BASEBALL BATTING TEE

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20160303450
  • Publication Number
    20160303450
  • Date Filed
    April 15, 2015
    9 years ago
  • Date Published
    October 20, 2016
    8 years ago
Abstract
A batting tee has a post including a ball holder on a top end of a post, and a tube cap on a bottom end of the post. A receptacle is positioned in a recess in a base frame having a through hole. The tee is set up for use by passing the post through the through hole from the bottom of the base and securing the tube cap to the base. The batting tee may be set up for use, and disassembled for transport or storage, quickly and easily.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

A batting tee is used by to practice hitting a baseball or softball held at various positions within or near the strike zone. By using a batting tee to practice hitting a stationary ball, players can improve their batting swings and learn to hit balls from various locations. Since the tee is often struck by the bat, it must be impact resistant. At the same time, the tee should also hold the ball in a way that minimally interferes with the bat, so that hitting the ball off of the tee better simulates hitting a pitched ball. The batting tee may also tip over when hit with a bat. This interrupts the batting practice since the user must then pick up and reset the batting tee. Consequently, a tee designed to resist tipping is beneficial. The batting tee should also be easily portable and quick to set up and take down.


Various batting tees have been proposed in the past. Generally these batting tees have a flat base or plate, an adjustable length post on the plate, and a ball holder at the top end of the post. Examples are shown in Lefebvre U.S. Pat. No. 4,227,691; Rodino U.S. Pat. No. 5,386,987; Tanner U.S. Pat. No. 6,358,163 and Quinn U.S. Patent Publication No. 2014/0302948. While these and other designs may have met with varying degrees of success, engineering challenges remain to providing an improved batting tee.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A batting tee has a post including a ball holder on a top end of a post, and a tube cap on a bottom end of the post. A receptacle is positioned in a recess in a base frame having a through hole. The tee is set up for use by passing the post through the through hole from the bottom of the base and securing the tube cap to the base. The batting tee may be set up for use, and disassembled for transport or storage, quickly and easily.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a top perspective view of a batting tee with a telescoping post in an retracted position.



FIG. 2 is a section view of the tee of FIG. 1 now in a fully extended position.



FIG. 3 is top exploded perspective view of the base of the tee shown in FIGS. 1 and 2.



FIG. 4 is a bottom exploded perspective view of the base of the tee shown in FIGS. 1 and 2.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

As shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, a batting tee 10 has a telescopically extendable post 14 which is attached to a base 12. The a ball holder 16 is provided at the top end of the post. The ball holder 16 may be a cone of rolled up rubber and/or fabric, as described in Newman U.S. Pat. No. 8,597,143, incorporated herein by reference. The post 14 in the example shown has a fixed lower tube 18 and two telescoping tubes. An end cap 20 at the bottom end of the lower tube 18 has and end tube 52 joined to a disk 54. The bottom end of the lower tube is connected to an end tube 52 on the end cap 20. The lower tube 18 and the tube end cap 20 may be made of a heavy material such as steel, to provide additional weight at the bottom of the post 14 for improved stability.


As shown in FIGS. 3 and 4, the base 12 may be generally square, with curved or angled corners and angled side surfaces, similar to a low profile four sided pyramid. In the example shown, the base has a receptacle 36 fitted into a recess 32 in the top surface of base frame 28, which may be metal, rubber or plastic. The receptacle 36 has receptacle collar 42 joined to or integral with a receptacle plate 40. The receptacle plate 40 is secured onto or into the base frame 28 via receptacle screws 38, with a flat bottom surface of the receptacle plate 40 on a floor 34 of the base frame 28. The receptacle 36 may also be made of a heavy material, such as steel, to add further weight at the bottom of the post. The receptacle 36 and the base frame 28 may optionally be provided as a single unit rather than as two separate components.


A frame opening 30 may be centrally located in the base frame 28 and surrounded by the base floor 34. The frame opening 30 has a diameter nominally larger than the diameter of the lower tube 18. The receptacle 36 has a collar opening 44 aligned with the frame opening 30, and having a diameter smaller than the frame opening 30. A detent ring 46 may be positioned within the collar opening 44, with set screws 48 securing detent balls or pins in place. The disk 54 has a diameter nominally smaller than the diameter of the frame opening 30.


In use, the tee 10 is assembled by inserting the post 14 through the base opening 30 up from the bottom of the base 12. The maximum diameter of the ball holder 16 is nominally smaller than the diameter of the collar opening 44 to allow it to pass through the collar opening 44. Alternatively, the ball holder 16 may be temporarily compressed inwardly by hand and threaded through the collar opening 44. The top surface of the disk 54 of the end cap 20 comes to rest against a bottom surface of the receptacle plate 40, with the bottom surface of the disk 54 flush with the bottom surface of the base frame 28. The detent devices on the receptacle collar 42 engage into a groove 50 on the end cap 20, securing the post 14 to the base 12.


