US643168A - Device for lifting plates. - Google Patents

Device for lifting plates. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US643168A
US643168A US71804199A US1899718041A US643168A US 643168 A US643168 A US 643168A US 71804199 A US71804199 A US 71804199A US 1899718041 A US1899718041 A US 1899718041A US 643168 A US643168 A US 643168A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
plate
lower arm
arms
hooks
engage
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US71804199A
Inventor
Frederick Scott Snyder
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US71804199A priority Critical patent/US643168A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US643168A publication Critical patent/US643168A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47JKITCHEN EQUIPMENT; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; APPARATUS FOR MAKING BEVERAGES
    • A47J45/00Devices for fastening or gripping kitchen utensils or crockery
    • A47J45/10Devices for gripping or lifting hot cooking utensils, e.g. pincers, separate pot handles, fabric or like pads

Definitions

  • My invention relates to a device for lifting plates, intended particularly for handling pie-plates in placing them in and removing them from an oven, although adapted for handling plates of all kinds, as well as vessels having a rim similar to the outline of a plate.
  • Figure 1 is a perspective view of my device applied to a plate.
  • Fig. 2 is a plan view showing its method of adjustment for plates of different sizes.
  • Fig. 3 is an end elevation taken from the left of Fig. 2, and
  • Fig. 4 is a plan view of a slightly-modified form of construction.
  • the object of my invention is to provide a cheap and convenient device by which pieplates and other similar articles may be quickly and conveniently handled without danger of burning the fingers.
  • the device is made of bent wire and consists of a lower arm A, which may be formed by bending the wire at its middle and twisting the two pieces together, as shown at A in Fig. 2, or by continuing them alongside each other, either connected, as shown in Fig. 4, or disconnected, as shown in Fig. 1.
  • the loop or that portion where the wire is bent upon itself is formed into a hook B,which extends upward and is concaved on its outer surface, being thus adapted to engage the rim of a dish, as a plate.
  • a short vertical standard F is formed between the lower and upper arms,
  • the spring-arms 0 form a regular curve extending at some little distance above the lower arm A.
  • the outer ends of these spring-arms (Tare provided with inwardly-projecting hooks D, and these hooks are so placed that they will normally occupy a position separated from each other a distance nearly equal to the width of an ordinary plate. They will also be located substantially in the same plane as the lower arm A.
  • the handle portion of the arms 0 may be crimped, as shown at C. in Fig. 1, thus furnishing a better grip for the hand, or may be left uncrimped, as desired.
  • the lower arm A is placed upon the surface upon which the plate is resting and the device slipped forward, with the hooks D embracing each side of the plate.
  • the lifter is thus correctly guided, so as to properly engage its hooks with the edge of the plate, which makes it a great deal more convenient to usein ovens and other dark places than if it had no such guiding member.
  • the arms will permit the hooks to be spread so as to pass around the sides of the plate.
  • the hook B will engage the adjacent edge of the plate.
  • the two spring-arms O are grasped by the hand. These arms may thus be drawn together, so as to securely grasp the plate between the three hooks D, D, and B, whether the plate be large or small.
  • Fig. 2 the outlines of two plates of different sizes are shown in dotted lines and the position of the spring-arms O for the smaller plate is also indicated by dotted lines. It will thus be seen that my device is quickly and automatically adjusted for plates of any size within its range, which range is quite large.
  • My device is quickly applied to plates of different sizes, as it is automatically adjusted by the simple action of grasping the springarms 0 with sufticient force to lift the plate.
  • a plate-lifter having a lower arm provided at one end with a hook adapted to engage one edge of the plate, and at the other end with a vertical standard, the parts of which are fixedly secured together,and springarms extending from the upper end of the standard over the plate and flaring outwardly, said arms having hooks upon their outer ends adapted to engage the outer side edges of the plate, substantially as described.
  • a plate-lifter having a horizontal lower arm adapted to rest upon the plate-supporting surface and provided with an upwardlyextending hook upon one end adapted to engage the edge of a plate, and spring-arms attached to the opposite end of the lower arm and extending over said arm and the plate, and having hooks at their outer ends adapted to engage the edges of the plate beyond the lower arm and at each side of its center line, substantially as shown and described.
  • a plate-lifter having a horizontal lower arm adapted to rest upon the plate-supporting surface and provided with an upwardlyextending hook upon one end adapted to engage the edge of a plate, a standard rising from the other end of said arm, and springarms extending from the upper end of said standard over the lower arm and the plate, and having hooks at their outer ends adapted to engage the farther edges of the plate, substantially as shown and described.
  • a plate-lifter composed of a single wire which is bent upon itself at its middle and has the end of the loop thus formed bent to form a side or upwardly-extending hook facing outwardly or in the direction of its end, the wires extending from said hook alongside each other to form a base-section, and then bending upwardly and being secured to each other to form a short standard, from the upper end of which wires extend upwardly and divergently over the base-section with their ends curving downwardly, and each provided at its end with an inwardly-extending hook adapted to engage the farther side edge of a plate, substantially as described.

