US2276086A - Clasp - Google Patents

Clasp Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2276086A
US2276086A US397839A US39783941A US2276086A US 2276086 A US2276086 A US 2276086A US 397839 A US397839 A US 397839A US 39783941 A US39783941 A US 39783941A US 2276086 A US2276086 A US 2276086A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
clip
tab
bend
clasp
spring
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
US397839A
Inventor
Peter J Peregallo
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 US397839A priority Critical patent/US2276086A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2276086A publication Critical patent/US2276086A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B42BOOKBINDING; ALBUMS; FILES; SPECIAL PRINTED MATTER
    • B42FSHEETS TEMPORARILY ATTACHED TOGETHER; FILING APPLIANCES; FILE CARDS; INDEXING
    • B42F19/00File cards
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S24/00Buckles, buttons, clasps
    • Y10S24/08Paper clips
    • Y10S24/09Sheet material
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T24/00Buckles, buttons, clasps, etc.
    • Y10T24/44Clasp, clip, support-clamp, or required component thereof
    • Y10T24/44641Clasp, clip, support-clamp, or required component thereof having gripping member formed from, biased by, or mounted on resilient member

Definitions

  • the general object of my invention is to provide a signal tab of a semi-transparent or translucent material such as Celluloid so that any notations or memorandums on the card'or paper may be read through the tab without disturbing it.
  • the clip has been formed of a spring metal and adapted to act in combination with th tab body or translucent material and provide the necessary clasping characteristics.
  • Another object of the especially designed spring clip when employed in combination with the Celluloid body is, that both may be bent into shape together during the same operation. .Although the clip and tab are united in a simple bending operation the design of the clip not only assures the springy characteristic required as mentioned above but also secures the union of the clip and tab permanently in an operable combination. The type of clip described also prevents a complete fracture of the Celluloid or tab portion at the bend which might result from too abrupt a bend in the clip.
  • Fig. 1 is a front elevational view
  • Fig. 2 is a side elevational view of the complete signal clasp.
  • Fig, 3 is an enlarged top plan view of the formed 152 spring clip before bending and crimping into position.
  • Fig. 4 is an enlarged side elevation of the clip showing its characteristics.
  • the clasp comprises a tab I2 made 20 of an inelastic translucent or transparent material such as Celluloid.
  • Said body portion or tab I2 is made from material supplied in the form of a strip which is cut to length and folded back upon itself to form two legs l6--l1 of unequal ti n th-
  • a spring clip H is also formed preferably from a strip of spring steel cut to size aslshown in Fig. 3. 'The strip of inelastic material I2 is then placed on the clip II, and the two parts folded together.
  • the fold in the spring steel forming the clip however is not an abrupt bend but rather a smooth curve as indicated at I9, Fig. 4.
  • Said curve I9 is made of as small a radius as possible without fracturing the spring clip or inelastic Celluloid body.
  • Another feature of the clip design is the cutouts or notches IS.
  • the object of providing such notches is evident when one studies the relative reactions of the spring clip and the inelastic tab, under a bending strain. By uniting the body l2 and clip II and bending the two together so that the body I2 is inside the clip H, the curvature or degree of bend is greater on the inner. or body member l2.
  • a clip made of a rectangular piece of material without the notches l5 frequently caused the Celluloid tab to'fracture along the fold line even though the bend was not excessive.
  • the line of bend of the clip is shorter than that of the body I2.
  • the width of the spring clip along the line of bend is less than the width of the tab or body member along its line of bend.
  • Another characteristic of the proposed clasp is the minute size of the lips of the spring clip II as compared to the legs IE-I'I of the body.
  • the method employed for making the complete clasp is as follows: A rectangular piece is cut from a strip of spring metal for providing the blank from which the clip I I is formed. Notches I5 in the shape of half an oval are then cut in opposite sides of the clip blank. The Celluloid body portion I2 is then laid across the clip blank so. that the center line of the body I2 is offset from the center line I8 of the clip blank and the two pieces folded or bent back upon themselves, the body I2 occupying the inside position in the combination. Then by means of a die or prickpunch the clip II is crimped tight on body I2 by forming depressions I I to form points I3. Said points I3 are thus indented into the body I2 thereby firmly fastening the two elements together and maintain them in an operable combination.
  • the most common size of blank from which the translucent tab legs I6I I are formed is approximately five-sixteenths of an inch wide by two inches long.
  • the actual size of the blank from which the spring clip illustrated in Fig. 3 is formed is approximately onequarter of an inch wide by five-sixteenths of an inch long.
  • the clip II overlaps the edge of the file card less than one-eighth of an inch.
  • the above dimensions are for a standard size signal tab and. are given merely for comparison of the sizes of the elements making up the same.
  • Various sizes of signal clasps may be made within the scope of this invention by making the relative sizes of their elements in proportion to the figures given above.
  • a signal tab including a body member from a strip of inelestic, semi-transparent material folded back upon itself and forming two legs of unequal length, one each side of the bend, and adapted to slide over-the edge of a card, and a spring clip made from a strip of elastic material of a relatively smaller size than said body member and fastened to said body member by bending said clip over the outside of the body member and along a line adjacent the line of bend in the body member said clip being notched at each side for removing a portion of the area along the line of the bend.
  • a device of the type described in claim 1 characterized by said spring clip being provided with points projecting from the inner surface of said clip and adapted to indent said body member for securely fastening the two elements together and maintaining them in an operable combination.

