Water Pipe Cleaning Tool
20180177226 ยท 2018-06-28
Inventors
Cpc classification
A24F9/10
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
The present invention is an efficient tool 10 for cleaning the interior of a smoking bowl 30 and the interior of a pipe stem 40 of a water pipe comprising a rod shaft 1, a first end 2 and a second end 3, wherein the first end has a taper narrowing to a tip 4, a groove 6 in the tip and a pair of teeth 8A and 8B, and the second end 3 has an aperture.
Claims
1. A water pipe cleaning device comprising: a rod shaft, a first end and a second end; the first end having a taper narrowing to a tip and including a groove; and the second end having an aperture.
2. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 1 wherein the tip has at least one tooth.
3. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 1 wherein the first end has a pair of teeth.
4. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 1 wherein the device has a longitudinal axis and the taper of the first end narrows toward the axis.
5. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 4 wherein the groove is positioned along the axis.
6. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 3 wherein the groove is bounded by the pair of teeth.
7. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 1 wherein the aperture is a hole.
8. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 1 wherein the second end includes at least one trough.
9. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 1 wherein the aperture is a slot.
10. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 9 wherein the slot is bounded by at least one retaining projection.
11. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 10 wherein the at least one retaining projection is a hook.
12. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 9 wherein the second end includes at least one trough.
13. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 9 wherein the second end includes a pair of opposing troughs.
14. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 9 wherein the device has a longitudinal axis and the slot is formed along the axis.
15. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 13 wherein the opposing troughs are aligned parallel to the axis.
16. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 9 wherein the device has a longitudinal axis and the taper of the first end narrows toward the axis.
17. A water pipe cleaning device comprising: a rod shaft, a first end, a second end and a longitudinal axis; the first end having a tip with a pair of teeth and a taper narrowing toward the tip and toward the axis and further including a groove formed at the tip and along the axis; and the second end having an aperture in the form of a hole.
18. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 17 wherein the rod shaft, first end and second end are flattened.
19. A water pipe cleaning device comprising: a rod shaft, a first end, a second end and a longitudinal axis; the first end having a tip with a pair of teeth and a taper narrowing to the tip and toward the axis and further including a groove formed at the tip and along the axis; and the second end having an aperture in the form of a slot, the slot being bounded by at least one retaining projection, the second end further including a pair of opposing troughs aligned parallel to the axis.
20. The water pipe cleaning device of claim 19 wherein the first end is flattened.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0022] A preferred embodiment of the water pipe cleaning tool of the present invention is illustrated in
[0023] Shown also in
[0024] As shown in
[0025] In operation of the invention, to clean residual tar and resins from the interior of a pipe smoking bowl, a swab is first doused with an appropriate cleaning solvent such as isopropyl alcohol and is nestled into the groove 6 of the first end 2 of the tool 10. The first end 2 with the swab attached is then inserted into the dirty smoking bowl so that the swab contacts the interior surface of the bowl. Alternatively, the swab may be placed initially in the bowl and squirted with solvent to begin dissolving the resinous material and then stabbed by the first end of the tool. Once inserted into the bowl, the tool 10 may be rotated and counter-rotated about its longitudinal axis by the hand of the operator so that the moistened swab physically interfaces with the dirty residue adhered to the interior surface of the smoking bowl, rubbing over, dissolving and loosening the residue and transferring it onto the swab. The pair of teeth 8A and 8B formed by the groove 6 on the first end 2 (see
[0026] As shown in
[0027] In operation, a swab is doused with appropriate cleaning solvent such as isopropyl alcohol and inserted into the hole 5 of the second end 3. The second end 3 with the swab attached is then inserted into the dirty pipe stem. Should the swab be of sufficient length and pliability, such as foam or cloth, it may tend to fold over inside the pipe stem (as can be seen in
[0028] One of skill in the art will readily appreciate selection of the width of a rod shaft and second end that is slightly smaller than the internal diameter of the pipe stem sought to be cleaned so as to accommodate the second end and be of sufficient length to insert as much of the shaft of the rod as is needed to clean the desired length of the pipe stem. A preferred length of the invention is about 12 inches, about an inch of which is dedicated to the first end. Typical pipe stems have an internal diameter in the range of about 0.34 inch to about 0.48 inch. Accordingly, for such diameters, a preferred width of the rod shaft should be about 0.31 inch. The tool may be made from plastic, wood, metal or other substantially rigid material. Swabs can be chosen easily from materials such as polyurethane foam or to other flexible foam, or scraps of cloth and cut, as desired, to preferred size and shape.
[0029] As shown in
[0030]
[0031] As shown in
[0032] In operation, the first end 12 of the present embodiment of the tool 20 functions similarly to the first end 2 of the previously described embodiment of the tool 10. The second end 13 has an aperture in the form of a slot 15 and a pair of hooks 17A and 17B that help retain and secure the cleaning swab once it is inserted into the slot 15. Alternate embodiments may, for example, include retaining projections such as a single hook, more than a pair of hooks, points, teeth, etc. As shown in
[0033] As one can see from the drawings and the descriptions above, the present invention substantially advances the art of cleaning water pipe smoking bowls and pipe stems, a tool that provides a simple, fast, effective, convenient and environmentally friendly way to clean these pipe components.
[0034] Although the description above contains many details and specificities, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention, but as provision of examples of some of the presently preferred embodiments of the invention. The scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples provided.