This invention relates to the mounting of traction gear on the bottom of footwear, in particular, athletic footwear.
Progress has been made in recent years in reducing the labor involved in installing traction cleats into the outsoles of athletic shoes. For example, removable cleats employing the Q-LOK™ attachment structure, the TRI-LOK™ attachment structure, or the FASTTWIST™ attachment structure require less than a full turn to install the cleat into the mating receptacle. (Q-LOK™ is described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,768,809, 6,151,805, 6,108,944, and 6,463,681, while Fast Twist™ is described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,123,184, 5,524,367, 5,974,700 and 6,272,774, each of which patents is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.) Because each athletic shoe usually includes many cleats, these attachment structures represented a step forward from previous systems that required multiple turns per cleat. However, some partial turn cleat systems can introduce some uncertainty as to whether the cleat has been turned sufficient degrees to firmly mate with the receptacle.
In preferred embodiments of the present invention, a traction cleat attachment system for footwear is provided that engages with a single click. The system comprises a cleat and a receptacle. The cleat includes a central stud extending from a base on the footwear attachment side of the cleat, with a plurality of screw threads positioned around the outside surface of the stud. The central stud is surrounded by a plurality of cleat projections extending radially inward. The receptacle includes a threaded annulus on a base, with projections extending radially outward, away from the annulus. The threaded socket in the receptacle annulus is complementary to the threaded stud of the cleat—receptacle and cleat mate via insertion of stud into annulus socket and rotation. The cleat projections and receptacle projections interact to help prevent inadvertent detachment of the installed cleat from the receptacle. When the cleat stud is inserted into the receptacle annulus and rotated, cleat projections first experience increasing resistance to rotation from corresponding receptacle projections and then decreasing resistance to rotation from the same receptacle projection. Various means are provided to ensure cleat projections interact in this fashion with one (and only one) receptacle projection. This resistance profile, which a cleat installer may experience as a single “click,” provides feedback to the installer that the cleat has been rotated enough (and no more than enough) to ensure proper engagement with the receptacle.
In some embodiments of the invention, the cleat projections are formed on the inner surface of a collar surrounding the central stud. The cleat projections deform when interacting with the receptacle projection and at least some of the projections may be partially hollow to facilitate deformation. In other embodiments of the invention, the cleat projections are flexible posts that extend from the cleat base which deflect when interacting with the receptacle projections.
In various embodiments of the invention, means to ensure that the cleat projections interact with a single receptacle projection according to the single click resistance profile can include one or more of:
providing two sets of alternating receptacle projections that differ in height above the receptacle base. During cleat installation into the receptacle, a cleat projection misses the first shorter receptacle projection, engages the next full height projection with a single click resistance profile, and is stopped by the front edge of the next receptacle projection, which is in the set of shorter projections. The top of the shorter projections can be shaped to facilitate single click action, such as slanting the projection's top. The angular disposition of cleat projections with respect to the central stud screw threads and angular disposition of receptacle projections with respect to annulus screw threads are selected so that cleat projections miss the first shorter projection upon installation;
selecting the depth of the receptacle annulus so that the end of the cleat central stud contacts the bottom surface of the annulus just after the cleat projection rotates past the receptacle projection producing the single click. Further rotation of cleat with respect to receptacle is thus prevented; and
setting the height of one or more features of the cleat to contact one or more corresponding features of the receptacle just after the cleat projection rotates past the receptacle projection producing the single click. Further rotation of the cleat with respect to the receptacle is thus impeded.
The foregoing features of the invention will be more readily understood by reference to the following detailed description, taken with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Definitions. As used in this description and the accompanying claims, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated, unless the context otherwise requires:
“Footwear” means any outer covering for a foot including, without limitation, athletic footwear, sandals, boots, shoes and slippers.