The tee is then ready for use. If the post 14 is a telescoping post having two or more telescoping tubes, the height of the post may be adjusted as desired. The weight of the base 12 and the lower tube 18 help to prevent the tee 10 from tipping over when hit by a bat. The tee 10 is disassembled by pushing the post 14 back through the base 12, allowing the tee 10 to be stored and transported in a compact configuration.


Thus, novel batting tees have been shown and described. Various changes and substitutions may of course be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The invention, therefore, should not be limited except by the following claims and their equivalents.

Claims
  • 1. A batting tee, comprising: a post including a ball holder on a top end of the post, and an end cap on a bottom end of the post;a base having a receptacle on a base frame, with the receptacle having a receptacle plate sized and shaped to fit within a recess in the base frame and a receptacle collar extending from the receptacle plate, the receptacle collar having a receptacle opening aligned with a frame opening in the base frame, the frame opening sized and shaped such that a disk on a bottom of the end cap fits within the frame opening, the receptacle opening sized and shaped such that it is smaller than frame opening in the base frame such that the disk cannot pass through the receptacle opening and the disk is retained within the frame opening by the receptacle plate; andwith the post extending through the receptacle opening.
  • 2. The batting tee of claim 1 further comprising one or more fittings on the base, and a groove on the bottom end of the post to cooperate with the fittings for securing the post onto the base.
  • 3. (canceled)
  • 4. The batting tee of claim 1 with the end cap including a tube joined to the disk, and with a lower end of the post joined to the tube.
  • 5. The batting tee of claim 1 with the receptacle plate matching a shape of the recess.
  • 6. The batting tee of claim 1 with the ball holder having a diameter less than a diameter of the receptacle opening to allow the post to be passed through the base.
  • 7. The batting tee of claim 1 with the receptacle plate permanently attached to the base frame.
  • 8. The batting tee of claim 1 with the post including a first tube, a second tube, and a third tube, with the end cap attached to the first tube at the bottom end of the post with the second tube and third tube telescopically extendable from the first tube, and with the ball holder at a top end of the third tube.
  • 9. The batting tee of claim 1 with a bottom surface of the disk flush with a bottom surface of the base frame.
  • 10. (canceled)
  • 11. A batting tee, comprising: a ball holder on a top end of a post;a tube cap on a bottom end of the post, with the tube cap having a disk joined to an end tube, and with the post joined to the end tube;a base having a through hole sized and shaped such that the disk of the tube cap fits within the through hole, and a recess in a top surface of the base;a receptacle in the recess having a collar joined to a plate, with an opening in the collar aligned with and smaller than the through hole such that the disk cannot fit within the opening in the collar but the end tube of the tube cap fits within the opening in the collar; andone or more fittings on the collar engaging one or more of detents or a groove on the end tube to retain the end tube within the collar thereby securing the post to the base.
  • 12. The batting tee of claim 11 wherein the fittings include one or more of detent balls or pins.
  • 13. The batting tee of claim 11 wherein the ball holder is sized and shaped such that it can pass through the opening in the collar, and wherein the post is secured to the base by inserting the top end of the post first through the through hole and then through the opening in the collar.
  • 14. The batting tee of claim 11 wherein a top surface of the disk of the tube cap comes to rest against a bottom surface of the plate.
  • 15. The batting tee of claim 14 wherein a bottom surface of the disk is flush with a bottom surface of the base.
  • 16. The batting tee of claim 2 further comprising a detent ring positioned within the receptacle opening of the collar and disposed in-between the post and the collar, the detent ring including openings for projection of the one or more fittings therethrough.
  • 17. The batting tee of claim 2 wherein the fittings include one or more of detent balls or pins.
  • 18. The batting tee of claim 1 wherein the post is engaged to the base by inserting the top end of the post first through the frame opening and then through the receptacle opening.
  • 19. The batting tee of claim 1 wherein the receptacle plate is releasably attached to the base frame.
  • 20. The batting tee of claim 1 wherein the ball holder is temporarily compressible or collapsible such that it can pass through the receptacle opening.
  • 21. The batting tee of claim 1 wherein the receptacle is made of metal and the base frame is made of one or more of rubber or plastic, the receptacle thereby providing weight toward the bottom end of the post for improved stability during use.
  • 22. The batting tee of claim 1 wherein at least a portion of the post including the end cap and the bottom end of the post is made of metal to provide additional weight at the bottom end of the post for improved stability during use.