The present invention relates to an improved mesh cell design for a trawl system (that by definition is iterated or cloned in varying geometric patterns) providing improved shaping and performance, especially when incorporated in mid-water or bottom trawls of such systems.
It is well understood that the basic cell of a selected portion of every trawl system is the unit cell (called mesh cell hereinafter). The selected portions of the trawl system is then built by repeating the shape of the basic mesh cell.
It is axiomatic that the ability to predict the overall shape and performance of the finished product depends entirely on the shape and structural integrity of that single basic mesh cell. Heretofore, proper trawl making was a two-step process that involved initial construction of undersized mesh cells, and setting the knots and mesh sizes by the substeps of depth stretching and heat setting involving turning the finished mesh in direction opposite to its natural bent and applying first pressure, and then heat to set the knots.
Materials used in mesh cell construction can be plastics such as nylon and polyethylene but other types of natural occurring fibers also can be (and have been) used. Single, double (or more) strands make up a thread or twine composed of, say, nylon, polyethylene and/or cotton. Additionally, in making the mesh portion of conventional trawls particularly mid-water trawls especially the forward section mesh portion thereof, braided cords and twisted ropes of natural and synthetic materials, bonded and unbonded, and cables have been used. However, the pitch of any braided or twisted thread, such as a twine, cord and/or rope (distance between corresponding points along one of the strands constituting one turn thereof which is analogous to the pitch between corresponding screw threads) either has usually been small, or has produced shallow or narrow depressions. Conventional trawl making practices balance the towing force generatable by a vessel against the largest possible trawl for a particular fishing condition, i.e. a trawl having the minimum possible drag. Thus, conventional trawl makers are taught to use the smallest possible diameter twine to reduce drag. Accordingly, meshes in conventional trawls, and especially the mesh of the forward sections of mid-water trawls, have been made of twines, including conventional three strand twisted twines of any pitch including loose pitch, that have relatively shallow or narrow and uniform spiral depressions, or smaller diameter braided twines having an equivalent breaking strength. Moreover, modern manufacturing processes using threads, such as twines, cords, cables or ropes to form mesh cells, have always been designed to produce mesh cells in which twist direction of the individual bars comprising each mesh cell, if any, is always the same. None have proposed the systematic and regular use of differently oriented twist for individual mesh bars of the mesh cell in the manner of the present invention.
Even though various Japanese Patent Applications superficially describe mesh cells for nets in which mesh bars have differing lay directions, (see for example, Jap. Pat. Apps. 57-13660, 60-39782 and 61-386), the mesh bars employ conventional, essentially smooth twine or rope. The patent applications disclose differing lay directions of conventional, essentially smooth twine or rope for balancing residual torque within the net structure during its deployment and use, not for generating lift that enhances of trawl system performance. The first-mention Application, for example, states that its purpose is to provide “net legs with different twist directions according to a fixed regular pattern so that torsion and torque of said net legs are mutually canceled.” The use of conventional, essentially smooth twine or rope will not yield substantial lift any different from conventional nets.
As set forth in published Patent Cooperation Treaty (“PCT”) International Patent Application, International Publication Number WO 97/13407, International Publication Date Apr. 17, 1997, (“the PCT patent application”) it has been recently discovered that threads, such as twines, cords, braided cords, cables, ropes or straps, may be advantageously twisted, during assembly of trawl net meshes into a loose, corkscrew-shaped pitch establishing helical grooves that are deeper and/or broader than the depressions in conventional tightly or loosely twisted multi-strand ropes or cables making up conventional mesh bars. During field operations in a water entrained environment, properly orienting mesh bars having the loose, corkscrew-shaped pitch produces lift that increases a performance characteristic of a trawl system such as increased trawl volume (particularly in shallow water) in comparison with a trawl made from conventional mesh, improved trawl shape, and reduced vibration, noise, and drag. Trawl performance improves even though, contrary to conventional trawl design, mesh bars having the loose, corkscrew-shaped pitch have a diameter (or shadow area) larger than corresponding mesh bars of a conventional trawl.
