To the fullest extent permitted by law, this nonprovisional utility patent application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to Germany Patent Application No. 10 2016 111 760.9, with a filing date of Jun. 27, 2016.
The invention concerns a disco ball with an outer skin fitted on the outside with mirror pieces. The invention also concerns a method for assembling a disco ball.
Disco balls are naturally known in the prior art. Disco balls usually have an inner polystyrene ball which on the outside is fitted with mirror pieces; the mirror pieces are glued onto the outside of the polystyrene ball. In addition, the disco ball has suspension devices which allow the disco ball to be securely suspended from the ceiling, a supporting structure or similar.
The problem with disco balls is that there is an increasing demand for very large disco balls which may be several meters in diameter. Firstly, disco balls with a diameter of 3 to 4 meters, as currently used, can only be transported on conventional roads with special safety precautions, and secondly large disco balls have a substantial weight of several hundred kilograms, in some cases several tons.
Inflatable disco balls are known in the prior art. At the “Bestival” in Robin Hill Country Park on the Isle of Wight in September 2014, a disco ball was publicly revealed which has a diameter of 10.33 m, and comprises an inner skin of PVC which is inflatable and an outer skin comprising a net surrounding the inner skin.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a disco ball which, despite its size, is easy to transport and also has a low weight.
This object is achieved with regard to the device by a disco ball with the features of claim 1.
The invention utilizes the concept of providing a disco ball with an expandable inner structure which is in collapsed state during transport and has a low volume and can therefore be transported very easily, while it expands for use at events and can be suspended above an event area while having a diameter of several meters and optically, viewed from the outside, shows no difference from a conventional polystyrene disco ball.
The invention in particular makes use of the astonishingly simple idea of providing an inflatable disco ball which is in a slack state during transport and has a low volume and can therefore be transported very easily, whereas it is inflated for use at events.
The outer skin is laid externally around the inner structure. It may lie on the inner skin over a large surface.
According to the invention, the outer skin has a plurality of approximately lenticular segments arranged next to each other, and adjacent lenticular segments are connected together to form the outer skin. The lenticular segments are connected together in such a manner that they can be released or separated again. This allows the outer skin to be transported not in one piece but in several segments, and the segments only assembled to form the outer skin at the event site.
The disco ball according to the invention has an inflatable inner skin which in the inflated state is spherical and holds the outer skin in a ball shape. The invention uses the surprisingly simple idea of providing a conventional inner skin which consists of a flexible plastic and is substantially air-impermeable, preferably fully air-impermeable, and surrounding this soft inner skin with an outer skin, wherein the outer skin is preferably provided with the known mirror pieces of a disco ball. Inflating the inner skin at the same time brings the outer skin to a spherical form.
It has proved particularly advantageous to use lenticular segments, wherein preferably sixteen but a higher or also a lower number of segments may be used.
The segments run along the outer skin from the north to the south pole, are formed tapering towards the north and south poles, and at the equator of the disco ball the segments have their greatest width. The lenticular segments are fitted with mirror pieces on the outside, the mirror pieces may all be configured identically but may also have different outer forms; favorably, the mirror pieces are glued onto the outsides of the segments and cover the outsides of segments substantially completely, preferably completely. Preferably, all outsides are covered with mirror pieces. The mirror pieces are adapted to the edges of the segments, preferably to the contour of the segments, i.e. they deviate from the shape of the mirror pieces which are used along the remaining inner face of the segments. The mirror pieces may all be identical in structure and they are preferably quadratic; they may however have different forms, and may in particular also be formed rectangular, circular, hexagonal etc. The shapes of the mirror pieces may also be mixed.
In addition, the mirrors may be designed with a color. All mirrors may have the same color or they may have different colors.
Favorably, Velcro® tape is provided on the inside on the longitudinal edges of each of the lenticular segments, and a complementary piece of Velcro® tape is joined on the inside above the Velcro® tape of adjacent lenticular segments.
The lenticular segments are preferably stacked in a box during transport. After transport, they are removed from the box, placed next to each other and preferably the Velcro® tapes along the edges of the lenticular segments are connected to the complementary Velcro® tape. Alternatively, it is also conceivable that the lenticular elements are applied directly onto the inner ball and attached there for example by means of Velcro® tape.
It is however also conceivable to connect the lenticular segments together in a different fashion, such as by button-like connections, by clamp connections of similar.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, a ring is provided at a north pole to which the tips of each lenticular segment are attached, and the ring has suspension devices from which cables depart for suspension of the disco ball. The lenticular segments, because of the mirror pieces applied thereto, may have substantial weight of many kilograms, in some cases up to 100 kilograms per segment. To secure the segments, the tips of each lenticular segment are attached to the ring, preferably a metal ring. For this, the metal ring may have holes or bores. The lenticular segments may also have holes, and bolts are guided through the holes with which the tips of the segments may be attached to the holes of the ring.
The entire disco ball is also suspended with its weight on the ring. For this, further suspension devices are provided on the ring in the form of holes, eyelets or similar which can support a corresponding weight.
