The present invention relates to archery products, and more particularly to a spacer to precisely position a cam on an axle of an archery bow.
Conventional compound and crossbow archery bows include a bowstring and a set of power cables that transfer energy from the limbs and cams, eccentrics or pulleys (which are all referred to generally as “cams” herein) of the bow to the bowstring, and thus to an arrow shot from the bow. The function of the cams is to provide a mechanical advantage so that energy imparted to the arrow is a multiple of that required of an archer to draw the bow. The cams typically are rotatably mounted to limbs via respective axles.
In most bows, a cam is rotatably mounted in a recess between free ends of a solid limb, or between two opposing limb arms of a split limb. An axle projects through the cam, and any associated bearings of the cam, as well as the free ends of the solid limb, or the opposing arms of a split limb. Sometimes, cylindrical bushings or circular washers are placed between the cam and the free ends or opposing arms of the limb to properly space or center the cam between those elements. To install these cylindrical bushings or circular washers, the axle must be removed from the limb, out from the limb recess, and then carefully redirected back into the limb recess, projecting through the center bore or hole of the cylindrical bushings or circular washers such that those elements are trapped on the axle.
While conventional cylindrical bushings or circular washers can position the cam between the free ends or opposing arms of a limb, they are tedious to install, and require full or partial removal of the axle from the limb and limb recess. Frequently, this requires that the bow be placed in a bow press to reduce the energy stored in the limbs so that the bow is safe to work on. This takes time and, of course, special equipment like a bow press. The components of the assembly, that is, the cam, the cylindrical bushings and/or the circular washers also have to be sequentially placed on the axle to ensure that the stack is appropriate along the axle, and achieves the desired placement of the cam along the axle. If the placement of a bushing or washer is improper, a user will remove the entire axle again to correct the misplacement. This can be tedious and time consuming. Likewise, if a bushing or washer of the wrong thickness is erroneously placed on the axle adjacent the cam, to replace that element with a correct or a better one, a user will remove the axle partially or fully from the limb.
Further, if a particular cylindrical bushing or circular washer is not of an appropriate thickness to provide a particular placement of the cam along the axle, an unwanted gap adjacent the cam or limb part can develop. As a result, the cam and components can slide laterally along the axle, which can lead to inconsistent and/or imprecise rotation of the cams. To replace the element, again, a user will use a bow press and remove the axle.
Accordingly, there remains room for improvement in the field of archery bows, and in particular, axle systems for rotating cams.
An archery bow assembly is provided including an open sided spacer which is mountable to an axle of an archery bow and removable therefrom without removing the axle from a limb of the archery bow.
In one embodiment, the spacer can mount on the axle adjacent a cam also mounted on the axle and rotatable thereto. The spacer can include an outer perimeter and an axle aperture. A recess can extend inward from the outer perimeter to the axle aperture so that the axle aperture and recess form a continuous opening.
In another embodiment, the open sided spacer can be of a C-shape or E-shape so that it can be frictionally pressed onto the axle and removed therefrom. The recess can have a recess width that is less than a diameter of the axle. The axle aperture can have a width that is equal to or greater than the diameter of the axle.
In still another embodiment, the spacer can be mounted to the axle by orienting the recess transverse to the axle. The spacer can be advanced toward a longitudinal axis of the axle in a direction that is transverse to the axis. The spacer can in some cases move radially inward toward the longitudinal axis.
In yet another embodiment, the spacer can be mounted on the axle and under compression between a limb arm and a cam or compression bearing. The spacer, cam and bearing can be clamped against one another, with zero gaps therebetween. Even under this compression, the cam can freely rotate relative to the axle between the limb parts and adjacent the open sided spacer mounted to the axle.
In even another embodiment, the spacer can include a friction feature in the recess that allows the spacer to be pressed on and off the axle, transverse to the longitudinal axis of the axle. In so doing, the axle passes through the recess and into the axle aperture where it settles. The axle thus can pass into and through a portion of the continuous opening in this installation.
In a further embodiment, the open sided spacer can be provided in a set, with different spacers in the set having different thicknesses. One spacer can be installed on one side of a cam, and another spacer on the other side of the cam. The spacers can be selected depending on their thicknesses to shift the cam, left and/or right along the axle, to adjust the center shot and/or tune of the bow.
