Claims
- 1. In a tennis racket frame having a handle and an ellipsoid head attached to one end of said handle and a grip element at the opposite end of said handle, an improved construction wherein said frame comprises a structural member of high strength to weight ratio comprising a core of an expanded porous resinous material integrally bonded to a shell comprising at least one layer of resin-coated unidirectionally oriented graphite fibers, said shell completely encasing said core at any cross section transverse to the length of said member and said core containing from about 25 to about 75 volume percent of chopped cork as a low density filler material and from zero to about 60 weight percent of a high density weight control material.
- 2. The tennis racket frame of claim 1 wherein said shell comprises a plurality of layers of resin-coated unidirectionally oriented graphite fibers, at least one of said layers having its fibers oriented in a direction different from the direction of orientation of the fibers in at least one other of said layers.
- 3. The tennis racket frame of claim 2 wherein said layers alternate in direction of orientation from about +45.degree. to about -45.degree. to the direction of the long dimension of the member.
- 4. The tennis racket frame of claim 2 wherein said plastic core has a density between about 20 and about 60 pounds per cubic foot.
- 5. The tennis racket frame of claim 2 wherein each end of said member is at the grip end of said handle, said member extending from one of its ends at the grip end of said handle up one side of said handle, around a major portion of the head of said frame and down the other side of said handle to the opposite end of said member at the grip end of said handle.
- 6. The tennis racket frame of claim 5 wherein said structural member is joined to a similar but shorter structural member which completes the ellipsoid shape of said head.
- 7. The tennis racket frame of claim 2 wherein said shell includes at least one layer of resin-coated unidirectionally oriented fibers at each of the opposite faces of said frame exterior to said shell.
- 8. The tennis racket frame of claim 2 wherein said high density weight control material is barium sulfate.
- 9. In a tennis racket frame having a handle and an ellipsoid head attached to one end of said handle and a grip element at the opposite end of said handle, an improved construction wherein said frame comprises a structural member of high strength to weight ratio comprising a core of an expanded porous resinous material occupying from about 20 to about 60 pounds per cubic foot and containing from about 25 to about 75 volume percent of chopped cork and from zero to about 60 weight percent of a high density weight control material, said core being integrally bonded to a shell comprising a plurality of layers of resin-coated unidirectionally oriented graphite fibers, at least one of said graphite fiber layers having its fibers oriented in a direction different from the direction of orientation of the fibers in at least one other of said layers, each end of said member being at the grip end of said handle, said member extending from one of its ends at the grip end of said handle up one side of said handle, around a major portion of the head of said frame and down the other side of said handle to the opposite end of said member at the grip end of said handle.
- 10. The tennis racket frame of claim 9 wherein said frame is a lightweight frame and said core composition contains from zero to about 10 weight percent of said high density weight control material.
- 11. The tennis racket frame of claim 9 wherein said frame is a medium weight frame and said core composition contains from about 10 to about 25 weight percent of said high density weight control material.
- 12. The tennis racket frame of claim 9 wherein said frame is a heavy weight frame and said core composition contains from about 25 to about 60 weight percent of said high density weight control material.
- 13. In a tennis racket frame having a handle and an ellipsoid head attached to one end of said handle and a grip element at the opposite end of said handle, an improved construction wherein said frame comprises a structural member of high strength to weight ratio comprising a core of an expanded porous resinous material integrally bonded to a shell comprising at least one layer of resin-coated unidirectionally oriented graphite fibers, said shell completely encasing said core at any cross section transverse to the length of said member and said core containing from about 25 to about 75 volume percent of a low density filler material and from 10 to about 60 weight percent of a high density weight control material having a density in excess of about 4.
- 14. The tennis racket frame of claim 13 wherein said frame is a medium weight frame and said core composition contains from about 10 to about 25 weight percent of said high density weight control material.
- 15. The tennis racket frame of claim 13 wherein said frame is a heavy weight frame and said core composition contains from about 25 to about 60 weight percent of said high density weight control material.
- 16. The tennis racket frame of claim 13 wherein said high density weight control material is barium sulfate.
Parent Case Info
This is a division of application Ser. No. 703,137, filed July 7, 1976, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,124,670.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
2505454 |
Aug 1975 |
DEX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
"Handbook of Reinforced Plastics"; 1964, pp. 194-196, 216, 217. |
Divisions (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
703137 |
Jul 1976 |
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