A bumper and mooring line receptacle apparatus for a dock facility includes an elongated bumper and mooring line receptacle for one or each mooring line, wherein each bumper and mooring line receptacle is connected with the dock facility, and further includes an abutment member connected with each mooring line at a distal end thereof. The bumper and mooring line receptacle has an interior hollow defined by a sidewall, having a slot therein along its entire length. The sidewall opposite the sot is attached to the sidewall of a selected dock facility via threaded fasteners or suitable. One bumper and mooring line receptacle can be located at the port bow, another at the starboard bow, another at the port stern and another at the starboard stern. Preferably, each of the sets of port and starboard bumper and mooring line receptacles end near each other at a generally amidship location on the gunwale where the skipper and crew/passengers enter and leave the watercraft. The mooring line is composed of conventional material used for nautical moorage, and has an abutment member at its distal end. The slot has a width either smaller than the cross-section of the mooring line such that the mooring line is forced though the slot into the interior hollow of the bumper and mooring line receptacle or is larger than the cross-section of the mooring line such that the mooring line easily passes through the slot. Thereupon, the mooring line rests storingly in the interior hollow for storing the mooring line when not in use.
The present invention relates to mooring lines used for mooring watercraft to dock facilities, and more particularly to a boat dock bumper containing a receptacle located on the dock facility for storing the mooring line in a ready to use outstretched configuration when the mooring line is not in use.
Watercraft, such as motor and sailboats, utilize fore and aft mooring lines at each of the port and starboard sides thereof to secure the watercraft to a dock facility. In this regard the dock facility generally has a number of cleats or other structures, such as pilings, to which the mooring lines of the watercraft may be connected.
Typically, a watercraft will have a mooring line for being connected with cleats on the watercraft in anticipation of future and present docking needs. Cleats are usually provided fore and aft at each of the starboard and port sides of the watercraft, whereupon four mooring lines would be needed to be connected to these four cleats.
Problematically, when a skipper leaves dock, the mooring lines may be loosely placed on the dock facility, where after they may slide off and then dangle into the water. Dangling mooring lines are, of course, unsightly, unsafe, and pose other problem on the dock facility. On the other hand, if the mooring lines are secured to some component of the dock facility to prevent potential dangling, then when the mooring lines need to be made ready for docking considerable time and effort must be expended to free the lines. This lost time could be critical if a skipper is in need of a fast securement to the dock in the event of an untoward docking situation, such as when other boats may limit free navigation or high seas or winds make docking particularly tricky.
Accordingly, what is needed in the art is some effective, simple and easy to use way to hold mooring lines in a stored state; yet be instantly available when docking is imminent.
The present invention is a damage preventing bumper attached to a fixed docking facility to cushion boats and the like against engagement with the structure and also provides and effective, simple and easy to use way to hold mooring lines in a stored state with respect to the dock facility, yet the mooring lines are instantly available when docking is imminent.
A bumper and mooring line receptacle apparatus according to the present invention includes an elongated bumper and mooring line receptacle for each mooring line, wherein each bumper and mooring line receptacle is connected with the dock facility; and further includes a mooring line have an abutment member connected to the distal end thereof.
The bumper and mooring line receptacle has an interior hollow formed by a sidewall composed of a durable or resilient material having a longitudinal slot therein. The sidewall opposite the slot is attached to the dock facility via threaded fasteners. One bumper and mooring line receptacle is located on the dock facility near the port bow, another at the starboard bow, another at the port stern and another at the starboard stern of the watercraft. Preferably, each of the sets of port and starboard bumper and mooring line receptacles end near each other at a location on the gunwale where the skipper and crew/passengers enter and leave the watercraft, generally aship of the watercraft. The mooring line is conventional nylon or other rope material used for nautical moorage. The slot has a width larger than the cross-section of the mooring line, such that the mooring line can be easily passed through the slot into the interior hollow of the bumper and mooring line receptacle. Alternatively the slot can contain flaps composed of a resilient material that will deform when the mooring line presses up against and passes through into the interior hollow. The flaps will rebound to their original shape when the mooring line is removed from the interior hollow. The abutment member abuts the end of the bumper and mooring line receptacle to thereby prevent the distal end of the mooring line from sliding into the interior hollow.
In operation, each mooring line is then respectively slipped into its bumper and mooring line receptacle progressively along the slot thereof. When docking, the skipper or a crew member grabs a mooring line, via the abutment member thereof, on the side of a dock facility, and then pulls upon the mooring line to thereby free it from its bumper and mooring line receptacle via exiting progressively along the slot thereof. The person then secures that mooring line in a conventional way to the their respective cleat on the watercraft. Other of the mooring, lines are then grabbed at their respective abutment member, freed and tied as was done with the first mooring line. When it is time to shove-off, the mooring lines are then slipped into through the slot of the bumper and mooring line receptacles for later use when docking is to again take place.
The mooring line freely passes through the slot and is not forced there through. Alternatively when flaps are utilized, the mooring line will pass through the deformed flaps into the interior hollow The mooring line simply lays in the interior hollow of the bumper and mooring line receptacle and is held substantially taught by an abutment member which is snappably engageable into the slot. Preferably, the abutment member is adjustably positionable on the mooring line to thereby be positioned to abut the far end of the bumper and mooring line receptacle when the mooring line is resident therein. A guide member at the near end of the bumper and mooring line receptacle can aid to guide the mooring line into the slot when the mooring line is being stored there inside. Alternatively the mooring line can be secured to a hardware member (eyebolt), which is affixed to the dock facility.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a bumper and mooring line receptacle apparatus for a dock facility, which provides for easy, Simple, outstretched storage of mooring lines in readiness for use when docking the watercraft. It is another object of the present invention to prevent damage to cushion boats and the like against engagement with the dock facility.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a bumper and mooring line receptacle apparatus, which provides convenient grabbing of mooring lines for rapid deployment during dockage of the watercraft. It is a further object of the present invention to provide attractive storage of mooring lines accompanied by quick ability to access the mooring lines when needed.
It is an additional object of the present invention to provide simple and easy storage of mooring lines without any possibility for the mooring lines to become tangled. It is an additional object of the present invention to provide protection on the dock facility for the watercraft.
These and additional objects, advantages, features and benefits of the present invention will become apparent from the following specification.
a is a plan view of a dock facility equipped with a bumper and mooring line receptacle apparatus with the guide according to the present invention in docked position.
a is a plan view of a dock facility equipped with a bumper and mooring line receptacle apparatus with the eyebolt according to the present invention utilizing an eyebolt in docked position.
Referring now to the Drawing.
As shown by
Preferably, the abutment member 5 shall be located on dock facility adjacent to the port and starboard sides of the watercraft 3 where the skipper and crew/passengers enter and leave the watercraft, generally aship of the watercraft. Each bumper and mooring line receptacle 7 has an interior hollow 13, which communicates with a slot 14, running the length thereof.
As indicated by FIGS. I, 1a, 2, & 2a it is p to provide four bumper and mooring line receptacles 7, at each of the port bow A, starboard bow B, starboard stern C, and port stern D. In this, regard, there is one bumper and mooring line receptacle 7 , at each mooring line 8, of the four locations (port bow A, starboard bow B, starboard stern C, and port stern D) of the watercraft cleats. The proximate end of each mooring line 8 is connected conventionally (by a loop or a knot) wit a respective cleat 2, as shown in
The mooring lines 8 are composed of any nautically suitable mooring line material, such as three-strand nylon. The mooring lines 8 each have a proximate end 8a, which can be connected to a respective cleat 2, of the dock facility 1, as discussed hereinabove. The mooring lines 8, each have an opposite distal end 8a, which includes an abutment member 5. The abutment member 5 is structured to interface with the far end 8b, of a respective bumper and mooring line receptacle 7, whereby the distal end 8b, of the mooring line 8 is abuttingly prevented from sliding into the interior hollow 13, and then becoming “lost” inside the bumper and mooring line receptacle 7. The abutment member 5 further serves as a convenient handle for a person to grab hold of to pull upon the mooring line 8, to thereby pullingly free it from storage within its bumper and mooring line receptacle 7.
