Goggles are used in any number of applications ranging from sports such as skiing and snowboarding to protective eye wear for use in a lab or even a military situation. While each of type of goggle has different design considerations and performance requirements, those requirements may change during use. For example, a snowboarding goggle that may be appropriate for use during a bright day may be too dark when a storm blows in or as evening approaches. Therefore, a single goggle with a single lens may not provide adequate performance for all of the different situations a user may find themselves in.
In one embodiment, a goggle may include a frame having an opening and a first lens disposed in the opening that may be selectively removed and replaced with a second lens while the goggle is worn. The selective removal and retention of the lenses may be provided through the use of a magnetic latch including at least one pair of retaining magnets correspondingly located on the goggle frame and lens.
In another embodiment, a goggle may include a frame having an opening with a top, a bottom, and opposite sides. A lens may be selectively removable from the opening. Furthermore, the lens may form a magnetic latch with at least one of the top side, bottom side, left side, or right side of the opening during insertion and removal. The frame may also include an overhang constructed and adapted to promote a pivoting movement of the magnetic latch and positioned over the magnetic latch.
In yet another embodiment, a goggle lens may include a lens and a first magnet coupled to the lens along a first side of the lens. The first magnet may have a first magnetic field direction. The lens may also include a second magnet coupled to the lens along a second side of the lens. The second magnet may have a second field direction that is substantially orthogonal to the first field direction.
In one embodiment, a goggle may include a frame and a first magnet coupled to the frame along a first side of the frame. The first magnet may have a first magnetic field direction. The frame may also include a second magnet coupled to the frame along a second side of the frame. The second magnet may have a second field direction that is substantially orthogonal to the first field direction.
In another embodiment, a goggle may include a frame and a lens. In addition, a first magnet may be coupled to the lens along a first side of the lens with a first field direction. The goggle may also include a second magnet coupled to the lens along a second side of the lens with a second field direction. The second field direction may be substantially orthogonal to the first field direction when the second magnet is coupled to the lens.
In yet another embodiment, a goggle may include a frame having an opening with a first and second side. The first side may include two lips extending along the first side and the second side may include a single lip extending along the second side. The goggle may also include a lens selectively disposed within the opening. Furthermore, the lens may be disposed between the two lips along the first side and it may be flush with the single lip along the second side.
In another embodiment, a method for replacing a goggle lens includes pivoting a lens about a pivot axis defined between a removable lens and a frame. The edge opposite the pivot axis pivots up and out during removal and in and down during insertion relative to a person when in the fitted state.
It should be appreciated that all combinations of the foregoing concepts and additional concepts discussed in greater detail below (provided such concepts are not mutually inconsistent) are contemplated as being part of the inventive subject matter disclosed herein. In addition, all combinations of claimed subject matter are contemplated as being part of the inventive subject matter disclosed herein.
The foregoing and other aspects, embodiments, and features of the present teachings can be more fully understood from the following description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The accompanying drawings are not intended to be drawn to scale. In the drawings, each identical or nearly identical component that is illustrated in various figures is represented by a like numeral. For purposes of clarity, not every component may be labeled in every drawing. In the drawings:
There are any number of instances where a person may want to change the performance of the lens in a goggle. Some reasons to change lenses may include, but are not limited to, changing the tinting for different light conditions, reducing glare, reducing fogging, increasing ballistic/shatter resistance, and/or to use a lens with a different chemical resistance to name a few non-limiting examples. Instead of providing a separate goggle for the different conditions a person may encounter it may be desirable to quickly and simply replace one lens with another with the desired performance characteristics. In view of the above, the inventors have appreciated the need to provide a goggle that may have the lens quickly and easily removed from the frame and replaced with another lens while the goggle is still worn by the person. More specifically, the inventors have recognized the advantages of providing a goggle with a magnetic latch with a corresponding overhang that permits the lens to be pivoted up and outwards to easily and smoothly remove the lens from the frame.
