1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a bladder for an inflatable ball with electrical wiring.
2. Background Art
Over the last years the advance of microelectronics has made it possible to provide balls, such as soccer balls, with electrical and/or electronic components. For example, U.S. Pub. No. 2004/0162170 A1, EP 1 637 192 A1, DE 103 50 300 A1, and DE 10 2007 013 025 A1 disclose the arrangement of different sensors, receivers, transmitters or speakers within the bladder of a ball.
A balanced arrangement of several electronic or electrical components, which does not negatively affect the playing properties of the ball, requires either a common positioning in the centre of the bladder or a separate but essentially symmetric distribution of the components so that the ball has no substantial un-balanced mass. If separate components have to be electrically connected, for example, if a small accumulator supplies power to an electronic device, the components must be electrically connected by means of a wire or the like. DE 103 50 300 A1 discloses a centered arrangement of a charging cable between two bladder chambers. If there is sufficient air pressure in the bladder chambers, the cable and the connected electronic component are fixed in the center of the bladder by adjacent walls of the two bladder chambers. In the above-mentioned U.S. Pub. No. 2004/0162170 A1, the electrical cable also extends centrally between two oppositely arranged components through the interior of the bladder and therefore interconnects the two components using a direct path.
The inventor of the present invention understands that the known arrangements may provide a balanced ball construction. However, they are not suitable to withstand the dynamic requirements of a ball, as they occur in particular for soccer balls. In case of a sharp shot, for example for a penalty kick, a soccer ball is subject to considerable forces, which may lead to the ball deforming to a banana-like shape. The wirings inside a bladder known from the prior art cannot withstand such forces so that the cable, its contacts or the connected component are damaged. This applies in particular to freely extending wires inside the bladder but also to the arrangement of wires between two internal bladder walls, in particular if there is an insufficient air pressure in the two bladder chambers so that the cable is not sufficiently fixed.
The present invention is therefore based on the problem to provide a bladder for an inflatable ball having an electrical wiring which is capable of withstanding these loads more efficiently than the arrangements known in the prior art and therefore provides a more reliable function of the connected electrical and/or electronic components.
The present invention solves this problem by providing a bladder for an inflatable ball, in particular a soccer ball, having a form substantially corresponding the form of a ball and electrical wiring, wherein the wiring is at least partially arranged along a bladder wall.
The invention therefore no longer follows the firm belief in the above explained prior art that the wiring has to extend centrally through the interior of the bladder. As a result of the arrangement along a bladder wall, for example the outer bladder wall, which contacts either directly or is separated by a carcass from the outer shell of the ball, the wiring is two-dimensionally anchored and therefore, in contrast to the prior art, mechanically stabilized.
The wiring may be arranged on an inner side of a bladder wall. However, it is also conceivable to arrange the wiring on an outside of the bladder wall or to integrate it into the bladder wall, for example during the manufacture of the bladder material.
In some embodiments, the wiring is at least partially arranged inside a tunnel which may be at least partially formed by the bladder wall. This embodiment may be particularly advantageous to avoid damage to the wires when the bladder undergoes great deformations.
The tunnel may include a plurality of openings towards the interior of the bladder to assure an equalization of the pressure between the interior of the tunnel and the interior of the bladder and to avoid mechanical loads arising as a result of different pressures and when the ball undergoes deformations. Furthermore, two of these openings can be used for the insertion of the wiring.
In one embodiment, at least a part of the wiring along the bladder wall includes a sequence of substantially straight sections interconnected by curved sections. The arrangement of the wiring therefore may not correspond to a geodesic line between the components to be connected, i.e. the shortest interconnection along the outer bladder wall, but on the contrary, may be an intentionally curved course. It has been found that this may be particularly advantageous for the stability of the wiring when the bladder is subjected to strong deformations. Excessive pulling loads are therefore avoided even under strong deformations of the ball or in case of an insufficient pressure inside the bladder.
