1. Technical Field
This invention relates generally to the field of athletic equipment, and more particularly to race identification number belts of the type commonly worn by runners and other athletes to hold race-number bibs during running competitions and other events.
2. Description of Related Art
Instead of using safety pins to attach a race-number bib to their clothing, many athletes prefer to use a race-number belt. A typical race-number bib includes an 8-inch by 6-inch sheet of paper on which a race identification number appears, while a typical race-number belt includes a woven-elastic belt with bib-attaching components on it. The athlete buckles the belt around their waist, adjusts the buckle to size the belt for their waist, unbuckles and removes the belt, and then manipulates the bib-attaching components in order to attach the bib. With the bib attached to the belt, the athlete can quickly and conveniently don and remove the combination of the belt and bib when desired while avoiding various disadvantages of safety pins.
Various existing race-number belts use different bib-attaching arrangements designed to accommodate the differing preferences of users. U.S. Pat. No. 5,299,324 describes one such belt. It includes two ⅛-inch by 3-inch elastic pieces that are also referred to herein as “elastic cords.” Each elastic cord has a proximal end that is stitched to a one-inch woven elastic belt so that the elastic cords are thereby held on the belt in spaced-apart locations. The athlete threads the free distal ends of the elastic cords through two existing quarter-inch diameter mounting holes spaced apart about 6⅞ inches on the upper portion of the race-number bib and then secures the bib in place on the belt by sliding mini cord locks onto the elastic cords.
Many athletes prefer such “cord-fastener attachments,” although others prefer the race-number belt described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,408,444. It describes a race-number belt having two snap-fastener assemblies instead of elastic cords (i.e., “snap-fastener attachments”). Each snap-fastener assembly includes two snap-fastener subassemblies that snap together in the usual manner of snap fasteners, but with the bib held in between. They are subsequently referred to as a first stud-receiving socket subassembly (a female component) that receives and engages a second socket-mating stud subassembly (a male component). The athlete places the bib against the stud-receiving socket component of each of two first subassemblies on the belt, and then forces the socket-mating stud component of each of two second subassemblies through the bib and into engagement of a respective one of the socket components, with the bib crushed in between and thereby secured in place on the race-number belt.
Both belt types are popular. The problem is that a cord-fastener belt providing cord-fastener attachments does not accommodate athletes preferring a snap-fastener belt having snap-fastener attachments, and vice versa. Thus, there is a need to overcome this problem.
In view of the foregoing, it is a primary object of the present invention to alleviate the concern outlined above by providing a way to facilitate both cord-fastener attachment and snap-fastener attachment of a race-number bib to a race-number belt so that the athlete is free to choose the attachment method preferred. The present invention achieves this objective by providing retrofitting cord-fastener assemblies having cords with mating snap-fastener subassemblies on their proximal ends that snap into engagement of the existing snap-fastener subassemblies on a snap-fastener belt; an athlete can use their race-number belt either way. In addition, another aspect of the invention provides a dual-use belt (also referred to as a hybrid race-number belt) that has both snap fasteners and cord fasteners, with a proximal end of each of two bib-attaching cords secured to the belt during belt fabrication by one of the two snap-fastener assemblies on the belt; an athlete can use this belt either way also.
To paraphrase some of the more precise language appearing in the claims and further introduce the nomenclature used, the invention includes a method for cord-fastener attachment of a race-number bib to a snap-fastener type of race-number belt. The race-number bib has two spaced-apart mounting holes for use in attaching it to the race-number belt, and the belt has two spaced-apart snap-fastener subassemblies. The method of the present invention provides two cords having proximal ends on which are mounted two snap-fastener sub assemblies that mate with the two snap-fastener subassemblies on the belt. An athlete snaps them into engagement of the snap-fastener subassemblies on the belt, leaving the distal ends of the cords free so that they can be threaded through the holes in the bib as cord-fastener attachments.
In other words, the method includes the step of providing two retrofitting cord-fastener assemblies, each having a cord and a mating snap-fastener subassembly on a proximal end of the cord that mates with a snap-fastener subassembly on the race-number belt (e.g., a male component in the form of a socket-mating stud subassembly). The method proceeds by snapping the mating snap-fastener subassemblies on the cords into engagement of the snap-fastener subassemblies on the race-number belt in order to thereby secure the first and second cords to the race-number belt. The athlete then threads the distal ends of the cords through the two mounting holes of the race-number bib and places mini cord-locking components onto the cords in order to secure the race-number bib on the cords.
In line with the foregoing, the invention provides a snap-fastener type of race-number belt accompanied by two retrofitting cord-fastener assemblies (items detached from, but attachable to, the belt). The athlete snaps the cord-fastener assemblies into engagement of snap-fastener subassemblies on the belt as a bib-attachment option. In addition, the invention provides separate retrofitting cord-fastener assemblies that an athlete can purchase separately for the athlete's use with an existing snap-fastener type of belt in order to retrofit the existing snap-fastener belt for cord-fastener attachment. Beyond all that, there is provided a dual-use race-number belt having both snap-fastener assemblies and bib-attaching cords on the belt component. During belt fabrication, components of two snap-fastener subassemblies are pressed together onto the belt component with the proximal ends of two bib-attaching cords held in between in order to thereby secure the proximal ends to the belt; the athlete can choose either snap-fastener attachment or cord-fastener attachment.
Thus, the invention better accommodates the differing preferences of athletes with a bib-attachment method and related race-number belt structure. In addition, the hybrid combination has an impact at the retailer level in that retailers no longer need to stock two types of race-number belts to accommodate both athlete and retainer preferences. The following detailed description and accompanying illustrative drawings make the foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the invention more apparent.
Nomenclature.
