The invention relates generally to ball striking devices, such as golf clubs and golf club heads, utilizing features for transfer of energy and/or momentum. Certain aspects of this invention relate to golf club heads having a rear member configured to transfer energy and/or momentum to the face upon an impact on the face.
Golf clubs and many other ball striking devices can encounter undesirable effects when the ball being struck impacts the ball striking head away from the optimum location, which may be referred to as an “off-center impact.” In a golf club head, this optimum location is, in many cases, aligned laterally and/or vertically with the center of gravity (CG) of the head. Even slightly off-center impacts can sometimes significantly affect the performance of the head, and can result in reduced velocity and/or energy transfer to the ball, inconsistent ball flight direction and/or spin caused by twisting of the head, increased vibration that can produce undesirable sound and/or feel, and other undesirable effects. Technologies that can reduce or eliminate some or all of these undesirable effects could have great usefulness in golf club heads and other ball striking devices.
The present devices and methods are provided to address at least some of the problems discussed above and other problems, and to provide advantages and aspects not provided by prior ball striking devices of this type. A full discussion of the features and advantages of the present invention is deferred to the following detailed description, which proceeds with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The following presents a general summary of aspects of the invention in order to provide a basic understanding of the invention. This summary is not an extensive overview of the invention. It is not intended to identify key or critical elements of the invention or to delineate the scope of the invention. The following summary merely presents some concepts of the invention in a general form as a prelude to the more detailed description provided below.
Aspects of the disclosure relate to ball striking devices, such as golf clubs, with a head that includes a face member including a face having a striking surface configured for striking a ball and a rear side located behind the face, a rear member connected to the rear side of the face member and having a front surface confronting the rear side of the face member, and a resilient material separating the rear member from the face member, such that the resilient member engages the rear member and the face member and is configured to transfer momentum between the face member and the rear member. The resilient material has a vertical portion engaging the front surface of the rear member, and wherein the vertical portion of the resilient material has a thickness that is larger proximate a heel side and a toe side of the head and smaller proximate a centerline of the head.
According to one aspect, the device further includes an engagement member engaging the face member and the rear member, where the engagement member forms a sole point of rigid engagement between the face member and the rear member. The engagement member may include a pin that is fixedly engaged with one of the face member and the rear member and is non-fixedly engaged with the other of the face member and the rear member. The engagement member may also form a joint between the face member and the rear member.
According to another aspect, the device may further include a wall extending rearward from the rear side of the face member, where the rear member is positioned below the wall, such that the wall covers at least a portion of the rear member, and the rear member forms at least a portion of a sole of the golf club head. The resilient material may also have a horizontal portion positioned between the wall and the rear member and engaging a top surface of the rear member and an underside of the wall.
According to a further aspect, the front surface of the rear member includes a lip that extends forward from the rear member, and the face member includes an indent receiving the lip, and wherein the vertical portion of the resilient material has a jog portion positioned between the lip and the indent. The thickness of the vertical portion may be smaller at the jog portion and larger proximate the heel side and the toe side.
According to yet another aspect, the thickness of the vertical portion of the resilient material is at least two times greater at the heel side and the toe side than the thickness proximate the centerline of the head.
Additional aspects of the disclosure relate to ball striking devices, such as golf clubs, with a head that includes a face member including a face having a striking surface configured for striking a ball and a rear side located behind the face, a rear member connected to the rear side of the face member and having a front surface confronting the rear side of the face member, and a resilient material separating the rear member from the face member, such that the resilient member engages the rear member and the face member and is configured to transfer momentum between the face member and the rear member. The device further includes an engagement member engaging the face member and the rear member, where the engagement member forms a sole point of rigid engagement between the face member and the rear member. The resilient material has a thinned portion located proximate the engagement member, the thinned portion having a thickness that is reduced relative to other portions of the resilient material.
According to one aspect, the engagement member includes a pin that is fixedly engaged with one of the face member and the rear member and is non-fixedly engaged with another of the face member and the rear member.
According to another aspect, the engagement member forms a joint between the face member and the rear member.
