This invention relates to the fields of baseball fielding gloves/mitts and a method of heating a baseball bat handle during cold weather. When used throughout the remainder of this application, including, but not limited to, in the claims section, “baseball” shall mean both and/or either, the games of baseball or softball.
Baseball fielding gloves are as old as the game itself. Yet many improvements have been made in baseball gloves over these many years as the game itself has become both quicker and harder to play due to technological advances in the construction of both baseballs and baseball bats, and also due to the higher level of fitness, strength and size of today's baseball players. In order to keep up with these subtle, yet ever present changes in the way the game is played, baseball gloves have also needed to evolve.
Along these same lines, it is now also regularly found that kids to adults are playing baseball more and more, including in weather and climates not normally thought to be ideal for the game. For example, it is not uncommon for the weather during Spring training for the professional leagues, and during the professional league's baseball playoffs and World Series to be quite cold. Further, as is often the case when dealing with popular sports, if the professionals are doing something, the colleges, high schools, elementary schools and parents/children will be trying to imitate the professionals. Hence, it is also not uncommon in today's society for children ranging in all ages and for adults to be playing baseball in cold to very cold weather conditions. It would therefore be desirable to have a baseball glove that keeps a player's hands/fingers warm while playing during these cold conditions, as well as a method of keeping the often times very cold baseball bat handle warm.
Over the years, it has been known to heat various types of clothing items, including but not limited to, general activity, play and dress gloves, but no such heating mechanisms are known to exist for baseball fielding gloves/mitts, and no methods of heating a baseball bat are known. Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide baseball gloves/mitts with heating elements in order to keep a player's hands warm in the colder weather, and it would be desirable to also provide a method for heating the handle of a baseball bat.
In accordance with one part of the invention, a heated baseball glove/mitt is provided. The heated glove/mitt comprises front and back shells joined together along select portions of their edges in such manner as to form a finger portion and a thumb portion of the glove/mitt, and further defining an opening between the front and back shells for receiving a hand of a user of the glove/mitt, a web-type panel disposed partially between the finger portion and the thumb portion, at least one interior member located between an inner surface of the front shell and an inner surface of the back shell, at least one finger stall extending from the interior member between the interior member and the back shell having a top surface proximate the inner surface of the back shell, and an electrically conductive member attached along at least a portion of the top surface of the at least one finger stall between the top surface of the at least one finger stall and the inner surface of said back shell for heating the at least one finger stall. In accordance with another aspect of the invention, a method of heating a baseball bat is disclosed.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to provide an improved baseball glove/mitt.
Still another object of the invention is to provide an improved baseball glove/mitt that is heated.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide a method of heating a baseball bat.
Still another object of the invention is to provide, in combination, a method of warming a player's fielding glove hand while he/she is in his/her fielding position, and of warming a baseball bat when the player is in his/her hitting position.
Other objects of the invention will in part be obvious and will in part be apparent from the following description.
The invention accordingly comprises assemblies possessing the features, properties and the relation of components which will be exemplified in the products hereinafter described, and the scope of the invention will be indicated in the claims.
For a fuller understanding of the invention, reference is made to the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to the figures, a baseball fielding glove constructed in accordance with the invention having an electrically conductive member for heating portions of the interior of the glove, is shown in
As seen in
Continuing now with the discussion of
Continuing with
In a preferred embodiment, finger stall assembly 60 has extending therefrom a wrist contact member 80, which has on an interior portion thereof (not shown), a fur-type material for contacting the back of the player's hand. As is known in the art, member 80 would be stitched in the normal manner to glove 10's strap assembly 90, which will be discussed in more detail below.
Electrically conductive member 100 comprises a resistance wire element 110, a battery 120, a control box 130 having an on/off switch 134 and an on/off indicator light 136, and wires 140 for connecting battery 120 to control box 130 and also for connecting control box 130 to resistance wire 110. Resistance wire 110 is attached along a top surface of finger stall assembly 60 in any manner deemed appropriate to best achieve heating of finger stall 60 when electrically conductive member 100 is turned on. As shown in the figures, resistance wire 110 has, in a preferred embodiment, loop elements 112, 114, 116, 118 and another at 119. As is obvious from
It is to be understood that while the above described preferred embodiment for the shape of resistance wire 110 may be in the form of loops 112–119, any other configurable shape of resistance wire 110 is anticipated herein; even a simple straight wire across all four, or only some, of the player's fingers, possibly located across the knuckles of the player's hand (not shown).
Viewing now the various drawings showing the exterior of glove 10 in association with the above description of how member 50 is placed within glove/mitt 10, placement of battery 120 and control panel 130 is constructionally self evident. In particular, as is best seen in
Continuing with the discussion of electrically conductive member 100, control panel 130 is secured to strap assembly 90 in any manner known in the art, including the use of adhesive, Velcro ®, or other known manners. The preferred manner would be through the use of Velcro ® as this would allow for easier removal and reattachment than if adhesive were used. In a similar manner, battery case 122 is secured to back shell 30 of glove/mitt 10. Battery compartment 122 also has an openable flap for allowing battery 120 to be removed for replacement and/or charging. In the embodiment of the figures, battery 120 is shown to be a nine volt battery, but the invention anticipates the use of any type of standard dry cell battery.
Directing attention now to the various manners of construction of strap assembly 90, it is shown in
As was also discussed earlier regarding member 80 of finger stall member 60, outside surface 82 of member 80 is stitched (or otherwise secured) to an inside surface (not shown) of strap element 92 opposite outside surface 96.
Turning to a second embodiment of glove/mitt 10, shown in
Turning now to a discussion of
In operation, a player will put on at least one heated batting glove 240 prior to approaching either the on deck circle or the batter's box. He/she will pick up his/her bat using the at least one heated glove and will proceed to bat in the regular course of playing the game by gripping the bat while wearing the heated glove 240, so as to insure that the cold handle 200 of bat 210 stays warm during this important and vital part of the game.
Unless otherwise expressly indicated, when used throughout this document the term “substantially” shall have the meaning of “approximation”, not “magnitude”; i.e., it shall have the meaning, “being largely but not wholly that which is specified.” See, Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary, Merriam-Webster Inc., 1989. Hence, applicant is not using the term “substantially” to denote “considerable quantity” or “significantly large,” but is instead using the term as a qualifier/minimizer of a term. For example, in the fictitious phrase “the head portion is substantially above the body portion,” “substantially above” is meant to indicate that while most of the head portion can be located above the body portion, there is certainly at least some of the head portion located in planes with the body portion, or even below parts of the body portion. As a further example, as used in the fictitious phrase “substantially hollow,” “substantially” is meant to indicate that there are areas where the item is not hollow, without regard to a quantity of hollow verses non-hollow areas. These examples are meant to be illustrative of the meaning to be attributed to the term “substantially” as used throughout this document, even if these particular phrases are not found herein.
It will thus be seen that the objects set forth above, among those made apparent from the preceding description, are efficiently attained, and since certain changes maybe made in the above constructions without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description and shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover all of the generic and specific features of the invention herein described and all statements of the scope of the invention, which, as a matter of language, might be said to fall therebetween.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
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| 20050155961 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |