Not Applicable
[Not Applicable]
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to installation of a grip on a golf club shaft. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method and apparatus for installing a handgrip on a golf club shaft.
2. Description of the Related Art
Grips have been used on golf clubs to provide a golfer with a greater ability to grasp the golf club during a swing. Grips were used as early as the 1700s when sheep-skin grips were the choice of golfers. In the 1800s, leather grips began to appear on a golf clubs, and soon became the dominant grip. In the 1900s, numerous rubber grips were developed mainly by rubber manufacturers. Presently, grips are composed of synthetic rubbers, plastics, and the like.
Handgrips are usually placed on the butt end of a golf club shaft at the club manufacturer. This process has for the most part been a manual process, with very little automation. A golf club shaft is manually wrapped with a double-sided tape at its butt end. Next, a solvent or lubricant is sprayed into the hollow interior of the handgrip, through an open end, in order to place the handgrip over the wrapped butt end without deterring from the adhesiveness of the tape. The handgrip is pushed over the shaft until the closed end of the handgrip is flush with the butt end of the shaft. The solvent eventually evaporates, or is absorbed into the adhesive or carrier, allowing for the tape to adhere to the surface of the hollow interior of the handgrip. Thus, it is obvious that this is a highly repetitious process may lead to injuries to some laborers unless remedial steps are taken by the manufacturer. Further, the use of certain solvents and lubricants may be an environmentally unfriendly means of manufacturing. Yet further, the spraying of a solvent or lubricant is an undesirable step which increases the production time.
Other problems exist with the application of grips such as mis-alignment due to poor initial grip strength, adverse affects on swing weight due to the evaporation of excess water in water activated tapes, and long drying cycles to wait for adhesive to dry before further processing.
The golf industry, and those associated with it, have attempted to automate some of the processes to increase production and lessen injury to laborers. One example is Hsu, U.S. Pat. No. 4,899,428 (the '428 patent) for a Golf Club Handle Sleeve Assembling Mechanism. The '428 patent discloses an assembling mechanism that includes slidable tables, triple acutators with hooks for expanding the front end of the handgrip, an air blower for blowing air into the rear of the handgrip and a fluid hose for delivering a solvent or lubricant to the handgrip for facilitating insertion of the shaft into the handgrip.
Another example is Vald'via, U.S. Pat. No. 5,407,026 (the '026 patent) for a Golf Club Grip Installing Apparatus. The '026 patent discloses the use of a grip lubricating device and a golf club shaft lubricating device. The '026 patent allows for a controlled amount of lubricant to be applied for facilitated insertion of the shaft into the grip.
Another example is Cresse et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,429,706 (the '706 patent) for a System And Method For Installing A Hollow Handgrip Over An Elongated Shaft End. The '706 discloses a system and method for applying a liquid adhesive to an interior surface of the handgrip in substitution for the use of tape on the shaft to adhere the grip. The '706 patent inflates the handgrip prior to insertion of the shaft into the grip.
Another example is U.S. Pat. No. 5,870,815 (the '815 patent) for an Apparatus And Method For Aligning A Golf Club For Attaching A Handle Grip. The '815 patent discloses an alignment assembly for positioning of a club head attached to a shaft prior to placement of a handgrip on the butt end of the shaft.
A water activated golf grip tape is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,429,703 (the '703 patent) to Hartman et al. The grip tape disclosed in the '703 patent is a four layer tape with an adhesive payer that contains moisture absorbent particles to detackify the adhesive layer for placement of a grip over the tape. The '703 patent teaches wetting the tape in a solution of soap and water in order to have the adhesive layer fully set up within twenty-four hours.
The present invention fulfills the needs of the golf industry by providing a novel process and apparatus for installation of a handgrip onto a golf club shaft. The present invention is able to accomplish this preferably with a moisture activated grip, tape which allows for adherence of the grip to the shaft in a reduced time period.
One aspect of the present invention is an apparatus for applying a handgrip to a butt end of a golf club shaft wrapped in a double-sided water activated tape. The apparatus includes a base, a shaft retention device, a moveable attachment mechanism, a fluid source and a compressed gas source. The base has a first end and a second end. The shaft retention device has a body with an aperture therethrough for placement of a shaft therein. The shaft retention device is positioned at a first end of the base and extends outward from the base. The aperture of the body is positioned within a first horizontal plane parallel to the base. The moveable attachment mechanism includes a grip attachment device and a misting device. The grip attachment device includes a first base block, a second base block, a first guiding rod, a second guiding rod, an arm and an inflation device with a barb. The first and second base blocks connect the grip attachment device to the base and extend outward from the base. The first guiding rod is slideably positioned through an aperture in the first base block, and the second guiding rod is slideably positioned through an aperture in the second base block. The first and second guiding rods are attached to the arm. The barb is attached to the arm between the attachment of the first and second guiding rods. The misting device includes a nozzle for dispensing water onto a tape and a support structure for positioning the nozzle forward of a grip attached to the barb and in a second horizontal plane above the first horizontal plane. The water source is in flow communication with the misting device, and the compressed gas source is in flow communication with the inflation device.