As shown by
Each mooring line 8 and its respective bumper and mooring line receptacle 7 are dimensionally paired such that the distal end Bb, of the mooring line has only a relatively small overlap beyond the far end of its respective bumper and mooring line receptacle when each mooring line is connected with its respective cleat 2, as generally indicated by
The bumper and mooring line receptacle 7 is formed of an elongated sidewall 12, composed of a material, preferably plastic. The sidewall 12 forms the interior hollow 13 and the slot 14, provided in the sidewall communicates with the interior hollow and runs the length thereof. A preferred cross-sectional shape of the sidewall 12 is cylindrical; if, however, added stability is desired, a flattened face may be provided at the exterior or the sidewall where It interfaces with the dock facility 1.
As depicted by
As further depicted by
In operation, each mooring line 8 is received into the interior hollow 13 of a bumper and mooring line receptacle 7, through the slot 14 thereof, wherein the mooring line 8 is thereafter removed therefrom via the slot 14 in order to be used for moorage of the watercraft 3, as shown.
The particular structure and function of the bumper and mooring line receptacle apparatus 7 will now be described with greater specificity.
The bumper and mooring line receptacle 7, has an interior hollow 13 which has an inside diameter exceeding the cross-section S of mooring line 8. The slot 14 of each bumper and mooring line 8 has a width W that is larger then the cross-section S of the mooring line 8, such that the mooring line can easily slipped into the slot 14 into the interior hollow 13 of the bumper and mooring line receptacle 7. Or alternately the slot 14 can contain a flap 14a which is composed of a resilient material. The slot flat 14a will deform and will spread allowing the mooring line 8 to be located into the interior hollow 13 where it will be trapped therein such that the mooring line 8 cannot fall out of the hollow 13 through the slot 14.
The mooring line 8 is then respectively slipped into its bumper and the mooring line receptacle 7 via the slot 14 thereof, as shown in
When docking, the skipper or a crew member grabs a mooring line 8 via its abutment member 5 on the dock facility 1 facing the watercraft, and then pulls upon the mooring thereby free it from its bumper and mooring line receptacle 7 via exiting of the mooring progressively along the slot 14 thereof. The person then secures that mooring line in an normal way to the watercraft cleat 4, as shown in
When it is time to shove off, the mooring lines 8 tied to the watercraft cleat 4 are released therefrom and then slipped through the slot 14 progressively along the subject bumper and mooring line receptacle 7 with finally the abutment abutting the far end of the bumper and mooring line receptacles, for later use when docking is to again take place.
In order for the mooring lines 8 to commence entry into the slot 14 at the near end of the bumper and mooring line receptacle a guide member 9 can be utilized as a mooring line guide.
As shown at
Alternatively, as shown at
As shown in
As shown at
In operation each of the port bow, port stern, starboard bow and starboard stern mooring lines 8 are looped or otherwise connected with their respective cleat on the dock facility 1. Each mooring line is then respectively passed into its bumper and mooring line receptacle via the slot 14 thereof. Thereafter, its abutment member 5 is secured to the far end 8b of the bumper and mooring line receptacle member 7, wherein preferably, the abutment member has been located on the mooring line so that mooring line is now generally taught in the bumper and mooring line receptacle so as to not fallout anywhere along the slot.
When docking, the skipper or a crewmember grabs a mooring line via its abutment member 7 on the dock facility 1 facing the watercraft 3, and then pulls upon the mooring line to thereby free it from its bumper and mooring line receptacle 7 via exiting of the mooring line 8 from the slot 14 thereof. The person then secures the mooring line 8 in a conventional way to the watercraft cleat 4, as shown in
Provisional Patent Application No. 60/506,970 Sep. 29, 2003 Confirmation #2282
Number | Date | Country | |
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60506970 | Sep 2003 | US |