Magazine Razor with Blades in Head
Patent US2334833
Invention Magazine Safety Razor
Filed Thursday, 17th September 1942
Published Tuesday, 23rd November 1943
Inventors Joseph Muros, Samuel C. Stampleman
Owner Gillette Safety Razor Company
Language English
CPC Classification:For a full resolution version of the images click here
A PDF version of the original patent can be found here.
Parts not referenced in the text: None
Parts not referenced in the images: None
This invention consists in an improved magazine safety razor in which by simple manipulation of a feeding device the user may at any time present in shaving position a fresh blade from a magazine located in the razor head. The razor is designed to receive a magazine or clip containing a supply of blades in which the blades, if desired, may be dispensed for sale to the public. The blade magazine is arranged to be dropped into the head of the magazine instead of having to be pushed in endwise as heretofore, this being a particularly convenient mode of replenishing the blade supply and requiring little or no mechanical skill on the part of the user.
With this end in view an improved feature of the invention consists in a safety razor having in its head a guard and an open channel adjacent to the guard, in combination with a magazine shaped to fit freely into the channel so that it may be dropped directly in place therein and be positioned or registered by fitting in the channel for supplying blades directly in shaving position above the guard.
Another feature consists in a detachable or removable magazine having a feeding device movably mounted thereon and assembled with the magazine, that is to say, the feeding device is an adjunct of the magazine and remains with it rather than with the razor frame. The magazine with or without the feeding device in some embodiments of the invention may be used as a dispensing receptacle comprising with its enclosed blades an article of commerce.
Means may be provided for locating the magazine in place when it has once been inserted in the channel of the razor head and such means serve to retain the magazine in operative position until the supply of blades contained therein has been exhausted. Preferably and as herein shown the locating means may have the further function of clamping the feeding device to prevent chance or accidental ejection of a blade or other displacement of the parts during the shaving operation.
These and other features of the invention will be best understood and appreciated from the following description of a preferred embodiment thereof, selected for purposes of illustration and shown in the accompanying drawing, in which:—
The razor illustrated herein comprises a frame consisting of a handle having a knurled barrel
The bottom plate
The magazine comprises a rectangular enclosure
The blades
Associated with the magazine is a feed member comprising a rectangular shell of thin sheet metal having a back wall
The bottom plate
Assuming that the razor contains a blade in shaving position, as shown in
It will be seen that the entire operation of replacing one blade for another involves two complete reciprocations of the feeding device and that the old blade is completely ejected from the razor before a new blade is advanced from its completely guarded position in the magazine.
A fresh blade may be advanced into operative position at any time before or during the shaving operation, that is, if the user finds a blade to be unsatisfactory while shaving
The feeding device is movably retained on the magazine by the free travel of the projections
If desired, the recesses
Having thus disclosed our invention and described a preferred embodiment thereof, we claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent:
1. A magazine safety razor including in its structure a frame having a handle, a guard and a threaded spindle in the handle, in combination with a detachable magazine having a blade outlet adjacent to the guard and a threaded socket co-operating with the spindle to retain the magazine in place in the razor, a stack of blades within the magazine, and a feeding device co-operating with the magazine to deliver a blade therefrom and hold it in shaving relation upon the said guard.
2. A magazine safety razor including a frame having a handle, a guard and a retaining spindle in the handle, in combination with a detachable magazine having a blade outlet and a retaining device co-operating with the spindle to hold the magazine in place adjacent to the guard in the razor, a stack of blades within the magazine, and a feeding device removable with the magazine and mounted movably upon it to advance a blade from the stack to shaving position above the said guard.
3. A magazine safety razor including a frame having a handle, walls connected to the handle and forming an open transverse channel, a guard disposed adjacent to said channel, and a retaining element in the handle, in combination with a detachable magazine fitting into said channel and having an exit slot and a co-operating retaining element therein, a stack of blades within the magazine, and feeding means removable with the magazine and movably mounted thereon to feed a blade from the stack to a position above said guard.
4. A magazine safety razor including a handle, transverse walls carried by the handle and forming an open channel, one of the walls being extended to form a guard at the upper edge of the channel, and one element of a magazine retaining connection movable in the handle toward the channel, in combination with a magazine fitting in said channel and having an exit slot in its front wall above the level of the guard, a co-operating element of the magazine retaining connection and a feeding device movably mounted on the magazine to feed a blade from the magazine through the exit slot and above said guard.
5. A magazine safety razor including a frame having a guard and an open channel adjacent thereto with one element of a magazine retaining connection therein, in combination with a blade magazine shaped to fit widthwise within the channel and having a delivery slot opening above the guard, and a co-operating element of the magazine-retaining connection.
6. A magazine safety razor including a frame having a guard and an open channel with a rotatable retaining screw in its bottom, in combination with a blade magazine shaped to fit freely into said channel and, when placed in the channel, having a blade exit slot located adjacent to the guard and a threaded socket registering with said screw.
7. A magazine safety razor including a frame having a guard and an open channel, in combination with a removable blade magazine fitting said channel and having a feeding device movably mounted thereon and removable therewith, and clamping means for holding said feeding device stationary in the razor.
8. A magazine safety razor including a head having a guard and an open channel therein, in combination with a removable magazine for blades fitting in said channel, a feeding device movably mounted on the magazine and removable therewith and means for limiting the path of the feeding device in its movement on the magazine.
9. In a magazine safety razor having a head with a guard and an open channel therein, a magazine for blades fitting in said channel, and a feeding device embracing the magazine and having blade-engaging members movable above the magazine and into engagement with a blade therein, and a retaining member movable transversely beneath the magazine in the bottom of the channel.
10. A magazine safety razor having a head with a guard and an open channel therein, in combination with an elongated magazine for blades fitting in said channel, and a feeding device having a rear wall, a slotted bottom plate movable between the magazine and the bottom of the channel, and blade-engaging dogs, together with means for holding the magazine spaced above the bottom of the channel to permit free movement of the feeding device.
11. A magazine safety razor including in its structure a head having a front wall, a guard and a rear flange of less height than the front wall defining a transverse channel therein, an elongated magazine fitting in said channel, and a feeding device embracing the upper and lower faces of the magazine and having a rear wall cut out to receive the said flange of the razor head.
12. A magazine razor including in its structure a head containing a removable magazine containing a stack of end-notched blades, a guard connected externally to the head, and means for feeding a blade from the magazine to position above the guard including a dog shaped to enter an end notch of the blade, and finger grips spaced beyond the ends of the magazine and adapted to be grasped by the user for operating said feeding means.
13. A magazine razor including in its structure a razor head having an external guard and an open channel located behind the guard, a magazine for blades fitting in said channel and having a blade-exit slot adjacent to the said guard, and a feeding device mounted on the magazine and having blade-engaging dogs for feeding a blade from the magazine into shaving position above the guard, and sliding interlocking connections with the magazine limiting its feeding stroke thereon and preventing accidental disengagement of the feeding device from the magazine.
14. A magazine razor including in its structure a razor head having an outwardly projecting guard and an open channel adjacent to the guard, a magazine for blades fitting in said channel and having an exit slot in a position for delivering blades transversely into registration with said guard, and a blade-feeding device movably mounted on the magazine and having sliding interlocking connections therewith limiting its feeding stroke and preventing accidental disengagement of the feeding device from the magazine.
Samuel C. Stampleman.
Joseph Muros.