None.
Not Applicable.
This invention relates to a portable boat cleat usable by the owner or operator of a boat to quickly and efficiently secure the boat to a boat dock or pier by affixing the cleat to a dock piling.
When tying a boat up to a dock, the boat operator will typically take one end of a rope and wrap it about a post or piling forming part of the dock. Securing, or tying off, the boat to the dock is important in preventing the boat from drifting away from the dock and into a navigable channel or waterway where it may strike, or be struck by, other vessels resulting in damage to the vessel(s) and possibly injury to those on a vessel.
Many docks have cleats located on an edge of the dock for the operator to wrap the rope around the cleat, again to dock the boat in a safe manner. It will be understood that not all docks are similarly equipped for tying a boat up to it, and often a boat's operator will have to provide his own means of securement
In this regard it is not uncommon for a boat operator, when they reach a dock, to hammer a nail to the dock and wrap an end of a rope around the nail. While this may allow the boat to be tied up to the dock, it is possible for the nail to be worked loose from the dock, freeing up the boat to float away from the dock into an unsafe position.
The present invention alleviates this problem by providing the boat operator a portable, reusable cleat that the operator can securely attach to a dock piling and then securely attach an anchoring rope to the cleat so the boat is effectively secured in place. When the boat subsequently is leaving the dock, the cleat is readily retrieved and stored on the bot for future use.
A cleat of the present invention is for quickly and efficiently securing a boat to a boat dock. The cleat includes a brace contoured to fit against a piling of the dock and extend around the outer surface of the piling when the brace is fitted in place. The cleat further includes an adjustable strap having one end which is attached to one end of the brace with an opposite, free end, of the strap fitting about the other end of the brace. An end portion of this free end, when fitted about the other end of the brace, overlaps with the overlapping portions being fastened together to secure the brace to the piling. An anchor projects from a back face of the brace. An anchor rope attached to the boat is secured to the anchor portion of the brace, once the brace is secured to the piling, to secure the boat to the dock.
Importantly, the cleat is a portable cleat that is readily unattached and removed from the piling to allow the boat to undock from one location, with the cleat then being usable to secure the boat to a dock at its next docking location.
The anchor is lightweight, portable, and conveniently stored on the boat.
More than one cleat can be used, if necessary or warranted, to secure the boat to a dock.
Other objects and features will be in part apparent and in part pointed out hereinafter.
Corresponding reference characters represent corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
The following detailed description illustrates the claimed invention by way of example and not by way of limitation. This description will clearly enable one skilled in the art to make and use the claimed invention, and describes several embodiments, adaptations, variations, alternatives and uses of the claimed invention, including what I presently believe is the best mode of carrying out the claimed invention. Additionally, it is to be understood that the claimed invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangements of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The claimed invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting.
Referring to the drawings and as shown in
As shown in
Next, brace 12 has a spool 16a, 16b respectively installed at each end of the brace. Also, each end of the brace is rounded with the portion of the ends which abut against the outer surface of the piling each have a series of vertically extending teeth 18 for biting into the piling, when cleat 10 is affixed to the piling, to prevent the cleat from rotating about the piling and keeping it in place.
Cleat 10 further includes an adjustable strap 20 one end of which attaches to spool 16a on the one end of brace 12 with an opposite, free, end 22 of the strap being wrapped about spool 16b at the other end of the brace. As shown in the drawings, when an inner face 24 of brace 12 is abutted against the outer surface of piling P, strap 20 is fitted around the post. The strap is sufficiently long that after wrapping around the outside of the post, there is still sufficient length of the strap to be inserted into the other end of the brace, wrapped about spool 16b and drawn back out. Pulling on the extending free end of the strap allows brace 12 to be tightened against the post to firmly connect cleat 10 to the post.
As shown in
An anchor plate 28, integrally formed with brace 12 extends outwardly from the now outer face 30 of the brace. The anchor plate has a relatively straight section 32a extending across the outer portion of brace 12. The anchor plate then flares outwardly at each end of section 32a, as indicated 32b and 32c in the drawings. This construction allows the boat operator to conveniently wrap loops of a boat anchor rope R to secure boat B to cleat 10 and tie the boat to the dock.
When the boat is to move away from the dock, the end of anchor R is untied from cleat 10 and stored on board boat B. The overlapping sections of free end 22 of strap 20 are unattached from each other allowing the cleat to be removed from piling P, brought back on board the boat and stored away. The boat can then be manually pushed away from dock D or moved away from it under engine power.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art, that more than one cleat 10 may be used to moor a boat to a dock. Also, free end 22 of strap 20, besides having the pads 24 for fastening the overlapping portions of the end together may alternately use other fastening means such as snaps, for example.
In view of the above, it will be seen that the several objects and advantages of the present invention have been achieved and other advantageous results have been obtained.
As various changes could be made in the above constructions without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
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