No cross-reference to related applications .
1. Field of Invention
A protective sleeve for the placement of credit cards, driver license or other cards bearing magnetic strips and bar codes on a rear surface of the cards is presented to place such card into the protective sleeve to prevent damage to the bar code and the magnetic strip attached to the cards, the sleeve having a front clear portion for the visual identification of the front of the card and a rear portion having a thin non-conductive metallic strip imbedded on the rear portion coinciding with the location of the magnetic strip on the card, and a smooth fabric portion coinciding with the location of the printed bar code on the card, the bar code and magnetic strip being generally provided on the rear surface of the card
2. Description of Prior Art
The following United States patents were discovered and are disclosed within this application for utility patent. All relate to card sleeves. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,288,942 to Godfrey, a cardholder is disclosed having a thin sheet of magnetically soft ferromagnetic material with high resistance to eddy currents, referenced as “keepers”, to maintain at least one pattern of magnetism carried in at least one magnetic strip. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,941,375, a clear plastic or PVC sleeve is formed having pockets for the insertion of thin metal strips is provided to shield the magnetic portion of a card inserted within the sleeve, the metal strip defined as rolled aluminum or a nickel/iron alloy. Another sleeve protector intended to shield contactless smart cards or card containing RFID microchips is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,121,544 to Petsinger.
In addition, it is known through publication that a product is available on the market containing a fabric known as TYVEK®, which is marketed as an ATM Credit Card Protector Sleeve located at www.championbp.com. TYVEK® is manufactured by Dupont and the MSDS sheet on that product is disclosed herein, TYVEK® identified as a spunbonded olefin product. While these prior art reference discuss similar goals and similar concepts, the sleeve disclosed in the current invention is distinguished by elements which protect both the magnetic strip and the printed bar code ink material from damage during containment in the sleeve, which is not anticipated by the disclosed prior art either individually or in combination.
As indicated in prior art, the problem of damage to magnetic strips on credit card and the wear of ink on the printed portion of the card has long been a problem. Over time, the magnetic strips and ink comprising bar codes, numbers and signatures is know to wear or erode, rendering the card invalid or dysfunctional. As technology advances, these cards, used for identification, medical information and financing become more important to commerce, medical treatment, insurance information and identification. A solution to the protection of the several sensitive areas of the card requires more than the existing technology.
It is therefore the primary objective of the invention to provide a protective sleeve to prevent damage to the printed material on a credit card and shield the magnetic strip on the card from contact damage, friction and external magnetic or electric fields in a simple embodiment.
The following drawings arc submitted with this utility patent application.
A credit card magnetic strip protector sleeve, shown in
In a first embodiment, shown in
In a second embodiment,
Most preferably, the non-conductive metal 50a, 50b is a thin sheet of copper, which is a preferred metal for very thin application where non-conductivity is desired. The non-conductive metal strip 50a, 50b is most preferably applied to the outer surface 32a, 32b of the rear section 30a, 30b of the sleeve 10a, 10b to prevent friction between the credit card 100 and the non-conductive metal strip 50a, 50b.
The preferred material for the low friction fabric 60a, 60b is a product identified by a trade name TYVEK®, a spunbonded olefin product, which is shown to exhibit low friction characteristics which maintains the integrity of printed and embossed ink on the surface of materials which are in contact with the TYVEK®.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3958690 | Gee, Sr. | May 1976 | A |
4141400 | Mangan | Feb 1979 | A |
4711347 | Drexler et al. | Dec 1987 | A |
5005106 | Kiku | Apr 1991 | A |
5288942 | Godfrey | Feb 1994 | A |
5506395 | Eppley | Apr 1996 | A |
5941375 | Kamens et al. | Aug 1999 | A |
6121544 | Petsinger | Sep 2000 | A |
D431719 | Mucarquer | Oct 2000 | S |
Number | Date | Country |
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2638619 | May 1990 | FR |