The present invention relates to a golf ball fabrication method, particularly to a fabrication method for a golf ball having a reflective effect and a long service life.
Golf has become a popular sport in recent years rather than an expensive activity in the past. This becomes obvious as a great number of golf courses have been set up in a wide scope of areas. While the golf has become more popular and widespread nowadays, golf clubs and golf balls also become fashionable products on the market, and competition is fierce. How to develop products with distinguished features is vital to increase market share.
A conventional white golf ball A (referring to
U.S. Pat. No. 6,949,595 B2 (referring to
Another U.S. Pat. No. 5,427,378 (referring to
The present invention provides a golf ball fabrication method, which can fabricate in a simple way a golf ball having a superior reflective effect and a long service life simultaneously, and which improves the reflective effect of the reflective layer of the golf ball and enhances the durability of the reflective layer, whereby the reflective layer is less likely to be damaged, and whereby the cycles-to-failure of the reflective layer is increased, wherefore are overcome the problems of poor reflectiveness and low cycles-to-failure of the conventional golf ball.
To achieve the abovementioned objective, the present invention proposes a golf ball fabrication method, which comprises Step a: providing a core; Step b: spraying a thin resin film on the surface of the core to form a conductive layer; Step c: vacuum-electroplating the surface of the core to form a glossy thin metallic film functioning as a reflective layer; and Step d: encapsulating the glossy thin metallic film with a transparent resin layer in an injection-molding technology to form a transparent outer layer of the golf ball.
The golf ball fabrication method of the present invention can provide benefits as follows:
The method can fabricate a golf ball having a superior reflective effect and a long service life simultaneously in a simple way, making the reflective layer completely parallel the outermost transparent layer and generate the best reflective effect.
Refer to
Step a: providing a core 20;
Step b: spraying a thin resin film 30 on the surface of the core 20 to form a conductive layer;
Step c: vacuum-electroplating the surface of the core 20 to form a glossy thin metallic film 40 functioning as a reflective layer; and
Step d: encapsulating the glossy thin metallic film 40 with a transparent resin layer 50 in an injection-molding technology to form a transparent outer layer of the golf ball 10.
Refer to
In Step b, the thin resin film 30 is made of a PU (polyurethane) resin and coated on the finely-roughened surface 21 of the core 20. The smooth surface of the core 20 and the release agent attached to the high-temperature high-pressure molds beforehand are the factors impairing the bonding of the core 20 and the thin resin film 30. Since the two factors are removed in the present invention, the bonding of the core 20 and the thin resin film 30 is enhanced.
In Step c, the glossy thin metallic film 40 is made of an aluminum alloy and vacuum-electroplated on the thin resin film 30. The glossy thin metallic film 40 cannot be directly vacuum-electroplated on the surface of the core 20. Therefore, the thin resin film 30 is sprayed on the surface of the core 20 to form a conductive layer. Thereby, the glossy thin metallic film 40 can be tightly bonded to the surface of the core 20. It is exactly the focus of the present invention: vacuum-electroplating the thin resin film 30 on the surface of the core 20 to make the glossy thin metallic film 40 tightly bonded to the surface of the core 20 and form a mirror-like reflective layer. While the golf ball 10 is hit, the tight bonding of the glossy thin metallic film 40 and the core 20 makes the glossy thin metallic film 40 less likely to peel off from the core 20. The glossy thin metallic film 40 should be very thin, limited to have a thickness of 1-30 μm. The glossy thin metallic film 40 is made of a metallic material. The glossy thin metallic film 40 having too large a thickness will make the golf ball 10 less likely to restore its original spherical shape after the golf ball 10 is hit by a golf club 60. In other words, the resilient force of the core 20 is hard to restore the deformed glossy thin metallic film 40 to its original shape after the golf ball 10 is hit by the golf club 60. Therefore, the glossy thin metallic film 40 must be very thin lest the golf ball 10 cannot be restored to its original spherical shape (as shown in
In one embodiment, a sputtering technology replaces the vacuum-electroplating technology and is used to form the thin glossy thin metallic film 40 in Step c. In such a caser, spraying the thin resin film 30 on the surface of the core 20 (Step b) is unnecessary. The glossy thin metallic film 40 formed in the sputtering technology has a thickness of 0.3-5 μm.
In Step d, the transparent resin layer 50 is made of an artificial resin and encapsulates the glossy thin metallic film 40 in an injection-molding technology. The transparent resin layer 50 has an outermost surface 51 parallel to the continuous reflective surface of the glossy thin metallic film 40, whereby the transparent resin layer 50 can protect the continuous reflective surface of the glossy thin metallic film 40. Thus, no matter whether a light beam incident to the reflective layer vertically or non-vertically, the light beam can be fully reflected without obstruction (as shown in
After the transparent resin layer 50 is formed in an injection-molding technology and demolded, the surface of the golf ball 10 has a parting line. The parting line is removed with a cutting tool or via grinding, and a thin transparent paint 53 is sprayed on the surface of the transparent resin layer 50 to form an outermost protection layer of the golf ball 10. In one embodiment, after the parting line 201 is removed, the transparent resin layer 50 is sandblasted to form a finely-roughened surface; text or patterns 52 are printed on the finely-roughened surface; then the thin transparent paint 53 is sprayed on the surface of the transparent resin layer 50 to form a protection layer (as shown in
In one embodiment, after vacuum-electroplating is completed in Step c, a colored thin transparent resin film 41 is sprayed on the glossy thin metallic film 40, as shown in
In one embodiment, the glossy thin metallic film 40 is encapsulated with a colored transparent resin layer 50 in Step d. Thus, the golf balls 10 can reflect light beams of different colors. In one embodiment, the transparent resin layer 50 of the golf ball 10 contains fluorescent powder 54. While the golf ball 10 is flying, the glossy thin metallic film 40 and the fluorescent powder 54 of the outermost transparent resin layer 50 reflect light simultaneously and glisten together.
In summary, the present invention proposes a simple method to fabricate a golf ball 10, providing an optimized reflective function for the golf ball 10, protecting the glossy thin metallic film 40, bonding the glossy thin metallic film 40 to the core 20 tightly, exempting the glossy thin metallic film 40 from peeling off from the hit golf ball 10, protecting the glossy thin metallic film 40 from fogging and damage, and prolonging the service life of the golf ball 10.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006-005465 | Jul 2006 | JP | national |
This is a continuation-in-part, and claims priority, from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/027,745 filed on Sep. 16, 2013, entitled “GOLF BALL” which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/535,312 filed on Aug. 4, 2009, entitled “GOLF BALL” which is also a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/529,526 filed on Sep. 29, 2006, entitled “GOLF BALL”, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference. This application claims the priority benefit of Application No. 2006-5465 filed in Japan on Jul. 7, 2006.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160114224 A1 | Apr 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14027745 | Sep 2013 | US |
Child | 14990485 | US | |
Parent | 12535312 | Aug 2009 | US |
Child | 14027745 | US | |
Parent | 11529526 | Sep 2006 | US |
Child | 12535312 | US |