In one embodiment, the described wiring may include two parts which may be arranged on substantially opposite segments of the bladder wall. The arrangement of the wiring along the outer bladder wall creates an imbalance, which can be largely compensated for by a symmetric arrangement on opposite segments of the bladder.
In the explained embodiments, the wiring may interconnect a first electrical/electronic component with a second electrical/electronic component, for example a pressure sensor for measuring the pressure within the bladder and a display device which can be integrated into the valve of the bladder. However, other fields of use for the described wiring are also conceivable, for example use as an antenna configuration for electromagnetic receivers and/or transmitters of a ball or for the connection of an electromagnetic coil with an energy storage device. Basically, the component to be connected by the wiring can be attached inside or outside of the bladder of the corresponding ball.
According to a further aspect, the present invention relates to a ball, in particular a soccer ball having at least an electrical and/or at least an electronic component. The ball may include a bladder according to the above-described embodiments and therefore its electrical components have a substantially higher lifetime than the designs of the above described prior art.
Aspects of the present invention are further explained with reference to the accompanying figures. These figures show:
a, 4b are a schematic top view and a schematic side view, respectively, of a further embodiment of the present invention.
In the following, embodiments of the invention are further explained with reference to the example of a bladder for a soccer ball. However, it is to be understood that the present invention is not limited for use in a soccer ball. Other balls with an inflatable bladder, such as handballs, basketballs, volleyballs, rugby balls, balls for American football etc., may also be provided with a wiring as described below. However, the present invention may provide particularly significant advantages for use in a soccer ball, since a soccer ball is subject to particularly great deformations during a soccer game, which is why the wirings of the bladder known from the prior art often fail.
A valve 10 may be arranged at the north pole of the bladder 1. The valve 10 can have an indicator device 13 with two light emitting diodes, for example a green one and a red one, which indicate whether the air pressure inside the bladder 1 is within a predefined range (for a soccer ball, for example 0.8-1.0 bar). The red light emitting diode can be seen in
It is to be noted that the light emitting diodes, the pressure sensor and the battery are only examples for the electrical and/or electronic components which can be arranged inside or at the bladder 1. Other electrical/electronic devices may alternatively or additionally be arranged in or at the bladder 1, such as e.g. accelerometers, speakers, GPS-receivers, transmitters and/or receivers of electromagnetic signals, acoustic and/or optical signal indicators, memory chips for storing data, for example acceleration values or position data or an induction coil for inductively charging or a charging socket for charging the energy storage, such as a battery or a capacitor, etc. The corresponding wiring may include a different number of cables than the number of cables explained in the following detailed description depending on how many components are to be interconnected.
As can be seen in
The overall presentation in
a and 4b show further schematic representations of the zigzag-shaped course. Thereby a symmetrical arrangement of the wiring at opposite segments 3 of the bladder wall 50 can be seen. Furthermore, these representations show in still greater clarity the multitude of sections 31 which are connected with each other via curved sections 32 (cf.
In some embodiments, in particular for a soccer ball, an arrangement wherein the cables may not extend substantially following a geodesic line, i.e. the shortest connection along the bladder wall 50 between the electrical/electronic components to be connected is least preferred. In the bladder 1 of
The cables 60 may be flexibly arranged within the tunnel 55. To this end, each cable 60 may have at the end of the tunnel 55 an adequate additional length. Moreover, the zigzag-shaped course results in any case that the cables 60 have an adequate play so that even large deformations of the bladder 1 do not result in damage of the cable 60, its connections or of the bladder wall 50.
The tunnels 55 may provide on the one hand a secure anchoring of the cables 60 along the bladder wall 50. On the other hand they may also allow a certain play of the cables 60 so that pulling loads on the electrical connections may be avoided. In some embodiments, a plurality of holes are arranged on the side of the tunnels 55 directed to the interior of the bladder (not shown in the figures) to allow an equalization of the pressure and to avoid any loads on the material due to different pressures. The holes or openings may be arranged in the area of the curved sections 32 and thereby may also avoid a folding and delamination of the material 53 which forms the inner wall of the tunnels 55.
In the embodiment shown in
Also, the wiring depicted in
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