The present invention relates to mats in general, and more particularly to a pet mat that is configured to prevent and/or restrain an object, such as a food or water bowl, from moving and/or sliding around the top surface of the mat and is configured to raise the mat from the floor and prevent and/or restrain it from moving and/or sliding on the floor.
It is known art to place a dog mat under a feeding or water bowl. The mat serves a number of functions. It keeps the bowl from having direct contact with the floor, thereby preventing marking on the floor. Some mats also have sides to prevent spills from spreading from the bowl onto the floor of the pet owner's kitchen or other room.
However, existing mats have a major limitation. The bowl tends to slide around the top of the mat, which is generally a flat piece of plastic only interrupted by an occasional decorative rib with the logo or other decorative configuration on the top of said mat. Some mats also have dedicated bowl locations that prevent or inhibit varied bowl placement on the mat, thereby reducing the utility of the mat.
A significant limitation is that mats known in the art slide relative to the floor. Thus, when a pet aggressively consumes food or water it pushes against its bowl causing the bowl to slide off the mat. When the mat has features such as bumps that prevent sliding of the bowl relative to the mat, it may cause the mat itself to slide on the floor. Thus, the food or water in the bowl may spill over the rim of the bowl or the bowl itself may tip over as the mat is being moved. A situation more dire occurs when the mat in its unwilling journey suddenly encounters an obstacle, such as a wall. In that case, it is likely that the contents of the bowl are deposited on the floor necessitating a clean-up of the mess by the pet's owner.
Furthermore pet mats known in the art suffer from the drawback of having the underside of the mat surface rest directly on the floor. This results in many unintended consequences. For example, a mat resting with its underside on a floor tends to wobble on certain types of flooring material, such as tiled floors, because of the imperfections and unevenness in the placement of the tiles. Thus, the mat may rock back and forth as the animal eats and on causing food or water to spill. Another unintended consequence is that temperature transfer from the floor to the food in the bowl causes the room-temperature food to become unsuitably cooled by a winter floor. Further, a pet mat that is raised from the floor brings food closer to the natural eating height of pets, thus, making it easier for the pet to feed. Conversely, a pet mat surface that rests on the floor makes it harder to feed for the pet.
In case of a spill onto a floor, a pet mat that has an underside resting on the floor may trap the spill on its underside. Thus, as the mat is removed from the floor for clean-up water or food clings to the underside tracking the spillage further.
Thus, what is need is a pet food mat that is resistant to unintended movement of the bowl relative to the mat on which the bowl rests and that is resistant to movement of the mat relative to the floor on which the mat rests.
What is needed also is a pet mat that is raised from floor to provide mat surface that is further removed from the floor reducing the aforementioned limitations and drawbacks.
The mat of the present invention overcomes the deficiencies of prior art mats through the use of a pattern of raised bumps. The configuration and spacing of said bumps is such that a common pet bowl or dish can be placed on any part of the top surface of the mat and the bowl will normally fall within the interstices between the pattern of bumps. In said manner, the bowl does not slide or slip around the mat. This helps prevent spillage on the mat itself so that in combination with the sides of the mat, the chance of spillage off of the mat onto the floor itself is greatly reduced. The mat is preferably formed from a tacky material, such a natural rubber, which further aids in the goal of reducing slippage. Such tacky material helps prevent and/or restrain both bowl slippage on the bowl-receiving surface of the mat as well as slippage of the mat itself on the floor.
The mat of the present invention also overcomes the deficiency of prior art mats through the use of an overmolding that intergrades a plurality of feet made of tacky material. If preventing the sliding of the mat relative to the floor.
The following detailed description is of the best mode or modes of the invention presently contemplated. Such description is not intended to be understood in a limiting sense, but to be an example of the invention presented solely for illustration thereof, and by reference to which in connection with the following description and the accompanying drawings one skilled in the art may be advised of the advantages and construction of the invention. In the various views of the drawings, like reference characters designate like or similar parts.