In still a further embodiment, the set of different spacers can have multiple thicknesses that can be mixed and matched along the axle to properly position the cam along the axle. As one example, the set can include one or more first spacers having a first thickness of 0.100 inches, one or more second spacers having a second thickness of 0.130 inches, and one or more third spacers having a third thickness of 0.160 inches. Of course, the thicknesses can vary depending on the cam, the limb recess in which the cam rotates, and other factors.
In yet a further embodiment, the cam can include a bearing having an inner bearing portion and an outer bearing portion. The open sided spacer can be placed on the axle in contact with the inner bearing portion. The axle and/or a fastener joined with the axle can be operable in a compression mode to exert a compression force, such as an axial clamping force, against the spacer which engages the bearing inner portion so the bearing inner portion is non-rotatable relative to the axle, while the outer portion remains uncompressed and rotatable relative to the axle, along with the cam.
In yet a further embodiment, the compression force is an axial clamp force optionally of at least 1 pound, further optionally between 1 pound and 500 pounds.
In another embodiment, a method of using an archery bow assembly is provided. The method can include providing a bow with the above components, for example, providing an axle installed in opposing limb arms, with a cam rotatably mounted on the axle, and pressing an open sided spacer onto the axle in a direction transverse to the longitudinal axis of the axle until the axle enters an axle aperture of the spacer, without removing the axle from the limb.
In still another embodiment, the method can include loosening an axle compression fastener associated with the axle; sliding the axle through a recess of the spacer such that the recess expands in width until the axle enters the axle aperture.
In yet another embodiment, the method can include selecting different thickness open sided spacers; selectively placing a first spacer adjacent one side of the cam without removing the axle; selectively placing another spacer adjacent an opposite side of the cam; and tightening a fastener to exert a compression force on the first spacer, cam and the second spacer. The first and second spacers can have the same or different thicknesses depending on the positioning of the cam relative to the limb.
In even another embodiment, the method can include placing a spacer adjacent a bearing inner portion that is included in a bearing also having a bearing outer portion joined with a cam, exerting a compression force on the spacer between the bearing inner portion and a part of a limb, removing the compression force, and pushing the spacer off an axle while the axle remains mounted to the limb part. Optionally, the axle exits an opening of the spacer through an outer perimeter of the spacer, rather than through the axle aperture in which the axle is disposed in use on the bow.
The open sided spacer and archery bow of the current embodiments can provide an axle assembly that is easy to service and to adjust the centershot and/or tune of the bow. One or more spacers can be installed on and removed from the axle without removing the axle from an associated limb. This can reduce or eliminate the use of a bow press when adjusting or tuning the bow at the cams. In some cases, different spacers can come in a set of different thicknesses, and selected ones of the spacers can be quickly and easily mounted to the axle adjacent the cam to address cam lean, or to tune the bow.
These and other objects, advantages, and features of the invention will be more fully understood and appreciated by reference to the description of the current embodiment and the drawings.
Before the embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the details of operation or to the details of construction and the arrangement of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention may be implemented in various other embodiments and are being practiced or being carried out in alternative ways not expressly disclosed herein. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including” and “comprising” and variations thereof is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items and equivalents thereof. Further, enumeration may be used in the description of various embodiments. Unless otherwise expressly stated, the use of enumeration should not be construed as limiting the invention to any specific order or number of components. Nor should the use of enumeration be construed as excluding from the scope of the invention any additional steps or components that might be combined with or into the enumerated steps or components.
A compound archery bow including one or more cams and an archery bow assembly in accordance with a current embodiment is illustrated in
The cam 30 can be mounted to a limb 93, which can be joined with the riser 97 of the bow. The exemplary cam 30 illustrated can be an upper cam, and the bow 90 can include another lower cam 30A spaced apart from the upper cam 30 and of a similar configuration. The limb 93 can be in the form of a split limb, including a first arm, first sub limb or limb portion 95 and a second arm, second sub limb or limb portion 96 that are separated from one another along respective lengths of each of the first sub limb and the second sub limb. Although shown in connection with a split limb, the current embodiments are well suited for solid limbs having limb portions separated somewhere along their length to accommodate a rotating body, as well as limbs having axle systems mounted to pillow blocks that are further mounted to the limbs. Where an axle assembly or its components are described herein as being joined with or in some orientation relative to an arm, a limb and/or limb portion, that arm, limb and/or limb portion can be any portion of any type of a limb, limb arm or portion, pillow blocks and/or other mounting structures associated with the arm, limb and/or limb portion. The limb 93 can define a limb recess 94. As used herein a limb recess can be formed by a solid limb, between free ends or arms of the solid limb, and/or between separate arms or mini-limbs of a split limb.
The cam 30 can be rotatably mounted to the limb 93 via the axle 40. Optionally, the axle assembly can include a first bearing 50 comprising a first inner portion 51 and a first outer portion 52. The first outer portion 52 can be non-rotatably engaged with the cam 30. The first inner portion 51 can be mounted immediately adjacent the axle 40, and optionally non-rotatable relative to the axle 40. Between the inner portion and the outer portion, ball bearings, pins, rollers or the like can be disposed so that the outer portion 52 rotates freely relative to the inner portion 51.
Further optionally, the axle 40 can include one or more fasteners 40A joined with the axle and operable in a compression mode to thereby compress under a compression force the first inner portion of the first bearing between a first end 41 and the second end 42 of the axle. The first outer portion 52 remains uncompressed when the compression force is applied to the first inner portion 51. As a result, the first outer portion 52 and the cam 30 are rotatable relative to the axle 40, while the first inner portion 51, and any open sided spacers 20, 20A mounted on the axle are non-rotatable relative to the axle 40 under the compression force.
The various other components aligned along the axle, immediately adjacent the axle (other than the cam and the outer portion of any bearings) can be clamped under the compression force, which can be an axial clamping force, between the ends of the axle 40, so they will not rotate upon rotation of the cam under normal circumstances. In this clamped configuration, the components along the axle have zero gaps or tolerances between them individually and the limbs. Indeed, these components can be clampingly forced against one another under a compression force, for example, an axial clamping force of optionally at least 1 pound, further optionally at least 5 pounds, yet further optionally at least 10 pounds, even further optionally at least 20 pounds, still further optionally at least 30 pounds, yet further optionally at least 40 pounds, further optionally at least 50 pounds, yet further optionally at least 100 pounds, still further optionally at least 250 pounds, still even further optionally at least 500 pounds, still further optionally between 1 pound and 500 pounds.
Although the current embodiment is described in connection with a dual cam bow, and in particular a binary cam system, the current embodiment and its features are suited for use with simpler pulley systems, for example, in single cam systems. The axle assembly, limb, cam and other features also can be used in other dual cam, cam and a half, and single cam systems as well. Further, the embodiments herein are well suited for compound archery bows, dual cam bows, cam and a half bows, crossbows and other archery systems including two or more cams. As used herein, a “cam” refers to a cam, a pulley, and/or an eccentric, whether a modular, removable part, or an integral part of a cam assembly, for use with an archery bow. However, when a cam is described as an “eccentric cam,” this refers to a cam that rotates about an axis distal from a center of the body, for example a geometric center, and this term excludes perfectly circular pulleys such as those used in single cam archery bows.
As used herein, a “track” refers to a structural element that is adapted to guide or accommodate a portion of a bowstring or power cable within or adjacent the element, and can be in the form of a groove, a recess, a slot, pins or posts extending from or defined by a surface or element. When in the form of a groove or recess, that element can be defined by a part of a cam assembly, for example, defined by a bowstring cam and/or a power cable cam, and can be of virtually any geometric cross section, for example, partially or fully semi-circular, rounded, triangular, rectangular, square, polygonal, or combinations of the foregoing. The cam and/or module can be formed from rigid material, such as a metal, optionally aluminum, titanium, or magnesium, or a non-metal, optionally composites and/or polymers.
As used herein, an “axis of rotation” refers to an axis about which a cam can and/or does rotate, for example, a rotational axis of cam 30. Optionally, the axis of rotation can coincide with the longitudinal axis LA of axle 40 to which the cam is mounted. Although not described in detail, the cam herein can include modular elements that provide some level of adjustment of a performance characteristic of a bow, including but not limited to, a particular draw length, draw stop or draw force for the bow. The assemblies also can include draw stops and other components common to cams as desired.