Landscapes

  • Clamps And Clips (AREA)

Description

March 10, 1942.. P, J, PEREGALLO 2,276,086
CLASP Filed June 13, 1941 Pefer' JPere al/o.
. lNVENT R ATTEJRNEY Patented Mar. 10, 1942 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE CLASP Peter J Peregallo, Hawthorne, N. J. Application June 13,1941. Serial No; 397,839
2 Claims. (c1. 24 259 This invention relates to fasteners generally and especially to those of the clasp type. The special purpose of the particular type of clasp described in this application is for marking certain file cards or papers for the purpose of calling ones attention to a notice or memo associated with the card and clasp. To accomplish this purpose the device bears some significant color and is generally termed a signal or indicator tab.
When metal or opaque tabs are employed it is routine practice to remove or shift the position of the clasp when reading the notations on the card in order to be sure that no portion of the memorandum is covered by the tabs. The general object of my invention is to provide a signal tab of a semi-transparent or translucent material such as Celluloid so that any notations or memorandums on the card'or paper may be read through the tab without disturbing it.
It would be impractical to make the tab in one piece and of one material such as Celluloid since the elasticity of such a material is generally too low to provide the springy action required. In order to overcome this defect and yet retain the advantages of the translucent material a separate resilient spring clip has been designed. The clip has been formed of a spring metal and adapted to act in combination with th tab body or translucent material and provide the necessary clasping characteristics.
When a plain piece of spring steel or similar metal is bent through 180 degrees (back upon itself) the sharp bend frequently fractures the metal at the bend. Even though no fracture does occur as a result of the bend, nevertheless, the distortion beyond the elastic limit ordinarily places a permanent set in the material and thus the resiliency required in a clip of this type would be lost. Therefore, in the proposed device a clip has been provided of a novel design to over-- come the above mentioned difiiculties.
Another object of the especially designed spring clip when employed in combination with the Celluloid body is, that both may be bent into shape together during the same operation. .Although the clip and tab are united in a simple bending operation the design of the clip not only assures the springy characteristic required as mentioned above but also secures the union of the clip and tab permanently in an operable combination. The type of clip described also prevents a complete fracture of the Celluloid or tab portion at the bend which might result from too abrupt a bend in the clip.
10' ing wherein:
Fig. 1 is a front elevational view, and Fig. 2 is a side elevational view of the complete signal clasp.
Fig, 3 is an enlarged top plan view of the formed 152 spring clip before bending and crimping into position.
Fig. 4 is an enlarged side elevation of the clip showing its characteristics.
In detail the clasp comprises a tab I2 made 20 of an inelastic translucent or transparent material such as Celluloid. Said body portion or tab I2 is made from material supplied in the form of a strip which is cut to length and folded back upon itself to form two legs l6--l1 of unequal ti n th- A spring clip H is also formed preferably from a strip of spring steel cut to size aslshown in Fig. 3. 'The strip of inelastic material I2 is then placed on the clip II, and the two parts folded together.
The fold in the spring steel forming the clip however is not an abrupt bend but rather a smooth curve as indicated at I9, Fig. 4. Said curve I9 is made of as small a radius as possible without fracturing the spring clip or inelastic Celluloid body.
Another feature of the clip design is the cutouts or notches IS. The object of providing such notches is evident when one studies the relative reactions of the spring clip and the inelastic tab, under a bending strain. By uniting the body l2 and clip II and bending the two together so that the body I2 is inside the clip H, the curvature or degree of bend is greater on the inner. or body member l2. By experiment it was found 45 that a clip made of a rectangular piece of material (without the notches l5) frequently caused the Celluloid tab to'fracture along the fold line even though the bend was not excessive.
By limiting the amount of bend in the clip 50 the difficulty of fracturing the body member might be eliminated. However in case the automatic machine used for bending the clip got out of adjustment and caused an excessive bend the defect might not be noticed at the time. By
55 providing the notches IS in clip H the tab material I2 in that area is relieved of the excessive bending strain. Therefore by removing a portion of the spring clip II along the line of bend I8 one of the purposes of the notches has been accomplished by preventing said clip from pinching and fracturing the body member over at least a portion of the bend. In Fig. 3 that portion of the clip still remaining is about one third the width of the body member I2 and for want of a better term may be called a strap. The same result, however, may be obtained if the central portion of the clip II adjacent the bend were removed so long as a portion of the fold in the body member I2 cannot be pinched by the spring clip I I.
Therefore one of the objects of the proposed design for the spring clip I I when used in combination with the Celluloid body I2. is, that the line of bend of the clip is shorter than that of the body I2. In other words, the width of the spring clip along the line of bend (I8, Fig. 3) is less than the width of the tab or body member along its line of bend.
Therefore by employing the proposed type of clip, complete fracture of the Celluloid'tab at the bend is eliminated and the legs of the tab I-2- remain integral parts of the single element. A further advantage of the notches or cut-out portion I is that the colored tab I2 may be seen, when viewing the card edgewise. Therefore when a series of cards bearing colored signal tabs of the type described herein are employed in a file the color of the tab may be readily determined without moving or separating the cards.
During the operations of bending or forming the clip it is crimped on both sides as shown at I4; said crimping resembles an ordinary prickpunch. Crimping at I4 depresses or displaces the material from the outer face of the clip and causes a lip or point I3 to project from its inner side. Said points I3 become imbedded in the inelastic tab material I2 and prevent the clip II from sliding off the body I2. As related above the purpose of the cut-outs I5 is to aid in preventing fracture of the inelastic body in that area. However, in case the body should fracture along the bend, the points I3 will tend to hold and retain the separate legs |6-I'I of the body in. relative operating position.
By folding the tabs on a line just off center, the long leg I6 of the tab will extend beyond the borders of the short leg I! as illustrated in Fig. 1. By that type of structure the clasp can be readily separated for fastening on a file card orpaper.
Another characteristic of the proposed clasp is the minute size of the lips of the spring clip II as compared to the legs IE-I'I of the body. By
and back of a file card. Consequently any memorandum occurring under the long leg IS on the back of the card may be read without removing the clasp similar to memorandums on the front of the card.
The method employed for making the complete clasp is as follows: A rectangular piece is cut from a strip of spring metal for providing the blank from which the clip I I is formed. Notches I5 in the shape of half an oval are then cut in opposite sides of the clip blank. The Celluloid body portion I2 is then laid across the clip blank so. that the center line of the body I2 is offset from the center line I8 of the clip blank and the two pieces folded or bent back upon themselves, the body I2 occupying the inside position in the combination. Then by means of a die or prickpunch the clip II is crimped tight on body I2 by forming depressions I I to form points I3. Said points I3 are thus indented into the body I2 thereby firmly fastening the two elements together and maintain them in an operable combination.
In actual practice the most common size of blank from which the translucent tab legs I6I I are formed is approximately five-sixteenths of an inch wide by two inches long. The actual size of the blank from which the spring clip illustrated in Fig. 3 is formed is approximately onequarter of an inch wide by five-sixteenths of an inch long. In the completed form the clip II (opaque portion of the device) overlaps the edge of the file card less than one-eighth of an inch. The above dimensions are for a standard size signal tab and. are given merely for comparison of the sizes of the elements making up the same. Various sizes of signal clasps may be made within the scope of this invention by making the relative sizes of their elements in proportion to the figures given above.
I claim,
1. A signal tab including a body member from a strip of inelestic, semi-transparent material folded back upon itself and forming two legs of unequal length, one each side of the bend, and adapted to slide over-the edge of a card, and a spring clip made from a strip of elastic material of a relatively smaller size than said body member and fastened to said body member by bending said clip over the outside of the body member and along a line adjacent the line of bend in the body member said clip being notched at each side for removing a portion of the area along the line of the bend.
2. A device of the type described in claim 1 characterized by said spring clip being provided with points projecting from the inner surface of said clip and adapted to indent said body member for securely fastening the two elements together and maintaining them in an operable combination.
PETER J. PEREGALLO.
US397839A 1941-06-13 1941-06-13 Clasp Expired - Lifetime US2276086A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US397839A US2276086A (en) 1941-06-13 1941-06-13 Clasp

