The invention generally relates to harnesses and load bearing strap type applications. In particular, the present invention relates to braided and unbraided members forming harnesses and other load bearing systems.
This application claims priority to U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 62/060,117 filed Oct. 6, 2014, the contents of which are incorporated by reference.
Harnesses are used to intercouple a user with some form of safety line such as a rope or cable. The most common type of harness used in outdoor sports is coupled around a user's waist and legs. In various outdoor sports, a harness is used during ascent and descent of technical terrain to enable a user to intercouple with a rope. For example, in roped climbing-related activities, an individual will generally wear a harness to provide a coupling point for the rope. Likewise, during roped descents and rappels, a harness is necessary to facilitate the controlled rope descent.
Various types of harnesses are used based on desired performance characteristics corresponding to a particular activity. These characteristics include weight, adjustment range, usability, safety, strength, etc. Most rock climbing and rappelling type harnesses include a waist belt and a set of leg loops interconnected at a frontal location. The waist belt and leg loops must meet certain industry-certified strength parameters while also providing a minimum amount of comfort to the user. For example, the waist belt and leg loops generally include wide regions designed to distribute forces across the corresponding anatomical regions of the user.
In many applications, the primary performance characteristic of a harness is the overall weight. The evolution of harnesses has therefore been primarily toward lighter-weight systems, including various stitching and fabric selection techniques to minimize weight while maintaining minimum strength and comfort. For example, heavier materials are often stitched between regions of lightweight narrow materials to maintain comfort but minimize weight. Unfortunately, the technique of stitching multiple materials together still requires heavy stitching to intercouple the regions while maintaining necessary strength.
Therefore, there is a need in the industry for a non-stitch based system for reducing the overall weight of a harness or other load bearing strap type applications.
The present invention relates to harnesses and load bearing strap type applications. One embodiment of the present invention is related to a harness system including a waist member and a leg loop member. The waist member is configured to encircle the naval region of the user. The leg loop member is configured to encircle the legs of the user. The leg loop member may also be coupled to the waist member via a third loop. The leg loop member includes a cord with at least two unbraided regions and at least one splice coupling. The unbraided regions are disposed between braided regions and are disposed on the leg loop member to correspond to the user's legs. The unbraided regions further comprise a plurality of separated strands oriented substantially parallel and equidistant to one another. A second embodiment of the present invention relates to a method of manufacturing a harness, including providing a waist member and leg loop member, splice coupling the two ends of the cord, and unbraiding at least two separated portions of the middle region to form unbraided regions.
Embodiments of the present invention represent a significant advancement in the field of harnesses and load bearing strap systems. Conventional harnesses fail to significantly minimize weight while maintaining necessary comfort and strength. Embodiments of the present invention incorporate unbraided wider regions and braided narrower regions of the same cord, thereby eliminating the necessary stitch type couplings of conventional lightweight harnesses. Likewise, embodiments of the present invention incorporate a spliced intercoupling of the ends of a cord so as to form a continuous loop without any type of independent stitch coupling.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be set forth or will become more fully apparent in the description that follows and in the appended claims. The features and advantages may be realized and obtained by means of the instruments and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims. Furthermore, the features and advantages of the invention may be learned by the practice of the invention or will be obvious from the description, as set forth hereinafter.
The following description of the invention can be understood in light of the Figures, which illustrate specific aspects of the invention and are a part of the specification. Together with the following description, the Figures demonstrate and explain the principles of the invention. In the Figures, the physical dimensions may be exaggerated for clarity. The same reference numerals in different drawings represent the same element, and thus their descriptions will be omitted.
The present invention relates to harnesses and load bearing strap type applications. One embodiment of the present invention is related to a harness system including a waist member and a leg loop member. The waist member is configured to encircle the naval region of the user. The leg loop member is configured to encircle the legs of the user. The leg loop member may also be coupled to the waist member via a third loop. The leg loop member includes a cord with at least two unbraided regions and at least one splice coupling. The unbraided regions are disposed between braided regions and are disposed on the leg loop member to correspond to the user's legs. The unbraided regions further comprise a plurality of separated strands oriented substantially parallel and equidistant to one another. A second embodiment of the present invention relates to a method of manufacturing a harness, including providing a waist member and leg loop member, splice coupling the two ends of the cord, and unbraiding at least two separated portions of the middle region to form unbraided regions. Also, while embodiments are described in reference to a harness leg loop member, it will be appreciated that the teachings of the present invention are applicable to other areas, including but not limited to other load bearing strap type applications such as harness waist members, belay loops, pole hand straps, etc.
The following terms are defined as follows:
Braiding—a type of interweaving in which individual fibers are substantially parallel and interwoven around one another.
Weaving—a type of interweaving in which an orthogonal fiber is interwoven between a set of substantially parallel fibers.
Cord—an elongated member comprising a set of at least three braided fibers. For example, DYNEEMA is a type of braided fabric cord.
