Not Applicable
The present invention relates to a hollow golf club head, and particularly a fairway wood-type golf club head, with a reinforced hosel that can be bent easily without damaging any portion of the golf club head.
Hosel bendability is a desirable feature for golf club heads because it allows the club heads to be customized to specific golfers. When a golf club is fitted to a particular golfer, the lie, loft, and/or face angle of the golf club may be adjusted by bending the hosel portion of the club.
Some prior art methods of achieving such bendability have focused on material properties. In these processes, hosels are created from a ductile material, softened via heat treatment (as disclosed in U.S. patent Ser. No. 10/486,223), or bent at high temperatures. Such processes are generally complex, require tedious trial and error processes, and must be performed before the golf club is finished cosmetically. Furthermore, when hosels are made from softer materials, it is harder to control their bendability properties. They will not have the desired robustness and simultaneous feedback necessary to support such bending processes, and will have varying compliance and resistance from the bending angle.
Other prior art means of obtaining bendability have focused on external geometric features that distribute bending stresses and control strain locations. Some examples include the notch designs disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,186,903 and 9,849,348. While these designs solve for some of the issues presented by the material properties processes, they do not substantially improve hosel bendability and their benefits are limited by aerodynamic and cosmetic considerations.
Therefore, there is a need for a golf club head with an improved, bendable hosel design.
One aspect of the present invention is a hollow golf club head with hosel reinforcement regions that are hidden from view of a golfer, which provides a more cosmetically appealing product with improved bendability characteristics that reduce the human effort involved in bending process. This hosel reinforcement region comprises ribs and thickness pads or scallops, the thickness of which may be optimized using AI.
Another aspect of the present invention is a golf club head comprising a body comprising a face section, a crown section, a sole section, a hosel, an interior cavity, a flange where the hosel blends into the crown section, face section, and sole section, a reinforcement region proximate the flange, and a volume of 50 to 300 cubic centimeters, at least one rib, and at least one scallop, wherein the hosel comprises a hosel bore with a hosel axis and a hosel embedment where the hosel extends into the interior cavity, wherein each of the at least one rib and the at least one scallop is confined to the reinforcement region, wherein, when a coordinate system is applied to the body and centered around the hosel axis, 0° and 180° positions extend parallel with the face section and 90° and 270° positions extend perpendicular to the face section, with the 270° position extending in a forward direction away from the face section, and wherein the at least one rib extends from the hosel embedment onto an inner surface of the crown section and is disposed between the 90° and 180° positions of the coordinate system.
In some embodiments, the reinforcement region may be a volcano-shaped region comprising all body surfaces contained within a cylinder with a diameter of 1 to 2.5 inches that is applied around the hosel axis at the flange. In other embodiments, the reinforcement region may be a volcano-shaped region located between the flange and the face section, sole section, and crown section. In other embodiments, the golf club head may comprise a face component, the face section may comprises a face opening, and the face component may be affixed to the body to cover the face opening. In a further embodiment, the face component may be selected from a group consisting of a face cup and a face insert. In still other embodiments, the golf club head may comprise a crown insert, the crown section and the sole section may define an upper opening, the crown section may comprise an attachment zone, and the crown insert may be affixed to the body to cover the upper opening. In a further embodiment, the crown insert may be composed of a non-metal material, the body may be composed of a metal material, and the crown insert may be affixed to the attachment zone with an adhesive material.
In other embodiments, the crown section may comprises thickened region that extends in a heel to toe direction, and the at least one rib may extend from the hosel embedment to the thickened region. In still other embodiments, the at least one scallop may have a thickness of 0.001 to 0.100 inch, and in other embodiments the at least one scallop may not be disposed between the 225° and 270° positions of the coordinate system. In still other embodiments, the at least one scallop may comprise a first scallop and a second scallop, and the first scallop may have a greater area than the second scallop. In a further embodiment, the first scallop may be aligned with one of the 0°, 90°, 180°, and 270° positions within the coordinate system, and the second scallop may be aligned with one of 45°, 135°, 225°, and 315° positions within the coordinate system.