Description

No. 643,|68. Patented Feb. I3, I900. F. S. SNYDER.
DEVICE FOR LlFTlNG PLATES.
(Application filed May 24, 1599.
(No Model.)
ATTORNEYS Unrrnn STATES PATENT @FFICE.
FREDERICK SCOTT SNYDER, OF WHITEHALL, NEW YORK.
DEVICE FOR LIFTING PLATES.
SPEGIFIC'ATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 643,168, dated February 13, 1900.
Application filed May 24, 1899. $erial No. 71 1 (N0 11106191) I To all whom it. may concern.-
Be it known that I, FREDERICK Soorr SNY- DER, of Whitehall, in the county of Washington and State of New York, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Devices for Lifting Plates, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact description.
My invention relates to a device for lifting plates, intended particularly for handling pie-plates in placing them in and removing them from an oven, although adapted for handling plates of all kinds, as well as vessels having a rim similar to the outline of a plate.
Reference is to be had to the accompanying drawings, forming a part of this specification, in which similar characters of reference inclicate corresponding parts in all the figures.
Figure 1 is a perspective view of my device applied to a plate. Fig. 2 is a plan view showing its method of adjustment for plates of different sizes. Fig. 3 is an end elevation taken from the left of Fig. 2, and Fig. 4 is a plan view of a slightly-modified form of construction.
The object of my invention is to provide a cheap and convenient device by which pieplates and other similar articles may be quickly and conveniently handled without danger of burning the fingers.
The device, as shown, is made of bent wire and consists of a lower arm A, which may be formed by bending the wire at its middle and twisting the two pieces together, as shown at A in Fig. 2, or by continuing them alongside each other, either connected, as shown in Fig. 4, or disconnected, as shown in Fig. 1. The loop or that portion where the wire is bent upon itself is formed intoa hook B,which extends upward and is concaved on its outer surface, being thus adapted to engage the rim of a dish, as a plate. At one end of the lower arm or base opposite the hook the two halves of the wire are bent upward and forward or over the lower arm, at the same time flaring outwardly, thus forming spring-arms O. Preferably a short vertical standard F is formed between the lower and upper arms,
as most clearly shown in Fig. 1. I have found that the upper arms 0 spring more truly when this is done than when they rise directly from the lower arms, as they do not have the same tendency to twist, and thus to slip from eugagement with the plate edge.
As shown in the drawings, the spring-arms 0 form a regular curve extending at some little distance above the lower arm A. The outer ends of these spring-arms (Tare provided with inwardly-projecting hooks D, and these hooks are so placed that they will normally occupy a position separated from each other a distance nearly equal to the width of an ordinary plate. They will also be located substantially in the same plane as the lower arm A. The handle portion of the arms 0 may be crimped, as shown at C. in Fig. 1, thus furnishing a better grip for the hand, or may be left uncrimped, as desired.
In using my device the lower arm A is placed upon the surface upon which the plate is resting and the device slipped forward, with the hooks D embracing each side of the plate. As the base-section or lower arm A rests upon the same surface as the plate the lifter is thus correctly guided, so as to properly engage its hooks with the edge of the plate, which makes it a great deal more convenient to usein ovens and other dark places than if it had no such guiding member. If the plate is wider than the hooks D, the arms will permit the hooks to be spread so as to pass around the sides of the plate. At the same time the hook B will engage the adjacent edge of the plate. The two spring-arms O are grasped by the hand. These arms may thus be drawn together, so as to securely grasp the plate between the three hooks D, D, and B, whether the plate be large or small.
In Fig. 2 the outlines of two plates of different sizes are shown in dotted lines and the position of the spring-arms O for the smaller plate is also indicated by dotted lines. It will thus be seen that my device is quickly and automatically adjusted for plates of any size within its range, which range is quite large.
In Fig. 4 the wires forming the lower arm Aare not twisted, as shown in Fig. 2, but lie parallel and are bound together by having a plate E of metal stamped or otherwise secured on the same. It is desirable that the two halves of the Wire forming this lower arm be secured to each other in some way. 4
My device is quickly applied to plates of different sizes, as it is automatically adjusted by the simple action of grasping the springarms 0 with sufticient force to lift the plate.
Having thus fully described my invention, I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent 7 I 1. A plate-lifter having a lower arm provided at one end with a hook adapted to engage one edge of the plate, and at the other end with a vertical standard, the parts of which are fixedly secured together,and springarms extending from the upper end of the standard over the plate and flaring outwardly, said arms having hooks upon their outer ends adapted to engage the outer side edges of the plate, substantially as described.
2. A plate-lifter having a horizontal lower arm adapted to rest upon the plate-supporting surface and provided with an upwardlyextending hook upon one end adapted to engage the edge of a plate, and spring-arms attached to the opposite end of the lower arm and extending over said arm and the plate, and having hooks at their outer ends adapted to engage the edges of the plate beyond the lower arm and at each side of its center line, substantially as shown and described.
A plate-lifter having a horizontal lower arm adapted to rest upon the plate-supporting surface and provided with an upwardlyextending hook upon one end adapted to engage the edge of a plate, a standard rising from the other end of said arm, and springarms extending from the upper end of said standard over the lower arm and the plate, and having hooks at their outer ends adapted to engage the farther edges of the plate, substantially as shown and described.
4:. A plate-lifter composed of a single wire which is bent upon itself at its middle and has the end of the loop thus formed bent to form a side or upwardly-extending hook facing outwardly or in the direction of its end, the wires extending from said hook alongside each other to form a base-section, and then bending upwardly and being secured to each other to form a short standard, from the upper end of which wires extend upwardly and divergently over the base-section with their ends curving downwardly, and each provided at its end with an inwardly-extending hook adapted to engage the farther side edge of a plate, substantially as described.
FREDERICK SCOTT SNYDER.
WVitnesses:
H. O. RAYNOR, ll. P. FRANKLIN.
US71804199A 1899-05-24 1899-05-24 Device for lifting plates. Expired - Lifetime US643168A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US71804199A US643168A (en) 1899-05-24 1899-05-24 Device for lifting plates.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US71804199A US643168A (en) 1899-05-24 1899-05-24 Device for lifting plates.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US643168A true US643168A (en) 1900-02-13

