This invention relates generally to a gripping device that may be incorporated into or utilized with any product or tool that is generally designed to be held or operated with one hand. This gripping device is ideally utilized as a handle for a standard umbrella, although it may be readily configured as a handle for other single-hand operable devices. The gripping device of the present invention is particularly effective in situations in which the product into which the device is incorporated will regularly impose a strain on the user's hand, for example, where the user is holding an umbrella upright while in inclement weather and the umbrella is being pulled in various directions due to high winds. In this situation, the user will need to grip the umbrella's handle more tightly, which will strain the user's hand and cause hand and arm fatigue or longer-term chronic use injuries, such as carpal tunnel syndrome. The gripping device of this invention will alleviate this strain and fatigue by providing a more natural gripping shape while simultaneously distributing the umbrella's torque forces more evenly across the surfaces and fingers of the user's hand.
Although the gripping device of this invention is ideally suited for an umbrella handle grip, it is easily incorporated into other products and tools that may require the user to tightly grip the product or tool, thus imposing similar strains on the user's hand and arm. This gripping device can be utilized with hand tools, such as snow brooms, snow brushes, garden tools, such as lawn edgers and trimmers, power tools such as hand-saws or drills, and kitchen implements such as pots, pans, whisks or hand-mixers. Virtually every product or tool that is designed or intended to be operated with one hand will ultimately cause strain on the hand and arm of the users of those products or tools or devices, and the gripping device of the present invention can be incorporated into those products or tools to alleviate that strain.
The gripping device of the present invention accomplishes this by providing an ergonomic, padded surface for the user's hand and a plurality of shaped holes through which the user's fingers are inserted while utilizing the product or tool. Hand products or tools generally require the user to grip a generally hard-surfaced cylindrical handle. The handle for the tool or product is generally given little consideration by its manufacturer, as the operability or functionality of the product or tool will be of primary importance. Yet that operability or functionality will suffer if the user is unable to continue operating or using the product or tool if the user experiences pain or fatigue in his or her arm or hand. The present invention addresses this shortcoming by providing an ergonomic gripping device that forms a more natural gripping surface while distributing forces more evenly through the user's hand and arm.
The present invention is a gripping device for attachment to a product or tool that is intended to be held and operated in one hand. It is particularly suited to be used as a handle for an umbrella. This invention allows an umbrella to be held and operated with decreased gripping strength from the user's hand. The form-fitted finger and hand supports provided with this invention also allow the user to maintain the umbrella in a stable and upright position without an overly tight grip upon the handle.
Many previous attempts have been made to develop a gripping device for hand tools and other implements, such as umbrellas, that are designed to be operated or held in one hand. For example, Ameduri in US Patent Application Publication No. 2010/0287736 A1, describes a tubular gripping handle with an adjustable finger retention strap. The device in Ameduri, however, does little more than secure the user's fingers against a handle. It does not facilitate an ergonomic grip nor does it allow for reduced hand or arm fatigue, as it still requires the user to grasp the handle somewhat tightly. The primary benefit of Ameduri's device appears to be that it secures the tool or product into which the handle is incorporated, such that the user will not drop the tool or product.
Richard, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,977,621 addresses the ergonomics of the gripping surface of the handle that can be used for an umbrella, specifically by providing finger holes that are lined with soft materials like silicone, neoprene, or soft fabric. Richard '621's device is designed to be worn by a user separately and apart from any tool or product and it is not intended to be incorporated directly into the product. Thus, Richard '621 is cognizant of the ergonomic issues involved in gripping hand tools and products and the hand and arm fatigue which can accompany the gripping action, but Richard has not solved the issue of incorporating his device directly into a tool or product.
Richard advances his earlier concept in US Patent Application Publication No. 2009/0313737 A1, which describes a dampening device which cushions the user's hand when a tool or product is gripped. Richard '737 focuses on the use of this device with a baseball bat. Baseball players are well aware that unless a ball is hit with the “sweet spot” of a bat, the impact and vibrations from the impact will communicate an impulse shock to the batsman's hand when a ball is struck with the swung bat. Richard '737's dampening device is intended to lessen or eliminate that shock. While this concept is transferrable to other tools and products, such as umbrellas, again it solves only one issue, namely, reducing or eliminating the shock from forces that are translated into a user's hand or arm when a tool or product is held or operated with one hand.
