1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a metal racket, particularly to a method for leveling a partial string groove not used for receiving a string of a hollow metal racket, in order to make the racket stronger and neater.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Most rackets are provided with a string groove to hide a string to be netted on a racket so as to keep the string from directly contacting the ground and being damaged in hitting a ball. And there are generally two kinds of methods to form a string groove in a racket as described below.
The first conventional method for forming a string groove in a hollow metal racket has an advantage that the it can have the strength it should as designed, and an disadvantage that the portion of the string groove not needed is impossible to be removed, making its whole shape look not so neat.
The second conventional method for forming a string groove in a hollow metal racket, though it is commonly used, has a large drawback that the pressed portion of the racket is weakened in its strength against pressure, in spite of the pressed portion being a netted portion necessary to have high strength.
This invention offers a method for leveling a string groove in a hollow metal racket, in which at first a straight metal tube with a string groove formed in its whole length is in advance prepared. Then the metal tube is placed in an outer mold specially designed, and then two inner molds are pushed in the two free ends of the metal tube for a certain distance and then is retracted out of the metal tube so as to level the two end portions of the metal tube not to be netted with a string. In this way, the finished racket has a string groove only for the portion to be netted with a string, but the other portion not to be netted is leveled as high as its original shape, improving the drawback of the two conventional methods described above.
This invention will be better understood by referring to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
A preferred embodiment of a method for leveling a string groove of a hollow metal racket in the present invention as shown in
The first step is to prepare a hollow metal tube 10 with a string groove 11 formed in the whole body of the tube 10 by means of a mold, becoming a material for a racket.
The second step is to prepare the outer mold 20, which consists of an upper mold 21 and a lower mold 22 respectively provided with an upper straight groove 211 and a lower straight groove 221 as shown in
The third step is to prepare the inner molds 30, 40 which have a preset length, having the same cross-sectional shape as that of the inner hole 12 of the hollow metal tube 10 with the string groove 11 and a front cone-shaped end 31, 41 respectively for easily guiding the inner molds 30, 40 to be inserted in the inner hole 12 through two open ends.
The fourth step is to placing a hollow metal tube 10 in the upper and the lower straight groove 211 and 221 of the upper mold 21 and lower mold 22 of the outer mold 10, as shown in
The fifth step is to push and squeeze the two inner molds 30, 40 in the inner hole 12 through the two free ends 13 of the hollow metal tube 10 to level up the two free end sections of the hollow metal tube 10 where the string is not netted. And then the two inner molds 30, 40 are retracted out of the inner hole 12 of the hollow metal tube 10, finishing the method for leveling a string groove of a hollow metal racket in the present invention.
As shown in
The method according to the invention involves the advantages of the two conventional methods described above, with the directly formed string groove 11 and with the netted portion of a hollow metal tube not pressed to change its original shape, so the racket has better strength against pressure, with the netted portion only having the string groove 11 and with the rest portion neat and good-looking.
While the preferred embodiment of the invention has been described above, it will be recognized and understood that various modifications may be made therein and the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications that may fall within the spirit and scope of the invention.