1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to expandable shoes that may be adjusted longitudinally.
2. Discussion of Related Art
Some attempts have been made to provide expandable shoes, which can purportedly withstand day-to-day use. U.S. Pat. No. 3,389,481, for example, discloses a shoe in which a two plate assembly is disposed between an inner and a disjointed outer sole, having overlapping front and back portions. One of the plates includes a spring tongue, and the other plate includes two apertures to receive the spring tongue, each aperture corresponding to a shoe size. To adjust the shoe size, a screw which extends through the heel and into the disjointed soles is removed. The shoe may then be pulled apart allowing the disjointed sole to separate until the spring tongue engages the next aperture. Thus the shoe size may be lengthened by one size, but apparently the size cannot be controlled finely or reduced. The shoe includes two crinkled leather portions 34, one on each side of the shoe, to facilitate expansion of the shoe.
Under one aspect of the present invention, a shoe includes a front outer assembly and a rear outer assembly. A flexible, expandable segment is attached to the front and rear outer assemblies to define a shoe outer shell. The flexible segment extends at least partially along each side of the outer shell and transversely across the bottom of the outer shell. Within the outer shell an adjustable inner assembly is disposed and attached to the front and rear outer assembly. The inner assembly has a control to adjust a dimension of the inner assembly and thereby a corresponding dimension of the shoe.
Under another aspect of the invention related to the above aspect, the inner assembly may be in the form of a last board, or as a combination of a last board and other portions of the shoe, for example, a portion of a midsole.
Under one aspect of the invention, a visualization window provides a view port to the inner assembly. The inner assembly may include size markings or other indicia representative of a shoe adjustment, and these markings may be placed on the inner assembly to allow them to be visible through the view port.
Under another aspect of the invention, the inner assembly includes a first sole portion, a second sole portion, and a screw drive. The screw drive has an externally accessible screw passing through a screw insert mounted to one of the first and second sole portions and a screw-receiving portion attached to the other of the first and second sole portions. In this fashion, turning the screw causes the first and second portions to move relative to one another, thereby adjusting a dimension of the shoe.
Under still another aspect of the invention, the shoe includes a base and a manually operable control coupled to the base and to the screw for turning the screw and thereby adjusting adjust a dimension of the shoe.
Under another aspect of the invention, the control includes a latching mechanism operable between a first position in which the latching mechanism resists movement around an axis defined by the screw and a second position in which the latching mechanism can be used to turn the screw to adjust a dimension of the shoe. Under another aspect of the invention, a separate locking mechanism is used to hold the control in the first position.
Under another aspect of the invention related to the above, the control is externally accessible from the outer shoe and it is possible to adjust a dimension of the shoe while the shoe is being worn.
The principles of the invention may be realized in hiking shoes, dress shoes, sandals, skates, biking shoes, Nordic and cross-country ski-boots and the like.
In the Drawing,
An adjustable inner sole assembly 22 is placed within outer shell 21 so that a screw 26 extends through a screw port opening 31 of the rear outer sole 16. The inner assembly 22 is firmly attached to the front and rear outer assemblies 13, 17 but not to bellows 14. In this fashion, once the shoe is assembled and in use, a wrench 28 (e.g., with an allen-head design) may be used to turn a screw 26 to adjust the length of the inner sole assembly 22 (and correspondingly the entire shoe 10) in the direction A. A control feature 24 (more below) is positioned within guide slot 27 to facilitate the directional control of the shoe 10 as it is caused to expand or contract. Screw port plug 30 may be used to fit within screw port opening 31 to cover the screw 26 when the shoe is not being adjusted. To adjust the size of this embodiment, only the screw 26 needs to be turned. The size may be lengthened or shortened in fine increments corresponding to the pitch of the screw 26.
The front and rear outer soles 12, 16 may be made with conventional techniques and material to obtain popular shoe constructions. The front sole 12 may be made so that it is roughly only a front half of a shoe sole, and the rear outer sole 16 may be made so that it is only approximately a rear half of a sole. The rear outer sole, unlike conventional soles, is also made to define a screw port opening 31 and a generally rectangular recess 33 (see
Bellows segment 14 is made of a stretchable material, e.g., rubbers, press coated fabrics, etc., and fashioned (e.g., molded or extruded) as a bellows in a generally rectangular segment, which is then shaped into the U-shape, extending along the sides and bottom of the shoe 10 as shown in
A front adjustment member 42 may be attached to or integrated with front section 40. Front adjustment member 42 includes a generally flat section 43 and includes an elongated section 44 having a generally rectangularly shaped top portion 45 with wing-like extensions 46A and B. As will be explained below, wing-like extensions 46A and B are shaped to fit corresponding grooves 47A and B, within rear section 50. On the underside of elongated section 44 is a threaded screw-receiving section 48 that extends parallel to the longitudinal centerline of the front section 40, but which is offset from the top surface of front section 40. On the top side of the elongated section 44 is a control guide 24 protruding slightly upward and substantially on the longitudinal centerline of the front section 40. This guide 24 may be made in numerous ways, including for example, using rivets or integrating the shape into the design of member 42.
The rear section 50 is shaped on its underside to have a first hollowed segment 52 and a second hollow segment 54, more rearward than the first. The first segment 52 mates with flat section 43 of the front section 40, and the second segment 54 is shaped to receive the top portion 45 of the front section 40. Second hollow segment 54 includes longitudinal grooves 47A,B shaped to receive wing-like extensions 46A,B of front section 40. The rear section 50 also includes a screw section insert 56 for receiving and guiding screw 26 into alignment with screw-receiving section 48. The rear section 50 includes guide slot 27 along the longitudinal centerline of rear section 50 and through which the guide 24 is positioned once the inner assembly 22 is configured. As is readily apparent, for right-handed screws, once the screw 26 engages threads in hole 48, rotating screw 26 clockwise B will draw front section 40 closer to rear section 50, and vice-versa.
The latching mechanism 102 is operable between a first position (shown in
As shown in
The rotatable member 140 includes a member 142 that extends across a diameter of the rotatable portion 140 that can be manually grasped to turn the rotatable portion 140 and thereby turn the screw to adjust a dimension of the shoe. After the shoe is adjusted, a bar 144 is provided to cause the rotatable member 140 to resist movement around an axis defined by the screw 110. The bar 144 includes two projections, 148 and 149, each of which is inserted into a civility 146 in the rotatable member 140. When the projections 148 and 149 are in the cavities 146, the rotatable member 140 resists movement around an axis defined by the screw. When the bar 144 is removed from the cavities 146, the rotatable member 140 can be used to turn the screw.
In all of the embodiments described, the controls are easily accessible through the outer shell and not requiring access through the bottom portion of a sole. In some embodiments the adjustments may be made without any tools. All adjustments were relatively fine-grained, and size may be increased or decreased.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are described with particular reference to a hiking shoe design. Other embodiments entail other shoe constructions, including running shoes, biking shoes, ski boots, dress shoes, snow boarding boots, sandals, skates and the like. Depending on the shoe type, the inner assembly may be in the form of a last board, or a combination of a last board and a midsole. Likewise, depending on the shoe type, the materials used will be selected to provide a desired amount of flexibility or rigidity. Moreover, depending on the shoe design the outer shell may differ. In the case of a sandal, for example, one of the novel last boards may be used, but the outer shell would only have strapping. Other embodiments, such as a biking shoe, might have either netting, meshing, or no material where the bellows are shown, thus providing increased ventilation. In short, the outer shell design offers wide latitude though the bellows embodiments shown are believed novel and advantageous in some embodiments.
In other embodiments, the screw ports and conduits for rod members may be positioned in many other areas. Likewise, though the embodiments included the control mechanisms, such as the screws, screw receiving sections, gears and deformable teeth in a rear portion of the shoe, these features may be positioned at other portions as well.
Moreover, the above embodiments described a flexible segment made of a bellows-shaped material, but other embodiments may use other materials, e.g., stretchable nylon, netting or meshing, or it may be omitted. Likewise all of the control features described had external features to activate the control, but other embodiment (e.g., cost-reducing embodiments or embodiments where hiding the control is desirable) may place the control mechanisms on the interior of the outer shell.
While the invention has been described in connection with certain preferred embodiments, it will be understood that it is not intended to limit the invention to those particular embodiments. On the contrary, it is intended to cover all alternatives, modifications and equivalents as may be included in the appended claims. Some specific components, figures and types of materials are mentioned, but it is to be understood that such component values, dimensions and types of materials are, however, given as examples only and are not intended to limit the scope of this invention in any manner.
This application is a continuation-in-part of now U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/191,682, filed Jul. 9, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,817,116 which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/438,935 filed on Nov. 12, 1999, which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,438,872 on Aug. 27, 2002, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09438935 | Nov 1999 | US |
Child | 10191682 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10191682 | Jul 2002 | US |
Child | 10875973 | US |