Any and all U.S. patents, U.S. patent applications, and other documents, hard copy or electronic, cited or referred to in this application are incorporated herein by reference and made a part of this application.
The words “comprising,” “having,” “containing,” and “including,” and other forms thereof, are intended to be equivalent in meaning and be open ended in that an item or items following any one of these words is not meant to be an exhaustive listing of such item or items, or meant to be limited to only the listed item or items.
The word “rectangular” includes square.
The words “substantially” and “essentially” have equivalent meanings.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,378,832 discloses a manually operated golf club head cover comprising a pair of sections connected by a series of double action-spring loaded hinges along a longitudinal axis. A user needs both hands to open and close this head cover. Consequently, it is inconvenient to use.
Our golf club head cover and method of use has one or more of the features depicted in the embodiments discussed in the section entitled “DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF SOME ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS.” Our head cover is opened with one hand, is maintained open with this one hand, and, as the case may be, the golf club head is removed from or inserted into our opened head cover. Consequently, the user opens our head cover with one hand and, while open, inserts or removes the golf club head with the other hand. Our head cover automatically closes upon release of the user's grip. The claims that follow define our golf club head cover and method of use, distinguishing them from the prior art; however, without limiting the scope of our golf club head cover and method of use as expressed by these claims, in general terms, some, but not necessarily all, of their features are.
One, our golf club head cover comprises body including a pair of cover sections and a clip member connecting the cover sections. The clip member has a manually operable actuator mechanism such as handle elements that project from the connected cover sections. The body has an open condition enabling it to receive the head of a golf club and a closed condition substantially enclosing the club head therein. Each cover section has a predetermined configuration and each includes a perimeter. These perimeters abut when the body is in the closed condition. The cover sections may be connected to pivot about a longitudinal centerline along a backside of the body.
Two, the clip member has an open position and a closed position, and it includes a pair of arms hinged together and a spring element connected to the arms to normally bias the clip member into the closed position. Each arm includes a mounting element and a handle element. One cover section is connected to the mounting element of one arm and the other cover section is connected to the mounting element of the other arm. The handle elements may be positioned opposite each other along a portion of the abutting perimeters. They are oriented so that manually gripping and depressing the handle elements using only one hand overcomes the bias of the spring element. Depressing the handle elements moves the clip member to the open position by pivoting the hinged together arms to separate the cover sections to form the open condition of the body so long as the handle elements are manually depressed. Upon release of manually gripping the handle elements, the spring element moves the separated cover sections together to rejoin the cover sections along the perimeters to form the closed condition of the body. In other words the chip member functions as a single action hinge, namely, only urges the hinge into a closed condition. In one embodiment, only a single clip member is used and it may be positioned substantially centrally a longitudinal centerline in a backside of the enclosure.
Three, each cover section may include a frame covered by a flexible sheet material or each cover section may be molded from a plastic and are substantially rigid. In the case of the sheet covered frame, the frame forms a substantial portion of the perimeter of its corresponding cover section. In either case, the perimeters of each cover section may include a mating segment that mates with a complementary mating segment of the other cover section. For example, in one frame its perimeter has a male cross section, and in the other frame its perimeter has a female cross section, allowing the two cover sections to come together in alignment upon closure.
Four, the body has a topside, and one cover section may have along a segment of its perimeter in the topside a laterally projecting portion. The other cover section may have along a segment of its perimeter in the topside a recess portion that is aligned with and that receives the laterally projecting portion when the body is in the closed condition. The laterally projecting portion and the recess portion may each be substantially semi-circular shaped and they may have a common center when the body is in the closed condition.
Five, our method of covering and uncovering the head of a golf club employs our golf club head cover, which forms an enclosure by the mating of the pair of complementary cover sections. Importantly, the pair of handle elements are accessible, for example, they may be along the longitudinal centerline in a backside of the enclosure, and adapted to be gripped between the thumb and one or more fingers by a user and depressed towards each other to move the cover sections so they pivot and spread apart into an open condition. According to our method, the user with one hand grips the handle elements and depresses them so the enclosure is in the open condition, maintains the grip on the handle elements to keep the enclosure in the open condition while placing the head of a golf club between the spread apart cover sections, or removing it. While in the open condition, with the head of a golf club between the spread apart cover sections, or removed therefrom, the user releases the grip on the handle elements so the cover sections come together. This opening and closing is done with only one hand of the user, while the user with the other hand places or removes the head of the club into or from, as the case may be, our opened head cover.
These features are not listed in any rank order nor is this list intended to be exhaustive.
Some embodiments of our golf club head cover and method of use are discussed in detail in connection with the accompanying drawing, which is for illustrative purposes only. This drawing includes the following figures (Figs.), with like numerals indicating like parts:
As disclosed herein, our golf club head cover may have several different embodiments. The numeral 10 designates the embodiment of our golf club head cover shown in
All the embodiments include a body B comprising a pair of cover sections S1 and S2 and a manually actuated spring-biased clip member CM that normally holds the cover sections in a closed condition (
As illustrated in
The cover section S1 and S2 are substantially mirror images of each other except for their central top segments. As best shown in
The frames F1 and F2 are components that respectively form the perimeters P1 and P2 of the cover sections S1 and S2 of this embodiment cover 10. These frames F1 and F2 may be molded from a plastic and each includes a rear portion 12a and 12b, respectively, forming a mounting element of an arm of the hinge 12. These arm portions 12a and 12b are hinged together substantially along the centerline CL in the backside 18b of the cover 10 and a leaf spring element 30a is connected to the arms in a manner that normally biases the clip member CM into a closed position (
The handle elements H1 and H2 project from the connected cover sections S1 and S2 and are positioned opposite each other along a portion of the abutting perimeters P1 and P2. These handle elements H1 and H2 are oriented so that manually gripping and depressing them using only one hand overcomes the bias of the leaf spring element 30a to move the clip member CM to the open position by pivoting the hinged together arm portions 12a and 12b to separate the cover sections S1 and S2. This produces the open condition of the body B, which is maintained so long as the handle elements H1 and H2 are manually depressed. Upon release of manually gripping the handle elements H1 and H2 the leaf spring element 30a moves the partially separated cover sections S1 and S2 together to rejoin them along essentially the entire perimeters P1 and P2 to form the closed condition of the body B. As shown in
The embodiment of our golf club head cover designated by the numeral 10a depicts a body B′ where its topside 18c′ has a circular configuration and the embodiment of our golf club head cover designated by the numeral 10b depicts a body B″ where its topside 18c″ has a substantially rectangular configuration. Otherwise these cover members 10a and 10b are essentially the same as the cover member 10.
The embodiment of our golf club head cover designated by the numeral 10c depicts a cover member CM′ having its cover sections S1′ and S2′ each molded from a plastic. The cover sections S1′ and S2′ are substantially rigid and the hinge H has a coiled spring 30b oriented lengthwise along the centerline CL of the backside 18b.
All the embodiments of our golf head cover member as discussed above are used in the same way, namely, a user inserts or removes the golf club head H from between the separated cover sections using only one hand to hold the cover member in the open position. The handle elements H1 and H2 projecting outward from the backside 18b of the body B are easily accessible by the user and are adapted to be gripped between the user's thumb and one or more fingers. The user grips the handle elements H1 and H2 with one hand as depicted in
The above presents a description of the best mode we contemplate of carrying out our golf club head cover, and of the manner and process of making and using it, in such full, clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the art to which it pertains to make and use our golf club head cover. Our golf club head cover is, however, susceptible to modifications and alternate constructions from the illustrative embodiments discussed above which are fully equivalent. Consequently, it is not the intention to limit our golf club head cover to the particular embodiments disclosed. On the contrary, our intention is to cover all modifications and alternate constructions coming within the spirit and scope of our golf club head cover as generally expressed by the following claims, which particularly point out and distinctly claim the subject matter of our invention: