This application claims priority from French Patent Application No. 16 56874 filed Jul. 19, 2016, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
This invention relates to an improved command and control device for a traction sail of the kite type, or for the rigging of a sailboat (integrated into the boom).
The invention further relates to a kite sail or a sailboat boom for a sailboard, fitted with such a device.
The invention will be described in view of its application to a kite sail, integrated into the bar of said sail, without being limited to that application.
It is known that kite sails are made up of one or more soft sails, generally elliptical or semi-elliptical in shape, flat or semi-flat, where the concave side is designed to be placed in the wind to create a means of traction, and possibly movement, by a user or other, connected to the sail by cables called lines.
Such sails have many possible applications, particularly in sports involving sliding on land, water or snow, and used, for instance for kitesurfing, mountain boarding, snowkiting, kite buggying, all of which are powered by a traction kite. These sails are used to power all kinds of nautical or land equipment, sliding or rolling, but are also used in electricity generation systems that use the force generated by such sails.
Such a sail generally comprises a leading edge (front) and a trailing edge (rear).
The sail further comprises:
The ends of the four rear and front lines opposite the sail are connected to the user through a control bar; more precisely, the ends of the two front lines are connected to a central end going through the bar, while the ends of the rear lines are fixed to the left and right ends of the bar.
The central part of the bar is connected to the user by a dropping system connected to a harness worn by the user or the like. The bar is held by the user in their two hands.
Depending on the wind force, the user adjusts the traction power of the sail by varying its inclination along a variable plane demarcated by the fastening points of the front and rear lines, by shortening or lengthening the distance between the fastening point and the harness.
Depending on the wind force, the user can vary the traction power of the sail by varying its inclination using the sliding bar connected to the rear lines (steering and power) in relation to the front lines (traction).
If the wind force is too high or not high enough for the user, the user can also adjust the power of the sail and thus extend its range of use thanks to a central adjustment and deflection system that most generally connects the two front lines. That operation modifies the adjustment of the incidence of the sail.
In a known manner, this maneuver is carried out via a central adjustment and deflection system that most generally connects the two front lines centrally, and slides perpendicularly through or close to the bar. Said system makes it possible to adjust the incident inclination of the sail, by reducing or extending the distance between the rear trailing edge and the fastening point to the front harness. The same system or its equivalent may also be made from the rear lines.
Thus, by pushing or pulling the bar, the incidence of the sail can be decreased or increased, which decreases or increases the tension in the (front and rear) lines by aerodynamic effect.
To control the central deflection system, the user must release one hand, and the bar is then held in only one hand.
That creates a major drawback in terms of controlling the sail, which is all the more disadvantageous because the user precisely needs to better control the bar when the wind force and/or direction changes.
In the French patent application 1361291 filed by the applicant, a bar was proposed with a central winder on the bar that can be controlled by a single hand and associated with a deflection mechanism (internal to the bar) connected to the two ends of the rear cables.
Even though this system makes an advantageous improvement to prior bars, it can be improved in view of speed and responsiveness, the effort to be made by the user and the traction power on the cables.
Further, known mechanisms are not totally sealed, and the presence of sand affects their working and reliability.
This invention relates to a command and control bar for traction sails, which enables the user to adjust the power of the sail, that is to say the inclination (known as the incidence) of the sail while holding the bar with both hands, using the least effort, speedily and responsively, with incomparable precision, and lastly in a manner that is virtually sealed from sand.
To that end, according to the invention, the command and control bar for a sail of the kite type known as a traction sail, liable to be associated with two front cables and two rear cables, wherein the cables are intended to be connected at one end to said sail, the bar has a substantially cylindrical elongated shape, the rear cables are connected to the bar and the front cables are intended to be connected to the user, means are provided to shorten or extend the front or rear cables in order to vary the inclination of the sail, wherein the means to shorten/extend the rear cables are incorporated into the bar so as to allow control by one of the hands of the user without releasing the bar, wherein each rear cable is associated with a deflection system that creates, for each rear cable, a cable strand of variable length, characterized in that said deflection system can be displaced parallel to the axis of the bar, and is connected to return means, and the bar comprises means adapted to lock/release the position of the deflection system along the bar, depending on the traction forces applied on the cables, wherein said locking/releasing means are accessible to at least one finger of the user from outside the bar.
Thus, the user shortens/extends the cable firstly without releasing the bar, and secondly using little force, thanks to the return means.
