This technology relates to dasher-boards, which surround an ice-rink for the sport of ice-hockey. It is a development from technology shown in patent publication US-2012/0001139, dated 5 Jan. 2012.
The side of the dasher-board that faces towards the ice—being the side that players make contact with, during the game—is referred to as the ice-side or front of the dasher-board. The other side, which faces away from the ice, is referred to as the back of the dasher-board.
The dasher-board assembly is the assembly of dasher-board plus glass panes, with their associated mounting components. For the purposes of this specification, the dasher-board itself does not include the glass. The dasher-board assemblies may be referred to as the Boards.
The dasher-boards extend all the way around the ice-rink. It is made in sections, each section being 2.44 meters wide (measured along the perimeter of the rink). Typically, dasher-boards are 14 cm or 15½ cm overall thickness (including the kick-panel or puck-panel on the ice-side, at the bottom of the dasher-board.)
Around the corners of the rink, typically, the dasher-boards are curved. In some installations (e.g as shown in FIG. 14 of US-2012/0001139), the corner-panes are also curved, corresponding to the curve of the corner-boards. In other installations (e.g as shown in FIG. 15 of US-2012/0001139), the corner-boards are curved but the corner-panes are flat-planar.
The glass panes are made of tempered glass, or of perspex or acrylic or other suitable plastic material. Typically, the panes are 1.22 meters wide, and 1.22 to 2.44 meters high. Usually, the panes around the corners and ends of the rink are higher than the panes along the straight sides of the rink. The glass panes are 12 mm or 15 mm thick. Typically, the corner panes weigh 54 kg to 108 kg, and the smaller panes 46 kg to 205 kg.
In some installations, the assembly includes metal stanchions, which are mounted in, and protrude upwards from, the dasher-boards. The glass panes are mounted in (i.e between) the stanchions. Usually, the stanchions can be detached from the dasher-boards, for the purposes of dismantling and removing the dasher-board assemblies from the rink.
An example of an installation that uses stanchions is shown in FIG. 2 of US-2012/0001139. The dasher-board structure includes front and back top-stringers, and generally the stanchions pass between the two top-stringers, and rest on a mid- or bottom-stringer.
Typically, the stanchions are not positioned at the ends of, i.e between, adjacent dasher-board sections, but rather the stanchions are located well away from the ends of the sections. Thus, some of the panes, supported in the stanchions, span across from section to section.
In other installations, there are no stanchions, but rather the glass panes are received in troughs or channels that are structured into the tops of the dasher-boards. Examples of no-stanchions installations are shown in FIGS. 6,7,13 of US-2012/0001139.
In some installations, the glass panes are set some way back from the front edge of the top-cap of the dasher-board. This positioning makes it easy to support the panes between the two (front and back) top-stringers of the dasher-board, whereby the required strength and robustness of the dasher-board assembly is readily achieved.
However, setting the pane back from the front edge of the top-cap leaves a wide ledge of the upwards-facing top-cap protruding towards the ice—and available for contact with the face and head of a player who happens to be falling at the same time as crashing into the Boards. FIGS. 1,3 of US-2012/0001139 show an example of a (potentially dangerous) wide ledge or land on the ice-side of the top-cap.
In other installations, the glass pane is flush, or almost flush, with the ice-side panel of the dasher-board. FIGS. 4-9 of US-2012/0001139 show examples of flush-mountings, where the exposed land of the ice-side of the top-cap is zero, or very narrow, and thus exposes players to much-reduced risk of injury.
In ice-hockey, players crash into the dasher-board-assemblies, and the Boards have to be robust enough not to be damaged by a player-crash-incident. The Boards also should be so structured that injuries to players arising from such incidents are minimized.
Desirably, the Boards should be structured to have a shock-absorbing function, in which the Boards “give” somewhat, when struck by a player, and resiliently recover after being so struck. Also, the designers should see to it that any relative movements between the various components of the Boards, which might occur during a player-crash-incident, should not open up gaps that could or might pinch the player (or clothing, etc) when the components regain their normal or unstressed juxta-positions.
The present technology is aimed at providing such shock-absorbing resilience, or “give”, in a dasher-board assembly, in a manner that minimizes use of resources, while maximizing performance and robustness. The technology can be used when the glass panes are set back (i.e not flush-mounted), but is especially beneficial when the panes are flush-mounted.
It is known (e.g from U.S. Pat. No. 6,004,217) for the dasher-board itself to be so mounted (to the concrete floor of the rink) that the dasher-board can rock back resiliently when the player crashes into the boards. In the same publication, a glass pane is so mounted on the dasher-board that the pane can tip backwards resiliently with respect to the dasher-board.
The present technology is described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIGS. 3C,3D,3E are pictorial views showing different assembly stages.
FIGS. 8,9,10,11 show stages in the encapsulation of the flexible metal bases in moulded polyurethane.