In preferred embodiments of the present invention, a traction cleat attachment system for footwear is provided that engages with a single click. The system comprises a cleat and a receptacle. The cleat includes a central stud extending from a base on the footwear attachment side of the cleat, with a plurality of screw threads positioned around the outside surface of the stud. The central stud is surrounded by a collar with a plurality of splines projecting radially inward from the inner surface of the collar. The receptacle includes a threaded annulus on a base, with teeth projecting radially outward, from the outer surface of the annulus. The threaded socket in the annulus is complementary to the threaded central stud of the cleat—receptacle and cleat mate via insertion of stud into annulus socket and rotation. The cleat splines and receptacle teeth interact to prevent inadvertent detachment of the installed cleat from the receptacle. When the cleat stud is inserted into the receptacle annulus and rotated, cleat splines first experience increasing resistance to rotation from the corresponding receptacle teeth and then decreasing resistance to rotation from the same receptacle teeth. Various means are provided to facilitate cleat spline interaction with one (and only one) receptacle tooth with this resistance profile which will be called in this description and any appended claims, “a single click.” This resistance profile can provide feedback to the installer that the cleat has been rotated enough (and no more than enough) to ensure proper engagement with the receptacle. In some embodiments, this resistance profile produces a single, audible click when the cleat is properly installed into the receptacle.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a traction cleat 100 for footwear is provided as shown in
Cleat 100 includes a base 140. The base 140 supports the cleat's attachment mechanism on one face and one or more traction projections 160 on the other face. The attachment mechanism includes a threaded central stud 110 and a collar 130, forming an annular well 170 between stud and collar. The central stud projects from the base 140 and has an axis which is perpendicular to the base. Three screw threads 120 are spaced around and on the outer peripheral surface of the central stud 110. The cleat is installed into the receptacle by insertion of the central stud into the mating structure on the receptacle (described below) and rotation of the cleat about the axis of the central stud. The collar 130 is provided with a plurality of radial splines 135 disposed on the collar surface which faces the central stud. The number and disposition of the splines 135 around the inner surface of the collar 130 is chosen, in various embodiments, to cooperate with the teeth of the mating receptacle to help ensure that the cleat and receptacle do not inadvertently rotate with respect to each other during ground contact of the cleat. In some embodiments of the invention, at least some of the splines 135 are at least partially hollow to allow the splines to more easily deform when engaging the teeth of the receptacle. In this embodiment of the invention, the cleat attachment mechanism allows the cleat to be coupled with and locked to the mating receptacle with a rotation of the cleat about the central stud axis of less than seventy degrees.
In one embodiment of the invention, the splines 135 of the cleat collar extend less than 2 millimeters from the adjacent surface of the base of the cleat, at the annular well 170. In another embodiment of the invention, the end of the central stud 110 extends less than 2.5 millimeters beyond the distance the splines 135 extend from the adjacent surface of the base of the cleat 170. In a further embodiment of the invention, the end of the central stud extends less than 4 millimeters from the adjacent surface of the base 170. In various embodiments of the invention, each cleat screw thread 120 extends between fifty degrees and one hundred and fifty degrees around the axis of the central stud 110.
A. Height and profile of the receptacle teeth. As shown in
B. The depth of the receptacle annulus and the length of the cleat stud. These elements can be dimensioned so that the end of the cleat central stud 110 contacts the bottom surface of the annulus 380 just after the cleat projection rotates past the receptacle projection producing the single click. Further rotation of cleat with respect to receptacle is thus prevented. This arrangement is illustrated in
C. Setting the height of one or more features of the cleat to contact one or more corresponding features of the receptacle just after the cleat projection rotates past the receptacle projection producing the single click. For example, as shown in
The features identified are provided for illustration and not by way of limitation. The features may be mixed in any combination that substantially impedes the cleat splines from rotating past the next tooth after the spline generates a first click. Other features that impede rotation of the cleat when the splines meet the second short tooth in the rotation can be employed in other embodiments of the invention
In another embodiment of the invention, the cleat collar 130 with splines 135 described above is replaced by a ring of deflectable posts that surrounds the cleat's central stud. The posts deflect outward from the central stud under pressure from the receptacle projections, as the cleat is installed into the receptacle. As a post rotates past a full height receptacle projection, the post springs inward to provide a single click. One or more of the features described above are employed to prevent the posts from interacting with the next receptacle projection to produce a second click.
In various embodiments of the invention, system components can be made of any of a variety of materials, including plastic and metal. The components may be fabricated by processes typical for such components such as injection molding, die cut and assembly (adhered, glued, etc.), compression and flow molding, casting, etc.
Similarly, it is of course apparent that the present invention is not limited to the detailed description set forth above. Various changes and modifications of this invention as described will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention as defined in the appended claims. For example, while embodiments of the invention with three screw threads on the cleat and on the receptacle have been described above, the number of screw threads in other embodiments may vary. The number of cleat projections and receptacle projections can vary and, in some embodiments, the set of shorter teeth may be partially or fully eliminated. In such an embodiment, other features of the cleat and receptacle prevent further clicks after the first.
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional patent application, Ser. No. 61/300,058, filed Feb. 1, 2010, entitled “Cleat Attachment System,”, which is incorporated herein by reference.
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