This invention relates generally to the field of powered winches, and more particularly to the field of powered winches known as tow or sport winches, whereby the winch is used to rapidly wind up a tow rope being held by a water skier, snow skier, snowboarder, surfer, wake boarder or the like.
The use of powered winches to accelerate and pull a water skier, snow skier, snowboarder, surfer, wake boarder or the like for a distance of several hundred feet is known. The winches are typically relatively large and are either fuel or AC electrically powered. The winches, if not designed for permanent installation, must be transported to a remote location using heavy equipment, trucks or similar devices.
It is an object of this invention to provide an improved tow winch, the winch being operated by a DC motor powered by a rechargeable battery, with the winch preferably being small enough to be carried by an individual. It is a further object of this invention to provide such a winch having a wireless throttle control mounted on or incorporated into the tow rope handle, such that the user controls acceleration and speed. It is a further object of this invention to provide such a winch having a wireless kill switch, such that upon operation of the kill switch or release of the tow handle by the user, the winching operation will cease. It is a further object to provide such a winch having a sensor switch and a marker device attached to or incorporated into the tow rope a short distance from tow handle such that if the marker device is sensed by the sensor switch, indicating that the majority of the tow rope has retrieved, the winching operation will cease to prevent injury to the user. It is a further object to provide such a winch in the form of a backpack.
The invention is in general a sport or tow winch powered by a DC motor and a rechargeable battery, the DC motor driving rotating a winch reel or spool directly or driving a belt or chain that turns a winch spool when a magnetic clutch is engaged. A tow rope is wound by the winch spool, the tow rope having a tow handle with a wireless throttle control to start, stop and adjust the speed of winding. A wireless kill switch may also be incorporated into the tow handle. A suitable transmitter and receiver combination is utilized to control the motor. A marker device is incorporated into or attached to the tow rope and a sensor switch is provided on the base, whereby when the marker device is detected by the sensor switch the winch is disengaged to halt the retrieval operation. The base and operational components are preferably sized and structured such that straps may be connected to the base and the tow winch carried like a backpack.
With reference to the drawings, the invention will now be described in detail as to preferred embodiments and the best mode. In general, the invention is a powered tow winch having wireless controls incorporated into or mounted onto the handle of a tow rope, whereby the user can start retrieval of the tow rope onto the winch, control the speed and acceleration of the tow rope, and stop the retrieval operation as desired.
A first embodiment of the tow winch is illustrated in
The tow rope 21 is provided with a tow handle 22, and a throttle control member 23 is mounted onto or incorporated in the tow handle 22. The throttle control member 23 may be for example a thumb switch, a pressure switch or any other suitable mechanism for transmitting control commands. The throttle control member 23 is wireless and transmits a signal, such as a radio frequency signal for example, to a wireless receiver 24 that operates the magnetic clutch 18 and/or the DC motor 14. In one embodiment, the DC motor 14 may be arranged to drive the chain or belt 19 and the axle sprocket or pulley 16 continuously, but with rotation of the axle 12 and spool 13 occurring only if the magnetic clutch 18 is engaged by the user.
As a safety feature, a marker member 32, such as a magnet or metal member, is attached to or incorporated into the tow rope 21 a relatively short distance, e.g., about 35 feet, from the tow handle 22. A sensor switch 31 is mounted on the base 10 adjacent the spool 13 such that if the marker device 32 is detected by the sensor switch 31 during the winding of the tow rope 21 the magnetic clutch 18 is automatically disengaged, thereby stopping the retrieval action of the winch spool 13 to insure that the user is not pulled into the tow winch or pulled too close to shore in water applications.
When the tow winch is in neutral, the DC motor 14 will rotate the axle sprocket or pulley 16 but the disengaged magnetic clutch 18 will not deliver this rotation to the axle 12. The winch spool 13 is free-spinning in this status, such that the tow rope 21 can be unwound from the winch spool 13. When the tow rope 21 is played out, the user initiates the towing action through the throttle control switch 23, thereby engaging the magnetic clutch 18 such that the winch spool 13 is rotated by the DC motor 14 and the tow rope 21 is retrieved, thus pulling the user forward. Preferably the throttle control member 23 allows the user to control the acceleration or deceleration and to increase or decrease the winding speed, either over a continuous spectrum or in incremental stages. If the user wishes to stop the winding action, the throttle control member 23 is used to disengage the magnetic clutch 18.
Alternatively, as shown in
Also as shown in
The base 10 is preferably structured such that it may be worn as a backpack by the user, strap members 41 being attached to the underside of the base 10 or to handles 42. The components necessary to wind 500 to 600 feet of rope at about 35 mph are small enough in size and weight such that transport by a single user is possible, particularly if the battery 17 is removed and carried separately. This enables the user to take the tow winch to remote locations inaccessible by powered vehicles. Preferably a cover member (not shown) is provided over the base member 10.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/647,357, filed May 15, 2012.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61647357 | May 2012 | US |