Example fishing rods, structures of fishing rods, and methods of making fishing rods according to embodiments of the present invention are described with reference to the accompanying drawings, beginning with
For further explanation of transverse stiffness,
For further explanation,
The rod blank in this example is a sandwich-structured composite of a core (122) disposed between facings (124), with the core less dense than the facings. A ‘composite’ as the term is used here is a material made from two or more constituent materials with different physical properties. The constituent materials as combined produce a material with characteristics different from the individual components. The constituent components remain distinct within the composite. A sandwich-structured composite is a composite fabricated by attaching two thin but stiff skins or ‘facings’ to a lightweight but thicker core. The core material in embodiments can be lower strength material, but its higher thickness provides the sandwich composite with high bending stiffness and overall low density.
In rod blanks according to embodiments of the present invention, the constituent materials are facing materials and a less dense core that, when combined into a composite, enable design and construction of a rod blank that, by comparison with rods made with traditional materials, is lighter and more controllable in quantity of stiffness and direction of stiffness. The facings can, for example, be composed of thermoplastic or fiber reinforced plastic. Examples of thermoplastics that, among embodiments, can be used to form facings include poly(methyl methacrylate), polyamides including nylon, polybenzimidazole, polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride, fluoropolymers including polytetrafluoroethylene, and the like. A fiber-reinforced plastic is a composite material made of a polymer matrix reinforced with fibers. The polymer can be an epoxy, vinylester, polyester, or the like. The fibers can be glass, carbon, basalt or aramid, and can include natural fibers such as paper, wood, bamboo, cork, asbestos, and others as will occur to those of skill in the art. The core can be composed of many flexible materials less dense than the facing materials, including, for example, a composite with natural or synthetic fibers composed with thermoplastic or epoxy matrix including cork or bamboo in epoxy, as well as closed-cell foam, a reticulated foam, an open-cell foam such as foam rubber, a syntactic foam, a polyurethane foam, a polyvinyl chloride foam, Styrofoam™, a polyimide foam, a silicone foam, or other flexible synthetic foams as will occur to those of skill in the art.
For ease of explanation,
Rod blanks according to embodiments of the present invention are correctly described with at least a portion of the rod blank quadrilateral in cross section, but, again, this is for explanation, not limitation. There is nothing in the present description that requires a rod blank to be constructed entirely quadrilateral in cross section. It is perfectly within the scope of the present invention to construct, for example, a butt section of a rod blank quadrilateral in cross section with a tip that is round in cross section. It is perfectly within the scope of the present invention to construct, for example, a butt section of a rod blank quadrilateral in cross section with a mid-section hexagonal in cross section and a tip that is round in cross section. And so on, as will occur to those of skill in the art.
The facings (124) are generally quadrilateral in cross section with a cross-sectional width or base ‘b’ (123) that is larger than a cross-sectional height ‘h’ (125). The area (121) of each cross section of the rod blank along the rod in direction x therefore is a product of the base width and the height of the rod blank at each position x along the rod blank. The cross-sectional area of the rod blank is a function of the position x of a cross section along the rod blank, diminishing as x gets larger.
The rod blank is less stiff in a casting direction than transverse to the casting direction. Here the casting direction is indicated by the Y axis (145) with the top and bottom of the rod blank lying in planes parallel to the Z axis (147); it is an axis of the rod that at rest lies in the plane of the X axis that bends when a casting force is applied to the rod blank. For explanation of stiffness,
Representing the modulus of inertia of the facing material as Ef, the stiffness of the facing S as a function of x is given by:
This shows that stiffness in the transverse direction grows with the cube of the base width and only linearly with height, while the reverse is true for the casting direction. So long as the base is wider than the height, this kind of example facing contributes more stiffness transversely than in the casting direction. Readers will recognize from this explanation that such an example rod blank, with facings having bases wider than their heights, can be stiffer transversely than in the casting direction even in portions of the rod blank where the overall cross section is square.
For further explanation,
The example rod blank (104) of
In embodiments, example rod blanks constructed as described here can be characterized under static load in the casting direction by:
and transverse to the casting direction by:
In equations (5) and (6), y is the deflection (140) in the casting direction of a point on the rod blank with respect to a point x (146) on a central axis (143), and z is the deflection transverse to the casting direction of a point on the rod blank with respect to a point x (146) on the central axis (143). L (144) is the length of the rod blank, both when the rod blank is extended straight along the X axis (143) and when the rod blank is curved. P is a force (148) applied by a load weight (142) at the tip end of the rod. θ (162) is an angle between a vertical center plane (158) of the rod blank and each side (164,166) of the rod blank. φc (143) is an angle between a horizontal center plane (150) of the rod blank and the top (153) and bottom (155) of the core (122). And φf is an angle between the top (153) and bottom (155) of the core (122) and the outer surfaces (152, 154) of the facings (124).
In embodiments, example rod blanks constructed as described here can be characterized under dynamic load in the casting direction by:
and transverse to the casting direction by:
In equations (7) and (8), the characteristics x, y, z, L, P, θ, φc, and φf are as described above with reference to equations (5) and (6). xmax (144) is a point on the central axis (143) corresponding to a position of the rod tip (116) along the curvature of the rod blank while the rod is bending. xmax moves back and forth on the x axis as the rod tip moves when in motion resulting from application of a casting force. x is described as less than xmax because no deflection is pertinent beyond the position of the tip of the rod blank when bent. x is described as less than L because of apparent singularities in the values of y and z when x equals L. β is a damping coefficient, t is time, ω is damped frequency or ringing frequency for the fundamental mode of harmonic oscillation of the rod blank. Higher nodes or harmonics of oscillation are possible for the rod blank, but for casting of a fishing rod, it is the fundamental mode that is of interest. Ec is a modulus of elasticity of the core, and Ef is a modulus of elasticity of the facings.
Equation (6) describes oscillatory motion of the rod blank when subjected to a casting force. In the example of
For further explanation,
In contrast,
For further explanation of rod blank stiffness,
For further explanation of rod blank stiffness,
The plot in
Rod blank stiffness is a function of area moment of inertia which in turn is a function of rod blank taper. Some examples in this paper vary taper and therefore stiffness by varying cross-sectional area linearly with respect to angles defining it, θ horizontally and φ vertically, where θ and φ are non-zero constants. When θ and φ are constants, the top, bottom, and sides of a rod blank are straight; they are angled with respect to one another so that the rod blank tapers, but the exterior surfaces implementing the taper are straight. There is, however, no requirement within the scope of the present invention that the angles defining taper of a rod blank must have constant values. In at least some embodiments, the angles defining taper vary according to displacement along a rod blank, that is, evaluating displacement along the rod blank a the x value on a coordinate such as the one illustrated at reference (143) on
For further explanation,
Plot (191) is for h=h0, Φ=0, giving a straight reference line at the beginning height of 0.0008 meters or 0.8 mm. Plot (193) is for a constant φ equal to 0.0008 radians or about 0.05 degrees. That is, plot (193) graphs h=h0+x(tan φ0), where φ0 has a constant value of 0.0008, and the plot of h is therefore a straight line.
Plot (195) is for φ as a function of x, φ=0.0005(x). That is, plot (195) graphs h=h0+x(tan(0.0005(x))). Now the shape of the top of the facing is curved rather than straight. From x=0 until about half way down the facing, where x is about 1.5 or 1.6, the height h is smaller than the corresponding height of the facing depicted in plot (193) and afterwards larger proceeding toward the base of the facing. A rod blank constructed with a facing according to plot (195), by comparison with a rod blank built with a facing according to plot (193), all other things being equal, would be in the casting direction more flexible in the front half of the rod blank nearer the tip and stiffer in the back half of the rod blank toward the base.
Plot (197) is for φ as a function of x, φ=φ0+0.0005(x). That is, plot (197) graphs h=h0+x(tan(φ0+0.0005(x))), with φ0 set equal to 0.0008 radians. Again the shape of the top of the facing is curved rather than straight. This time, however, h is larger than the corresponding height of the facing depicted in plot (193), not just in the front half, but throughout the entire length of the facing. A rod blank constructed with a facing according to plot (197), by comparison with a rod blank built with a facing according to plot (193), all other things being equal, would be stiffer in the casting direction throughout the entire length of the rod blank.
For further explanation,
In the example of
The example method of
It will be understood from the foregoing description that modifications and changes may be made in various embodiments of the present invention without departing from its true spirit. The descriptions in this specification are for purposes of illustration only and are not to be construed in a limiting sense. The scope of the present invention is limited only by the language of the following claims.
This patent application claims the benefit and priority of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/509,764, filed Oct. 8, 2014, and entitled “Fishing Rod,” which in turn claims the benefit and priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/902,633, filed Nov. 11, 2013, and entitled “Flexible Flat Fishing Rod,” all of which are incorporated by reference in their entirety herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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330572 | Edwards | Nov 1885 | A |
476370 | Divine | Jun 1892 | A |
592613 | Kenyon | Oct 1897 | A |
638733 | Martin | Dec 1899 | A |
767982 | Francia | Aug 1904 | A |
1593957 | Shaver | Jul 1926 | A |
1961642 | Pirnie | Jun 1934 | A |
4582758 | Bruce | Apr 1986 | A |
20110031720 | Meyer | Feb 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170360019 A1 | Dec 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61902633 | Nov 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14509764 | Oct 2014 | US |
Child | 15695007 | US |