FIGS. 9A,10A,11A are end-views corresponding to FIGS. 9,10,11.
Glass panes 29 are attached to the upright stanchion 30 in the conventional manner. The side-edges of the panes 29 fit into side-grooves created between the cross-sectional form of the stanchion 30 and tee-section retainer-strips 31 that clip onto pins in the stanchion.
The stanchion 30 is an aluminum extrusion, and is received in a socket 32 of the stanchion-support 25. The bottom of the stanchion 30 rests directly on the (plastic) material of a top-cap 34 of the dasher-board 21.
Thus, the stanchion 30 can move in the up/down direction with respect to the stanchion-support 25, but is constrained against all other modes of relative movement by the fact of the engagement of the cross-sectional form of the stanchion 30 with the shaped socket 32. The stanchion-support 25 preferably does not itself support the weight of the stanchion 30 (although it could). The stanchion-support 25, the stanchion 30, and the glass panes 29, all rest directly on the top-cap 34 of the dasher-board 21.
The stanchion-support 25 is a composite or sub-assembly, the components of which include (a) a stanchion-base 36 in the form of an aluminum extrusion, in which is formed the socket 32 that receives the stanchion 30; (b) the flexible bar-springs 23, of which one (or both) are inserted into suitable orifices in the extruded form of the stanchion-base 36; and (c) the plastic encapsulation 27.
The encapsulated bar-springs 23 that form the lower part of the stanchion-support 25 pass through an aperture 38 that has been formed in the top-cap 34. The foot of the stanchion-support 25 is contained in a fixed receptacle 40, which is built into the frame of the dasher-board 21.
As shown in FIGS. 1D,1E, the lower-portion of the stanchion-support 25 fits through an aperture 38 in the top-cap 34. The profile of the lower-portion (comprising the encapsulated bar-springs,
It is not essential that the sides of the aperture 38 in the top-cap 34 must constrain the lower-portion in all directions in which the same might move, in that other portions, e.g the top stringers 41,43 (or brackets attached to the top stringers) of the dasher-board 21 can provide positioning containment, for holding the stanchion-support 25—and the stanchion 30—in the desired location in the dasher-board frame.
As shown in FIGS. 2A,2B, the flat bar-springs 23 are replaced by round bar-springs 223. As shown, the round bar-springs 223 are encapsulated in polyurethane, in the same manner as the flat bar-springs 23.
In the assembly of
Non-flush (set-back, wide-ledge) glass mountings are common. In FIGS. 2A,2B, the glass-panes are set back, i.e are not flush-mounted. This reduces the need for a stanchion-base, as a component or unit that is separate from the stanchion itself. In FIGS. 2A,2B, the profile of the stanchion now fits between the two top-stringers—unlike
The FIGS. 3A,3B design is similar to that of
FIGS. 3C,3D,6E show stages in the assembly of some of the components of the bar-spring assembly of FIGS. 3A,3B. In
In
Much of this assembly operation consists in slotting components together, which can be done by unskilled workers, basically without tools. Disassembly, too, is just as simple.
In the assemblies thus far described, the glass panes have been secured to the dasher-boards using upright stanchions. The stanchions are fixed into the dasher-boards and the panes are fixed to the stanchions. However, upright stanchions, though slim, can interfere with the sight-view of persons outside the rink watching the game. Stanchion-less assemblies are common. As will be described, the use of the bar-springs as described herein, to permit the panes to “give”, and absorb (some of) the impact, when a player crashes into the dasher-board assembly, can be applied also to the stanchion-less assemblies. An example is shown in FIGS. 4A,4B,4C.
In FIGS. 4A,4B, the pane-carrier is in the form of a glass-support trough or channel 54, which can be made from folded steel or as an extrusion, etc. A moulded plastic liner 56 fits inside the trough 54, and the glass pane 29 fits inside the plastic liner 56. A bar-spring 423 is fast to a spacer 58, which is fast to the trough 54.
When a player crashes into the dasher-board assembly, the bar-spring 423 deflects in a similar manner to that shown in
The upper node is formed by the engagement of the bar-spring 423 with the aperture 438 in the plastic top-cap 434. The engagement prevents the bar-spring 423 from moving in the backwards direction, at the node-point. The mode of deflection of the bar-spring 423 means that, above the upper node-point the bar-spring moves backwards, while below the upper node-point the bar-spring moves forwards. (The upper and lower nodes are marked UN,LN on
As shown in
Preferably, the bar-spring comprises a bar of spring steel, having the same cross-sectional size and shape at every point along its length, the bar being straight and flat in the unstressed condition of the bar-spring. The Boards may be expected to combine good resilient shock-absorbing qualities with good robustness when the dimensions of the spring-bar are: a thickness of 5 mm to 10 mm; a width of 25 mm to 38 mm; a between-nodes-length of at least 40 cm; and an above-upper-node-length of between 15 cm and 30 cm.