According to a further aspect, the device also includes a wall extending rearward from the rear side of the face member, where the rear member is positioned below the wall, such that the wall covers at least a portion of the rear member, and the rear member forms at least a portion of a sole of the golf club head. The resilient material may further be positioned between the wall and the rear member and may engage a top surface of the rear member and an underside of the wall.
According to yet another aspect, the engagement member is laterally aligned with a center of gravity of the rear member.
According to a still further aspect, the thickness of the other portions of the resilient material is at least two times greater than the thickness of the thinned portion.
Further aspects of the disclosure relate to ball striking devices, such as golf clubs, with a head that includes a face member including a face having a striking surface configured for striking a ball and a rear side located behind the face, a rear member connected to the rear side of the face member and having a front surface confronting the rear side of the face member and heel and toe ends, and a resilient material separating the rear member from the face member, such that the resilient member engages the rear member and the face member and is configured to transfer momentum between the face member and the rear member. The resilient material has a periphery that is substantially flush with the face member and the rear member along a portion of the periphery, and the periphery of the resilient material is recessed from the face member and the rear member at the heel end and the toe end of the rear member, such that empty spaces exist between the heel and toe ends of the rear member and the rear side of the face member.
According to one aspect, the periphery of the resilient material is substantially flush with the face member and the rear member along a majority of the periphery.
According to another aspect, the periphery of the resilient material is substantially flush with the face member and the rear member along a bottom edge of the periphery.
According to a further aspect, the device includes an engagement member engaging the face member and the rear member, where the engagement member forms a sole point of rigid engagement between the face member and the rear member. The engagement member may include a pin that is fixedly engaged with one of the face member and the rear member and is non-fixedly engaged with the other of the face member and the rear member. The engagement member may form a joint between the face member and the rear member.
According to yet another aspect, the device includes a wall extending rearward from the rear side of the face member, where the rear member is positioned below the wall, such that the wall covers at least a portion of the rear member, and the rear member forms at least a portion of a sole of the golf club head.
Still further aspects of the disclosure relate to ball striking devices, such as golf clubs, with a head that includes a face member including a face having a striking surface configured for striking a ball and a rear side located behind the face, a rear member connected to the rear side of the face member and having a front surface confronting the rear side of the face member, and a resilient material separating the rear member from the face member, such that the resilient member engages the rear member and the face member and is configured to transfer momentum between the face member and the rear member. The face member has a first weight and the rear member has a second weight, and wherein a ratio of the first weight to the second weight is between 3.0:1 and 1.2:1.
According to one aspect, the device includes an engagement member engaging the face member and the rear member, where the engagement member forms a sole point of rigid engagement between the face member and the rear member.
According to another aspect, the device includes a wall extending rearward from the rear side of the face member, where the rear member is positioned below the wall, such that the wall covers at least a portion of the rear member, and the rear member forms at least a portion of a sole of the golf club head.
Yet other aspects of the disclosure relate to ball striking devices, such as golf clubs, with a head that includes a face member including a face having a striking surface configured for striking a ball and a rear side located behind the face, a rear member connected to the rear side of the face member and having a front surface confronting the rear side of the face member and heel and toe ends, and a resilient material separating the rear member from the face member, such that the resilient member engages the rear member and the face member and is configured to transfer momentum between the face member and the rear member. The rear member has a projection forming at least a portion of the front surface, and the projection extends into the cavity and is at least partially received within the cavity. The projection is recessed inwardly from a periphery of the rear member around at least a portion of the periphery. At least a portion of the resilient material is positioned in the cavity between the front surface of the rear member and the rear side of the face member, such that the resilient material engages the projection and an inner surface of the cavity.
According to one aspect, the projection is recessed inwardly from the periphery of the rear member at a heel end and a toe end of the rear member.
According to another aspect, the device includes an engagement member engaging the face member and the rear member, where the engagement member forms a sole point of rigid engagement between the face member and the rear member. The engagement member may include a pin that is fixedly engaged with one of the face member and the rear member and is non-fixedly engaged with the other of the face member and the rear member. The engagement member may also form a joint between the face member and the rear member.
According to a further aspect, the device includes a wall extending rearward from the rear side of the face member, where the rear member is positioned below the wall, such that the wall covers at least a portion of the rear member, and the rear member forms at least a portion of a sole of the golf club head.
Other aspects of the disclosure relate to ball striking devices, such as golf clubs, with a head that includes a face member including a face having a striking surface configured for striking a ball and a rear side located behind the face, a rear member connected to the rear side of the face member and having a front surface confronting the rear side of the face member and heel and toe ends, and a resilient material separating the rear member from the face member, such that the resilient member engages the rear member and the face member and is configured to transfer momentum between the face member and the rear member. The rear side of the face member has walls extending rearwardly and defining a cavity on the rear side, where the walls include a top wall at least partially defining a top of the cavity and side walls at least partially defining heel and toe portions of the cavity. The rear member is at least partially received within the cavity, where the rear member is positioned below the top wall, such that the top wall at least partially covers a top side of the rear member, and the side walls at least partially cover heel and toe sides of the rear member, and where the side walls extend around the heel and toe sides of the rear member and cover a portion of a bottom side of the rear member. At least a portion of the resilient material is positioned in the cavity between the front surface of the rear member and the rear side of the face member.
According to one aspect, the bottom side of the rear member forms at least a portion of a sole of the golf club head.
According to another aspect, the device includes an engagement member engaging the face member and the rear member, where the engagement member forms a sole point of rigid engagement between the face member and the rear member. The engagement member may include a pin that is fixedly engaged with one of the face member and the rear member and is non-fixedly engaged with the other of the face member and the rear member. The engagement member may also form a joint between the face member and the rear member.
Still other aspects of the disclosure relate to a golf club or other ball striking device including a head or other ball striking device as described above and a shaft connected to the head/device and configured for gripping by a user. The shaft may be connected to the face member of the head. Aspects of the disclosure relate to a set of golf clubs including at least one golf club as described above. Yet additional aspects of the disclosure relate to a method for manufacturing a ball striking device as described above, including connecting a rear member and/or a resilient material to a face member as described above.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description taken in conjunction with the attached drawings.
To allow for a more full understanding of the present invention, it will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
In the following description of various example structures according to the invention, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which form a part hereof, and in which are shown by way of illustration various example devices, systems, and environments in which aspects of the invention may be practiced. It is to be understood that other specific arrangements of parts, example devices, systems, and environments may be utilized and structural and functional modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention. Also, while the terms “top,” “bottom,” “front,” “back,” “side,” “rear,” “primary,” “secondary,” and the like may be used in this specification to describe various example features and elements of the invention, these terms are used herein as a matter of convenience, e.g., based on the example orientations shown in the figures or the orientation during typical use. Additionally, the term “plurality,” as used herein, indicates any number greater than one, either disjunctively or conjunctively, as necessary, up to an infinite number. Nothing in this specification should be construed as requiring a specific three dimensional orientation of structures in order to fall within the scope of this invention. Also, the reader is advised that the attached drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale.
The following terms are used in this specification, and unless otherwise noted or clear from the context, these terms have the meanings provided below.
“Ball striking device” means any device constructed and designed to strike a ball or other similar objects (such as a hockey puck). In addition to generically encompassing “ball striking heads,” which are described in more detail below, examples of “ball striking devices” include, but are not limited to: golf clubs, putters, croquet mallets, polo mallets, baseball or softball bats, cricket bats, tennis rackets, badminton rackets, field hockey sticks, ice hockey sticks, and the like.
“Ball striking head” means the portion of a “ball striking device” that includes and is located immediately adjacent (optionally surrounding) the portion of the ball striking device designed to contact the ball (or other object) in use. In some examples, such as many golf clubs and putters, the ball striking head may be a separate and independent entity from any shaft or handle member, and it may be attached to the shaft or handle in some manner.
The term “shaft” includes the portion of a ball striking device (if any) that the user holds during a swing of a ball striking device.
“Integral joining technique” means a technique for joining two pieces so that the two pieces effectively become a single, integral piece, including, but not limited to, irreversible joining techniques, such as adhesively joining, cementing, welding, brazing, soldering, or the like. In many bonds made by “integral joining techniques,” separation of the joined pieces cannot be accomplished without structural damage thereto.