An object of the present invention is to provide further improved trawl systems.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide trawl systems having improved performance characteristics.
Briefly, the present invention in one aspect is a trawl assembled from a plurality of mesh cells. Each mesh cell includes at least three mesh bars. At least one portion of at least a first mesh bar in at least one of the mesh cells includes a first product strand having a core product strand enclosed within a sheath. The sheath is specifically formed to resist sliding along the core product strand during assembly and field operations of the trawl. The first product strand forming the first mesh bar is also mechanically connected to a second product strand forming a second mesh bar of the at least one mesh cell. The mechanical connection specifically includes a clamp which encloses at least the slide-resistant, sheathed portion of the first product strand. In this way the sheathed portion of the first product strand disposed within the clamp resists separation of the sheath from the core product strand during trawl assembly and field operations thereby better preserving design characteristics of the first mesh bar and the trawl.
In one aspect, a thread, having a particularly preferred embodiment of the sheath, forms the first product strand of a trawl in accordance with the present invention. The particularly preferred embodiment for the sheath includes at least one spiraling product strand interwoven with other encircling product strands of the sheath. In this preferred embodiment, the spiraling product strand has a diameter that is larger than a diameter of each of the other encircling product strands.
In another aspect, the present invention is also an improved method for catching fish with a trawl system. The method includes a step of assembling the trawl system by combining components selected from a group consisting of a trawl, upper bridles and frontropes. The improved method for catching fish also includes deploying into a body of water as part of the trawl system the sheathed, first mesh bar from a vessel disposed on the surface of a body of water, and propelling at least the sheathed, first mesh bar through the body of water.
These and other features, objects and advantages will be understood or apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment as illustrated in the various drawing figures.
MESH is one of the openings between threads, ropes or cords of a net.
MESH CELL means the sides of a mesh and includes at least three sides and associated knots or equivalent couplers oriented in space. A quadratic mesh cell has four sides with four knots or couplers, and is usually arranged to form a parallelogram (including rectangular and square), with diamond-shaped mesh (trawl mesh) being preferred. A triangular mesh cell has three sides and three knots or couplers. A hexagonal mesh cell has six sides and six knots or couplers.
MESH BARS means the sides of a mesh cell.
CELL means a trawl construction unit, fishing net or the like and includes both a mesh cell relating to enclosable sides of the mesh of the trawl or net itself, as well as to upper bridle and frontropes used in towing the trawl or net through a water column to gather marine life.
CELL BAR means both the sides of a mesh cell and the elements that make up the upper bridle, frontropes and tow lines.
RIGHT- AND/OR LEFT-HANDEDNESS IN A RECEDING DIRECTION along a cell bar involves establishing a central axis for the trawl, net or the like to which the mesh cell associated with the cell bar belongs. Then a normalized imaginary giant stick figure, that is depicted in FIGs. of the PCT patent application, is positioned so his feet intersect the central axis, are rotatable about the central axis, his body penetrates through the cell bar, and his back is positioned perpendicular to and first intersects the water flow vector for the moving trawl, net or the like. The right- and/or left-handedness of the cell bar is then determined using the location of either his right or his left arm irrespective of the fact that the position of the cell bar is offset from the central axis.
THREADS are composed of synthetic or natural fibers. Firstly, for the present invention a thread can comprise two strands twisted along the longitudinal axis of symmetry in a loose fashion with a pitch in a range of 3d-70d, where d is:
STRAP is a flexible element of synthetic or natural fibers that forms a mesh bar, the strap having a cross-section that is generally rectangular or can be quasi-rectangular with rounded short sides and elongated long sides with or without camber. In operation, the strap acts as a hydrofoil, preferably twisted along its longitudinal axis, wherein the short sides form interchanging leading and trailing edges.
PRODUCT STRAND includes the synthetic or natural fibers or filaments used to form the construction unit of the invention which is preferably, but not necessarily, the product of a conventional manufacturing process, usually made of nylon, polyethylene, cotton or the like twisted in common lay direction. Such strand can be twisted, plaited, braided or laid parallel to form a sub-unit for further twisting or other use within a mesh bar or a cell bar in accordance with the invention.
NET is a meshed arrangement of threads that have been woven or knotted or otherwise coupled together usually at regular intervals or at intervals that vary usually uniformly along the length of the trawl.
TRAWL is a large net generally in the shape of a truncated cone trailed through a water column or dragged along a sea bottom to gather marine life including fish.
CODEND is a portion of a trawl positioned at the trailing end thereof and comprises a closed sac-like terminus in which the gathered marine life including fish are trapped.
FRAME is a portion of the larger sized meshes of a net or trawl upon which is overlaid (and attached by a binding) a netting of conventional twist.
PANEL is one of the sections of a trawl and is made to fit generally within and about frames shaped by riblines offset from the longitudinal axis of symmetry of the trawl.
PITCH is the amount of advance in one turn of one product strand twisted about another product strand (or strands) when viewed axially, or common advance of the twist of a strap along its axis of symmetry. For product strands, pitch values are determined with respect to the diameter of the next-to-largest product strand. For straps, pitch values are determined with respect to the width of the strap.
LAY is the direction in which the strands or the strap wind when viewed axially and in a receding direction.
INTERNAL LAY OR TWIST is the direction in which synthetic or natural fibers comprising each product strand are wound when such strand is viewed axially and in a receding direction.
INTERNAL BRAID describes the method of formation of a particular product strand.
FRONTROPE(S) is a term that includes all lines located at perimeter edge of the mouth of the trawl, net or the like, such as headrope, footrope (or bottomrope) and breast lines. The frontropes have a number of connections relative to each other and to the bridle lines.
BRIDLES relates to lines that intersect the frontropes and attach to the tow lines. For a particular port or starboard tow line, a pair of bridles extend from a common connection point therewith, back to the frontropes.
TRAWL SYSTEM is a term that includes the trawl, net or the like in association with the tow lines therefor as well as the bridles lines.
a and 20b are cross-sectional elevational views of alternatively shaped, parallelogram cross-sectional straps similar to that depicted in
a-23e are cross-sectional views of alternative embodiment straps having “S” or “Z” cross-sectional shapes;
a is an elevational cross-sectional view, orthogonal to a longitudinal axis of a woven strap, depicting various fibers that make up the strap;
b is an elevational cross-sectional view along the longitudinal axis of the woven strap taken along the line 24b-24b in
a and 26b depict cross-sectional shapes for alternative structure straps having angled shaping strips disposed along leading and trailing edges of the straps;
a and 27b are plan views illustrating shapes for alternative structure straps having angled shaping strips disposed along leading and trailing edges of the straps;
a through 28c are plan views illustrating various different configurations for corkscrew-shaped product strands; and
Referring to
As shown in
As indicated in
As shown in
It should be pointed out that product strands are synthetic or natural fibers or filaments which are preferably but not necessarily the product of a conventional manufacturing process, usually made of nylon, polyethylene, cotton or the like twisted in common lay direction. Such strand can be twisted, plaited, braided or laid parallel to form a sub-unit for further twisting or other use within mesh bars 35 in accordance with the teachings of the present invention and the PCT patent application. In general, bonded product strands exhibit significantly greater hydrodynamic lift, e.g. a 1.3 to 1.7 or greater increase in lift, than unbonded product strands of identical diameter. To minimize drag while maximizing hydrodynamic lift a densely laid, heat set and bonded product strand, densely braided product strand, or strap, each of which has a substantially incompressible cross-sectional shape and a somewhat roughened surface, is preferred for preserving, during and after assembly of the trawl 13 or 283, the profile and configuration of the mesh bars 35 and 283, as well as that of the cambered sections created by the loose, corkscrew-shape, particularly upon application of tensile forces to mesh bars 35 and 283. Alternatively, in applications where maximizing hydrodynamic lift is a primary consideration and breaking strength and drag requirements are easily satisfied, bonding may be used to make product strands or straps substantially incompressible while reducing manufacturing cost. Bonding resists a tendency for product strands or straps to compress during assembly and field operations, and therefore better preserves designed hydrofoil characteristics of the mesh bars 35 and 283. Variations in applying a bonding material during assembly of mesh bars 35 further permits controlling their external shape and filling gaps between product strands. A urethane polymeric material, or material having similar properties, is adequate as a bonding material.
In the illustration of
In
In
In
In
In
In
a through 23c depict various “S” or “Z” cross-sectional shapes that provide improved performance when used for the straps 284 of mesh cells 280. As depicted in
a illustrates various fibers that are assembled to form a simple, rectangularly-shaped strap 284. In the illustration of
b depicts a cross-section of the strap illustrated in
Also depicted in
a and 20b depict alternative embodiments of the parallelogram-shaped strap 284 depicted in
In addition to using twisted straps for the mesh cells 280 that form the wings 274 and mid-section 276 of the trawl 263, it is also advantageous to use such twisted straps for an back-end 277 and for a codend 278 of the trawl 263. However, since much smaller mesh cells 280 are required for the back-end 277 and for the codend 278 than for the wings 274 and mid-section 276, it is economically impractical to assemble small mesh cells 280, e.g. 4 inch mesh cells 280, in the way illustrated in
A jig for fabricating the smaller mesh cells 280 may orient the pins 334 either in a horizontal or in a vertical plane. If the jig orients the pins 334 in a horizontal plane, then the straps 332 to be laminated together are arranged between pairs of pins 334 that are located along one edge of the jig while fabricated mesh cells 280 are stored on an opposite side of the jig during assembly and fabrication of immediately subsequent rows of mesh cells 280. If the jig orients the pins 334 in a vertical plane, then the straps 332 to be laminated together are arranged between pairs of pins 334 that are located along an upper portion of the jig while fabricated mesh cells 280 are stored in a lower portion of the jig or on a floor of a fabrication area during assembly and fabrication of immediately subsequent rows of mesh cells 280.
The vertically oriented apparatus for forming the smaller mesh cells 280 from appropriately twisted straps 332 may be adapted for machine arrangement of the straps 332 and machine lamination of the short sections 336. Such a mechanical apparatus for fabricating the mesh cells 280 need employ only two row of pins 334 arranged in the zigzag manner, and then add only two more twisted straps 332 which form two more rows of mesh cells 280 to those mesh cells 280 previously fabricated using the same two zigzag rows of pins 334. Even faster vertically oriented machine fabrication of smaller mesh cells 280 may be effected by establishing a linear array of straps 332 along an upper portion of a machine. All of the straps 332 then feed downward concurrently in a zigzag manner guided by pins that oscillate horizontally back and forth within a single cell in synchronism with the descending straps 332. In this way, the short sections 336 of a particular strap 332 would first be juxtaposed with a short section 336 of a strap located on one side of the particular strap 332, and then subsequently be juxtaposed with a short section 336 of a strap located on the opposite side of the particular strap 332.
Instead, as illustrated in
In the method illustrated in
a and 27a illustrate straps 284 having symmetrical, angled shaping strips 372 disposed along both a first edge 374 and a second edge 376 of straps 284. As is apparent from the illustrations, the shaping strips 372 alternately project from one side surface 382 and then an opposite side surface 384 of the strap 284. Moreover, the shaping strips 372 wrap around either he first edge 374 or the second edge 376 in passing from one surface 382 to the other surface 384. Properly orienting and positioning the shaping strips 372 projecting from one surface 382 or 384 of the strap 284 with respect to twisting of the straps 284 aligns that portion of the shaping strip 372 on the cambered section substantially parallel to water flow past the mesh bar 283 while the portion of the shaping strip 372 on the other side 384 or 382, which extends between a pair of immediately adjacent cambered sections, is oriented substantially perpendicular to water flow. The straps 284 that include the shaping strip 372 exhibit greater hydrodynamic lift, improved hydrodynamic characteristics under larger twisting pitches, and increased twisting stability. The shaping strips 372 may be formed in various ways such as by stitching.
a through 28c depict various different configurations for mesh bars 35 having the loose, corkscrew-shaped pitch that establishes deep grooves 391 formed by the corkscrewing of the product strands 36, 37. In the illustration of
While for maximizing hydrodynamic lift and minimizing drag there exists an ideal orientation for the dashed line 392 indicating the cambered section 394 with respect to the arrowed line 396 indicating the water flow vector, the present invention permits engineering a trawl 13 having nearly maximum lift while minimizing drag even though the angular relationship between the dashed line 392 and the arrowed line 396 varies. Thus, the arrowed line 396 may be parallel to the dashed line 392, or may be skewed at an angle on either side of the dashed line 392 as will likely occur due to flexing of the mesh cells 30 of the trawl 13 during field operations in a water entrained environment. However, in assembling the trawl 13 or 263 the loose, corkscrew-shaped pitch of the mesh bars 35 is engineered to properly orient the dashed line 392 indicating the cambered section 394 with respect to the anticipated orientation of arrowed line 396 indicating the water flow vector depending upon the location of a mesh cell 30 or 280 within the trawl 13, and upon the hydrodynamic characteristics of particular product strands 36, 37 or straps 284 assembled into the mesh bars 35 or 283.
b depicts a configuration for the product strands 36, 37 in which the product strand 36 spirals around the product strand 37 which is aligned coaxially with the common axis of symmetry 38. Similar to the illustration of
One characteristic of the mesh bar 35 depicted in
For many applications, various embodiments of the structures described above for the mesh bars 35 and 283 may be selected for assembly and arranged to form the trawl 13 or 263 so that hydrodynamic lift generated by mesh bars 35 or 283 is directed substantially uniformly away from the axis of symmetry 32 or 281 of the trawl 13 or 263. This configuration for the mesh bars 35 or 283 yields maximum trawl volume. However, for other fishing conditions the orientation and design of the mesh bars 35 or 283 may be arranged so cumulative lift created by the mesh bars 35 or 283 of the bottom panel of the trawl 13 or 263, while directed away from the axis of symmetry 32 or 281 of the trawl 13 or 263, exhibits a lesser magnitude than cumulative lift created by the mesh bars 35 or 283 of the top panel. In this latter configuration, the trawl 13 or 263 exhibits a net upward lift toward the surface 11 or 261 of the body of water 12 or 262.
Although the present invention has been described in terms of the presently preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that such disclosure is purely illustrative and is not to be interpreted as limiting. Consequently, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, various alterations, modifications, and/or alternative applications of the invention will, no doubt, be suggested to those skilled in the art after having read the preceding disclosure. Accordingly, it is intended that the following claims be interpreted as encompassing all alterations, modifications, or alternative applications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
This is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/802,505 filed Mar. 16, 2004; which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/012,799 filed Nov. 3, 2001, that issued May 11, 2005, as U.S. Pat. No. 6,732,468 B2; which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/403,121 filed Feb. 23, 2000, that issued Mar. 19, 2002, as U.S. Pat. No. 6,357,164 B1; which was filed pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 371 claiming priority from Patent Cooperation Treaty (“PCT”) International Patent Application No. PCT/US98/07848 filed Apr. 14, 1998. This is also a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/036,992 filed Dec. 29, 2001; which is a division of application Ser. No. 09/051,326 filed Jan. 11, 1999, which application was filed pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 371 claiming priority from PCT International Patent Application PCT/US96/16419 filed Oct. 11, 1996.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09051326 | Jan 1999 | US |
Child | 10036992 | Dec 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10802505 | Mar 2004 | US |
Child | 11473249 | Jun 2006 | US |
Parent | 10012799 | Nov 2001 | US |
Child | 10802505 | Mar 2004 | US |
Parent | 09403121 | Feb 2000 | US |
Child | 10012799 | Nov 2001 | US |
Parent | 10036992 | Dec 2001 | US |
Child | 11473249 | Jun 2006 | US |