Brown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,445,582 addresses hand and arm fatigue not by reducing the forces on a user's hand and arm, but by attempting to strengthen the hand and arm with a device that wraps around a user's wrist and encompasses his or her hand with a grip that includes a plurality of finger holes. Although Brown describes a hand grip that includes finger holes lined with soft or pliable materials, Brown's device focuses more on the feature that wraps around the user's wrist to the exclusion of the hand grip. Thus, it would not be apparent from Brown's description of his device to construct a free-standing hand grip that may be integrated directly into a variety of hand tools or products, and particularly into an umbrella.
Prior art references that address gripping devices or that describe tools for gripping other products are rife with descriptions of grips that include finger holes. For example, Garcia in U.S. Pat. No. 6,968,644 describes a clamping tool for gripping fish, which tool includes finger holes for the user's fingers and thumb. Garcia specifically explains that the advantage of using finger holes is to eliminate the possibility of the tool falling out of the user's hands. Garcia also states that the tool may be maneuvered using only the operator's fingers, from which it can be inferred that the user will not stress his or her hand or arm by tightly squeezing the clamping tool. Yet the shape of Garcia's device is specific to the tool itself and the specific grip that Garcia describes is not transferrable to other tools, and again particularly not to an umbrella.
Other prior art references address pieces of a unified grip, but none include all of the elements that are desirable to make a hand tool easy to hold and operate while allowing the user to securely hold the tool in one hand. For example, Balfour in U.S. Pat. No. 4,226,418 describes a tubular, contoured grip for a game racket, which grip includes finger holes and recesses for a user's thumb and palm; Hernandez in U.S. Pat. No. 7,070,169 discusses an ergonomically-shaped grip on a cable puller, which grip directs the position of a user's hands on the actuating lever of the puller; Shulein in U.S. Pat. No. 5,799,369 claims an ergonomic tool handle with a defined surface hardness and thumb and finger rests; LeRoux in U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,207 describes an ergonomic handle to grasp a bag; Marinello in U.S. Pat. No. 7,572,210 discusses a device to train a user to grip a ball properly, which device includes two or more finger holes; and Provenzano et al. describe a hand protection device that cushions a weight-lifter's hands, thus eliminating strain, fatigue or injury. Persons skilled in the arts may well attempt to combine pieces of each of these prior art references to develop a universal grip that may be adapted to a hand tool or product, like an umbrella, but the totality of those pieces would still be lacking the full combination of features that would allow a user to securely hold and operate a hand tool or product while reducing or eliminating fatigue or stress on a user's hand and arm. The resulting product from the combination of these references would be too bulky or cumbersome, or it would add additional stress to the user's hand and arm.
Thus a need exists for a universal gripping device that can be incorporated or manufactured into tools and products that are intended to be operated by a single hand, such as an umbrella, wherein the gripping device is ergonomically-designed and allows the user to maintain control and operation of the tool or product without dropping or losing it.
A need further exists for a gripping device that reduces or eliminates arm and hand fatigue or stress that is a common result of using and operating single-hand tools and products.
Yet an additional need exists for a gripping device that is simple, minimalist in design and not bulky, and lightweight without sacrificing any functions of the hand tool or product on which it is used, or any ergonomic benefits of the device.
The gripping device of the present invention addresses these and other needs. Each of the embodiments of this invention described in this specification, as well as other technical aspects of the present invention and the technical, scientific and other terminology in the present specification are utilized according to their common meanings within the applicable industries and arts, and as known and used by persons skilled in the arts described herein. Nothing in the specification for this invention should be interpreted as a limitation on the present invention. Rather, this specification describes one or more preferred embodiments of the invention as illustrations of the principal aspects of the invention. Persons skilled in the arts described herein will understand the full breadth and scope of this invention, including its many permutations and practical embodiments.