First consider the prior art race-number belt 15 that is illustrated in
The stud-receiving socket subassembly 18 includes a stud-receiving socket component 20 (
The stud-receiving socket subassembly 18 works in a known way by removably receiving the socket-mating stud sub assembly 19 in snapping engagement. Together, they form the snap-fastener assembly 17. To attach the race-number bib 12 to the prior art race-number belt 15 using the snap-fastener assembly 17, the athlete proceeds without using the quarter-inch holes 12A and 12B provided in the bib 12. Instead, the athlete lays the belt 16 on a hard surface, such as a table top, with the receiving snap subassemblies facing upward, places the race-number bib over the receiving snap subassemblies, makes an indent in the bib over both receiving snap subassemblies (e.g., pressing against the bib with the thumb), and the snaps the mating snap subassemblies into engagement of the receiving snap subassemblies while crushing the bib in between. Doing so results in the configuration shown in
As an idea of size, the stud-receiving socket component 20 may measure about 7/16 inch in outside diameter, for example, with the first cap component 21 measuring about 0.5 inch in outside diameter. The components of the socket-mating stud subassembly 19 are similarly sized. Of course, those dimensions may vary significantly depending on the snap-fastener that is used.
Dual-Use Belt.
Now consider
With the above-mentioned numbering scheme in mind, notice that the race-number belt 10 includes a one-inch wide woven elastic belt component 36 (similar to the belt component 16) on which is mounted a first snap-fastener assembly 37 (
The first snap-fastener assembly 37 includes a first snap-fastener subassembly 38 and a second snap-fastener subassembly 39 that snap together removably in the well-known manner of a snap-fastener device (like the subassemblies 18 and 19 described previously). The illustrated first snap-fastener subassembly 38 is a female component (i.e., a stud-receiving socket subassembly) and the illustrated second snap-fastener subassembly 39 is a male component (i.e., a socket-mating stud subassembly). That is a preferable arrangement. A race-number belt constructed according to the present invention can, instead, have a first snap-fastener subassembly that is a male component and a second snap-fastener assembly that is a female component.
With further regard to the illustrated first snap-fastener assembly 37, the first subassembly 38 includes a stud-receiving socket component 40 and a first cap component 41 that a belt-fabricator presses together in order to mount the first snap-fastener subassembly 38 on the belt component 36. The second subassembly 39 includes a socket-mating stud component 42 and a second cap component 43 pressed onto the stud component 42. So assembled, the second subassembly 39 can be snapped removably into engagement of the first subassembly 38 for snap-fastener attachment of the race-number bib 12 in the manner of the prior art.
According to a major aspect of the present invention, the race-number belt 10 also includes means for cord-fastener attachment of the race-number bib 12 to the belt component 36. To accomplish this, the race-number belt 10 includes two cords (e.g., about ⅛-inch to ¼-inch wide by about 3-inch long elastic bands) that are held on the belt component 36 by the first and second snap-fastener assemblies where they function as third and fourth means for attaching the race-number bib 12 to the belt component 36. The two cords are identical and so only a first cord 50 is illustrated in
Retrofitting Cord-Fastener Assembly.
Turning now to
The two cord-fastener assemblies are identical and so only a first cord assembly 70 is shown and described. It includes a cord 80 (
With the two cord-fastener assemblies (i.e. first assembly 83 and its identical second assembly counterpart) secured to the belt component 61 in the manner described above, the athlete attaches the race-number bib 12 to the belt 61 using the cord-fastener assemblies. For the first cord-fastener assembly 70, the athlete threads the distal end 82 of the cord 80 through the hole 24 in the bib 12 as illustrated in
Retrofitting Methodology.
The method proceeds, as indicated by a second block 92 in
As mentioned previously, male and female components may be used in different positions. Preferably, the first and second snap-fastener assemblies on the belt component are female snap-fastener subassemblies (i.e., they have stud-receiving socket components). In that case, the step of providing a first cord assembly includes providing a first cord assembly having a first mating snap-fastener subassembly on the proximal end of the first cord that is a first male snap-fastener subassembly (i.e., it includes a socket-mating stud component). Similarly, the step of providing a second cord assembly includes proving a second cord assembly having a second mating snap-fastener subassembly on the proximal end of the second cord that is a second male snap-fastener subassembly. As a result, the first and second mating snap-fastener subassemblies on the first and second cords mate with the female snap-fastener subassemblies on the belt component.
Thus, the invention provides a bib-attachment method and related race-number belt structure that facilitate both cord-fastener attachment and snap-fastener attachment of a race-number bib to a race-number belt in different ways so that the athlete is free to choose the attachment method preferred. The athlete has the option of using a prior art snap-fastener belt, the option of using either cord-fastener attachment or snap-fastener attachment with a dual-use belt, and the option of using cord-fastener attachment by retrofitting an existing snap-fastener belt with cord-fastener assemblies. From the foregoing and descriptions, one of ordinary skill in the art can readily practice the methodology and implement the structure of the present invention. Although exemplary embodiments have been shown and described, one of ordinary skill in the art may also make many changes, modifications, and substitutions without necessarily departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the first and second cords can be composed of non-elastic material, including shoe-string like material, and be round rather than flat. In addition, the placement of male and female components can be interchanged within the broader inventive concepts, installing a subassembly 19 on the belt and having the subassembly 18 free, for example, or installing a stud-receiving component 62 on a cord fastener assembly similar to the cord-fastener assembly 80 instead of the snap-fastener subassembly 83. All such variations are contemplated and the claims should be interpreted to cover them. As for the specific terminology used to describe the exemplary embodiments, it is not intended to limit the invention; each specific term is intended to include all technical equivalents that operate in a similar manner to accomplish a similar purpose or function.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/339,549 filed Mar. 5, 2010.
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