The cam 30 as mentioned above is rotatably mounted on the limb 93 which can include a first arm 95 and second arm 96. As shown in
The limb 93, that is, each of the sub limbs or other portions of a solid limb, or pillow blocks, can include an interior surface. For example, the first limb arm 95 can include an interior surface 951 and an exterior surface 95E. The other limb arm 96 can include an interior surface 951 and an exterior surface 95E. The interior surfaces of the limb portion can face toward the cam 30 and can directly engage the open face spacers 20, 20A as described below, while the exterior surfaces can face away from these elements. The interior surfaces, as described in further detail below also can contact and be clamped against under a compression force, one or more components that are disposed along the axle between the limb arms within the recess 94.
The axle as mentioned above can include first fastener 40A that is joined with the axle 40 at an axle end 42. Although shown as a single fastener, two fasteners can be used with the axle, installed at opposite ends thereof. In some cases, the axle 40 itself can be in the form of a large bolt or fastener (not shown) with a head disposed on the exterior surface 96E of one limb arm, and a nut (not shown) attached to threads that protrude from the exterior surface 95E of the other limb arm.
The axle in
When exerted, the axial clamping force ACF can be optionally at least 1 pound, at least 5 pounds, at least 10 pounds, at least 20 pounds, at least 30 pounds, at least 40 pounds, at least 50 pounds, at least 100 pounds, at least 250 pounds, at least 500 pounds, or between 1 pound and 500 pounds. The axial clamp force ACF can be significant enough that the components along the axle forcibly engage against one another so that rotation of those components clamped against one another is impaired and/or prevented. For example, to rotate one component relative to the next adjacent component, against which it is clampingly and forcibly compressed, one of the components will have exerted upon it a torque of optionally at least 1 inch pound, at least 5 inch pounds, at least 10 inch pounds, at least 15 inch pounds, at least 20 inch pounds, or between 1 inch pound and 100 inch pounds. In some cases, the axial clamping force ACF can not only set the gap or tolerance between components along the axle that are abutted against one another to 0.00 inches, but in addition, the axial clamping force ACF can press those components against one another forcefully enough under a compression or clamping force that the components do not rotate relative to one another along the axle without exertion of significant torque.
As shown in
The open sided spacer 20 will be described in more detail with reference to
The spacer 20 can include one or more friction elements 23 as described below that frictionally engage the spacer 20 as it is pressed or urged on and off the axle 40 during installation and/or removal. The spacer can be mounted on an axle 40 under compression force ACF, and installed or removed by loosening the fastener 40A to remove the compression force. Thereafter, a user can use a tool, such as a hammer or wrench to bump or nudge the open sided spacer 20 on or off the axle in a direction that is transverse to, rather than parallel to or aligned with, the longitudinal axis LA of the axle as described below. The spacers 20, 20A can be provided in a set, and can have similar or varying thicknesses. These same or varied thicknesses of the spacers can shift the cam 30 left and right along the axle 40 to modify, adjust and/or maximize the center shot or tune of the archery bow 90.
With reference to
When fully installed, the longitudinal axis SA of the axle aperture 25 can be aligned with the longitudinal axis LA of the axle 40. The axle aperture can include a radius around at least half of the aperture. The axle aperture 25 optionally can include a centerline CL. As shown in
In particular, the spacer body 24 of the open sided spacer 20 can include an outer perimeter 60. This perimeter can extend around the outer periphery of the spacer body and can be interrupted by a spacer recess 50 that extends inwardly toward the longitudinal axis SA and toward the axle aperture 25 so the spacer recess and axle aperture form a continuous opening OP. With this continuous opening extending inwardly from the outer perimeter 60, the spacer body 24 optionally can take on a generally C-shape, U-shape or E-shape.
The outer perimeter 60 shown in
The forward surfaces 63 above and below the spacer recess axis SRA can transition to engagement edges 67A and 67B. The engagement edges can be the portion of the spacer body 24 that first engage the axle 40 in particular its exterior side wall 40S, which optionally can be cylindrical. The edges 67A and 67B can form a corner with the respective recess sidewall 68A and 68B that extend inwardly and generally toward the centerline CL of the spacer body 24. The surfaces 63 and respective sidewalls 68A and 68B can optionally form right angles at the respective corners where they transition to one another. These right angles can include a small slightly radiused portion depending on the manufacturing techniques for forming the open sided spacer 20.
The open sided spacer optionally can be constructed from a variety of materials, such as metal, composites, polymer and or combinations thereof. The open sided spacer can be molded, machined, 3D printed or formed in a variety of other suitable manners. Optionally, the spacer body 20 can be constructed such that the spacer recess width D3 can be slightly increased when the spacer body 24 engages the axle 40 as described below.
Returning to
Sometimes, when the shoulders are included, they can operate to lock the axle 40 in the axle aperture. Optionally, when the axle 40 is installed into the opening OP by moving the spacer 20 toward the axle 40 in direction M, the axle sidewall 40S slides along the respective sidewalls 68A and 68B of the recess 50. As this occurs, the axle frictionally engages these sidewalls due to the axle 40 having a diameter D1 that is greater than the recess width D3. In some cases, the recess width D3 can actually increase, with the edges 67A and 67B moving away from one another as the axle 40 enters the spacer recess 50, generally moving along the spacer recess axis toward the longitudinal axis SA of the axle aperture 25. Due to this friction fit, the sidewalls 68A and 68B also or alternatively can be urged away from one another slightly, as the axle 40 moves through the continuous opening OP. Eventually, when the axle 40 passes the shoulders 26A and 26B, and enters into the axle aperture 25, the sidewalls 68A and 68B can move back toward one another and the width of the recess D3 can return to its static condition.
As mentioned above, the spacer body 24 can include lateral surfaces 24S1 and 24S2. These surfaces can be separated by thickness T1. This thickness T1 can be optionally between about 0.005 inches and about 0.500 inches, between about 0.050 inches and about 0.400 inches, between about 0.050 inches and about 0.300 inches, between about 0.100 and about 0.275 inches, between about 0.250 inches and 0.27 inches, about 0.100 inches, about 0.130 inches or about 0.160 inches or other dimensions depending on the application and suitable spacing for the cam 30 along the axle, between the respective limb arms 95 and 96.
Optionally, the open sided spacer herein can be provided with varying thicknesses. For example, as shown in
As shown in
A method of using the archery bow assembly will be described with reference to
More particularly, as shown in
During installation or removal of an open face spacer, the user can leave the fastener 40A in the bore 40B and thus threaded in the axle 40. The axle likewise can remain installed relative to the limb 93. In particular, the first end 41 and second end 42 of the axle can remain installed in and engaging the respective limb arms 95 and 96. The axle ends 41 and 42 are not removed or pulled through the respective apertures 95A and/or 96A in which the axle is mounted, nor is the axle removed from the recess 94 between the limb arms 95 and 96 to install, remove and/or adjust the open sided limb spacers 20 and 20A. Further, it is noted that these actions can be taken with or without the use of a bow press compressing the limbs of the bow, optionally such that the spacers can be installed, removed and/or modified relative to the axle without the use of a bow press in some applications.
As shown in
As mentioned above, the spacers optionally can include the indicia elements 71, 72 associated with a particular thickness. The user can use these indicia elements to identify a spacer having a particular thickness suitable for the application and installation on the axle.
To install the spacer 20 on the axle 40, the spacer 20 can be moved in direction M toward the axle as shown in
The spacer 20 can be installed along the axle within the limb recess 94. The spacer 20 can be positioned so that the spacer body 24 is mounted between the cam 30 and the limb arm 95, or the limb arm 96 so the spacer is in the location of the other spacer 20A as shown in
Where the bearing 50 is included, the spacer body 20 can be placed adjacent the first inner portion 51 of the bearing, and distal from the first outer portion 52 of the bearing. The second lateral surface 24S2 can directly contact the first inner portion 51 of the bearing. The first lateral surface 24S1 can directly contact the interior surface 951 of the limb arm 95. Generally, the second lateral surface can face away from the cam 30 and the first lateral surface can face toward the cam.
