Not Applicable
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to footwear, specifically to outsoles and their tread.
2. Discussion of Prior Art
Gaiters are conventionally attached to a boot by two lateral attachment points pulled downward by a cord that passes beneath the arch of the boot from one side of the gaiter to the other. Disadvantages include: that the cord can wear through with use; the portion of the cord beneath the outsole may build tip compacted snow to the point that one Must walk on one's arch, and lose traction; the cord at any point may catch on objects in the environment, such as branches; the inboard portion of the cord May catch a point a crampon or briefly snag a lug of the other boot.
Prior art shows unconventional gaiter attachment means to an upper of a footwear, such as: U.S. Pat. No. 6,477,788, to Chen, (2002), which shows a zipper and hook and loop means of attaching a gaiter to the top of the boot; and U.S. Pat. No. 4,856,207 to Datson, (1989), which shows a gaiter permanently fixed to the boot; and U.S. Pat. No. 4,604,816 to Davison, (1986), which shows a gaiter removably attached to a circumferential lip integral to the boot; U.S. Pat. No. 4,713,895 to Vallieres, (1987) shows a hook and pile means of attaching a gaiter to a shoe outsole. U.S. Pat. No. 4,596,387 to Roberts (1986) shows four means of attaching a loop of flexible material to an upper of a shoe, including hook and loop, rings, loops, and snaps. These designs require significant additions to the boot itself and their incumbent costs. Furthermore, many of these designs could snag on objects in the environment. U.S. Pat. No. 921,435 to Miller, (1909), shows a metal clip that allows the legging to rest on the top edge of the boot upper.
A set of unconventional, prior art, gaiter attachment means extending beneath the outsole are: U.S. Pat. No. 421,906, to Carts et al., (1890); and U.S. Pat. No. 2,717,387 to McMahan, (1955), and U.S. Pat. No. 5,613,250, to Bell, (1997); and U.S. Pat. No. 2,151,350 to Glowka, (1939), which show metal parts or a patch of fabric that hook or loop beneath the underside of footwear, and no special engagement surfaces on the footwear outsole. Similarly, U.S. Pat. No. 4,727,662 to ion (1988) shows a metal loop over a boot outsole. The metal parts and fabric could hook on objects and trip a wearer or fail by bending.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,151,350 to Glowka, (1939) also shows an outsole with a slot retaining a metal hook. It appears the hook might have a tendency to release from the slot.
Accordingly, several objects and advantages of the present invention are:
(a) to allow gaiters of lower cost due to fabrication of fewer attachment points;
(b) to allow attachment of a gaiter with little or no need to replace its cord due to wear;
(c) to greatly reduce the problems associated with buildup of compacted snow;
(d) to reduce the likelihood of a cord or lower edge of a gaiter on catching on objects;
(e) to reduce the likelihood of the inboard portion of a cord catching a crampon point.
Further advantages are to provide improvement in aesthetics, reduction of weight, and cost due to the inboard gaiter bottom edge being higher than on conventional gaiters; hence requiring less fabric, parts, and labor. There is some reduction of extremely unlikely accidents of the nature of a vertical nail catching a gaiter cord, or worse, a nail rising vertically, but bent nearly horizontal above that base, so as to neatly hook a cord to a surface. Still further objects and advantages will become apparent from a consideration of the ensuing description and drawings.
In accordance with the present invention: an outsole comprising traction protrusions forward and rearward of an arch, and a slot piercing the outboard side of the outsole that allows the retention of a cord which is in outboard-ward tension.
In the drawings, closely related figures have the same numeric prefix and a different alphabetic suffix.
In the description of the Figures: “top/bottom”, “front/rear”, “right/left” are colloquial instead of engineering terminology, therefore the right side of a boot is as viewed by a wearer, and “front” refers to the toe area. “longitudinal” refers to parallel to heel to toe direction, while “transverse” refers to perpendicular to longitudinal. “Inboard” refers to the left side of a right boot and the right side of a left boot. “Outboard” refers to the right side of a right boot and the left side of a left boot. “Interior” refers to more central, and farther from the sides, front, or rear sides of an outsole. “Exterior” refers to on, or towards a side, front, or rear of an outsole. “Axial” refers to the axis of a gaiter retaining slot, for example: the dimension along which a cord lays within the slot. In this device, the cord of a gaiter is jammed into a gap, void, trough, slot to attach the cord to the outsole and thereby the gaiter to the boot. The gap, void, trough, slot is defined by boundaries; either openings or boundaries defined by being contiguous with a solid surface, the rubber of the outsole. These boundaries are further classified as either mostly surrounding the length of cord or mostly surrounding the knot; the cord space boundary and knot space boundary, respectively. The term “gaiter-ward” means “along a length of a cord or slot, the direction most directly towards a gaiter”.
Surfaces on and near lug 19F more closely related to the functionality of this invention are: slot wall 50, slot ceiling 51, abutment surface 53, guard surface 54, thrust surface 55, knot recess surface 56. These can be divided into two groups: those forming a cord space, and those forming a knot space 60. The first two surfaces 50, 51 and their counterparts on lug 19R form the cord space, which is the upper portion of slot 15. The second four planar surfaces 53, 54, 55, 56 and their counterparts on lug 19R form knot space 60. The functionality surfaces of lug 19R being mirror-images of functionality surfaces of 19F through the cutting-plane 1-1.
Wall 50 is planar, transverse, and slopes 86° to horizontal, upward-frontward. Slot 15 juncture with surfaces 53, 55 is inboard slot terminus 48. Therefore vertical sections of cord slot 15 have trapezoidal shapes perpendicular to its axis. Inboard slot opening 48 is planar, longitudinal and slopes 30° to horizontal, upward-outboard-ward. Shown is the front half of ceiling 51, which is planar immediately outboard of the inboard opening of slot 15. Outboard of that planar area, ceiling 51 becomes curved around a longitudinal axis; the 30° slope increasing to tangential to the outboard side of outsole 14. Outboard-ward slot 15 widens and becomes a broad, shallow, near-vertical recess 57 into which cord 13 enters slot 15 from gaiter 11.
Operation
Installation starts with inserting cord 13 into the nock made by nock surfaces 52 and its counterpart on lug 19R and then pulling cord 13 outboard-ward until knot 58 abuts abutment surface 53 and thrust surface 55. With more tension; cord 13 will come to rest against ceiling 51. The 30° slope of ceiling 51 combined with the 75° slope of abutment surface 53 shown on
Surfaces shown in
Operation—
Insertion and removal of cord 23F, 23R into slot 25F, 25R is similar to operation of the system shown in
The axis of slot 95 is in a vertical, longitudinal plane. Slot 95 is parallel-sided and tapers from zero depth above to a few millimeters depth below at its juncture with cord end space 100. The top/front surface of slot 95 is a slot ceiling 104; which is planar, transverse and slopes 60° to horizontal, upward-rearward. Slot 95 is bounded laterally by a slot space wall 108 and its mirror-counterpart. Slot 95 terminates below at an abutment surface located immediately left of its inboard, abutment surface edge 103. The abutment surface is planar, transverse, four-sided, and slopes 45° to horizontal upward-forward. Thus it makes an obtuse angle of 105° with ceiling 104 when measured as is measured in
Cord end space ceiling 110 is coplanar with slot ceiling 104. Cord end space 100 is trapezoidal viewed along the slot axis with knot space ceiling 110 being the wider of the trapezoid's parallel edges and its rearward opening being the narrower of its two parallel edges. The sides of the trapezoidal shape are identical, mirror, planar, slot space walls 105. Dogs 106 are trapezoidal viewed in sections parallel to plane 4-4. Dog 106 and its mirror-counterpart partly cover cord end space 100, leaving a gap between them through which a cord may pass. Located between dogs 106 and the abutment surface, relief surface 111 flanks cord end space 100. Surface 111 slopes rearward away from cord end space 100. Downward of dogs 106 cord end space 100 is flanked by planar, nock surfaces 102.
Operation—
Insertion of cord 93 in slot 95 is done by placing end 115 in cord end space 100 between nock surfaces 102. This might be done by elasticity of gaiter 91 or by closing a frontal gaiter zipper after placing end 115 in cord end space 100. Tension upon cord 93 pulls end 115 under dogs 106 and against the abutment surface. Removal of cord 93 is accomplished by pulling more rearward than upward on the gaiter-ward portion of cord 93. This force extracts end 115 from cord end space 100 through the opening between relief surface 111 and its mirror-counterpart, with some flexure of dogs 106. Attachment point 107 retains cord 93 by use of an obtuse angle λ as well as interference by dogs 106.
Thus the reader will see that this invention provides a safer, more convenient, and higher performance means of attaching a gaiter to a boot. Rarely, the gaiter cord can catch on a foreign object, or ones own gear, and this invention reduces such occurrences. Commonly it occurs that on snow, or mud, that a gaiter cord gathers material and causes endless, uneven, uncomfortable walking, as well as shaking of the boot to dislodge the material. This invention lacks the source of these problems. Additionally, it saves a user time lost to replacing a worn cord. In the case of athletic shoes lacking an arch, there are at least three benefits: the present invention cannot be felt underfoot, and; the cord does not constantly abrade on the ground surface, and; the cord is not able to catch on objects underfoot.
While my above specification provides many specificities, many other embodiments are viable. The outsole 24 of
The outsole may be made of any sort of elastomeric compound. It may be variable in density, elasticity, flexibility, color, durability and friction coefficients. A knot space boundary and/or slot space boundary elastomer may be very soft to allow release of snagged objects, nails, etc. The juncture between knot space and cord space may be a region of reinforcement; such as more competent elastomer, less flexible elastomer, embedded metal or plastic.