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US397839A US2276086A (en) 1941-06-13 1941-06-13 Clasp

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2276086A true US2276086A (en) 1942-03-10

Family

ID=23572870

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US397839A Expired - Lifetime US2276086A (en) 1941-06-13 1941-06-13 Clasp

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2276086A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3022805A (en) * 1956-12-06 1962-02-27 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Method of fastening wire to a soldering tag
US3177542A (en) * 1962-06-12 1965-04-13 Diamond Expansion Bolt Co Inc Clamping device

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3022805A (en) * 1956-12-06 1962-02-27 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Method of fastening wire to a soldering tag
US3177542A (en) * 1962-06-12 1965-04-13 Diamond Expansion Bolt Co Inc Clamping device

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2300623A (en) Index
US2472166A (en) Mailable display holder
US3199238A (en) Display device
US2276086A (en) Clasp
US2335713A (en) Slide holder for calendars or the
US1966340A (en) Bookmark
US2774124A (en) Clip
US1584238A (en) Indexing device
US1966019A (en) Card holder
US399417A (en) Indexing book-mark
US2156815A (en) Advertising folder
US2096354A (en) Bookmark
US1803234A (en) Card holder and exhibitor
US1478655A (en) Loose-leaf marker for books
US1472887A (en) Index tab
US1866353A (en) Indexed correspondence file
US2379637A (en) Card assembly
US1656217A (en) Record portfolio
US1415631A (en) Bookmark
US1763776A (en) Index-card tab
US1295837A (en) Card-index.
US1938944A (en) Index tab
US1819251A (en) Signal device for record sheets
US2197738A (en) Price marking ticket
US1974902A (en) Visible index