The process mentioned above for installing the open sided spacer 20 can be repeated for another spacer 20A, or the alternative spacers 120, 220 or additional spacers along the axle within the recess 94. Again spacers of the same width or of different widths can be mixed and matched for installation on the axle depending on the application.
With the spacers installed, and in cases where the archery bow assembly 10 utilizes a compression system, an axial compression force ACF can be applied to the assembly 10. To do so, a user can rotate the fastener 40A relative to the axle 40 thereby providing the axial compression force ACF. This in turn exerts the compression force on the open sided spacers 20, 20A, as well as the inner portions of the bearings and optionally the cam 30 located between the arms 95 and 96. The compression force can be any of the compression forces mentioned above, for example, between 1 pound and 500 pounds.
The first outer portion, 52, however, can remain uncompressed, unclamped, and not under the axial clamping force ACF when that axial clamping force is applied to the first inner portion. As a result, the first outer portion 52 of the bearing and the cam 30 are free to rotate relative to the axle 40, while the first inner portion 51 can remain nonrotating relative to the axle 40 and the spacer 20 under the axial clamping force ACF.
Directional terms, such as “vertical,” “horizontal,” “top,” “bottom,” “upper,” “lower,” “inner,” “inwardly,” “outer” and “outwardly,” are used to assist in describing the invention based on the orientation of the embodiments shown in the illustrations. The use of directional terms should not be interpreted to limit the invention to any specific orientation(s).
In addition, when a component, part or layer is referred to as being “joined with,” “on,” “engaged with,” “adhered to,” “secured to,” or “coupled to” another component, part or layer, it may be directly joined with, on, engaged with, adhered to, secured to, or coupled to the other component, part or layer, or any number of intervening components, parts or layers may be present. In contrast, when an element is referred to as being “directly joined with,” “directly on,” “directly engaged with,” “directly adhered to,” “directly secured to,” or “directly coupled to,” another element or layer, there may be no intervening elements or layers present. Other words used to describe the relationship between components, layers and parts should be interpreted in a like manner, such as “adjacent” versus “directly adjacent” and similar words. As used herein, the term “and/or” includes any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items.
The above description is that of current embodiments of the invention. Various alterations and changes can be made without departing from the broader aspects of the invention as defined in the appended claims, which are to be interpreted in accordance with the principles of patent law including the doctrine of equivalents. This disclosure is presented for illustrative purposes and should not be interpreted as an exhaustive description of all embodiments of the invention or to limit the scope of the claims to the specific elements illustrated or described in connection with these embodiments. For example, and without limitation, any individual element(s) of the described invention may be replaced by alternative elements that provide substantially similar functionality or otherwise provide adequate operation. This includes, for example, presently known alternative elements, such as those that might be currently known to one skilled in the art, and alternative elements that may be developed in the future, such as those that one skilled in the art might, upon development, recognize as an alternative. Further, the disclosed embodiments include a plurality of features that are described in concert and that might cooperatively provide a collection of benefits. The present invention is not limited to only those embodiments that include all of these features or that provide all of the stated benefits, except to the extent otherwise expressly set forth in the issued claims. Any reference to claim elements in the singular, for example, using the articles “a,” “an,” “the” or “said,” is not to be construed as limiting the element to the singular. Any reference to claim elements as “at least one of X, Y and Z” is meant to include any one of X, Y or Z individually, any combination of X, Y and Z, for example, X, Y, Z; X, Y; X, Z; Y, Z, and/or any other possible combination together or alone of those elements, noting that the same is open ended and can include other elements.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4064862 | Groner | Dec 1977 | A |
4333443 | Roelle | Jun 1982 | A |
5390655 | Mitchell | Feb 1995 | A |
6415780 | Proctor | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6474324 | Despart | Nov 2002 | B1 |
8950388 | McPherson | Feb 2015 | B2 |
9115953 | Huang | Aug 2015 | B1 |
9528788 | McPherson | Dec 2016 | B2 |
10126087 | Grace | Nov 2018 | B1 |
Entry |
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https://www.archerytalk.com/threads/e-clip.5329861/, downloaded Sep. 24, 2021. |