Alternatively, the corner panes can be curved. Generally, the panes are half the width of the dasher-boards, and the arrangement is that half the panes straddle between two dasher-boards, and the other half sit in the centre of their respective dasher-boards. The designers should see to it that the trough 556 and the trough-liners are robust enough to securely hold the panes, however arranged, without damage to the panes and troughs.
In
For added security, as shown in
Encapsulation of the bar-spring in a plastic moulding is preferred, but is not essential. In e.g
In general, in the technology described herein, the glass panes are mounted in a pane-carrier, and the pane-carrier is carried on a bar-spring. The bar-spring allows or enables the panes to rock backwards relative to the dasher-board, and thus to absorb much of the impact when a player crashes into the boards. Two examples of pane-carriers are described, being upright stanchions and bottom-edge-receiving troughs.
The bar-spring is fast to the pane-carrier. The bar-spring doubles as the provider of shock-absorbing resilience, and as the provider of the mechanical support needed to hold the pane in its designed location with respect to the frame of the dasher-board. The frame and the pane-carrier interact at upper and lower nodes. The frame constrains the bar-spring against translational movement, in the back-front sense, at the nodes.
Although the bar-spring is constrained, at its upper-node-point, against translational movement relative to the frame of the dasher-board, the bar-spring is free, at its upper-node-point, to undergo rocking or tipping movement relative to the frame of the dasher-board.
Between the nodes, the bar-spring can undergo bow-mode deflection. That is to say, the bar-spring is deflectable in bow-mode bending, in which the maximum deflection of the bar-spring occurs midway between the nodes. It is recognized that a bar-spring, configured as described herein, can be robust enough to serve as the mechanical support for the pane-carrier and the panes, and at the same time can be made to have the required spring characteristics, such as spring-rate, force-capacity, etc. In the new design, the stresses arising from the player-impact are fed into the bar-spring, and the bar-spring then feeds the stresses gently into the frame of the dasher-board.
The expression “fast to” is used herein, in the context “P is fast to Q”. This means that during operation, and especially when a player is crashing into the boards, the components P,Q do not, and cannot, move relative to each other. They are firmly and securely fixed or attached, as if they were monolithic. On the other hand, the two components may be said to be fast to each other, even though the two components can be disassembled from each other without tools.
Unless otherwise stated, the movements and deflections of the components of the dasher-board assembly, as referred to in this specification, are movements and deflections that occur in response to a player crashing into the dasher-board assembly.
The expression “flush-mounted” is used herein to refer to the position of the glass-pane with respect to the front panel of the dasher-board. This condition is defined as follows. The glass is flush-mounted if, in the dasher-board assembly, there are no significant protrusions that are closer to the ice than the front (ice-side) surface of the glass. The main type of protrusion, in conventional not-flush-mounted dasher-board assemblies, is the protruding ledge or land of the top-cap.
A protrusion is said to be significant if protrudes, in the towards-the-ice direction, more than 3½ centimeters, measured from the ice-side face of the pane. A protrusion, or a portion of a protrusion, is said to be upwards-facing insofar as it lies at an angle of 45° or less to the horizontal.
The pane cannot move or rock with respect to the pane-carrier. That is to say: the pane being mounted in the pane-carrier, the pane-carrier constrains the foot of the pane, to the extent that the pane and the pane-carrier, during operation, can undergo neither relative translational movement in a horizontal sense, nor relative tipping or rocking movement.
Preferably, the upper node is either in the back-side top-stringer, or is in a component that is fast to that stringer. Advantageously, the upper node is formed in the top-cap which is bolted to the stringer. Preferably, the top-cap is formed with a through-aperture, and the bar-spring passes through, and lies in, the through-aperture. The upper node-point is a point on the bar-spring that lies in contact with a wall of the aperture, and the upper node-abutment is the wall of the aperture.
It is advantageous for the dasher-board to be so configured that the bar-spring passes down between the two top-stringers, and that the lower node-abutment is formed in a lower-stringer.
The dimensions of the bar-spring should be such that the deflection of the bar-spring—at a point midway between the two nodes—is between 15 mm and 25 mm when the above-the-upper-node portion of the bar-spring is subjected to a torque of 500 N-m.
The numerals used in the drawings may be summarized as:
Herein, some of the features of the technology are depicted and described in relation to one type of dasher-board and not in relation to another. It should be understood that all the features can be applied to all the types of dasher-boards, where that is possible, or unless otherwise stated.
The scope of protection sought herein is defined by the accompanying claims. The hardware structures depicted and described in the drawings and description should be regarded as examples.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1207093.4 | Apr 2012 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CA2013/000397 | 4/22/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2013/159193 | 10/31/2013 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO-2012021105 | Feb 2012 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150151187 A1 | Jun 2015 | US |