The invention concerns a horseshoe-like hoof pad lining forming an essentially flat plate comprised of flexible plastic material in order to avoid the adhesion especially of snow and ice at the hoof sole, which can be placed within the space enclosed by the hoof pad between the hoof pad and the hoof sole, which hoof pad lining is provided with a tube-like hump defining at least partly the enclosed space, which hump having at least partly an air-filled hollow space standing upright on the plate of plastic material and extending generally to the upper edge of the hoof pad.
Linings of this type are for instance known from the published German patent application 36 44 706. They have the purpose to avoid the adhesion of especially snow and ice between the two legs of the hoof pad and the hoof surface because those adhesions do not only have negative effects on the safety of steps of the animal provided with horse shoes, but do also increase the danger of injury.
The said disadvantages are not or not completely, respectively, overcome by the known hoof pad linings, although they already take advantage of the known idea to provide the flat lining of flexible material, for instance of plastic material with a tube-like hump, having at least partly an air filled hollow space so that the hump can be elastically deformed causing a resilient force on stepping of the hoof or the hoof pad, respectively, on a solid ground covered especially with snow and ice, which resilient force is if the pad is unloaded therefore the reason that the material included between the legs of the pad will be thrown out.
The fact that the known hoof pad linings are not successfully working on avoiding the adhesion of strange material at the pad surface between the pad legs has also the reason that it was not known that the elastic capacity of the hump has to be adapted to the step of the hoof on the ground.
As surely known, the animal, for instance a horse, is stepping forward on the ground in a special manner according to which at first the front end of the hoof pad touches the ground. Thereafter the weight of the horse is then continuously shifted to the back so that the backward following parts of the surface of the pad touch the ground. This rolling of the pad results therein that at first the greatest part of the weight of the horse causes at the tip of the pad with respect to the ground a pressure force dependent on the weight so that the continuous hump is so strongly loaded that its useful life-time is relatively short dependent on the materials used for the pad lining. Thus, the hump will be extremely abraised and therefore its backward parts positioned at both legs of the pad opposite to one another loose their resilient throw-out function.
Therefore, the object underlying the invention is to avoid these disadvantages and especially to essentially improve the function and thus life-time of such kind of hoof pad linings.
In order to solve this object the invention proposes that the hump forms a tube-like hollow space profile provided with at least one oval hollow space and extending up to a connecting bridge connecting the two legs of the hoof pad in the range of their ends, which hump is provided at the front end of the hoof pad in the range of the connecting point of the two legs with an interruption, wherein the plastic material of the hoof pad and the hoof is free of a hump following the circumference of the hoof pad and beyond the connecting bridge in the direction of the ends of the legs.
The tube-like hollow space profile avoids because of its cross-section configuration and its extension at the inner edge of the hoof pad provided with interruptions in the front and back area of the hoof especially the formation of clods of snow and ice on the hoof surface. The reason therefore is the elastic characteristics of the plate of plastic material as well as also the arrangement of the connecting bridge at the end of the hoof pad developing a spring tension upright to the hoof surface causing a certain amount of play if the hoof touches the ground, which play is counteracting the fixing of snow and/or ice.
Thus, the proposal according to the subject of the invention is a good combination of constructional features concerning hoof pad linings and hoof pads theirselves resulting in advantageous cleaning effects and, respectively, cleanness effects.
Advantageous embodiments of the invention are characterized by the claims appended hereto.
The invention will be described in detail in the following related to the embodiments as shown by the drawings.
In the drawings are:
The hoof pad 12 of plastic material as shown in
The surface of the hoof pad is with the exception of the front pad end 17 provided with a profile, in order to improve the stepping safety of the hoof if the hoof is stepping forward and thus to reduce the danger of slipping.
Between the hoof pad 12 and the hoof a horseshoe-like lining 1 is positioned which is shown in
The hoof pad lining 1 is configuered as an essential flat plate 2 comprising of flexible plastic material having an outer and an inner circumference adapted to the hoof pad 12 and comprising at its inner circumference a tube-like hump 4 defining the hoof surface 3. The hump 4 is provided with a tube-like hollow space profile 6 having different configurations as shown in
This tube-like hollow space profile 6 forms at least one oval hollow space 7 as shown in
The tube-like hump 4 extends, as shown in
The hollow space profile 6 is continuously configured with the only exception of the interruption 22 at the front end 17 of the hoof pad 12.
Instead of a single ellipse 8, 9 as shown in
The size of the cross section of the space 7 of the hollow space profile 6 is advantageously ⅓ to ½ of the whole cross section of the hump and the two lower ends of the hump 4 positioned adjacent to the connecting bar 15, are, as shown in
As shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
202 19 286 U | Dec 2002 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3952807 | Cattaneo | Apr 1976 | A |
4557334 | Cattaneo | Dec 1985 | A |
4997045 | Cattaneo | Mar 1991 | A |
6244352 | Luber | Jun 2001 | B1 |
6401828 | Rafeld | Jun 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
36 44 706 | Jul 1988 | DE |
10007645 | Aug 2001 | DE |
280656 | Aug 1988 | EP |
299214 | Jan 1989 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040112612 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |