The present invention relates to fitness apparatuses. More particularly, it relates to an improved Swiss ball or inflatable ball apparatus which includes a variable stabilizing base as well as variable resistance extension devices for working various muscle groups.
A Swiss ball or inflatable exercise ball is an inflatable exercise apparatus which is used primarily to promote core fitness as a way of, inter alia, increasing core (abdominal) strength and balance. The ball, being inherently unstable, is positioned between the user and a stable support surface such as a floor, the user typically having to use core muscles for stability as he performs various routines designed to isolate and target specific core muscles. The primary benefit of the exercise ball is to promote core strength and to exercise various muscle groups which are difficult or impossible to exercise using traditional weight training devices such as barbells, dumbbells, resistance training machines, and the like.
It is known to incorporate various devices in, on, or around an exercise ball to allow for the implementation of various core strengthening exercises, the resultant apparatuses including pull handles, grasping handles, and the like allowing for limited arm and leg exercises while positioned on the ball.
U.S. Design Pat. No. 503,756 issued to Chiang discloses one such device which has extended handles which apparently allow for flexibility training while positioned on the ball.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,344,487 issued to Carter et al. discloses another such device having a central bore through which a flexible, adjustable tension cord with attached grasping portions extends. U.S. Pub. App. No. 2008/0176727 issued to Heitzman discloses a frame or partial enclosure positioned around an exercise ball to restrict lateral movement of the ball while the user is positioned thereon.
The preceding devices suffer from serious drawbacks for a user attempting to achieve a full body workout or exercise regimen incorporating an exercise ball. First, the ball, being both compressible and laterally movable, presents a serious challenge to any user attempting to maintain a specific position while performing even the most routine exercises. Novice users, users engaging in physical therapy to recover from accidents or illnesses, or the elderly risk serious injury as a result from falls while attempting an exercise routine. Even more advanced users risk injury using the ball, which often requires a trainer to prevent injury from falls. The Heitzman device recognizes this problem but only provides a partial solution by providing some lateral restraint of the ball. Second, the user attempting to do a more strenuous exercise runs an even greater risk of injury both from falls and from the improper execution of specific routines as he/she attempts to maintain balance. Third, the prior art apparatuses must be used with an exercise ball. Fourth, the prior devices do not allow for varying the intensity of core building exercises. Finally, those apparatuses which do incorporate limited strength training peripherals do not allow for much variation in the applied resistance or for varying the positions from which the apparatus is used, and thus the user is limited to only a few upper body routines.
None of the above inventions and patents, taken either singly or in combination, is seen to describe the instant invention as claimed.
The present invention overcomes the disadvantages of the prior art by providing a fitness apparatus which allows for simultaneous strength training and core muscle building/strengthening, the apparatus incorporating an inflatable exercise ball. The apparatus includes a base which allows for selectively controlling the lateral movement and effective compressibility of the ball while performing various exercise routines. Also incorporated in the base are adjustable resistance training devices which allow for a variety of strength training routines, the resistance training devices allowing routines ranging from very light to sufficiently strenuous to challenge advanced users. The apparatus is collapsible and stowable, and may be used without the exercise ball to facilitate both strength/flexibility training, as well as aerobics.
Accordingly, it is a principal object of the invention to provide an improved fitness apparatus.
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved fitness apparatus which selectively incorporates an inflatable exercise ball.
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved fitness apparatus which allows for selectively restricting the lateral movement of an inflatable exercise ball.
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved fitness apparatus which allows for selectively restricting the effective compressibility of an inflatable exercise ball.
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved fitness apparatus which selectively incorporates an inflatable exercise ball in combination with adjustable, repositionable resistance training devices.
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved fitness apparatus which is reconfigurable to allow for core building, aerobics, and strength training.
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved fitness apparatus which is collapsible.
Finally, it is a general object of the invention to provide improved elements and arrangements thereof in an apparatus for the purposes described which is dependable and fully effective in accomplishing its intended purposes.
These and other objects of the present invention will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Various other objects, features, and attendant advantages of the present invention will become more fully appreciated as the same becomes better understood when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters designate the same or similar parts throughout the several views, and wherein:
Referring now to
Referring now particularly to
The apparatus 10 can be seen to comprise three main components. Referring now to
At the lowermost position, indicated as position 1 in
A key aspect of the invention is to allow for selectively restricting the lateral translation and effective compressibility of the ball 20 in order to allow for varying the intensity of the core workout. As previously mentioned, an exercise ball 20 effectively strengthens core muscles by forcing the user to balance herself on the ball while performing an exercise routine. The need to maintain balance is a direct result of the fact that the ball 20 is inherently unstable, rolling and compressing with even the slightest shift in the user's balance. Therefore, the less the ball 20 rolls and compresses, the less the user must “recruit” core muscles to maintain his position on the ball 20. Accordingly, with the handle 32, and therefore the adjustment mechanism 30 at the highest position, indicated by the numeral 2 in
Referring now particularly to
A removable, spring loaded “pin” or connecting member 64 extends laterally through a bore 65 formed in the housing 60 from the front face 66 to the rear face 62, the bore 65 terminating in an aperture 72. The pin 64 is sized for insertion into one of a series of apertures 68 formed in the track 70, the connecting member 64 in combination with angled rear face 62 and guide 63 serving to secure the housing 60 to the base 24. The apertures 68 are formed in circumferential spaced relation within the track 70 to allow for repositioning of the components 22 as necessary to facilitate a full range of motion for a particular exercise routine. Indicia such as opposing arrows 71 or the like may be imprinted on the housing 60 and at points along the upper edge of the base 24 corresponding to the positions of the apertures 68 to allow for proper user alignment. The tip of the pin 64 is a spring loaded extension 74 biased in the extended position. Rotation of the pin 64 by grasping and twisting tab 76 causes retraction of the extension 74 within aperture 72, disengaging the pin 64 from the aperture 68 allowing the component 22 to slide along track 70. Repositioning of the component 22 is accomplished by twisting tab 76 until the extension is disengaged from the aperture 68, sliding the component 22 along track 70 until arrow 71 imprinted thereon is aligned with a selected arrow 71 imprinted on the base 24, and releasing the tab 76 allowing the extension 74 to engage within the selected aperture 68. This type of pin or connecting member 64 is well known in the art. Guide member 63 has opposing flanges 77 which are sized for sliding engagement within grooves 78 formed in the track 70, the grooves 78 extending along the track 70 from the front end 79 of the track 70, terminating proximate the rear end 81. The housing 60 may be disengaged from the track 70 at the point 81 where the grooves 78 terminate.
An extension element 61 (see especially
Resistance members 82, of which there are may be one or more, but preferably at least two, may be spring reels 94 formed of a length of extension cable 96 terminating in pull ring 98, the cable 96 wrapped around a groove formed in the reel 94, which reels 94 are biased to retract the cable 96 by a coil spring as is well known in the art. The reels 94 may be conventional arbor reels encased in plastic cartridges, which may vary in effective resistance from about 5 pounds effective resistance up to 50 pounds or more. The resistance of the resistance member 82 is determined by, e.g., the spring constant of the spring (not shown) within the resistance member 82. The force/work required to extend the handle 80 to the limit of travel provided by the cable 96, can be varied from a few pounds up to 40 or 50 pounds or more. Accordingly, the resistance components 22 can be provided for users of all strength levels, with an array of light, medium, or heavy resistances available for each component 22. Thus, for a user requiring a light resistance, a component 22 having four resistance members 82 offering resistance of 5, 7.5, 10, and 15 pounds may be provided. For a user requiring a more strenuous workout, the resistance members 80 may provide a resistance of, for example, 20, 30, 40, and 50 pounds. Of course, more or fewer resistance members 82 may be provided within housing 60 than the four shown, with four being optimal as it affords the user some flexibility and keeps the size and weight of the component 22 at a minimum to allow for enhanced portability.
Each of the resistance members 82 are self contained cartridges 100 which slide into slots 102 provided in housing 60. The cartridges 100, which have a substantially rectangular geometry, with a sloped rearward portion corresponding to the slope of the base 24, may be made of hard plastic or other durable material. A pin 103, which may be a conventional pin having a tip with ball plungers as used with weight plates, extends horizontally through housing 60 and cartridges 100, preventing unintended disengagement of the cartridge 100 due to torque loading as an exercise routine is performed. Apertures 105, 107 formed in cartridges 100 and the lower end of the housing 60 respectively, are axially aligned when the cartridges 100 are properly seated within the housing 60. Both the housing 60 and cartridges 100 have forward grasping areas 97, 99 respectively to provide space for hand placement as the housing 60 rests primarily upon the floor which would otherwise interfere with manipulation of the housing 60 and cartridges 100. The clasps 92 appended to the connecting straps 84 allow for selective engagement with the pull ring 98 of the resistance member 82 to allow the user flexibility with respect to the effective resistance provided to each extension member 61. Thus, from the example above, the user may select cartridges 100 having a resistance of 5 and 7.5 pounds for an effective resistance of 12.5 pounds. With effective resistance member 82 resistances as discussed above then, the user may select from an effective resistance of between 5 and 37.5 pounds. If the cartridges 100 ranged from 10 to 50 pounds, the user could select from between 10 and 120 pounds effective resistance. Of course, the clasps 92 can be arranged to allow for simultaneous engagement with as many of the four pull rings 98 as desired. The apparatus 10 would be packaged with several cartridges 100 to allow for routines to be performed by users of all strength levels. The apparatus 10 thus provides for variable resistance training regimens by interchanging (replacing) cartridges 100 or by selectively attaching to cartridges 100 already in place.
The ball 20 may be a standard exercise ball, inflatable and made from a resilient material such as rubber, and commonly sold as a Swiss ball made of rubber or plastic and sufficiently durable to withstand several hundred pounds of pressure. The ball 20 would preferably have handles 120, the handles 120 preferably being of a unitary construction to reduce the possibility of unintended detachment, although any means of securely attaching the handles 120 may be employed. A ball 20 of about 26 inches in diameter may be used, but larger or smaller balls may be used, with the size of the base 24 made in accordance with the size of the ball 20. The handles 120 are spaced to allow the user to support himself thereon while performing the routines as described in more detail below. Specifically, the handles 120 should be spaced slightly more than shoulder width, allowing the user to extend their hands from their core for balance or additional support. Thus handles 120 should be placed on opposing sides of the upper half of the ball 20, the term upper half being relative with respect to the orientation of the ball 20 on the base 24 or a floor. Multiple handles 120 may also be positioned on the ball 20. With handles 120 on the ball 20 as shown and discussed, the ball 20 may be used in standalone mode, with the handles 120 used to facilitate certain routines such as leg extensions or any routine where the uses positions her hands on the ball 20.
As previously stated, the apparatus 10 may be used in several modes. In a first mode the user is positioned on the ball 20 performing various routines. In a second mode, the user may stand on the base with the platform 110 secured in position on the base 24 and perform resistance training routines. In a third mode, the user may use the platform 110 secured on the base 24 as an aerobic step. Referring again to
From the foregoing description, one skilled in the art can easily ascertain the essential characteristics of this invention and, without departing from the spirit and scope thereof, can make various changes and modifications of the invention to adapt it to various usages and conditions.
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the sole embodiment described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the following claims:
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