amounts of mortar to
touch-up areas along a wall or the like.
[0004]2. Description of the Related Art
[0005]Mortar hawks are well known in the art. They allow beds of mortar to
be held by one hand as a trowel is used by the other hand to finish
mortar or concrete. See for example U.S. Pat. No. 2,821,078 to Sewards,
U.S. Pat. No. 4,579,378 to Snyders and U.S. Pat. No. 5,067,761 Blowers.
In combination these patents teach a hawk or mortarboard to be carried by
hand. There is a flat, tray-like reservoir. Blowers teaches at least a
pair of side walls for containing the mortar.
[0006]However, the prior art does not teach or suggest a device adapted to
work with very small, touch-up amounts of mortar. Herein taught, beveled
edges are slight and angled to ease the transfer of mortar to the trowel.
The prior art and most
tools are not specifically finishing
tools rather
they are geared for holding relatively large amounts of mortar and thus
any side walls are meant to only retain the mortar and not urge the
mortar on to the trowel.
[0007]The prior art also does not teach a handle of the instant type
wherein it is on the same plane as the tray. In the prior art they are
centrally located and downwardly disposed because they must accommodate
the weight of large amounts of mortar and thus the user must support the
weight of the mortar with his or her entire arm, which can be cumbersome
and is not desirable for touch-up jobs.
[0008]Finally, the prior art does not teach a gap defined between the
first bevel and the second bevel which allows for the drainage of excess
water. In the prior art the side walls are integral throughout to avoid
loss of mortar. They do not teach or suggest a hole, gap, or slit between
them which defines a channel that acts like a drain. There is need then
for these and other features disclosed by the instant invention, as
below.
SUMMARY
[0009]It is the objective of the instant invention to provide a mortar
tool specifically adapted to use for touch-up, finishing brick-work jobs.
Detailing and finishing mortar work requires precise, clean application
of the mortar, and this invention eases the transfer of mortar, keeps the
mortar consistent, and allows for exact manipulation and placement of the
mortar.
[0010]Accordingly, what is provided is a mortar finishing tool, comprising
a plate having a left edge, a right edge, a front edge, and rear edge. A
left beveled lip is formed integral to the left edge along the length
thereof projecting upwardly from the left edge obliquely towards the
plate. A rear beveled lip is attached proximate to the rear edge along
the length thereof, the rear beveled lip being generally L-shaped in
cross-section having a base attached to the plate with its upper portion
angled obliquely towards the plate. A handle projects from the rear edge
of the plate situated co-planar to the plate.
[0011]The tool also includes a slanted lip front angled obliquely towards
said plate away from said front edge such that the finishing tool can be
placed directly against a wall and angled down toward said wall to urge
mortar from said plate, and a channel is defined between a rearmost edge
of the left beveled lip and a left side of the base of the rear beveled
lip at a bottom left corner of the plate to allow excess water to be
drained from the plate while still maintaining mortar on the plate.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012]FIG. 1 shows a top view of the instant finishing tool.
[0013]FIG. 2 shows a right side view of the instant invention showing the
two angled edges.
[0014]FIG. 3 shows a rear view of the instant finishing tool as viewed
looking down the handle.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0015]The invention will now be described in detail in relation to a
preferred embodiment and implementation thereof which is exemplary in
nature and descriptively specific as disclosed. As is customary, it will
be understood that no limitation of the scope of the invention is thereby
intended. The invention encompasses such alterations and further
modifications in the illustrated kit assembly, and such further
applications of the principles of the invention illustrated herein, as
would normally occur to persons skilled in the art to which the invention
relates. This detailed description of this invention is not meant to
limit the invention, but is meant to provide a detailed disclosure of the
best mode of practicing the invention.
[0016]With reference then to FIGS. 1-3, shown is the mortar finishing tool
1. A generally rectangular, flat plate 10 forms the flat surface on which
small amounts of concrete or mortar can be placed. For instance, using a
hand trowel, the user can scoop the mortar from a mixing bin onto the
plate 10. The plate 10 can be made of any suitable rigid material such as
plastic or metal.