With regards to the disclosure discussed below, it should be understood that there are pairs of mating magnets present on the lens and frame in corresponding locations and orientations. However, for simplicity's sake, magnets located on the frame and lens will be referred to with the same numeral. It should be understood that a magnet present on one component labeled with an identifier will mate with a magnet, or another material attracted to the magnet, present on the other component labeled with the same identifier.
In one embodiment, the goggle 2 includes a frame 4 and lens 8. The frame may include an opening 6 with a top 6a, a bottom 6b, left side 6c, and right side 6d. The lens may be shaped and sized so that it fits within the opening. The lens and frame may include corresponding retaining features such as pairs of magnets located along the periphery of the opening that may attract one another to retain the lens in place during use. These magnet pairs may include corresponding pairs of retaining magnets 12 located along the lower edge of the lens and opening and retaining magnets pairs 14 located on the opposite side along the top edge of the lens and frame opening. Another retaining magnet pair 16 may also be located along a lower edge of the lens and frame opening corresponding to a portion of a nose ridge. In the current embodiment, the various magnets are neodymium magnets. However, it should be understood that the magnets could be any type of magnet including, but not limited to, ceramic, Alnico, other rare earth magnets, and any other applicable magnet suitable for the design requirements of the specific goggle as would be apparent to one of skill in the art.
While the above noted retaining magnets and magnetic latch have been described with respect to mating pairs of magnets the current disclosure is not limited in this fashion. For example, it may be desirable, in some embodiments, to provide a single magnet on the frame or lens with a corresponding material on the other component that is attracted to the magnet. This material may include any magnetically susceptible material, such as iron, nickel, cobalt, magnetic alloys, and other applicable materials as would be apparent to one of skill in the art. For purposes of this patent, magnetic material includes magnets, materials attracted to magnets, and materials with magnetic properties. Therefore, the various magnetic latches, retaining features, and magnetic pairs disclosed herein may include various combinations of magnetic materials. Depending on the application, it may be also be desirable for the materials to be corrosion resistant. Therefore, the material may be a magnetic stainless steel, a ceramic based magnet, or any other corrosion resistant material with magnetic properties.
For aesthetic as well as functional purposes, the above noted retaining magnets may be disposed within an outer shell. In some embodiments, the shell may completely encase the magnets. In other embodiments, similar to those depicted in the figures, the shells may expose the mating surfaces of each pair. In addition, the shell may be made from a number of materials including nylon, polyethylene, or other appropriate materials. The shells may also be roughened, coated, knurled, or prepared in any other appropriate manner to facilitate removal of the lens from the frame. In other instances the shells associated with the retaining magnets 12 coupled to the lens 8 may be wedge shaped as seen in
To reduce the removal force of the lens and increase the accuracy of placement, it may be desirable to remove the lens through a pivoting motion about a placement guide. By removing the lens in this manner the retaining force of the magnets may be overcome gradually rather than all at once. For example, if the lens were to pivot upwards the retaining forces on the bottom would be overcome prior to those on the top. Hence, the removal force may be decreased as compared to overcoming the retaining force of every magnet at once.
To promote the desired pivoting motion and obtain easy repeatable placement of the lens in the opening in the frame, one or more pairs of magnets may act as a magnetic latch 18 between the frame and lens. To further facilitate the desired pivoting motion of the lens during removal and insertion, the frame may include a projection 10 that overhangs the magnetic latch 18. The portion of the magnetic latch 18 present on the lens may be positioned underneath the overhanging projection during insertion and use. In some embodiments, the overhanging projection may act as a physical guide for placement of the lens and may further promote pivoting of the lens during insertion and removal. As depicted in
The second magnetic field direction is associated with retaining magnets 12 and 16 disposed along the lower edge of the lens and is depicted by the arrows 24. As shown in
While only the magnetic field directions associated with the magnets on the lens have been shown, the portions of magnet pairs 12, 14, 16, and 18 located on the frame will have corresponding magnetic field directions that are parallel and opposite to the magnetic field directions depicted with respect to the magnets on the lens shown in
Lenses for a goggle are generally disposed between interior 26 and exterior lips 28 running along the periphery of the opening in the frame to both retain the lens and seal the goggle. In some embodiments, the exterior lip may be flush with an exterior surface of the frame and the interior lip may be recessed from the exterior surface of the goggle. The seal is usually created by pressing the lens between the two lips. However, to provide easy removal of a lens it may be desirable to have at least one side of the opening that does not have an exterior lip. This may permit the lens to easily pivot upwards from at least one edge without being retained by an exterior lip 28. Therefore, in a preferred embodiment, at least one side of the opening may only have an interior lip 26 and it may be located on the side of the frame opposite the location of the magnetic latch. In the embodiment presented in
In another embodiment, due to the magnets located along the edge corresponding to the magnetic latch providing an upwards, instead of inwards force, the lens may not be as strongly retained as it is along the opposite edge. Therefore, it may be desirable to provide additional retention force for the lens along the edge corresponding to the location of the magnetic latch by providing both interior and exterior lips along this edge. This is clearly shown in
Although in the embodiments described above the goggle includes a single lens, the goggle may have two or more lenses arranged front to back (as with lenses having an insulating space between lenses to reduce fogging), side to side (as in typical spectacle-type goggles having one lens positioned in front of each eye) and/or other arrangements. Moreover, the frame need not have the particular shape shown in the figures, but instead may have any suitable shape, such as that found in safety glasses, welding goggles, and so on. That is, the frame may accommodate a single unitary lens, or separate lenses, and may have any suitable size, shape or other configuration. The frame also need not include a face gasket or wrap-around shape that closely conforms to the wearer's face, but instead may be formed much like ordinary spectacles. In addition, while the embodiments detailed above describe lenses disposed within an opening of a goggle frame the current disclosure is not limited in this manner. In some embodiments, the lens may be disposed against an exterior edge of the frame such that the lens is placed around the front face of the frame. Alternatively, the lens may simply lie flush against the front face of the frame such that the edges of the frame and lens substantially align with one another. It is also possible an embodiment could contain a combination of the above noted lens and frame arrangements such that different edges of the lens could overlie a frame edge, align with a frame edge, or be disposed within an opening of the frame as the current disclosure is meant to include any of these variations.
The corresponding portions of the retaining magnets and magnetic latch may be mounted to the lens and frame in any suitable way. In this embodiment, the frame and lens may create interference fits with the shells of the retaining magnets and magnetic latch. However, the lens and/or frame may have any suitable features, materials or devices to mount the retaining magnets and magnetic latch. For example, the retaining magnets and magnetic latch may be connected to the frame and/or lens using tabs, holes, pins, locking devices, slots, fasteners, adhesive, friction or snap fit, interference fit, etc.
The goggle may be held in place on a wearer's head in any suitable way. For example, a head support may include an elastic strap. However, the head support may include other features, such as tension adjustment buckles, earstems that extend from the frame to engage the sides and/or ears of a wearer, snaps, clips, hook-and-loop fasteners or other devices to secure the frames to a helmet or other headgear, and so on. In addition to the above, in some embodiments the frame may include adjustable arms located at the sides of the frame that the head support may be attached to. The adjustable arms may allow a user to adjust the fit of the goggle. While several types of head supports have been discussed above, the current disclosure is not limited in this fashion. Instead, the currently disclosed goggle with replaceable lens may be used with any type of head support that allows the goggle to be retained on the head of an individual.
While the present teachings have been described in conjunction with various embodiments and examples, it is not intended that the present teachings be limited to such embodiments or examples. On the contrary, the present teachings encompass various alternatives, modifications, and equivalents, as will be appreciated by those of skill in the art. Accordingly, the foregoing description and drawings are by way of example only.