“Approximately” or “about” means within a range of +/−10% of the nominal value modified by such term.
In general, aspects of this invention relate to ball striking devices, such as golf club heads, golf clubs, putter heads, putters, and the like. Such ball striking devices, according to at least some examples of the invention, may include a ball striking head and a ball striking surface. In the case of a golf club, the ball striking surface may constitute a substantially flat surface on one face of the ball striking head, although some curvature may be provided (e.g., “bulge” or “roll” characteristics). Some more specific aspects described herein relate to putters and putter heads, although aspects described herein may also be utilized in wood-type golf clubs and golf club heads, including drivers, fairway woods, hybrid-type clubs, as well as iron-type golf clubs, other types of golf clubs or other ball striking devices, if desired.
According to various aspects of this invention, the ball striking device may be formed of one or more of a variety of materials, such as metals (including metal alloys), ceramics, polymers, composites, fiber-reinforced composites, and wood, and the devices may be formed in one of a variety of configurations, without departing from the scope of the invention. In one embodiment, some or all components of the head, including the face and at least a portion of the body of the head, are made of metal materials. It is understood that the head also may contain components made of several different materials. Additionally, the components may be formed by various forming methods. For example, metal components (such as titanium, aluminum, titanium alloys, aluminum alloys, steels (such as stainless steels), and the like) may be formed by forging, molding, casting, stamping, machining, and/or other known techniques. In another example, polymer and/or composite components, such as carbon fiber-polymer composites, can be manufactured by a variety of composite processing techniques, such as prepreg processing, powder-based techniques, mold infiltration, injection molding, pouring, and/or other known techniques.
The various figures in this application illustrate examples of ball striking devices and portions thereof according to this invention. When the same reference number appears in more than one drawing, that reference number is used consistently in this specification and the drawings to refer to the same or similar parts throughout.
At least some examples of ball striking devices according to this invention relate to golf club head structures, including heads for putter-type golf clubs. Such devices may include a one-piece construction or a multiple-piece construction. An example structure of ball striking devices according to this invention will be described in detail below in conjunction with
For reference, the head 102 generally has a golf club head body 107 with a top 116, a bottom or sole 118, a heel 120 (also called a heel side or heel end) proximate the hosel 109, a toe 122 (also called a toe side or toe end) distal from the hosel 109, a front side 124, and a back or rear side 126. The shape and design of the head 102 may be partially dictated by the intended use of the device 100. In the club 100 shown in
The ball striking device 100 may include a shaft 104 connected to or otherwise engaged with the ball striking head 102, as shown in
The face 112 is located at the front 124 of the face member 128, and has a striking surface or ball striking surface 110 located thereon. The ball striking surface 110 is configured to face a ball in use (not shown), and is adapted to strike the ball when the device 100 is set in motion, such as by swinging. As shown, the ball striking surface 110 occupies most of the face 112. The face 112 may include some curvature in the top to bottom and/or heel to toe directions (e.g., bulge and roll characteristics), and may also include functional face grooves 115, as is known and is conventional in the art. In other embodiments, the surface 110 may occupy a different proportion of the face 112, or the face member 128 may have multiple ball striking surfaces 110 thereon. In the embodiment shown in
It is understood that the face member 128 and/or the hosel 109 can be formed as a single piece or as separate pieces that are joined together. In the embodiment shown in
The face member 128 in the embodiment of
The rearwardly-extending portion 161 in the embodiment of
The side walls 167B in the embodiment of
The cavity 155 defined by the face member 128 in the embodiment of
The head 102 of the ball striking device 100 has a rear member 130 (which may also be referred to as a “weight member”) connected to the face member 128 at the rear side 127 of the face member 128. In general, the rear member 130 is configured to transfer energy and/or momentum to the face member 128 upon impact of the ball on the striking surface 110, including an off-center impact. The rear member 130 has a front surface 135 that faces and confronts the rear surface 131 of the face member 128, and in the embodiment of
The rear member 130 may have various different dimensions and structural properties in various embodiments. In the embodiment shown in
Further, the rear member 130 may be positioned so that the CG of the rear member 130 is substantially aligned with the CG of the face member 128. In one embodiment, the CGs of the rear member 130 and the face member 128 are laterally aligned, and these respective CGs may additionally or alternately be vertically aligned in another embodiment. In one embodiment, the face member 128 may have alignment indicia (not shown) aligned with the CG of the face member 128 and/or the CG of the rear member 130, however this indicia may be absent or differently located in other embodiments.