In other embodiments, the at least one rib may extend over the at least one scallop. In another embodiment, the body may have an average thickness of approximately 0.032 inch. In yet another embodiment, each of the at least one rib and the at least one scallop may be spaced from and does not make contact with the face section. In any of the embodiments, the at least one rib may have an approximately triangular cross-sectional shape, a thickness of 0.030 to 0.090 inch, and/or a height that is greater than or equal to the depth of the hosel embedment. In any of the embodiments, the at least one rib may comprise three ribs.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is a fairway wood type golf club head comprising a metal body comprising a face section, a crown section, a sole section, an upper opening defined by the crown section and the sole section, a face opening in the face section, a hosel, an interior cavity, a flange where the hosel blends into the crown section, face section, and sole section, and a volcano-shaped reinforcement region proximate the flange, a composite crown insert affixed to the body at an attachment zone in the crown section to close the upper opening, a metal face component comprising a striking portion, the face component affixed to the body to cover the face opening, at least one rib, and at least one scallop, wherein the hosel comprises a hosel bore with a hosel axis and a hosel embedment where the hosel extends into the interior cavity, wherein each of the at least one rib and the at least one scallop is confined to the reinforcement region, wherein, when a coordinate system is applied to the body and centered around the hosel axis, 0° and 180° positions extend parallel with the face section and 90° and 270° positions extend perpendicular to the face section, with the 270° position extending in a forward direction away from the face section, wherein the at least one rib extends from the hosel embedment to the attachment zone and is disposed between the 90° and 180° positions of the coordinate system, and wherein the at least one scallop is aligned with one of the 0°, 90°, 180°, and 270° positions of the coordinate system.
Having briefly described the present invention, the above and further objects, features and advantages thereof will be recognized by those skilled in the pertinent art from the following detailed description of the invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The present invention is directed to a golf club head, and particularly a hollow fairway wood head, with stiffening structures disposed within a hosel reinforcement region proximate the flange where the hosel connects with the body. Though the preferred embodiment is a fairway wood, the structures disclosed herein may be applied to other hollow golf club heads, including drivers, hybrids, irons, and putters.
A preferred embodiment of this invention is shown in
The region where the hosel 50 attaches to or blends into the body 20 is known as the flange 60, and that is where the novel reinforcement region 70 is at least partially disposed. The reinforcement region 70 may be defined by drawing a 1.0 inch to 2.5 inch diameter cylinder around the hosel axis 55 at the flange 60 and applying the reinforcement structures 80 described below to the surfaces of the flange 60, hosel 50, and body 20 (particularly the crown region 22 and ribbon or edge region 24 of the body 20) that fall within that cylinder. Alternatively, the reinforcement region 70 may be defined by starting from the end of the constant diameter of the bottom of the hosel 50 (i.e., at the flange 60), and extending to (and being confined by) the surface 28 to which the crown insert 40 is attached at the crown region 22, the face region 23, and the edge region 24. The resulting reinforcement region 70 looks like a volcano when applied to a wood-type golf club head 10, as illustrated in
With reference to
The reinforcement structures 80 of the present invention comprise a plurality of ribs 82 and scallops or thickness pads 84, all of which are disposed within the “volcano” reinforcement region 70 and are applied to the IML of the golf club head 10. These structures 80 are spaced slightly from the face region 23 so as to avoid affecting the variable face thickness pattern on the striking portion 32 of the face cup 30, and do not extend to the sole 25 of the body beneath the hosel 50.
As shown in
The scallops 84 of the present invention are also shown in
Ribs 82 are also placed at the shared boundaries between scallops 84 for easier meshing and manufacturing, and may be applied on top of the scallops 84. There also is no material infill (and no reinforcement structures 80) between the hosel embedment 52 and the volcano reinforcement region 70. This configuration reduces or eliminates out-of-shape failure or buckling due to structural instability or paint cracking above the crown adhesive (where the crown insert 40 connects to the crown region 22 of the body 20) when the hosel 50 is bent toward the crown insert 40. If no crown insert 40 is used and the crown is integrally created (e.g., cast) with the body 20, this configuration helps reduce buckling.
From the foregoing it is believed that those skilled in the pertinent art will recognize the meritorious advancement of this invention and will readily understand that while the present invention has been described in association with a preferred embodiment thereof, and other embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings, numerous changes, modifications and substitutions of equivalents may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention which is intended to be unlimited by the foregoing except as may appear in the following appended claims. The section titles included herein also are not intended to be limiting. Therefore, the embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined in the following appended claims.
The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/227,036, filed on Jul. 29, 2021, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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63227036 | Jul 2021 | US |