Slot shape may vary considerably. A cord slot may close onto itself underneath a cord, thus precluding collection of snow, mud and stones. Such a close-lipped slot would only open upon insertion and removal of a cord. Facilitation of insertion may be by formation of the close-lipped slot at the top of an inverted V-shaped trough designed to spread the sides of that cord slot. A similar slot wall spreading structure may be formed below the slot ceiling. A slot may widen downward from its ceiling. A slot may have a cord-protective ridge of retaining protrusions just below the cord's location, with the slot widening below that. Slot orientation and location may vary considerably: a slot may be angled such that a cord from a gaiter enters the slot under the arch of the footwear, such as in the vertical, transverse surface just rear of the arch. A slot axis viewed from below may be curved or have an angle(s) in its length. Thusly, a knot space may be oriented along a different axis than some or all of the slot space. Measured in a horizontal plane and perpendicular to the slot axis; a slot may narrow at or near its junction with a knot space. A slot may have ridges, protrusions, lips, etc to retain the cord or knot. A slot space or knot space may be crossed by a slot, such that it may appear that the slot space is formed by more than two lugs or protrusions. A slot ceiling may be penetrated by a much more narrow slot, or by a cut in the outsole that does not open to leave a slot. A slot may have a V-shaped slot ceiling.
The attachment point of
A slot boundary may have twist or otherwise mate with a knots' shape and/or cords' shape. A slot may have double-butted ends or a wider midsection such that a plug may be placed to fill the slot when a gaiter is not used; and the plug may be retained by interference against downward as well as slot axial forces. A plug may be retained by hook and loop devices. A knot space and cord space may be entirely below the bottom surface of an outsole between lugs. The abutment surface may be convex towards the knot; such as dome, or a frustum with the inboard terminus of a slot bisecting that abutment surface. A knot space may have a wider space than required for the knot to allow the knot to be turned around more easily during extraction. This might be done by allowing more space beneath or above the knots' in-use location. A slot need not be approximately vertical, it may be horizontal, such as with one wall flush with the outsole surface between traction protrusions.
A gaiter attachment point may be designed for a cord of any shape or type construction. A cord could be substituted by metal cable, plastic strap, plastic bar, elastic cord, elastic fabric, webbing, etc. Any expanded end device may be substituted for a knot. For example; a cord may thicken as a substitute for a knot by use of an end splice, or additional fibers, alteration or replication of a weaving pattern, or melting, or addition of objects within its core or woven into its sheath or mantle. Thickening may be accomplished by: coiling, or braiding, or weaving, or laying of its core, or its cover, or its entirety. A gaiter attachment point may be designed for a cord with any system of knot, ferrule, or a ring, washer, or a swaged plastic end, or swaged metal end, or applied molten plastic end, or plastic parts that snap or clamp onto the end of a cord, or metal parts that snap or clamp onto the end of a cord, or thick whipping, or thick, close stitching similar to embroidery, or rubber wedge or other shaped stopper, or other part may be substituted for knot and for causing interference. A plastic, metal or rubber hook or “L” or “T” shape having a combination of such interferences protrusions may be used as a cord expanded end. An outsole may have a expansion space that approximately mates with a hook, “L” or “T” shaped cord expansion. For example, a expansion space may deepen or widen near its interface with a cord slot to mate with a “L” or hook shaped cord expansion. A expansion space may expand outside of a cord slot in two opposing directions to approximately mate with a “T” shaped cord expansion end oriented approximately in a horizontal plane, the T shaped cord end space may be narrow and high in outsole to preclude retention of stones. A slot cord may be generally round or approximately strap shaped. A slot cord may be a strip of fabric or piece of webbing. Such webbing-type cord may be used to fill a slot to prevent mud and ice buildup. Such webbing-type cord may be used to allow a narrower slot to be used. Such webbing-type cord may have a expanded end formed by folding and stitching of itself or some roughly spherical or approximately planar plastic, rubber or metal end. Such webbing-type cord may twist or fold within a slot, such as twist to form a rope-like shape, or fold to form a double thickness portion approximately filling a slot. A wholly or partially plastic strap may be used to form a slot cord. Such a strap may have a thickened end of approximately planar shape, roughly spherical shape or a combination of both. Such a strap may have holes for use in a buckle. A slot and cord may substitute hook and pile for knot interference. A cord may be whipped or stitched with two bends.
Retention lobes may extend over a cord end space from one side, or both sides of the cord end space. Retention lobes may extend far enough to contact each other to better retain a cord end. Retention lobes may extend across a cord end space and connect to form a continuous loop of material over the cord end space, possibly leaving a hole through which a cord end might be pulled through to remove the gaiter.
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921435 | Miller | May 1909 | A |
2151350 | Glowka | Mar 1939 | A |
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