Claims
- 1. A shaft suited for use as the shaft of a golf club, comprising:
- a straight shaft made of composite materials comprising a resin matrix with reinforcing fibers with the shaft extending between an upper butt end and a lower tip end, the shaft including a radially outwardly protruding bulge section located on the shaft with the bulge section being spaced from both the tip end of the shaft and the butt end of the shaft, wherein the bulge section has a midpoint and is symmetrically shaped about a transverse axis extending through the midpoint which transverse axis is perpendicular to a longitudinal axis through the shaft, and wherein the shaft has a variable outer diameter along the length of the bulge section characterized by outer diameters at either end of the bulge section which are smaller than a maximum outer diameter substantially at the midpoint of the bulge section.
- 2. The shaft of claim 1, wherein the outer diameter of the shaft over the bulge section smoothly increases from a lower end of the bulge section to the midpoint and then smoothly decreases from the midpoint to an upper end of the bulge section.
- 3. The shaft of claim 1, wherein the entire bulge section is located within approximately a lower 1/3 of the length of the shaft.
- 4. The shaft of claim 1, wherein the bulge section is also symmetrically shaped about the longitudinal axis of the shaft.
- 5. The shaft of claim 4, wherein the shaft has substantially circular cross-sectional profiles over the bulge section.
- 6. The shaft of claim 5, wherein the shaft has substantially circular cross-sectional profiles over most of its length including over the bulge section.
- 7. The shaft of claim 1, wherein the bulge section begins approximately 3 to 12 inches from the tip end of the shaft.
- 8. The shaft of claim 1, wherein the bulge section is also formed of composite materials comprising a resin matrix with reinforcing fibers.
- 9. The shaft of claim 8, wherein the bulge section provides additional composite material such that the bulge section adds mass to the shaft compared to a shaft without the bulge section.
- 10. The shaft of claim 9, wherein the bulge section is formed from at least two patterns of composite material that are rolled up to form the bulge section, the patterns comprising a trapezoidal pattern and a triangular pattern overlaid on top of the trapezoidal pattern.
- 11. The shaft of claim 10, wherein the triangular pattern shorter than the trapezoidal pattern and is centered on the trapezoidal pattern when the triangular pattern is overlaid onto the trapezoidal pattern.
- 12. The shaft of claim 11, wherein the trapezoidal pattern is in the shape of a truncated isosceles triangle.
- 13. The shaft of claim 12, wherein the trapezoidal pattern has a length on one en that is equal to the length of the bulge section and is truncated at an opposite end when its length is about 25% of the length of the bulge section.
- 14. A shaft suited for use as the shaft of a golf club, comprising:
- a straight shaft having a butt end and a tip end and a predetermined length extending between the butt end and the tip end, a radially outwardly extending bulge section placed along the length of the shaft with the bulge section lying entirely within approximately a lower 1/3 of the length of the shaft, the shaft and bulge section both being made of composite materials comprising a resin matrix with reinforcing fibers.
- 15. The shaft of claim 14, wherein the shaft above the bulge section uniformly tapers outwardly to have a steadily increasing outer diameter to the butt end of the shaft.
- 16. The shaft of claim 14, wherein the shaft has a variable outer diameter along the length of the bulge section characterized by outer diameters at either end of the bulge section which are smaller than a maximum outer diameter at a location somewhere between the ends of the bulge section.
- 17. The shaft of claim 15, wherein the maximum outer diameter is at a midpoint of the bulge section.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/591,822, filed Jan. 25, 1996, now abandoned and a continuation of U. S. application No. Ser. 08/664,776, filed Jun. 14, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,735,753, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/000,218, filed Jun. 14, 1995.
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
5735753 |
Hoffmeyer |
Apr 1998 |
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Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
664776 |
Jun 1996 |
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