This invention relates generally to sports protective devices and, more particularly, to an auxiliary head protection apparatus for providing enhanced head protection to a wearer of a primary or traditional helmet.
Traditionally, each major sport is characterized by a certain degree of protective equipment, depending on the relative potential for injury while playing the respective sport. For instance, football players wear a helmet that includes cranial padding and a face guard so as to absorb or block the impact of tackling or being tackled by another player. Various other pads are common within or beneath the shirt and pants worn by a football player. Similarly, a lacrosse player may wear a less involved helmet but one that protects the head which may inadvertently get hit by another player's stick. Further, shin pads worn beneath a player's socks are well known.
Although presumably effective for their intended purposes, the existing protective devices, namely, a helmet in football, still fail to adequately protect a player's head. In recent years, medical diagnostics and professional knowledge has determined that long-time players of the game of football have a significantly higher occurrence of serious head trauma. Stated another way, the repeated impacts of a player's head against the helmets of other players and the ground result in physical damage to the player's brain.
Therefore, it would be desirable to have an auxiliary head protection apparatus that blocks or absorbs impact forces prior to said forces being encountered by a players' primary head protection device.
A head protection apparatus for covering a primary head protection device worn on the head of a sports player according to the present invention includes a base having a rim that defines an open bottom for wear on the head of the sports player. A framework extends upwardly from predetermined points along the rim. The head protection apparatus includes a face shield having a rear bar coupled to upper ends of the framework and is pivotally movable between a closed configuration in which a lower edge bears against the rim so as to block access to an interior area and an open configuration pivoted about an axis defined by the rear bar and which allows access to the interior area. The face shield includes a top wall having a crowned configuration so as to redirect otherwise direct impact forces. The head protection apparatus is worn by a sports player and for blocking impact to a primary player protection device.
Therefore, a general object of this invention is to provide an auxiliary head protection apparatus that covers and protects a wearer's primary head protection device.
Another object of this invention is to provide an auxiliary head protection apparatus, as aforesaid, that may be worn over the head and on the shoulders of a sports player and may be pivotally movable between open and closed configurations such that access is selectively obtained.
Still another object of this invention is to provide an auxiliary head protection apparatus, as aforesaid, that includes a crowned top wall configured to deflect or redirect direct impact forces.
Yet another object of this invention is to provide an auxiliary head protection apparatus, as aforesaid, that is easy and fast for a sports player to put on over his head and so as to prevent or decrease impact forces experienced by the primary head protection device.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein is set forth by way of illustration and example, embodiments of this invention.
An auxiliary head protection apparatus according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention will now be described with reference to
More particularly, the base 20 may include a rim 22 having an annular or ring-shaped configuration having inner and outer surfaces that are opposed to each other and which define an open bottom and an open interior area through which the apparatus 10 may be worn over the head of a sports player. The rim 22 may include an upper surface, also referred to as a shelf 24 that may define a groove 26 or raised shoulder configured to receive a bottom edge or bottom bar associated with the face shield 40 at a closed configuration as will be described later.
In an embodiment, auxiliary head protection apparatus 10 may include a framework 30 standing upwardly from the shelf 24 of the rim 22 of the base 20. In an embodiment, the framework 30 includes a rear wall 34 having a lower edge coupled to the rim 22 and extending upwardly to an upper edge 36, said rear wall 34 having an annular configuration and a solid construction so as to prevent encroachment of impact forces from a rear direction.
Further, the auxiliary head protection apparatus 10 includes a face shield 40 pivotally coupled to the rear wall 34 and is movable between closed and open configurations. More particularly, upper ends of the rearward support members of the framework 30 may be pivotally coupled to the upper edge 36 of the rear wall 34 of the rim 22. Further, the face shield 40 may include an array of bars 42 suitably configured and arranged so as to prevent or block impact forces (such as blocking or tackling by other sports players). The face shield 4030 may include a upstanding support bars 32 from which horizontal bars of the array of bars 42 extend, each having a proximal end 33a coupled to the rim 22 and extending upwardly to a distal end 33b opposite the proximal end 33a.
In addition, the face shield 40 may include a top wall 44 (a.k.a. a lid) mounted atop an uppermost bar of the array of bars 42 of the face shield 40 such that the face shield 40 has a closed top. As shown in the drawings, the top wall 44 includes a front edge 44a and a rear edge 44b opposite the front edge and which define an imaginary longitudinal axis therebetween. As shown in the figures, the top wall 44 may be raised or crowned such that direct impact forces are urged or pushed outwardly and laterally. In other words, the top wall 44 is configured to form a ridge or ridged edge 44c that extends along the longitudinal axis and extends away from the top wall 44 so as to redirect impact forces.
In another aspect, the auxiliary head protection apparatus 10 may include a pair of mounting flanges 46 coupled to opposed outer surfaces of the base 20, respectively. Each mounting flange 46 extends outwardly or away from the base 20 and may have a slight curvature appropriate for nesting with the players shoulders or engaging football shoulder pads. A corresponding pair of straps 48 may be associated with the pair of mounting flanges 46, respectively, and may be used for coupling the mounting flanges to a user's shoulders or shoulder pads or other sports gear such as football shoulder pads.
In another aspect, a chinstrap 14 associated with a primary head protection device 12 may be releasably coupled to the rim 22. More particularly, a helmet strap receiver 16 may be mounted to an exterior surface of the rim 22, the receiver 16 being configured and operative to receive a fastener on a free end of the helmet strap 14 as shown in
An auxiliary head protection apparatus 100 according to another embodiment of the present invention is shown in
Still another auxiliary head protection apparatus 200 according to another embodiment of the present invention is shown in
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application number 63/220,783 filed July 12, 2021 and titled Auxiliary Head Protection Apparatus, which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20120167289 | Kim | Jul 2012 | A1 |
20140053324 | Jackson | Feb 2014 | A1 |
20200163400 | Salaam | May 2020 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20230011623 A1 | Jan 2023 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63220783 | Jul 2021 | US |