1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to equipment used for athletic exercise, and more particularly, to portable devices used to exercise and strengthen the muscles by pulling.
2. Background
A portable athletic exerciser pulling device was invented earlier and is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,505,681 by Bruggemann, who is one of the present inventors. This patented device consists of a small cylindrical housing enclosure containing a number of constant force, circular wound spring assemblies; and includes a cord-wound pulley wheel with a pull handle, that is molded to the enclosure and an attached force selector mechanism. The selector is used to manually select the number of spring assemblies to be engaged by the pulley, by inserting and moving a splined rod axially to connect in turn with the axially stacked spring assemblies.
When the pull handle is pulled, the device housing rotates around its cylindrical axis as do all the spring assemblies inside the housing. However, the total resisting force felt by a user is determined by the number of spring assemblies selected, as well as their individual constant force ratings.
If five spring assemblies are contained in the housing, then the maximum number of resisting force levels available to a user is also five. This is due to the sequential method of spring assembly selection employed by the device.
While the device described above has performed admirably and has been well received by users, the inventors believe that the number of resistance force levels made available by the device is unnecessarily limited, and the device remains more costly to produce than desired. There is, therefore, a need to improve upon the design of the device to extend the device versatility and at the same time, decrease the cost of the device.
The invention is an improvement of an exerciser pulling device which is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,505,681 by Bruggemann. The invention is a small device which may be fastened to any suitable immovable object, and having a pull handle attached to a cord which is wrapped around a pulley wheel inside the device. The device comprises a plurality of spring housing assemblies that are stacked and clamped in a column with at least one pulley wheel assembly; and a grooved metal shaft that is disposed throughout the column longitudinal axis, engaging the hubs of all constant-force spring assemblies which are stacked inside the housing assemblies and engaging the pulley wheel hub. Means are provided for user manual selection of any individual spring assembly through slots in the side of the housing assemblies. Selection causes a selected spring assembly to generate a resisting force when the pull handle is pulled away from the device by an exerciser.
An advantage and improvement is that any one of the spring assemblies and any combination of the available spring assemblies can be selected by an exerciser, permitting a large number of force settings to be available for even relatively few total spring assemblies in a device.
Another advantage is the improved convenience of being able to fasten the device directly to any convenient immovable object without need for clamps.
Yet another advantage is the low cost of the invention device as compared with earlier devices.
Accordingly, it is a principal object of this invention to provide a large variety of resisting force settings available to a user of the device.
Another object is to improve the earlier device by greatly simplifying the device construction and reducing the number of parts required.
Further objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from studying the following portion of the specification, the claims and the attached drawings.
Referring particularly to the drawings, there is shown in
The device is designed to be clamped or fastened to a fixed object such as a desk and used for manual pulling exercise. If needed for fastening, metal rings may be attached to the device end caps 2 for this purpose. A pull handle 18 is attached to the pulley wheel cord 20 and normally hangs down when not in use. If the device was being used for exercise, its pull handle 18 would be extended outwards as illustrated in
Each spring housing member 4 is capped by an external end cap 2 and a coupling end cap 6. Both types of end cap serve primarily to secure the spring assemblies 24 which float, stacked in a central cylindrical cavity in each spring housing member 4. However, the coupling end cap 6 is designed to also interface with a pulley wheel assembly 8 as depicted in
A grooved metal shaft 32 is inserted centrally along the long axis of the cylindrical cavity in each spring housing 4, and extends from one end of the device to the other; with the shaft ends being held loosely in a center recess in each of the external end caps 2. The shaft 32 directly engages the pulley wheel 92 and a hub 30 of each spring assembly 24 so that a rotation of the pulley wheel 92 will cause all spring assemblies to rotate the same amount. However, unless engaged by a selector lever 16, no resisting force will be generated by a spring assembly 24.
Two end-threaded metal bolts 10 with a winged lock nut on each end, are used as a means of clamping the spring housing assemblies and a pulley assembly 8 together in a column. The winged lock nuts may include a handle portion 12 as illustrated, to aid with tightening or may instead, include a projecting metal ring portion for fastening the device to a fixed, immovable location.
A metal alignment rod 14 closely fills a channel that extends from one external end cap 2 to the device distal external end cap 2, and another identical rod 14 occupies a parallel channel. These channels are formed by through-holes cut in the end caps, the spring housings and the pulley assembly, which are lined up axially during assembly. The alignment rods 14 in the channels, are provided to align each stacked assembly in a precise lateral position that lines up the rotational axis of all rotating components with the central shaft 32, and prevents any possible lateral shifting that might otherwise occur during use of the device and so disrupt operation.
In the
All the selector levers 16 will have, visibly imprinted on their outer edge, a number indicating the force rating of the spring assembly it will engage. Thus, a user can pick any particular resisting force he desires by pushing the levers that add up to the total force desired. Sequential selection is not required. If each spring assembly is rated differently, the total number of resistance force levels available for selection by a user, increases as the square of the number of spring assemblies that are contained in the device. Thus a device containing only six spring assemblies could have as many as thirty-six resistance force levels available for choice in exercising.
These two views show a spring assembly 24 that is fitted in a housing axial cavity 26 at a slot 72 level, and a pivotable selector lever 16 that is mounted on a pivot rod 34 on a slot surface that is adjacent to the control face 33 edge.
In
In
In the selector position shown in
A commonly available means for temporarily holding the long arm 41 of a selector lever 16 in the selected positions, is the use of a spring-loaded snap-in ball 38 mechanism embedded in an end of the lever. This is used together with two separated holes 40 that mark the desired positions in the housing slot surface, to snap the lever easily into the engaged position or disengaged position.
Opening or unselecting a lever is achieved by simply pushing the exposed end of the short arm 43 of a lever inwards until the long arm 41 snaps into the position shown in
In
Referring now to
It should be noted that the height of the hub 30 is made about a third greater than the height or thickness of the spring hub 44. This is done so that when the spring assemblies 24 are stacked on the central shaft 32 inside their housing 4, a rotating spring base surface can not rub against a stationary spring base 44 that may be above or below it, interfering with its free movement.
Refer now to
In
As for each of the in-line components, two alignment holes 22 are cut through the spring assembly housing 4, and alignment holes 76 are cut through the coupling end cap 6, for stacking by the alignment rods 14.
In the housing member 4, two holes 40 are cut in the surface of each slot 72, to mate with a spring-loaded snap connector that is on one end of each selector lever 16 in the slot.
In the coupling end cap 6, a central through hole 74 is cut and sized to permit passage of the central shaft 32. The center of the hole 74 is laterally offset an amount “A” to match the position of the shaft axis. As a means of holding one end of the pivot shaft mentioned earlier in the housing description, a recessed hole 78 is provided, located near a corner of the cap 6 in the appropriate position. This, however, may be deemed unnecessary and be omitted, depending on the pivot means used for the selector levers 16.
The central shaft 32 is shown in a partial side view in
Finally,
It should be noted that the pulley wheel housing front side 96 which will be close to the device control face 33, has been cut back so that a substantial portion of a seated pulley wheel 92 will extend out of the pulley wheel housing as seen in
Referring once more to the invention embodiment shown in
The number of spring assembly housings 4 in a device may be as low as one or even four or more. Two or more pulley assemblies may be incorporated. The size, ratings and quantity of spring assemblies contained in a device are all variable. Thus a large number of device configurations, having the same basic characteristics of the present invention can be envisioned for various applications. From the foregoing, it is clear that the use and versatility of the original pulling device are greatly enhanced by the present invention.
Most of the device parts are fabricated from hard, molded plastic. Metal components used are few, consisting of the central shaft, two clamping bolts, the constant-force springs the pulley wheel, and two alignment rods. With the exception of the central shaft, all the metal parts are standard and can be readily purchased.
As compared, with the earlier design pulling device, there are no expensive, machined parts required, and far fewer parts in the total assembly. The ease of device assembly is obvious from the foregoing description. Therefore, manufacture of the device in quantity, should result in a much lower cost per invention device as compared with the earlier pulling exerciser device, and will be welcomed by potential users.
From the foregoing description, it is believed that the described preferred embodiment achieves the objects of the present invention. Alternative embodiments and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. These and other modifications are considered to be equivalent and within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
THIS APPLICATION CLAIMS THE BENEFIT OF PROVISIONAL APPLICATION NO. 60/572,415 FILED May 20, 2004
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5505681 | Bruggemann | Apr 1996 | A |
5580338 | Scelta et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
6482138 | Nelson | Nov 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60572415 | May 2004 | US |