Applicant claims priority from provisional application Ser. Nos. 60/515,305 and 60/552,218 and prior nonprovisional application filed Nov. 26, 2004 and assigned Ser. No. 10/903,491.
This invention relates generally to foot securement straps for sports boards and, more specifically, to adjustment mechanisms for sports board bindings.
A typical foot strap binding for a kite board or windsurf board is constructed of a webbing strap or a molded strap with a soft pad or cushion as an enclosure to hold a person's foot securely without digging in or otherwise causing pain or discomfort. The size of the strap can be adjusted by removing the strap mounting screws, readjusting the overall length and position of the strap and re-attaching the strap to the board using different board attachment positions.
Adjustment on the strap binding is difficult to do or impractical when the board is in use. This process usually must be done on land with hand tools. Quick adjustments or fine tuning are not possible. Each time the user needs to make an adjustment, he or she must stop, or go to shore (water sports) to properly make this adjustment. A typical problem occurs when a user changes his or her foot volume by adding a water boot or shoe. Also if riders with different foot volumes use the same foot strap such as for boards used by an instruction school where several riders use the same board or in a rental scenario—they would need to make this volume adjustment. The most common problem of a typical foot strap is the need to keep the binding loose somewhat to get the foot in and out of the binding easily. The user is not able to quickly tighten beyond what is typical for entry/exit for good performance hold, but still quickly and easily release when needed.
Some foot straps are secured with hook-and-loop fasteners (e.g., Velcro™). However, the user must still be on land to properly adjust because the Velcro strap must be completely disengaged to reset the straps. Furthermore, Velcro tends to decrease in effectiveness when used in a dirty environment such as may be found on a beach or shore. Small changes due to riding the board may lose an effective hold over time.
Attempts have been made to solve these problems, but attempts to solve these problems do not achieve the ease of use or the effective tightening desired.
The present invention provides a foot strap assembly for board sports such as water sports that allows the user to easily tension a foot strap over the top of his or her foot. The foot strap device includes a strap, a cable, and an cable adjuster. The strap has separate first and second sides connected by the cable. The cable is tightened and loosened by the cable adjuster with which it is engaged. For these purposes, the cable is representative of all tension members, including but not limited to cables, laces, ropes, strings, cords, etc., all of which are deemed to be included in the use of the term “cable.”
A pad is secured between the strap first side and the foot of the user. An enclosure sheath is also preferably positioned over at least a portion of the cable and the strap with the cable adjuster having access through the sheath. The pad is preferably made of EVA (ethyl vinyl acetate), but may alternatively be any soft, durable, resilient pad.
The cable adjuster includes a rotatable reel about which the cable winds in adjusting tension in the cable. A first guide is secured to the first side of the strap and a second guide is secured to the strap second side, which channels the cable between the strap sides and into a loop to and from the cable adjuster.
The cable adjuster may also include a pull cord with a handle, which pull cord is coupled to rotate the reel.
The second side of the strap slides into a sleeve that is typically secured to the pad though equivalently it could be secured to the first side of the strap with a same affect. For these purposes, description of one configuration is deemed to include the other. Tensioning of the cable with the cable adjuster pulls the first and second strap sides together as the second side telescopes into (or out of when the tension is released on the cable) which moves the pad along the enclosure. Of necessity then the strap first and second sides overlap as the second side telescopes into the sleeve attached to the pad. For purposes herein, we refer to all manner of the strap bodies sliding together as mutually telescoping, or similar term, but such reference is deemed to include all such other ways of doing so in addition to telescoping. In practice then, the cable is tensioned to bring the straps together which shortens the effective length of the strap. In doing so, the strap maintains a continuous enclosure arched over the board together with the board under the strap into which the user's foot may be inserted. As the effective length of the strap is adjusted to resize the enclosure by tensioning or releasing tension of the cable between the sides of the strap, the enclosure maintains an uninterrupted cover over the foot comfortable to the user's foot.
Employment of the strap also permits positioning of the cable adjuster between strap first and second sides at any convenient position, including remote from the strap or to either a medial or a lateral side of the strap. Thus, in one embodiment, the strap is secured to the sports board and the cable adjuster is also secured to the sports board instead of to the strap. In this embodiment, a first strap secures a first foot of the user and a second strap secures a second foot of the user. With the cable coupled through the cable adjuster and between the first and the second straps, the cable adjuster selectively tightens or loosens the tension on both the first and second straps simultaneously. For all purposes herein, the term sports board refers to and includes all recreational boards on which a user rides while standing on the board, including as illustrative but not limited to snowboards, kite-boards, windsurf boards, ocean surf boards, and the like.
The strap is preferably constructed of a molded plastic material. Alternatively, strap is constructed of metal, composites, or other material that can bear tensile forces.
The preferred and alternative embodiments of the present invention are described in detail below with reference to the following drawings.