The rear member 130 may have varying sizes in different embodiments. For example, in one embodiment, the rear member 130 may make up about 25% or more of the total weight of the head 102, or about 25-45% of the total weight of the head 102 in another embodiment. In an example embodiment, the total weight of the head 102 may be about 340 g, with the rear member 130 having a weight of about 100 g. The relative weight of the rear member 130 may also be expressed as a ratio with the weight of the face member 128. For example, in one embodiment, the ratio of the weight of the face member 128 (including the hosel 109) to the weight of the rear member 130 (including any weights 134) may be less than about 3:1, or between about 3:1 and about 1.2:1, or about 2.4:1.
The rear member 130 in the embodiment of
The rear member 130 may be connected to the face member 128 in a number of different configurations that permit energy and/or momentum transfer between the rear member 130 and the face member 128, several of which are described below and shown in the FIGS. In other embodiments, the rear member 130 may be differently configured, and/or the head 102 may contain multiple rear members 130. For example, the rear member 130 as shown in
In the embodiment of
The properties of the resilient material, such as hardness and/or resiliency, may be designed for use in a specific configuration. For example, the hardness and/or resiliency of the resilient material 140 may be designed to ensure that an appropriate rebound or reaction force is transferred to the face, which may be influenced by parameters such as material thickness, mass of various components (including the rear member 130 and/or the face member 128), intended use of the head 102, and others. The hardness and resiliency may be achieved through techniques such as material selection and any of a variety of treatments performed on the material that can affect the hardness or resiliency of the resilient material, as discussed elsewhere herein. The hardness and thickness of the resilient material may be tuned to the weight of a particular rear member 130. For example, heavier weights may require harder resilient material 140, and lighter weights may require softer resilient material 140. Using a thinner resilient material 140 may also necessitate the use of a softer material, and a thicker resilient material 140 may be usable with harder materials. In a configuration where the resilient material 140 is a polyurethane-based material having a hardness of approximately 65 Shore A, the resilient material 140 may have a thickness between the rear member 130 and the rear surface 131 of the face member 128 of approximately 1.0 mm to approximately 2.5 mm in one embodiment, or approximately 0.5 mm to approximately 4.0 mm in another embodiment.
In the embodiment shown in
The resilient member 145 and/or the resilient material 140 may be formed of multiple components as well, including components having different hardnesses in different regions, including different hardness distributions. For example, the resilient member 145 and/or the resilient material 140 may be formed of an exterior shell that has a different (higher or lower) hardness than the interior, such as through being made of a different material (e.g. through co-molding) and/or being treated using a technique to achieve a different hardness. Examples of techniques for achieving a shell with a different hardness include plasma or corona treatment, adhesively bonding a film to the exterior, coating the exterior (such as by spraying or dipping). If a cast or other polyurethane-based material is used, the resilient material 140 may have a thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) film bonded to the exterior, a higher or lower hardness polyurethane coating applied by spraying or dipping, or another polymer coating (e.g. a thermoset polymer), which may be applied, for example, by dipping the resilient material into an appropriate polymer solution with an appropriate solvent. Additionally, the resilient member 145 and/or the resilient material 140 may have different hardness or compressibility in different lateral or vertical portions thereof, which can create different energy and/or momentum transfer effects in different locations. For example, the resilient member 145 and/or the resilient material 140 may have a higher or lower hardness in proximate the heel 120 and/or the toe 122, which may be achieved by techniques described herein, such as treatments or use of different materials and/or separate pieces. In this configuration, the hardness of the resilient material 140 may be customized for use by a particular golfer or a particular golfer's hitting pattern. Similarly, an asymmetrical resilient member 145 may also be used to create different energy and/or momentum transfer effects, by providing a larger or smaller amount of material at specific portions of the face member 128. Such an asymmetrical resilient member 145 may also be used to provide customizability. A variable-hardness or asymmetrical resilient member 145 may also be used in conjunction with an offset connection point, as discussed below, for further customizability. Other embodiments described herein may also employ a resilient material 140 that has a variable hardness or asymmetrical features. A single-component or multi-component resilient member 145 and/or resilient material 140 may be manufactured by co-molding, and may be co-molded in connection with the face member 128 and/or the rear member 130.
