In order to lessen friction between snow and a gliding ski, paraffin-based wax is typically applied to a ski, specifically the wax absorption layer known as the ski base. The technique for applying paraffin-based waxes to skis is well known. Most commonly, the following steps are completed:
A common inconvenience when drawing the waxing iron across the ski base (step 3 in par. 0001) is the tendency of molten ski wax to flow off the ski base downward onto the ski's side walls, which wastes wax and requires subsequent removal.
The present invention is an attachment which may be affixed to the base of a commercially available ski waxing iron and prevents molten ski wax from flowing from the ski base downward onto the sidewalls of a ski.
The attachment consists of two clamping bars and two blades. Typical ski waxing iron bases have sufficient thickness to allow the clamping bars to attach to the fore and aft edges of the iron's base. The clamping bars are oriented parallel to each other and separated by a distance slightly larger than that of the ski's width. To the interior face of each clamping bar, a thin, flexible blade is permanently affixed near the front end.
The separation distance of the two blades is larger at the front of the attachment, tapering to a smaller separation distance in the rear. Therefore, the front of the attachment is easily applied to the ski, while the rear blades are held adjacent to the ski sidewalls via spring tension.
The heated iron base and attachment are guided onto the ski base, then drawn along the ski base which melts the wax, while the blades prevent molten ski wax from flowing downward onto the ski's sidewalls.
Accordingly, several advantages of one or more aspects of my invention are:
One embodiment of the attachment is shown in
The clamping bars 2(a&b) are oriented on an iron base 1 so the blades 5(a&b) are interior of the clamping bars 2(a&b), and the clamping bars 2(a&b) are parallel to each other and separated by a distance slightly larger than the width of a ski 6. The clamping screws 3(a&b) are inserted into the threaded holes 4(a&b), then tightened against an iron base 1 tightened to secure the clamping bars 2(a&b) to an iron base 1. Prior to using the attachment, a ski 6 is prepared by the conventional method of applying ski wax onto a ski base 7, with ski wax 8 hardening to a solid as it cools. An iron base 1 with affixed attachment is applied to the front of a ski 6 such that the blade's 5(a&b) largest separation distance is facing towards the back end of a ski 6. An iron base 1 is then in contact with a wax layer 8, and the attachment's blades 5(a&b) are in contact with the sidewalls of a ski 6. A waxing iron base 1 and the attachment are then moved down the length of a ski base 7, which melts ski wax 8. The blades 5(a&b) prevent molten ski wax 8 from flowing onto a ski's sidewalls.
The description above should not be construed as limiting in scope of the embodiments but as merely providing illustrations of some of several embodiments. For example, the attachment may be of numerous dimensions and being comprised of varying metals or metal alloys, etc.
Provisional Patent Application No.: U.S. 62/818,911 Provisional Patent Filing Date: Mar. 15, 2019
Number | Date | Country | |
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62818911 | Mar 2019 | US |