The present invention relates to a head of a golf club, especially to a head of a golf club with a high coefficient of restitution.
A conventional golf club comprises a club and a head mounted on one end of the club. The head has a face panel mounted on one side of the head. The face panel has a specific thickness. A handle is formed on another end of the club. When a player grips the handle with hands and hits the golf, the golf club is swung and hits the golf at 45 meters per second, and the face panel with a coefficient of restitution approximately from 0.825 to 0.83 impacts the golf. At that time, the impact force makes the face panel slightly deform concavely by 0.2 to 0.25 millimeters at a striking point, and the golf also deforms by a reaction force and further, the golf pops out because of the reaction force.
According to experience and skill level, a golf player may be sorted as a professional golf player or an amateur. Besides, there are various types of golf clubs, one of which comprises a wood club with a hollow head, and this wood club is utilized to strike out for longer distances. A professional player can accurately adjust the hitting force and control movement in hitting the golf, so the professional player is able to strike out the golf to a longer desired distance. In contrast, an amateur cannot control movement and strike force as accurately as the professional player, so even using the same golf club and the same face panel, the amateur still cannot strike out the golf to the longer desired distance. In other words, the amateur using a conventional golf club may not reach a desired striking effect.
To overcome the shortcomings, the present invention provides a head of a golf club to mitigate or obviate the aforementioned problems.
The main objective of the present invention is to provide a head of a golf club, the head having a face panel with a high coefficient of restitution. With the face panel with a high coefficient of restitution, an amateur can easily strike out the golf for a long distance.
Therefore, as the shaft is mounted in the club head and the buffer element is mounted on the shaft and abuts the inner surface of the face panel, when the golf is hit by a golf club with aforesaid head, the outer surface of the face panel is impacted and deforms concavely and the golf is popped out immediately. Meanwhile, the compressible and resilient buffer element may conserve the impulse and prevent the face panel from splitting or breaking. Therefore, a thickness of the face panel may be lower than that of a conventional face panel and thereby increasing coefficient of restitution to pop out the golf for a longer distance.
The head comprises a club head, a face pane, a shaft, a shock-proof component, and an anti-impulse component. The club head forms an opening and a through hole on two opposite sides of the club head, respectively. The face panel is securely mounted on the opening of the club head. The shaft is securely mounted in the through hole of the club head and forms a cavity. The cavity includes a bottom surface. The shock-proof component is mounted in the cavity of the shaft and comprises a first surface and a second surface. The first surface abuts the bottom surface of the cavity. The second surface is opposite the first surface. The anti-impulse component is mounted in the cavity of the shaft and comprises a third surface and a fourth surface. The third surface abuts the second surface of the shock-proof component. The fourth surface abuts an inner surface of the face panel.
After the head hits a golf, the impulse may make the face panel concave inward and the golf is stuck away and deformed, too. Meanwhile, the impulse become shock waves on the head. Some shock waves will be transmitted to the anti-impulse component via the face panel and some shock waves will be transmitted to the shaft via the through hole, which is opposite the face panel, of the club head. The shock waves on the shaft are obstructed by the shock-proof component, so said shock waves may not be absorbed by the anti-impulse component. Therefore, all of the remaining impulse and the shock waves on the face panel can be absorbed by the anti-impulse component, and thereby the coefficient of restitution of the head is improved and thereby the golf may be hit away distantly.
Other objectives, advantages and novel features of the invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
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The club head 10 is a hollow body. The club head 10 has a face panel 11 mounted on one side of the club head 10. The face panel 11 is made of a board and has an inner surface 111 and an outer surface 112. The outer surface 112 of the face panel 11 is configured to hit the golf. A thickness of the board is lower than that of the conventional board, which makes the face panel 11 have a high coefficient of restitution. The club head 10 has an installing seat 12 formed on another side of the club head 10. The installing seat 12 comprises a through hole communicating with an interior of the club head 10.
The shaft 20 is an elongated body. The shaft 20 comprises a cavity 21 at one end of the elongated body and a mounting portion 22 at another end of the elongated body.
The buffer element 30 is a compressible, resilient, and elongated body. The buffer element 30 has two ends, one of the ends is mounted in and combined with the cavity 21 of the shaft 20, and thus axes of the combined shaft 20 and buffer element 30 are perpendicular to the inner surface 111 of the face panel 11. The other end of the buffer element 30 protrudes out of the shaft 20 and an end surface of the other end of the buffer element 30 abuts the inner surface 111 of the face panel 11. The shaft 20 is mounted into the club head 10 through the through hole of the installing seat 12. The mounting portion 22 is mounted on and combined with the installing seat 12 of the club head 10.
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The first embodiment of the present invention further comprises a cap 50. The cap 50 has outer threads 51 and the shaft 20 as the hollow tube has inner threads 222, so that the inner thread 222 of the shaft 20 and the outer thread 51 of the cap 50 are securely threaded together and thereby the shaft 20 is fixed.