[0017]The plate 10 has a left edge 12, a right edge 14, a front edge 16,
and a rear edge 18. Formed integral to the left edge 12 is an angled or
beveled lip 19. This left beveled lip 19 travels the entire length of the
plate 10 and projects upwardly from the left edge 12 obliquely at a
slight angle towards the plate 10. "Slight" as defined herein means the
lip is non-perpendicular relative to the plate 10, forming an angle A
relative to the plate in the range of forty-five degrees (45.degree.) and
ninety-degrees (90.degree.), preferably about sixty-degrees. See FIG. 3
for instance. In this manner, mortar that resides on the plate 10 can be
better urged onto the trowel when the user pushes the mortar against the
left beveled lip 19. Such an angle keeps the mortar from falling off of
both the trowel and the instant finishing tool as the user tries to scoop
the mortar from the plate 10 onto the trowel.
[0018]An angled lip is also formed at the rear edge 18 of the plate 10,
traveling most of the length of the rear edge 18, e.g. from the right
edge 14 to near the left beveled lip 19. As termed herein, this rear
beveled lip 17 can be formed integral to the plate 10, but preferably it
is a separate component having a flat base 17a attached proximate to the
rear edge 18 using rivets 18a or the like, the flat base 17a being raised
slightly from the plate 10. For instance the rear beveled lip 17
preferably is a separately attached bevel, generally L-shaped in
cross-section. In this manner, as further described below, a channel
border 20 is formed along the left side of the rear beveled lip 17. The
rear beveled lip 17 is raised upward from the base 17a and angled
slightly towards the center of the plate 10. "Slightly" as used herein
with respect to rear beveled lip 17 is defined as an angle slightly past
the vertical axis normal to the plate plane. Thus, an angle B is formed
having an angle in the range of ninety-degrees (90.degree.) and
one-hundred thirty-five (135.degree.) degrees relative to base 17a. This
rear beveled lip 17 similarly allows mortar to be urged on to the trowel
and also keeps the mortar from falling across the handle 22 of the
finishing tool and thus keeps the mortar away from the user's hand.
[0019]There is no raised lip at the front edge 16 of the plate 10 or at
the right edge 14 of the plate (or edge opposing either edge that has the
lip, if reversed). Each non-beveled edge forms the border of the plate 10
and allows for the easy transfer of mortar from the bed or mixing bin to
the finishing tool and from the finishing tool plate 10 to the
brick-work. However, in the preferred embodiment left beveled lip 19
includes a lip front 24 which is angled obliquely towards plate 10 away
from front edge 16 such that lip front 24 is not perpendicular to plate
10. In this manner, the finishing tool 1 can be placed directly against
any wall and angled down toward the wall to better urge the mortar from
the plate 10 close to the work area.
[0020]As shown by FIGS. 1 and 3, defined between the left beveled lip 19
and the base 17a of the rear beveled lip 17 is a gap. Particularly, at
the bottom left corner of the plate 10 at the junction of the left
beveled lip 19 and the base 17a of bottom angled lip 17, a channel 21 is
formed. The left side channel border 20 of the base 17a of the rear
beveled lip 17 forms one side of the channel 21, and the rearmost edge 23
of the left beveled lip 19 relative to front edge 16 forms the other side
of the channel 21. This channel 21 allows excess water residing in the
mortar and thus on the plate 10 to be drained from the plate without
losing any amounts of mortar therethrough. For instance when mortar is
manipulated on the plate 10, excess water included in the mortar or
concrete can fall through the channel 21 and away from the mortar and
finishing tool 1. This allows the consistency of the mortar to be
maintained.
[0021]A handle 22 projects from the rear edge 18 of the plate 10. In the
preferred embodiment the handle 22 is on the same plane as the plate 10.
See FIG. 3 for instance. Such a configuration allows the finishing tool 1
to be easily held and manipulated by wrist action in all directions as
small amounts of mortar are used to touch-up and finish a brick wall for
example. Since the instant finishing tool 1 is designed to hold small
amounts of concrete or mortar, the handle 22 can be positioned in this
more maneuverable manner rather than underlying the center of the plate
10 as is known in the art.
[0022]It should be understood that the embodiment described above is
well-suited for user's holding the finishing tool 1 in their left-hand as
they work with a trowel in their right hand. One of ordinary skill can
re-configure the edges of the plate to accommodate use of the plate in a
user's right hand, for instance by moving the handle and/or bottom angled
lip to the opposing side of the plate. The instant embodiment covers this
version.
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