Family

ID=2711751

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US71804199A Expired - Lifetime US643168A (en) 1899-05-24 1899-05-24 Device for lifting plates.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US643168A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3199719A (en) * 1961-06-30 1965-08-10 Inland Steel Co Container handle construction

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3199719A (en) * 1961-06-30 1965-08-10 Inland Steel Co Container handle construction

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5794999A (en) Pizza box carrier
US643168A (en) Device for lifting plates.
US6584692B1 (en) Easy release fork
US3010688A (en) Combined holder and stand
US840650A (en) Combination-lifter.
US3333882A (en) Lifting and holding device
US348717A (en) Pie-lifter
JP4119805B2 (en) Lid remover
US1517776A (en) Tongs
US1236610A (en) Carrier for bottles.
US1110945A (en) Lid-lifter.
US916175A (en) Plate-lifter.
US782895A (en) Fish-roaster.
US993976A (en) Ice-cream-can puller and carrier.
US1670732A (en) Pan lifter
US1637227A (en) Pan lifter
US1212858A (en) Stove-lid pliers.
US1511128A (en) Pan lifter
US1087649A (en) Store-goods lifter.
US1457379A (en) Can lifter
US656547A (en) Pan-lifter.
US761136A (en) Can-lifter.
US805405A (en) Store-goods lifter.
US1533726A (en) Combination lifter
US1983168A (en) Lifter for hot dishes