The drawings which accompany the description of this invention are provided for information and descriptive purposes only. Any particular features and details included in the drawings are included solely as an aid to describe one or more of the best methods of utilizing the device and practicing the method of the present invention. The details provided in the drawings are not included as limiting factors, and are included only to the extent that such details are deemed to be necessary to describe certain fundamental aspects of the device and method of the present invention. Persons skilled in the arts to which this invention refers will understand that other forms and embodiments of this invention are available, and such persons will know and understand how to create and implement those other embodiments.
In the drawings:
Referring now to the present invention in more details, in
Extending perpendicularly from the central shaft 14 is the rigid grip portion 16 that defines the finger slot space 18. Lining the inner portion of the finger slot space 18 is a soft material creating lined finger slots 20. This same soft material is also used to form a cushion 22 for the palm on the tubular assembly 12 opposite the finger slot space 18. This is best seen in
The embodiment of the present invention shown in
The embodiment of the present invention depicted in
In the embodiment depicted in
The finger slots 20 define rounded shapes, such as circles, ovals, or oblong shapes. The finger slots 20 leave room for the user's fingers to fit snuggly but comfortably into their internal diameters. The finger slots 20 will be preferably lined with a soft comfortable material in order to accommodate various finger diameters of a user in a manner that minimizes or eliminates chafing or rubbing. Use of other pliable materials capable of maintaining the shapes of the finger slots 20 is also contemplated, including but not limited to firm rubber, silicon, polyurethane, silica gel and memory foam. When the gripping device of the present invention is incorporated into an umbrella, it is anticipated that forces from wind will translate down a shaft S and into the gripping device, and the user will experience those forces through pressure exerted against his or her fingers when inserted into finger slots 20. An excess of material will substantially dampen the forces that are translated into a user's hand, but that excess will also make it difficult for a user to insert and remove his or her fingers from finger slots 20. Conversely, a minimal amount of material will ease the insertion and removal of a user's fingers, but will be insufficient to dampen translated forces. The manufacturer will thus need to determine the optimum type and amount of pliable material with which to line the finger slots 20.
The cushion 22 for the user's palm is located on the tubular assembly 12 opposite the finger slots 20. The cushion 22 is constructed of the same soft material as the foam liners used to line the finger slots 20. The cushion 22 may be substantially the length of, or the entire length of, the tubular assembly 12, and the width of the cushion 22 may be between two inches and four inches to substantially accommodate the palm of a user's hand. As with the material that is used to line the finger slots 20, in an alternate embodiment of this invention, the cushion 22 may be removable and replaceable as it becomes worn, soiled or torn. An indentation 24 is also depicted in
As shown in
The tubular nature of the assembly of the gripping device is more clearly depicted in
The advantages of the present invention include, without limitation, vastly improved ergonomics above the current umbrella constructions. The finger slots 20 created from foam or foam-like material as well as the cushion 22 provide stability of the attached umbrella for the user, as well as providing the user with increased grip on the umbrella particularly during wet and/or windy conditions. The finger slots 20 prevent any sliding movement of a user's hand along the tubular assembly 12. Additional advantages exist particularly for users having carpal tunnel syndrome or other degenerative or arthritic conditions causing the user to have a decreased strength in the muscles and/or joints of the hand or a decreased ability to exert a forceful grip on a handle. The foam construction of the finger slots 20 and cushion 22 provide an increased and superior level of comfort for such users, allowing the umbrella to remain stable and firmly in the user's hand without need for the hand strength normally required to maintain an umbrella's position, particularly in wet or windy conditions.
While the foregoing written description of the invention enables one of ordinary skill to make and use what is considered presently to be the best mode thereof, those of ordinary skill will understand and appreciate the existence of variations, combinations, and equivalents of the specific embodiment, method, and examples used herein. The invention should therefore not be limited by the above described embodiment, method, and examples, but by all embodiments and methods within the scope and spirit of the invention
This application claims priority to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/587,031 filed Jan. 16, 2012, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61587031 | Jan 2012 | US |