As seen in
The resilient material 140 in the embodiment of
In the embodiment illustrated in
Other portions of the resilient material 140 may be flush or substantially flush with the peripheries of the face member 128 and the rear member 130 in the embodiment of
The resilient material 140 may have a constant or substantially constant thickness or a varying thickness in various embodiments. In the embodiment of
In one embodiment, the club head 102 may include an engagement member 180 that rigidly engages both the face member 128 and the rear member 130 to form a point of rigid engagement 181 between the face member 128 and the rear member 130. The engagement member 180 may be the sole point or area of rigid engagement between the face member 128 and the rear member 130 in one embodiment. For example, in the embodiment of
The engagement member 180 may have various structural configurations, locations, and orientations. In various embodiments, the engagement member 180 may be fixed to at least one of the face member 128 and the rear member 130, and/or the engagement member may rigidly abut at least one of the face member 128 and the rear member 130 (but without being fixedly connected). In the embodiment illustrated in
In the embodiment of
The rear member 130 in any of the embodiments described herein may be configured such that energy and/or momentum can be transferred between the rear member 130 and the face member 128 during impact, including an off-center impact on the striking surface 110. The resilient material 140 can serve to transfer energy and/or momentum between the rear member 130 and the face member 128 during impact. Additionally, the rear member 130 may also be configured to resist deflection of the face member 128 upon impact of the ball on the striking surface 110. The resiliency and compression of the resilient material 140 permits this transfer of energy and/or momentum from the rear member 130 to the face member 128. As described above, the momentum of the rear member 130 compresses the resilient material 140, and causes the resilient material 140 to exert a response force on the face member 128 to achieve this transfer of momentum. The resilient material 140 may exert at least a portion of the response force on the face member 128 through expansion after the compression. The rear member 130 may deflect slightly toward the impact point to compress the resilient material 140 in the process of this momentum transfer. The actions achieving the transfer of momentum occur between the beginning and the end of the impact, which in one embodiment of a golf putter may be between 4-5 ms. In the embodiment as shown in
The resilient material 140 can function to transfer the energy and/or momentum of the rear member 130 to the face member 128 at the heel 120 or toe 122. In the process of transferring energy and/or momentum during impact, the resilient material 140 may be compressed by the momentum of the rear member 130 and expand to exert a response force on the face member 128, which resists deflection of the face member 128 as described above. It is understood that the degree of potential moment causing deflection of the face member 128 may increase as the impact location diverges from the center of gravity of the face member 128. In one embodiment, the energy and/or momentum transfer from the rear member 130 to the face member 128 may also increase as the impact location diverges from the center of gravity of the face member 128, to provide increased resistance to such deflection of the face member 128. In other words, the energy and/or momentum transferred from the rear member 130 to the face member 128, and the force exerted on the face member 128 by the rear member 130, through the resilient material 140, may be incremental and directly relative/proportional to the distance the impact is made from the optimal impact point (e.g. the lateral center point of the striking surface 110 and/or the CG of the face member 128, in exemplary embodiments). Thus, the head 102 will transfer the energy and/or momentum of the rear member 130 incrementally in the direction in which the ball makes contact away from the center of gravity of the head 102, via the rear member 130 suspended by the resilient material 140. The transfer of energy and/or momentum between the rear member 130 and the face member 128 can reduce the degree of twisting of the face 112 and keep the face 112 more square upon impacts, including off-center impacts. Additionally, the transfer of energy and/or momentum between the rear member 130 and the face member 128 can minimize energy loss on off-center impacts, resulting in more consistent ball distance on impacts anywhere on the face 112. The resilient material 140 may have some elasticity or response force that assists in transferring energy and/or momentum between the rear member 130 and the face member 128.