Another aspect of the present invention is a process for installing a grip on a shaft, the grip having a hollow interior with a first diameter. The process includes flowing a gaseous medium into the grip to expand the hollow interior of the grip from the first diameter to a second diameter. The next, the grip is moved toward a butt end of a shaft having at least a portion wrapped in a moisture activated tape. Next, the moisture activated tape is misted with a fluid at a rate lower than 24 milliliters per minute prior to placement of the grip over the tape. Next, the expanded hollow interior of the handgrip is applied over the butt end of the golf club shaft.
Another aspect of the present invention is a golf club having a grip attached to a shaft wherein the grip has a grip strength of at least fifty-five foot-pounds, one minute after installation of the grip onto the shaft.
Another aspect of the invention is a golf club that has a gap of 0.10 inch to 0.25 inch between edges of a double-sided water activated tape, and has a grip strength of at least fifty-five foot-pounds, one minute after installation of the grip onto the shaft.
Having briefly described the present invention, the above and further objects, features and advantages thereof will be recognized by those skilled in the pertinent art from the following detailed description of the invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The apparatus and method of the present invention is directed at a installing a hand grip onto a golf club shaft using a water activated double sided tape. The installation may be performed manually by an operator, or automatically using a computer controlled system. As shown in
The base has a first end 50a and a second end 50b opposite the first end 50a. The shaft retention device 52 is generally located at a first end 50a of the base 50. The shaft retention device 52 preferably has a body 53 with an aperture 54 for placement of a shaft 30 therethrough. The body 53 extends upward from the base 50 and the aperture 54 preferably lies in a horizontal plane above the base 50. The shaft retention device 52 may be any fixture or means that maintains a shaft in a fixed horizontal plane.
The moveable attachment mechanism 48 provides the means for attaching the grip 25 to the butt end 34 of the shaft 30 wrapped in the double-sided water activated tape. The grip attachment device 55 generally includes a first base block 56a and a second base block 56b extending upward from the base 50. The first base block 56a has a first guiding rod 57a positioned therethrough and the second base block 56b has a second guiding rod 57b positioned therethrough. Each of the guiding rods 57a and 57b are attached to an arm 58 at an end opposite the base blocks 56a and 56b. The arm 58 and the guiding rods 57a and 57b generally lie on the same horizontal plane with the shaft 30 placed through the aperture 54 of the shaft retention device 52. The guiding rods 57a and 57b allow for the arm 58 to move forward and rearward along the first horizontal plane in order to attach a grip 25 to a shaft 30.
The arm 58 provides a support for a barb 61 of the grip inflation device 60. The barb 61 is positioned on the arm 58 between the guiding rods 57a and 57b. The barb is in flow communication with a source of gaseous source 62 for inflating the grip 25 from a first diameter to a second diameter for installation on the shaft 30. In a preferred embodiment, the gaseous source is an air source that injects compressed air into the grip 25 through the rear aperture 29 at preferably between 20 and 75 pounds per square inch, and more preferably at least 40 pounds per square inch. The air or other gas, assists in the removal of excess fluid from the tape 22. In an alternative embodiment, the gaseous source may be blown through the tip end of a shaft without a golf club head.
The misting device 40 preferably includes a nozzle 44 attached to a support structure 42 and in flow communication with a fluid source 41 through tubing 43. The nozzle 44 lies in a second horizontal plane above the first horizontal plane. The support structure 42 is attached to the arm 58 and is moveable along with the arm 58. The nozzle 44 is positioned to be forward of the opening 28 of the grip 25. The nozzle provides a mist of the fluid onto the moisture activated tape 22 to activate the adhesive properties of the tape 22. In a preferred embodiment, the fluid 45 is water.
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From the foregoing it is believed that those skilled in the pertinent art will recognize the meritorious advancement of this invention and will readily understand that while the present invention has been described in association with a preferred embodiment thereof, and other embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings, numerous changes, modifications and substitutions of equivalents may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention which is intended to be unlimited by the foregoing except as may appear in the following appended claims. Therefore, the embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined in the following appended claims.