As seen in
As shown in
A cable guide 42 on strap first and second sides 26, 32 slidably engage a cable 44 between said distal ends 29, 31. Tensioning the cable 44 pulls the strap first and second distal ends closer 29, 31 into further overlap as the strap second side distal end 31 slides into the sleeve 38. Typically, to allow full adjustment, the cable guide 42′ on the strap second side 32 is spaced apart from its distal end 31, even near its proximal end to allow the substantial portion of the strap second side 32 to slide into sleeve 38. The cable guide 42″ on the strap first side 26 is typically on or near its distal end 29 to provide nearest proximity to the other cable guide 42′. Typically, the cable guide 42 on each side includes a channel to guide the cable 42 from one strap side back toward the other strap side. Thus, the cable guide 42 functionally has a U-shape configuration. The cable adjuster 50 may be anchored to either strap side or even to the board 10.
The pad 34 is of length shorter than strap first and second sides 26, 32 together so when they are pulled closer together into further overlap by the cable 44 between them, the pad 34 moves further under the strap second side 32. In normal configuration, the strap second side distal end 31 is partially within the sleeve 34 and the strap second side 32 is partially under the strap first side 26 such that when the cable 44 is tensioned bringing the strap first and second sides 26, 32 together into further overlap, the strap second end 31 simply slides further into the sleeve 34 and the pad 34 moves toward the strap second side proximal end 31. The pad 34 though shorter than the strap first and second sides 26, 32 together is nevertheless of length to bridge the top 46 of the enclosure 15 such that in use the foot is always snug between the pad 34 and the board 10. A sheath 110 wraps the pad and straps sides through which the cable adjuster 50 extends for access, which is useful in maintaining the strap sides 26, 32 and pad 34 aligned and together.
A cable adjuster 50 intercepts the cable 44 to adjust tension in the cable 44. Cable adjuster 50 is used to tighten the bridge 15 by reducing its effective length about the foot F and for release of tension on the foot F as desired. The cable adjuster 50 includes a rotatable reel 52 around which the cable winds. As the reel 52 rotates in a first rotation the cable 44 routed around the reel 52 tightens between the strap first and second sides 26, 32. Similarly, as the reel 52 rotates in a counter direction, the cable 44 loosens.
In an alternate embodiment the cable adjuster 50 may be used to tighten two straps 14′, 14″ simultaneously, as illustrated in
Turning now to
Secured to the central shaft 72 alongside the drive gear 70 is a reel ratchet sprocket 82 and a reel pawl 84 that engages and disengages from the sprocket 82 by turn of a release lever 86 outside of the housing 58, which lever 86 is mechanically linked to the reel pawl 84. In an engage position of the lever 86, the reel pawl 84 is moved to engage the reel ratchet sprocket 82 and the central shaft 72, in which case the reel ratchet sprocket 82 is allowed to rotate with the central shaft 72 in a wind rotation wherein the cable 44 winds on the reel 42 while the reel pawl 84 sliding over the sprocket 82 without engaging it but while also preventing the reel ratchet sprocket 82 from counter-rotating by the reel pawl 84 engaging the reel ratchet sprocket 82 in normal ratchet operation. With the reel pawl 84 turned to disengage position, it does not engage the reel ratchet sprocket 82 and the reel 52 is released to rotate freely with the result that tension in the cable 44 is relaxed.
It may be advantageous to provide rotation of the central shaft 72 quicker than provided with the knob 74. In which case, a pull 90 is provided. The pull 90 comprises a pull housing 92, a body 94 connected to and rotating with the central shaft 72, the body 94 comprising a coil spring 96 around a body tube 98, with one end connected to the body 94 and another end connected to the reel housing 58 or pull housing 92. The body 94 further comprises a spool 100 and a cord 102 connected between the spool 100 and a handle 101 external of the housing 92, which cord 102 wraps around the spool 100. Internal to the body tube 98 is a pull sprocket 104 and a pull pawl 105 pivoting at the tube 98 with the pull pawl 105 disposed to engage the pull sprocket 104 when the cord 102 is pulled against the bias of coil spring 96 and to release or disengage from the pull sprocket 104, sliding over the pull sprocket 104 when the cord 102 is relaxed such that as the cord 102 is pulled by the handle 101 the pull pawl 105 engages the pull sprocket 104 which in turn rotates the central shaft 72 and the drive gear 70 such that the cable 44 is wound on the reel 42. When the cord 102 is relaxed, it is withdrawn around spool 100 under action of the spring bias of coil spring 96 while the central shaft 72 does not rotate by action of the cord 102 as the reel pawl 84 engages the reel ratchet sprocket 82.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4748726 | Schoch | Jun 1988 | A |
4969655 | Katz | Nov 1990 | A |
6336418 | Pavlovic | Jan 2002 | B1 |
20030093882 | Gorza et al. | May 2003 | A1 |