This technology relates generally to the field of beer pong improvements, and more particularly to applications and methods of sanitizing classic beer pong game play.
The game play of classic beer pong, also known as “Beirut,” typically involves drinking beverages from cups after a ping pong ball “contacts the surface of the beverage contained within the cup.” See http://www.beirut-guide.com/rules/basic.php#rid14. Often times beer pong is played in less than sanitary environments, inevitably resulting in players drinking beverages from cups that a dirty ping pong ball has contacted. Several attempts have been made to avoid such unsanitary game play, but each such attempt fails to adequately model the classic game. One such prior art attempt introduces the addition of a “rinse cup” filled with water, used to rinse off a ball after it has contacted the floor. This attempt fails to protect against contact with unsanitary hands and requires frequent change out of the rinse water. Another such prior art attempt includes the use of empty cups, wherein the beverage to be consumed is contained in a separate cup, but with no liquid in the cups in play, this attempt results in balls that bounce in and out of cups in play, thereby resulting in the introduction of additional contaminants. The deficiencies of this attempt, and proposed solutions, are described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,899,590 to Kahn et al. herein incorporated by reference as part of this description. Kahn describes methods to retain balls and stabilize non-beverage containing cups from tipping over, but Kahn's methods explicitly teach away from ball retention means that permit the drinking beverage to remain in the cups in play. There is a need for a more sanitary application and method of playing beer pong that permits the drinking beverage to remain contained within the cups in play.
This written description is provided to meet the enablement requirements of the patent statute without imposing limitations that are not recited in the claims. Referring now to the exemplary beer pong system depicted in
The insert cup flaps of the present invention are not limited to the particular geometry, length, number, or arrangement shown in this example. Rather, the present invention discloses an application and method of more cleanly playing beer pong with the use of an insert cup that protects the beer pong cup's beverage from contact with the ping pong ball, while also catching the ping pong ball and allowing for easy retrieval of the ping pong ball with a participant's fingers. In practice, when a ping pong ball 10 begins to enter the insert cup 30, that is inserted into the cup 20, the ping pong ball 10 first contacts an insert cup flap 38. That contact between ping pong ball 10 and insert cup flap 38, deflects the position of the insert cup flap 38 towards the insert cup sidewall 36, thereby reducing the speed of the ping pong ball 10 as it heads toward the insert cup base 34. If the speed of the ping pong ball 10 was not sufficiently reduced on first contact with the insert cup flap 38, and the ping pong ball begins to bounce back towards the insert cup rim 32 with enough speed that it could exit the insert cup 30, then the ping pong ball 10 will again contact an insert cup flap 38, thereby restricting the ping pong ball 10 from exiting the insert cup 30 and leaving the ping pong ball 10 to bounce back down to the insert cup base 34 before coming to rest there. A participant may remove the insert cup 30 from the cup 20 and drink the contents of the cup 20 either before or after the participant reaches into the insert cup 30 to retrieve the ping pong ball 10 with their fingers.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by the above described exemplary embodiment.
This application claims priority to, and the full benefit of, U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/122,013, filed on Oct. 8, 2014, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference hereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62122013 | Oct 2014 | US |