This invention relates to a cue stroke practice aid for a billiards player. More particularly, the invention relates to a practice aid whereby the billiards player selects the cross dimension of a horizontally disposed tubular chamber according to a skill level to repetitiously practice a cue stroke.
Billiards is a game which has been enjoyed by many people for many years. It can be enjoyed at home or in a social setting such as a pool hall. It is primarily a recreational game participated in by players of all skill levels. It can be played professionally as well.
Regardless of the billiards player's skill level, the player's competitive nature drives the player to want to achieve a higher level. Playing the game for extensive time periods can be beneficial. At some point, though, the billiards player must do more. It is all too common that the player reaches a certain skill level and just cannot go beyond that level regardless of how often the game is played.
Most billiards players are self-taught. Some players may benefit from the advice of an onlooker or perhaps from reading an instructional manual on the subject. Various equipment aids have been developed and suggested for improving one's billiards game. U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,851,876, 5,238,457, 5,275,398, 6,267,685, and 6,746,336 all disclose products for use while playing the game. They primarily aid in properly holding or aligning the cue prior to hitting a cue ball. U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,708,577, 5,125,652, 6,132,319, U.S. Publication No. 2006/0189397A1, and U.S. Design Pat. No. DES 312,290 disclose practice aids. They primarily provide a means for the player to develop a better stroke. It is well known that the first step in attaining a high skill level is to develop a cue stroke which is level and which precisely strikes the cue ball at a desired spot. The known practice aids appear either too expensive for the average player or too cumbersome to use. Also, none accommodate differing skill levels.
In accord with a need, there has been developed a practice aid for billiards players. The practice aid is economical to produce, easy to understand, effortless to use, and conducive to creating a repetitive stroke. Most importantly, it can be used by players of different skill levels with means for incremental adjustments until cue stroke perfection has been consistently achieved.
A cue stroke practice aid is designed for use by billiards players of different skill levels to use and continually improve the player's cue stroke. The device comprises an elongated housing with a slide assembly positioned within it. The slide assembly is adjustable to create a horizontally disposed tubular cavity of a desired cross dimension. The elongated housing has a first opening at one end and a second opening at an opposed end. The slide assembly includes a shaft. A first end of the shaft extends at least partially through the first opening of the elongated housing. An adjusting knob is mounted on that end of the shaft. A second end of the shaft has a set of substantially equi-spaced rails extending axially. The slide assembly also has a set of cue guide arms, each arm movably mounted between two of the rails. A set of travel pins extend through transverse pinholes in adjacent rails and through directional travel slots in the cue guide arms which are positioned therebetween. Cue guide fingers extend longitudinally from a free end of each cue guide arm through the second opening in the elongated housing. The adjusting knob is turned to cause the shaft and its associated rails to slide laterally within the elongated housing. This in turn causes the cue guide arms to move inwardly or outwardly as they are forced to travel along the travel pins until the desired cross dimension defined by the cue guide fingers and arms is created for that particular player. The rails and cue guide arms form the tubular cavity which extends from the second opening of the elongated housing inwardly. The tubular cavity is used by the billiards player to repetitiously practice the player's cue stroke at the desired selected cross dimension.
The cue stroke practice aid of the invention is described in detail in the following paragraphs and with reference to the drawings. The practice aid is primarily used by placing it on a billiards table and the player repetitiously practicing the cue stroke until a consistently level stroke has been attained. A consistent forward thrust and follow-through of the cue is the objective. The practice aid can as well be placed and used on any other flat top surface, such as a desk or table of approximately the same height as a billiards table.
The cue stroke practice aid 10 of the invention comprises an elongated housing 11 and a slide assembly 12. The elongated housing is best seen in
With reference to
Arch-shaped openings 20 and 21 in the bottom housing half 17 mate with arch-shaped openings 22 and 23 in the top housing half 18 to create the first opening 14 and the second opening 16 in the elongated housing 11. The two openings are opposed one another.