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The column component 31D may be a hollow body and thus a portion of a hollow space in the column component 31D is configured as a receiving space and another portion of the hollow space is configured as a through-mounted space. The column component 31D may have a second stepped surface 312D formed therein. The receiving space and the through-mounted space are divided by the second stepped surface 312D.
The weight adjusting component 32D is securely mounted in the through-mounted space of the column component 31D; for example, the weight adjusting component 32D is screwed in the through-mounted space. With the weight adjusting component 32D, the total weight of the head is increased. Precisely, since the club head 10D is hollow, the weight adjusting component 32D is configured to offset the weight lose because of casting, and thereby the head complies with the weight requirement. The weight adjusting component 32D has an abutting surface aligned to the second stepped surface 312D. Therefore, the receiving space is configured as a cavity, and the abutting surface of the weight adjusting component 32D and the second stepped surface 312D are configured as a bottom surface of the cavity. However, it is not limited thereto. In another embodiment without the second stepped surface 312D, the abutting surface of weight adjusting component 32D is configured as the bottom surface of the cavity.
The lead weight component 33D is securely mounted in the through-mounted space of the column component 31D; for example, the lead weight component 33D is screwed in the through-mounted space of the column component 31D. The location of the lead weight component 33D with respect to the column component 31D is adjustable, and thereby a center of gravity of the head is controllable so that the head is suitable for the player.
The shock-proof component 40D and the anti-impulse component 50D are mounted in the cavity of the shaft 30D. The shock-proof component 40D has a first surface and a second surface opposite to each other and the anti-impulse component 50D has a third surface and a fourth surface opposite to each other. The first surface of the shock-proof component 40D abuts the bottom surface of the cavity, i.e. the second stepped surface 312D and the abutting surface of the weight adjusting component 32D. However, in another embodiment without the weight adjusting component 32D, the first surface may only abut on the second stepped surface 312D; in another embodiment without the second stepped surface 312D, the first surface may only abut on the abutting surface of the weight adjusting component 32D. The third surface of the anti-impulse component 50D abuts the second surface of the shock-proof component 40D and the fourth surface of the anti-impulse component 50D abuts the inner surface of the face panel 20D. The shock-proof component 40D may be made from silicone and the anti-impulse component 50D may be made from Thermoplastic Elastomer, i.e., TPE, but it is not limited thereto. In some embodiment, the anti-impulse component 50D in the fifth embodiment may be the buffer element in the previous embodiments, but it is not limited thereto.
After the head hits a golf, the impulse may become shock waves on the entire head. Some of the shock waves will be transmitted to the anti-impulse component 50D via the face panel 20D and the shaft 30D via the face panel 20D and the through hole 12D, which is opposite the face panel 20D, of the club head 10D. The shock waves transmitted to the shaft 30D will be obstructed by the shock-proof component 40D, so the shock waves may not be transmitted to the anti-impulse component 50D via the shaft 30D, which allows the anti-impulse component 50D to absorb all the remaining impulse and the remaining shock waves on the face panel 20D. If the shock-proof component 40D only obstructs but does not absorb the shock waves, the golf is hit away while the shock waves are transmitted back to the face panel 20D, so the elasticity of the face panel 20D will not be affected. Besides, after the head hits a golf, the face panel 20D may deform inward and press the anti-impulse component 50D. Because the anti-impulse component 50D is supported by the shaft 30D and the shock-proof component 40D, the anti-impulse component 50D can help the face panel 20D to restore the original shape immediately. Therefore, the coefficient of restitution of the head is improved and thereby the golf may be hit away distantly and the player's demands can be achieved.
Moreover, in this embodiment, the anti-impulse component 50D may comprise an anti-impulse recession 500D formed on the third surface and concaved away from the shock-proof component 40D. Similarly, the weight adjusting component 32D may comprise a adjusting recession 320D formed on the abutting surface and concaved away from the shock-proof component 40D. Therefore, a contact area of the shock-proof component 40D and the anti-impulse component 50D or a contact area of the shock-proof component 40D and the weight adjusting component 32D is decreased, which avoids the shock waves on the entire head, except for the face panel 20D, being transmitted to the anti-impulse component 50D via the shock-proof component 40D, so that the anti-impulse component 50D can absorb the remaining shock waves on the face panel 20De and thereby the coefficient of restitution of the head is improved further and the golf will be hit away distantly.
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Even though numerous characteristics and advantages of the present invention have been set forth in the foregoing description, together with details of the structure and features of the invention, the disclosure is illustrative only. Changes may be made in the details, especially in matters of shape, size, and arrangement of parts within the principles of the invention to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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106128252 | Aug 2017 | TW | national |
This application is a continuation in part application of United States patent application filed on Aug. 3, 2018 and having application Ser. No. 16/054,159, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16054159 | Aug 2018 | US |
Child | 16413587 | US |