Advantageously, the bar comprises a long element, such as a strip, one end of which is integral with the mobile deflection system and the other end of which is connected to the return means.
Preferably, said long element, the deflection means, the cable strands of variable length and the return means are arranged inside the bar.
The deflection system comprises a mobile slide.
Particularly, the long element is a small bar or a rigid rod.
The bar comprises means adapted to lock and release the displacement of the long element, and these means comprise a mobile male lug, adapted to be in two stable positions, namely a locking position, where it cooperates with openings or notches made on the long element, and a retracted releasing position, which allows the displacement of the long element and thus the deflection system.
More specifically, the lug is connected by a transmission mechanism to a pushbutton that can be controlled by a finger of the user from the outside of the bar. Thus, the bar comprises a control mechanism, particularly including a pushbutton accessible from the outside of the bar, and a transmission mechanism inside the bar connecting said pushbutton to the lug.
Said return means comprise a gas lift cylinder or a return spring.
Said long element is connected firstly to the return means and secondly to the deflection system by an additional respective pulley.
A device for a traction sail of the kite type or a sail of a sailboat, paraglider or sailboard, connected to said sail by at least one cable or line, a device intended to command and/or control said sail, wherein the device has a substantially cylindrical elongated shape, wherein means are provided to shorten or extend the at least one cable in order to stretch the sail or alter the inclination/incidence of the sail, wherein the means for shortening/extending the rear cable are incorporated into the device so as to allow control with one of the hands of the user without having to release the device, wherein each cable (5, 6) is associated with a deflection system that creates, for each cable, a cable strand with a variable length, characterized in that said deflection system can be displaced parallel to the axis of the device, and is connected to return means, and in that the device comprises means adapted to lock/release the position of the deflection means along the bar, depending on the traction forces applied on the cable, wherein said locking/release means are accessible to at least one finger of the user from outside the device.
The invention further relates to an assembly for a traction sail of the kite type, or the sail of a sailboat, paraglider or sailboard, comprising a sail and at least one cable or line connecting the sail to said command bar as described and claimed, or connecting the sail to said device as described and claimed.
The invention may be associated with sails in a number of applications, particularly sports involving sliding on land, water or snow, which are used for kitesurfing, mountain boarding, snow kiting, or kite buggying. These sails are used to power all kinds of nautical or land equipment, sliding or rolling, but are also used in electricity generation systems that use the force generated by such sails.
The terms “front”, “rear”, “distal”, “longitudinal”, “diagonal” refer to elements as part of the normal use of the bar according to the invention, by reference to a user standing up and holding the bar.
The invention will be better understood in the light of the description below of illustrative but non-limitative examples by reference to the attached drawings wherein:
The lines or cables 3, 4, 5, and 6 have one end each connected to a respective corner of the sail 1. The ends 6A and 5A, opposite the sail 1, of the rear cables 5 and 6 are connected to the ends 2A, 2B of the bar 2. The ends 3A and 4A (opposite sail 1) of the front cables 3 and 4 are connected to a common central end 10 that passes close to or at the center of the command bar 2. Beyond bar 2, opposite the sail, the end 10 protruding from the bar is connected to a handle or ring, known as the “dropping” ring 10 A.
In a known manner, depending on the wind speed and/or direction symbolized by the arrow V, the user holding the bar 2 modifies the length of the front cables 3 and 4, by example in the manner shown in
Thus, the user can modify the leading angle of the sail in relation to the force of the wind, and thus adjust and control the sail traction power.
The user can therefore move on the water, on a sailboard or the like, or on the land, on a buggy or the like.
At the “cruising speed” of use, the user holds the bar 2 with their left 7 and right 8 hands, while a harness (known in itself and not shown) connects the bar 2 to the user, who is not shown.
The bar according to the invention has a system for adjusting the length of the rear cables 5 and 6, which adjusts the power of the sail by shortening/extending said cables, where said system can be controlled by one of the hands of the user without releasing the bar. The front cables or lines are thus, in the described exemplary embodiment, fixed in length.
The system according to the invention, for shortening/extending the cables 5 and 6, is placed inside the bar and has been described below by reference to
At its two ends, the bar has two closing sleeves 7 and 8 and a fixed sleeve 9 substantially at the center.
The front cables 3 and 4 go through the bar 2, substantially at its center, through an opening 10A created in the bar 2, designed to receive the sleeve 10 (not shown) in
In the bar, the following are also provided:
The left-hand rear cable 5 goes through the extreme left sleeve 7 and onto a guide pulley, not shown, inside the bar 2, arranged inside the slide 11. The end of the left rear cable 5 is connected to the left end sleeve 7.
Thus, inside the bar, the cable 5 forms two parallel strands 5A and 5B between the end sleeve 7 and the slide 11.
The rear left cable 6 passes through the closing sleeve 8, then goes entirely through the bar from the inside and passes through a deflection pulley (not shown) with a diagonal axis provided in the closing sleeve 7. At the exit from that pulley, the cable forms a first strand 6A that passes around the other deflection pulley provided on the slide 11 and then forms a second strand 6B, the distal end of which is fixed to the end sleeve 7.
The pulley provided in the slide 11 is thus common to the rear cables 5 and 6.
The strip 12 is integral at its end 12B (opposite the end 12A integral with the slide 11) with the fixed central sleeve 9 through an additional cable or rope 20. That rope passes over a deflection pulley (not shown) with a diagonal axis and provided in a second slide 21 that is integral with the end of the cylinder 16 turned towards the end sleeve 8.
The additional rope 20 thus comprises:
The gas piston 15 is of a type known in itself and is adapted to apply, depending on the relative position of the piston rod 17 and the cylinder body 16, a return force on the strip 12. That is because the latter is connected, by the additional rope 20 with a fixed total length to a fixed point of the bar, that is to say the central sleeve 9.
Reference is now made to
In
In
At the end of its range, the position shown in
The displacement of mobile elements inside the bar extends/shortens the rear cables 5 and 6, so as to adjust the behavior of the sail, and its power, inclination etc.
Via the two deflection pulleys provided in the respective slides 11 and 21, it can be seen that a given extension/shortening distance “D” of the cables 5 and 6 leads to displacement “d” of the mobile elements of the bar that is such that d=D/4.
That makes it possible to limit the dimensions of the bar, while providing cable extension/shortening amplitude that is appreciable and sufficient for the user.
Reference is now made to
In
The lug 19 protrudes out and penetrates into the hole 13 of the strip 12, locking the displacement of the strip. The gas cylinder 15 thus applies a return force on the strip 12.
If the user presses the pushbutton (not shown and described later on) of the control mechanism 18, associated with the lug 19, that makes the lug go back once again into the bar 12, thus releasing the strip 12 which can thus be displaced again.
Because the intensity of the force FA is greater than the force GA, the strip thus moves to the right up to a balance position shown in
That situation is that of a sail configuration known as “slightly hauled in”.
The user may, if they wish, re-engage the lug 19 so that it blocks the strip 12 in that balance position.
If, on the contrary, the user's action is such that the lug 19 does not block the displacement of the strip 12, the forces applied by the rear cables become greater than the return force of the gas cylinder. The position shown in
In
Said control mechanism 18 comprises:
The displacement axis of the locking lug 19 is substantially orthogonal, firstly with the displacement axis of the pushbutton 22 and secondly with the displacement plane of the strip. Thus, the user can control it with a thumb, from below the bar substantially facing the ground.
The self-locking cylinder is maneuvered by the user via a cam mechanism 26 described below, connected to a pushbutton 22 associated with a compression spring 23 (similar to those of the embodiment of
The pushbutton 22 is integral with a rod 27 that can be displaced diagonally and provided with a bevel 28. A tab 29 is set against the bevel 28, wherein the tab itself is integral with a longitudinal arm 30 (passing before the sleeve 10) which is connected by a fork 31 to the piston 32 of the self-locking cylinder 150.
When the user presses the pushbutton 22, the rod 27 is displaced, which leads to longitudinal displacement when the bevel 28 pushes the diagonal tab 29. That leads to the displacement of the cylinder piston 32 via the arm 30 and the fork 31.
It is then subjected to the traction forces applied by cables 5 and 6, as shown schematically in
The self-locking cylinder 150 is of the type known to those skilled in the art, and is known as self-locking in that the displacement of its inner piston remains blocked until releasing action is applied to the piston by means of the pushbutton as described above.
When the user releases the pushbutton, the cylinder piston 32 is no longer subjected to the longitudinal displacement force (due to the movement explained above) and the piston is blocked once again.
The configuration of
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16 56874 | Jul 2016 | FR | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180022430 A1 | Jan 2018 | US |