Preferably, a compressor or fan is arranged at the north pole and is connected to the inner skin via an intake air shaft. It has been found that inner skins consisting of plastic, such as polyurethane, polyethylene or similar, lose air over time or change their volume because of temperature fluctuations in the room. To compensate for this volume change or air loss, a compressor is provided via which ambient air can be blown into the inner skin via a supply air shaft.
Furthermore, an overflow valve is provided which automatically allows air to be released if the internal pressure of the inner skin becomes too high.
The object is achieved in its second aspect by a method, in that an outer skin is provided which has mirror pieces applied to the outside, and an expandable inner structure is inserted in the outer skin.
According to the invention, an inflatable inner skin is used as an inner structure. The inner skin is inserted in the outer skin, it is then inflated and thus the outer skin is expanded into a ball shape.
The invention makes use of the very simple but very effective idea of bringing very bulky disco balls into a small form for transport, preferably in that the disco ball can be inflated or its air released. During transport, the disco ball is in a slack and dismantled state; during use at an event however, the disco ball is inflated and suspended over an event area. Preferably ambient air is used for inflation. However, other gases may also be used.
According to the invention, identical lenticular segments are provided which are arranged next to each other, connected at their outer edges, and form a slack outer skin. The lenticular segments have already been described above.
The method described is particularly suitable for assembling one of the disco balls described above.
Favorably, each of the lenticular segments is attached to the ring by a tip, and the disco ball is suspended from a ceiling via suspension devices of the ring. Segments may be firmly secured by means of bolts or other closures to a stable ring, preferably a metal or steel ring, and assembled. The applicable safety regulations should be observed.
In a refinement of the invention, the disco ball is equipped with a compressor, the compressor is connected to the inner skin air-conductively and, on pressure fluctuations of the inner skin, can adjust the internal air pressure by the supply or outlet of air.
After use, the outer skin may be removed again and the inner structure shrunk, either by dismantling the inner rod linkage or evacuating the air from the inner skin.
The invention is described in six figures with reference to an exemplary embodiment. The drawings show:
A disco ball 1 according to the invention has an inner skin 2 and an outer skin 3;
A different number of segments 4 is also conceivable, in particular more but also fewer segments 4 may be used to form the outer skin 3.
The segments 4 are preferably lenticular, they may also have different outer forms. The segments 4 of a disco ball 1 are preferably exactly the same. However, deviations in design and form of the segments 4 of the disco ball 1 are conceivable, in particular the segments 4 may have different widths at an equator of the disco ball 1.
One of the segments 4 shown in
The lenticular segments 4 have mirror pieces 6 at their outer face, covering the outer face completely. The mirror pieces 6 are formed largely quadratic in their outer shape in
Other forms, in particular of the outer periphery of the mirror pieces 6, may be used. In particular, they may be circular, triangular, hexagonal or have other shapes. The mirror pieces 6 of a disco ball 1 may also have mutually differing forms. Preferably however, the outside of the lenticular segments 4 is completely covered by the mirror pieces 6.
In addition, suspension devices 11 are provided on the terminating ring 7, which may also be holes, but also eyelets or similar, through which cables or other suspension means can be drawn in order to suspend the disco ball 1 with its entire weight from a ceiling, supporting structure or similar. Disco balls 1 may have substantial weight; with a diameter of 4 to 5 meters, because of the high number of mirror pieces 6, the weight of the disco ball 1 may amount to several hundred kilograms. The suspension devices 11 and the terminating ring 7 must therefore have a corresponding load-bearing capacity to comply with the necessary safety regulations.
The lenticular segments 4 are also connected together on an inside. This may be achieved by various connecting methods, in particular a Velcro® tape may be placed along each edge on the inside of the lenticular segments 4, and the Velcro® tapes may be joined to a complementary Velcro® tape so as to create cohesive outer skin 3 which covers the Velcro® tapes.
It is however also conceivable that the lenticular segments 4 may be joined together by clamp connections, button-like connections or similar. The outer skin 3 is slack and brought into a ball shape by the inflatable inner skin 2.
The inner skin 2 has an air inlet 12 and an air outlet which can both be closed. Additional securing cables may be provided on the inside of the outer skin 3 which join the segments 4 together and also prevent a sagging of the segments 4 when the air is let out of the inner skin.
Since the inflatable disco ball 1 is normally used for several hours or even days, and for events must be suspended above an event site for several hours inflated as firmly as possible, according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2016 111 760.9 | Jun 2016 | DE | national |
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Entry |
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Inflatable Fabric Structure: The World's Largest Disco Ball—Architen Landrell ; Photo credits: Bestival 2014 Twitter Feed (Year: 2014). |
Anonymous; https://www.alibaba.com/product-detail/2019-giant-PVC-inflatable-disco-ball_60359865155.html?spm=a2700.7724857.main07.40.4cde024215c8Lv (Online shopping portal showing PVC Inflatable Mirror Disco Ball for sale by Guangzhou Hao Yi Inflatable Co. Ltd.). |
Architen Landrell; http://www.architen.com/projects/inflatable-fabric-structure-disco- ball/; Inflatable Fabric Structure: The World's Largest Disco Ball; From Bestival music festival, Sep. 6, 2014 (Web article discussing disco ball at “Bestival” music festival held on the Isle of Wight in Sep. 2014). |
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