1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a clamping hanger for an exercise mat.
2. Discussion of Prior Art
People use exercise mats when stretching or practicing yoga, Bikram or similar activities during which they perspire. Exercise mats are typically rectangular, range from an eighth of an inch to an inch thick, from 20″ to 32″ wide, and from 60″ to 96″ long, to approximate human proportions. Even when covered with towels, exercise mats may still get wet from perspiration. Mats also need to be washed periodically.
Options for storing mats between uses have been limited. Mats are often slung over a towel bar or “ballet bar,” or anything else available. Such expedients may not permit mats to lie flat, and instead crease or bend them. Mat surface areas contacting a towel bar may not get enough ventilation to dry quickly. There are a variety of clothes hangers with clamps for holding pants, skirts, and other clothes, such as U.S. Pat. No. 6,021,933 by Zuckerman. A typical clothes hanger is at most 18″ wide; pants-hanging clamps are narrower than that. While a clamping clothes hanger may hold thinner and lighter exercise mats, narrowly spaced clips can make mat corners fold objectionably. Clips with smaller surface areas require intensified pressure on an exercise mat, which can damage or compromise the surface of the mat. Straps for hanging mats may also fail to hold them fully unrolled. Modifications to standard mats to hang with rings, Velcro, magnets, etc. may interfere with the intended use of an exercise mat. A conventional clamp mechanism which requires a user to squeeze the clamp open while lifting and positioning a heavier mat, rug or similar object to be hung, may be awkward to use.
Lacking a convenient way to store an exercise mat in its normal unrolled position, people typically roll mats up for transport and storage, and don't unroll them until the next use. Mats are thus stored damp and may not dry quickly. A rolled up and stored mat, when unrolled again tends not to initially lay in the desired flat position. Damp exercise mats that are not dried properly may build up undesirable bacteria, mold and odors.
There remains, therefore, a need for a technique of hanging and storing exercise mats or similar items in their normal flat shape.
The above-described problems are relieved by the present invention's provision of a clamping hanger with a releasable standoff mechanism for holding the clamp open while a mat is inserted. A clamping hanger in a preferred embodiment comprises a hangable base having first pivot mounting means, a clip having second pivot mounting means, pivot means for rotatably connecting the base and the clip and for biasing the clip to rotate relative to the base, and latch means for releaseably limiting rotation of the clip by the biasing means. The biasing means urges the base and the clip together to clamp an exercise mat, which may then be hung up.
A typical exercise mat is between 20″ and 32″ wide, and the clamp preferably has a similar, though not necessarily equal, width. The base has a pressure area with a preferably non-slip surface textured by bumps or a directional design. Additional areas of non-slip materials such as natural rubber may be used to enhance the grip of the hanger and lessen the pressure needed to hold a mat weighing up to ten or more pounds. The biasing means may be embodied by springs, by the material design of the clip, by being gravity loaded, by a levering mechanism, by a cam, or by a combination of such means.
Once a mat is secured by the clip, various hanging solutions enable suspending the hanger and a mat from a shower curtain rod, shower head, clothes closet bar, door, wall, window, tiles, or other structure. The hanging solution, when hung over a door or affixed to a wall, spaces the mat from the door or wall to permit air to flow across, and dry, both sides. The mat dries in a flat position and avoids being curled or cracked.
The hanging mechanism may be combined into a unit that has support for hanging a towel, a bag for the mat, or storing related items such as blocks, straps, water bottles, or cleaning products. The hanging mechanism can be used to hang similarly shaped exercise towels that may or may not include non-slip properties incorporated into the towel. The towel hanging may be in addition to the mat or instead of the mat.
These and other advantages of the invention will be illuminated by the following Detailed Description and accompanying Drawings.