The raised peripheral edge 30 of the illustrated embodiment preferably has an irregular shape that is best seen from the top view of
The pet mat 10 of the present embodiment is preferably formed from a non-stick, tacky material, such as natural rubber. Other non-stick, tacky materials are contemplated. Such material prevents or inhibits a pet bowl from sliding or slipping around the mat 10 and helps prevent spillage on the upper surface 20 of the mat 10 so that, in combination with the raised peripheral edge 30, the chance of spillage off of the mat 10 onto a floor is greatly reduced. A tacky material also helps prevent slippage of the mat 10 itself on the floor.
The arrangement of bumps 140 permits bowl 150 to be placed anywhere that is suitable (see
While pet mat 100 may be formed from a non-porous, non-stick material such as plastic, the overmolding 200 is preferably formed from a tacky natural rubber or manmade rubber material or an elastomeric material that is suitably thermally sensitive to permit molding. The material of the overmolding is continued in and/or other suitable material is provided for feet 210 to provide a frictional resistance and also act to absorb impact for pet mat 100, thusly, aiding pet mat 100 from moving or sliding relative to floor 190. The combination of bumps 140 and feet 210 to prevent and/or restrain moving and/or sliding of the bowl relative to the pet mat and prevent and/or restrain movement and/or sliding of the pet mat relative to the floor preventing spillage of the contents of the bowl.
Each overmolding 200 is preferably placed at a corner of pet mat 100 and may comprise one or more spaced apart feet 210 that are preferably placed in pairs so that at least one pair is parallel to the longitudinal axis of the pet mat while at least one other pair is placed parallel to the transverse axis of the pet mat. Thus, pet mat 100 has resistance to moving and/or sliding not only in the longitudinal and/or transverse direction but also in the entire plane of the floor.
Returning to
To accentuate the moving and/or sliding resistance, spaced apart feet 210 preferably have a rectangular shape that without undue waste of material is substantially longer than wider in the direction the feet offer resistance. For example, the feet parallel to the longitudinal axis are substantially longer in the longitudinal axis than they are wider in the pet mat's transverse direction. Similarly, the feet parallel to the transverse axis are substantially longer in the transverse axis than they are wider in the pet mat's longitudinal direction. It should, of course, be appreciated that feet 210 may be shaped differently or be placed on any convenient axis.
In one embodiment, feet 210 extend along the outside perimeter of the overmolding and reinforce the overmolding for stability. In a further embodiment, feet 210 are themselves reinforced with a rigid material.
While overmolding 200 may be placed economically only at the corners, it may also be placed entirely along the peripheral edge 130 to prevent a user from noticing peripheral edge 130. Therein, it may be advantageous to have the overmolding include a continuous support for the pet mat from the floor rather than spaced apart feet 210.
The pet mat of the present invention may be usefully manufactured by obtaining a surface having a peripheral edge and a plurality of bumps. The pet mat in a region of the edge is then overmolded, preferably in a corner, with a suitable material, such as an elastomeric material. The feet or support are the formed preferable in the overmolding.
While the present invention has been described at some length and with some particularity with respect to the several described embodiments, it is not intended that it should be limited to any such particulars or embodiments or any particular embodiment, but it is to be construed with references to the appended claims so as to provide the broadest possible interpretation of such claims in view of the prior art and, therefore, to effectively encompass the intended scope of the invention. Furthermore, the foregoing describes the invention in terms of embodiments foreseen by the inventor for which an enabling description was available, notwithstanding that insubstantial modifications of the invention, not presently foreseen, may nonetheless represent equivalents thereto.
This application is a continuation-in-part application claiming the benefit of U.S. Ser. No. 10/824,199 filed on Apr. 14, 2004, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety and which claims the benefit of provisional application 60/462,757 filed on Apr. 14, 2003, now abandoned.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60462757 | Apr 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10824199 | Apr 2004 | US |
Child | 11171029 | Jun 2005 | US |