It is understood that any of the embodiments of ball striking devices 100, heads 102, face members 128, rear members 130, and other components described herein may include any of the features described herein with respect to other embodiments described herein, including structural features, functional features, and/or properties, unless otherwise noted. It is understood that the specific sizes, shapes, orientations, and locations of various components of the ball striking devices 100 and heads 102 described herein are simply examples, and that any of these features or properties may be altered in other embodiments.
Heads 102 incorporating the features disclosed herein may be used as a ball striking device or a part thereof. For example, a golf club 100 as shown in
Different rear members 130 and different locations, orientations, and connections thereof, may produce different energy and/or momentum transfer upon impacts on the striking surface 110, et seq., including off-center impacts. Additionally, different rear members 130 and different locations, orientations, and connections thereof, may produce different effects depending on the location of the ball impact on the face 112. Accordingly, one or more clubs can be customized for a particular user by providing a club with a head as described above, with a rear member 130 that is configured in at least one of its shape, size, location, orientation, etc., based on a hitting characteristic of the user, such as a typical hitting pattern or swing speed. Customization may also include adding or adjusting weighting according to the characteristics of the rear member 130 and the hitting characteristic(s) of the user, such as by moving and/or interchanging the weights 134. Still further embodiments and variations are possible, including further techniques for customization.
The ball striking devices described herein may be used by a user to strike a ball or other object, such as by swinging or otherwise moving the head 102 to strike the ball on the striking surface 110 of the face 112. During the striking action, the face 112 impacts the ball, and one or more rear members 130 may transfer energy and/or momentum to the face 112 during the impact, in any manner described above. In one embodiment, the rear member(s) 130 may transfer incrementally greater energy and/or momentum for impacts that are farther from the desired impact point (e.g. the CG). As described below, the devices described herein, when used in this or a comparable method, may assist the user in achieving more consistent accuracy and distance of ball travel, as compared to other ball striking devices.
The various embodiments of ball striking heads with rear members described herein can provide energy and/or momentum transfer upon impacts on the striking face, which can assist in keeping the striking face more square with the ball, particularly on off-center impacts, which can in turn provide more accurate ball direction. The energy and/or momentum transfer to the face member can reduce or minimize energy loss on off-center impacts, creating more consistent ball speed and distance. The energy and/or momentum transfer may be incremental based on the distance of the impact away from the desired or optimal impact point. The spaces 146 at the heel 120 and toe 122 enhance the ability of the rear member 130 to impart this energy and/or momentum transfer at the heel 120 and toe 122. Additionally, the projection(s) on the rear member 130 and the corresponding cavity or cavities 163 on the face member 128 assist in creating a smaller profile or “footprint” for the club head 102 in a front-to-rear direction. This creates a more aesthetically pleasing appearance at the address position while functionally permitting the rear member 130 to have a sufficiently large size and weight with respect to the face member 128 to achieve the desired performance. Further, the resilient material and/or the spacer(s) may achieve some energy absorption or damping on center impacts (e.g. aligned with the center point and/or the CG of the face). As a result of the reduced energy loss on off-center hits, reduced twisting of the face on off-center hits, and/or reduced energy transfer on center hits that can be achieved by the heads as described above, greater consistency in both lateral dispersion and distance dispersion can be achieved as compared to typical ball striking heads of the same type, with impacts at various locations on the face. The ball striking heads described herein can also provide dissipation of impact energy through the resilient material, which can reduce vibration of the club head and may improve feel for the user. Still further, the use of the rear member on the bottom side of the head can provide an aesthetic option for the resilient material and/or the rear member to not be visible to the user at the address position. Other benefits can be recognized and appreciated by those skilled in the art.
While the invention has been described with respect to specific examples including presently preferred modes of carrying out the invention, those skilled in the art will appreciate that there are numerous variations and permutations of the above described systems and methods. Thus, the spirit and scope of the invention should be construed broadly as set forth in the appended claims.
The present application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/290,398, filed May 29, 2014, which application is incorporated by reference herein and made part hereof in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14290398 | May 2014 | US |
Child | 14994786 | US |