Webbing—an elongated flat member comprising a set of woven fibers. For example, a common type of webbing comprises colored nylon and is often sold per foot at an outdoor retail store such as REI.
Cable—an elongated member comprising a single strand or a plurality of twisted non-braided strands. For example, a twisted strand metal cable is often used to secure items with a key lock.
Splice—a type of coupling between one end of a cord and another portion of a cord. A splice includes braiding the end of the cord with either another end region or a middle region.
Continuous loop—a mathematical relationship in which an elongated structure forms a loop with no points of discontinuity. For example, a rubber band forms a mathematically continuous loop of rubber because there is no end region. A continuous loop may include various shapes such as an oval,
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The illustrated leg loop member 105 forms a continuous loop which is releasably shaped to substantially encircle the legs of user and form a narrow middle region. The leg loop member 105 includes a splice coupling 110, braided regions 130, and unbraided regions 120. The terms “splice”, “splice coupling” or “spliced coupling” all refer to an interwoven coupling of the cord as will be discussed below. The leg loop member 100 comprises a cord of interwoven fibers, which meets the necessary tensile and shear strength parameters to function as a harness leg loop. As defined above, a cord is distinguishable from a cable and a piece of webbing in that the constituent fibers are interwoven or braided in a substantially aligned configuration. In contrast, a cable includes fibers which are twisted, and webbing includes fibers which are orthogonally woven. The cord is therefore an elongated structure of braided fiber members. The default configuration of a lengthwise portion of cord is therefore a braided region because the fibers are braided together. Throughout the application, a reference to a “braided region” therefore indicates that a particular lengthwise section remains in a braided state. One example of a cord is sold under the brand name DYNEEMA and is composed of fabric-type fibers. It will be appreciated that other cords such as those made of metal may be used in accordance with embodiments of the same invention.
The spliced coupling 110 is an interwoven coupling between portions of the cord. As defined above, a splice coupling includes interweaving the fibers to form a coupling that tightens in response to tensile separation forces. Various splicing techniques may be used, including but not limited interweaving sub-strands of the two ends of the cord within one another. The splicing technique may be combined with one or more sleeves to circumferentially compress the splice, protect the splice, and/or avoid expansion. The splicing technique may be described as analogous in function to the commonly known toy called a “finger torture” device in that the interwoven splicing pattern is configured to bind the fibers against one another, thereby strengthening the coupling in response to tensile expansion forces. The splice coupling 110 is a unique type of coupling because it does not require any additional materials or operations to effectuate the coupling. In contrast, stitch type couplings between regions of woven members (i.e. webbing) include an external stitch routed through both the woven members. Likewise, mechanical couplings require some type of compression apparatus to couple two members. Therefore, the splice coupling 110 reduces overall system weight while maintaining the necessary strength by eliminating the additional coupling components of conventional coupling schemes.
A splice coupling may be created between two end regions of cord (coupling 110 shown in
The braided regions 130 include lengthwise regions of the cord in which the fibers remain in the default interwoven or braided configuration. In the illustrated embodiment of
The unbraided regions 120 further include a separate left and right unbraided region 122, 124 corresponding to each of the user's legs. The unbraided regions 120 refer to lengthwise sections of the cord in which the constituent fibers are separated in a substantially parallel and equidistant configuration. The functionality of separating the fibers changes the cross sectional shape of the unbraided regions to be substantially flat. In general, it is advantageous to include a substantially flat wider region in proximity to a user's legs for purposes of comfort. Providing the comfort of the wide unbraided regions at the points of user leg contact while maintaining the overall strength and reduced weight of the cord is a unique aspect of this invention. The process of creating the unbraided regions 120 may be performed across a discrete intermediate lengthwise segment of cord. Various unweaving processes may be implemented which limit the unweaving to a particular region. The illustrated left and right unbraided regions 122, 124 are disposed at particular lengthwise intermediate locations on the continuous loop structure of cord so as to substantially encircle each of the user's legs. The unbraided regions 122, 124 are also disposed between the braided regions 132, 134. The illustrated left and right unbraided regions 122, 124 do not overlap one another and therefore only partially surround a user's leg. The unbraided regions 120 of the leg loop member 100 include separated and substantially aligned constituent fibers of the cord. Portions of a braided cord may be unbraided without cutting the cord. The fibers are aligned and separated in a substantially equidistant parallel configuration to distribute shear forces across the fibers, thereby substantially maintaining the tensile strength of the cord. The fibers of the unbraided regions may be supported in the substantially equidistant parallel configuration by intercoupling with an optional separator (not shown). The separator may be a flat woven fabric, a plastic guide, etc. Positioning of the fibers may include various techniques such as interweaving a crossfiber with the separator, a pressure/temperature welding with the separator, a set of physical channels within the separator, etc. The unbraided regions may also be covered by an optional cover member (not shown) extending lengthwise over the unbraided regions 122, 124.
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It should be noted that various alternative system designs may be practiced in accordance with the present invention, including one or more portions or concepts of the embodiment illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | |
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62060117 | Oct 2014 | US |