The present invention provides a clamping hanger having a latching clip. The hanger may be hung from a wall, door, clothes rod, peg, or other support to hold an exercise mat unrolled so that it can dry flat. The clip has a “closed” position, an “open” position, and in between, a “holding” position. In the open position the clip jaw is kept spaced from the base by a latch or other standoff mechanism which may either pull on the clip above a pivot axis or push on the clip below the pivot axis. There may be one or more standoffs across the width of the clip. An edge of an exercise mat may be inserted between the clip and the base of the open hanger. Once a mat is inserted between the clamping members, the latch is released and the clip is closed, by a spring, to the holding position, where the opposed jaw and pressure area clamp the exercise mat and hold it. The force applied by springs or other biasing means may be distributed across the clip by using flexures, wider or additional hinges, or more springs, for example. In a gravity-based clamp, the force applied is determined by the weight of a mat.
Base 20 and clip 30 are connected by a pivot means which enables clip 30 to rotate around an axis 44 (
In a second embodiment, not shown, the hooking of the latch may need to be manually engaged to overcome the deflection of the tongue away from the lip. In such an implementation, the lip and catch mechanism may be different and the catch mechanism may be unengaged by squeezing the clip and the base unit together, which would allow the tongue to return to its natural non-deflected position.
In a third embodiment, also not shown, a latching mechanism positioned below the pivot axis of the clip comprises a stand-off which would keep the clip from closing against the base. The stand-off design could require manual engagement (to the open position) or manual dis-engagement (to the closed position). For easier use, the engagement or disengagement could be further actuated by the insertion or removal of the mat.
Hinge brackets 41b and 41c hold a hinge pin or dowel 45 which couples base 20 and clip 30 together. Hinge pin 45 also positions a biasing means, preferably two coiled steel springs 46 of a type well-known in clothes pins, clip boards or clamps of various kinds, typically compression or torsion springs. The torsion springs 46 may be of several different forms, have a different number of winds, have different spring arms, and be held in place be a variety of means. One example spring holder has slots in both the base 20 and in the clip 30 to retain the spring arms in their desired positions. This retention prevents the spring from unwinding, from slipping sideways, and from falling out of position. Hinge pin 45 passes through the winding area of, and retains, the springs 46. In another implementation (not shown), the mechanism for rotating the base and the clip could be separate from the mechanism that supports the biasing means. In such an alternate implementation, the rotating means may be formed as part of the base and clip parts directly. Similarly, the mechanism for capturing the biasing means, or even the biasing means itself, may be part of base or clip without any external components.
The spring 46 force applied to clip 30 above the pivot axis 44 presses clip jaw 32 toward base 20 to compress a mat. Front surface 24 has, on one side of the axel 45 a pressure area 22, and on the other side latch tongue 26 extending generally perpendicularly from the surface. Springs 46 bias clip jaw 32 (
Clip hinge brackets 41c and hinge pin 45 comprise elements 40c of pivot means 40. Hinge pin 45 in
Base 20 preferably also has, in its upper corners, keyhole-shaped slots 53 for hanging the base on fasteners (not shown) anchored in a vertical surface such as a wall or door. The shape of the openings allows screws to be less than fully screwed in and the base to be slid onto the screw heads. Alternatively, holes 53 may be threaded with a string, cord or wire to hang base 20 from an external support such as a peg or hook (
While the present invention is described in terms of a preferred embodiment, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that this embodiment may be modified without departing from the essence of the invention. For example in this embodiment the catch is a single mechanism, but other embodiments may use multiple catches. Other configurations where the catch needs to be positioned into place by the user to capture the clip are possible.
Another type of mechanism to keep the clip spaced from the base would be one or more standoffs used below the pivot axis. These standoffs could then be released either directly by the user or through the user's action of inserting the mat.
Besides a hanger that has a single open position, a ratchet mechanism can be used to provide multiple open positions. A sawtooth type design can be utilized to catch the clip at different distances from the base. This can be useful for different mats with different thicknesses. Additionally, the position the user utilizes to ratchet open the hanger can also be more readily achieved if a ratchet catches the hanger in a partially open position, then the user adjusts their hands to further ratchet the hanger into a more fully open position. Different mechanisms to release the ratchet can also be employed such that the hanger closes with the necessary force to hold a mat in place.
It is therefore intended that the following claims be interpreted as covering any modifications falling within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is a Continuation-in-Part of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/678,563 which was filed Nov. 16, 2012, and is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 13678563 | Nov 2012 | US |
Child | 13965569 | US |