The elongated housing 11 has two halves to allow assembling of the slide assembly into the housing's cavity. The housing halves 17 and 18 preferably are made of a molded plastic. They are attached together once the slide assembly is properly positioned. While not shown, screws, bolts, double sided adhesive tape or other common attaching means are used to permanently attach together the two housing halves. Preferably, the bottom housing half 17 further has a metal plate 24 attached to its underside to add weight to the cue stroke practice aid. The metal plate 24 is configured to fit within the outline of the bottom housing half. Further, a set of anti-slide pads 25 are added to the underside of the metal plate to ensure the cue stroke practice aid 10 does not slide while in use.
Still with reference to
The shaft 30 of the slide assembly 12 has a diameter slightly less than the first opening 14 in the housing 11. A first free end of the shaft extends through the opening and is intended to move back or forth in the opening by turning of the adjusting knob. For this purpose, the shaft 30 has external threads 37 and the adjusting knob has mating internal threads 38. The adjusting knob has an annular shape with a ring-shaped internal stop rib 39 and a ring-shaped external stop rib 40. The two ribs effectively trap the knob in the housing's first opening.
A rail bracket 41 is permanently secured to the second end of the shaft 30 opposite its first end. The rail bracket 41 is flat and mounted transversely to the shaft's longitudinal axis. It serves to hold ends of the rails outside the shaft's cylindrical 5 surface. Extending axially from the shaft 30 are four substantially equi-spaced rails forming the rail set 31. Collectively, the rails of the rail set 31 form a box-like structure with the rails parallel to one another and each rail having a gap between it and an adjacent rail. The rails extend to near the full length of the housing's cavity. Each of the rails is operatively associated with both a horizontally disposed rail and with a vertically disposed rail through the travel pins 33 and 34. For this purpose, each of the rails in the rail set 31 has at least two spaced transverse horizontal pinholes and at least two spaced 15 transverse vertical pinholes. The pinholes are aligned with like pinholes in an adjacent rail.
As seen in
Now with more particularity, and with reference to
The travel pins 33 extend between aligned horizontal pinholes and the travel pins 34 extend between aligned vertical pinholes in the rails 50-53. The travel pins are positioned in the respective aligned pinholes and permanently secured in place.
Still with reference to
Each cue guide arm has a length less than the length of the rails and has a width about the same as the distance between the rails. They are trapped in position by the cavity walls of the housing halves and made to expand or contract by the aforedescribed travel pins as the slide assembly's shaft and rails are forced to move laterally. For this purpose, each cue guide arm has at least two spaced directional travel slots 76 positioned in it to receive one of the travel pins. The travel slots 76 are angled from the longitudinal axis of the cue guide arm and extend fully therethrough. Each travel slot extends from near an innermost surface of the cue guide arm when positioned between rails back towards the cue guide arm's first end 74 at an angle of from about thirty degrees to about sixty degrees. The cue guide arms 70-73 are each shown with six travel slots 76, though only three are used with the cue stroke practice aid 10 illustrated. The extra three travel slots in each cue guide arm can receive a travel pin for enhanced smoothness in operation, but are not necessary. Elongated holes 77 are provided in the cue guide arms for weight reduction and raw material savings only.
For illustration purposes, and still with reference to
Again with reference to
The individual components of the cue stroke practice aid of the invention are preferably all made of plastic. All or selected components of the practice aid can as well be made of wood, metal or any other rigid material.
As an option, the tubular cavity within the elongated housing can have a slight downward slope to better approximate a natural cue stroke. A drop of from about five degrees to about ten degrees from the second end to the first end is preferred. The drop can be achieved best by having the metal plate on the underside of the bottom housing half configured to achieve the desired slope.
In operation, the practice aid of the invention is placed on a flat surface, ideally a billiards table. The adjusting knob is turned to adjust the cross dimension distance between the cue guide arms and fingers. The novice will choose a fully open position to have the greatest distance within which to practice a stroke. The more skilled player will turn the adjusting knob to contract the cue guide arms and fingers to a lesser distance, depending on the player's skill level. As the player's stroke improves, the distance is reduced. Ultimately, the billiards player is able to consistently stroke the cue into the practice aid when set to minimal cue clearance without the cue making contact with the cue guide arms and fingers.
Having described the invention in its preferred embodiment, it should be clear that modifications can be made without departing from the spirit of the invention. It is not intended that the words used to describe the invention nor the drawings illustrating the same be limiting on the invention. It is intended that the invention only be limited by the scope of the appended claims.
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