Photochromatic toy

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6322416
  • Patent Number
    6,322,416
  • Date Filed
    Friday, January 28, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, November 27, 2001
    22 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Examiners
    • Nguyen; Kien T.
    Agents
    • Baker & Daniels
Abstract
A toy system including a housing, an ultraviolet light source provided in the housing; and a representative element comprising photochromatic material, the representative element being temporarily disposed in the housing, the representative element being exposed to the ultraviolet light source while in the housing, the representative element having a first state in which a first condition is visually simulated and a second state in which a second condition is visually simulated, the first and second visually simulated conditions being different from one another. One of the first and second states is achieved in response to the representative element having been within the housing and exposed to the ultraviolet light source, whereby a corresponding one of the first and second conditions is simulated by the representative element having been within the housing. In one embodiment, the toy system may include a toy railway including a car which transports the representative element; the housing may be representative of a bottling plant and the representative element may represent a container such as a bottle, the visually simulated conditions being that the bottle is full or empty.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates to toys and toy systems which include photochromatic materials which change in appearance when subjected to ultraviolet (UV) light, and in particular to such toys and/or toy systems comprising movable cars, such as, for example, those included in model railways.




2. Background Art




Photochromatic materials are chemical compounds which exhibit a reversible change in its absorption spectrum upon irradiation with light of a given wavelength. Photochromatic compounds may be engineered to exhibit this change in the absorption spectrum at light wavelengths below those of visible light, the absorption spectrum change being manifested by a change in the color of the material. Thus, the material may exhibit one, “natural” color when exposed to visible light, and another, different color when exposed to light of a shorter wavelength.




Ultraviolet (UV) radiation is electromagnetic radiation in the part of the light spectrum between x-rays and visible light, and differs from visible light only in that the UV wavelengths are too short to be seen by the human eye. UV light has wavelengths which vary from between about 100 to 400 nm; the wavelength of visible light ranges from about 330 to 770 nm. UV light is generally characterized into three ranges: UVA (315 to 400 nm); UVB (280 to 315 nm); and UVC (200 to 280 nm). Light of wavelengths from 100 to 200 nm may also be considered to be a shorter range of UVC. UVB radiation, for example, is of the type used for suntanning, whereas UVC radiation may be used for germicidal disinfection; these types of light may be damaging to human cells. The well-known fluorescent or incandescent blacklight, however, emits UVA light radiation.




Many accessories which simulate activities related to rail transport are known and available for the model railroad hobbyist, and it is known to provide toy elements which represent various things which are transported by the model train. Such representative elements include, for example, people, animals, luggage, vehicles and other manufactured goods. Moreover, it is known to provide life-like miniature environments in which these elements are animated such that they may be moved about to simulate work being done by the people or on the goods.




Further, it is known to provide a model railroad accessory which comprises a representative element which simulates a container, such as a bottle. Previously, however, because the appearance of these representative elements have been substantially fixed, they have only simulated a single condition. For example, previous elements which represent bottles have been painted or molded in color, and thus may simulate only the containers' full or empty conditions. Separate, differently colored elements would be necessary to simulate the containers' empty condition.




A toy system, such as a model railway in combination with an accessory, in which a representative element may be altered in appearance to simulate a change in condition of thing it represents, without necessitating separate representative elements to simulate the separate conditions, is desirable. Further, it is desirable to provide a toy system in which a single representative element may be used to simulate both the presence and absence of something associated with the simulated element, which would, in the real world, be transported by rail. In particular, it is desirable to provide such a system in which the representative elements are separable from the train in which they are conveyed, and are animated during the time they are separated from the train.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




An object of the present invention is to provide a toy system which includes photochromatic materials which change in appearance, for example, in color, when exposed to a source of UVA light, such as the well-known “black” light. The toy system includes a representative element, which models a real world element and which is temporarily changed in appearance to simulate a change in its condition as a result of having been exposed to the source of UVA light, or as a result of its having been received within a housing which contains the source of UVA light. The toy element may be altered in appearance in response to its exposure to the UVA light source to simulate the presence or absence of something associated with the real element. For example, the element represented may be a container such as a bottle, the condition simulated one of being substantially full. This simulated condition is temporarily achieved by exposure of the photochromatic material in the representative element to the source of UVA light. The altered state of appearance is temporary after such exposure, and the appearance of the representative element will eventually revert to a natural state once exposure to the UVA light source has ended. In its natural state of appearance, the toy bottle of the above example will simulate the condition of being substantially empty. Further, one embodiment of the present invention provides for representative elements which are separable from the train on which they are conveyed, and which are animated.




To achieve this object, the present invention provides a toy system including a housing, an ultraviolet light source provided in the housing, and a representative element comprising photochromatic material. The representative element is temporarily disposed in the housing and is exposed to the ultraviolet light source while in the housing. The representative element has a first state in which a first condition is visually simulated and a second state in which a second condition is visually simulated; the first and second visually simulated conditions are different from one another. One of the first and second states is achieved in response to the representative element having been within the housing and exposed to the ultraviolet light source, whereby a corresponding one of the first and second conditions is simulated by the representative element having been within the housing.




The present invention further provides a toy system including a movable toy car, a representative element which includes photochromatic material and which is transported by the car, and a housing within which the representative element is temporarily disposed. The housing includes a source of ultraviolet light to which the representative element is exposed while the representative element is disposed within the housing. The representative element has a first state of appearance in which a first condition is simulated, and a temporary second state of appearance different from the first state of appearance in which a second condition different from the first condition is simulated. The second state is in response to the representative element having been exposed to the source of ultraviolet light, the representative element being reverted to its first state of appearance when the representative element is no longer disposed within the housing.




The present invention further provides a toy including a housing in which is provided an ultraviolet light, and at least one photochromatic toy element which has first and second simulated conditions. The element is temporarily disposed in the housing and exposed to the ultraviolet light therein, whereby the color of the toy element is changed. A change between the conditions is simulated by the color change.




The present invention further provides a toy system which includes a representative element which includes photochromatic material, and has a first color and a second color, the first and second colors being different from each other. A first condition is simulated by the first color and a second condition simulated by the second color, the first and second conditions being different from each other. The system also includes a housing having a source of ultraviolet light attached thereto. The representative element and the source of ultraviolet light are selectively proximal to each other and in their selective proximity the representative element is exposed to ultraviolet light, whereby a change in color of the representative element from one of the first or second colors to the other is effected by the exposure.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The above mentioned and other features and objects of this invention, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and the invention itself will be better understood by reference to the following description of embodiments of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:





FIG. 1



a


is an upper perspective view of a first embodiment of a representative element according to the present invention, the representative element representing a carton of bottles;





FIG. 1



b


is a side view of the representative element of

FIG. 1



a;







FIG. 1



c


is a lower perspective view of the representative element of

FIG. 1



a;







FIG. 2

is a perspective view of a first embodiment of a housing according to the present invention, the housing representative of a bottling plant building;





FIG. 3

is a sectional plan view of one embodiment of a toy system according to the present invention, this system including a plurality of representative elements as shown in

FIG. 1

, the housing of

FIG. 2

, and a toy railway car;





FIG. 4

is a view of the toy system of

FIG. 3

along line


4





4


;





FIG. 5

is a perspective view of an alternative embodiment of a toy system according to the present invention, this system including second embodiments of a representative element and a housing according to the present invention, the housing again representative of a bottling plant building, a portion of which is broken away; and





FIG. 6

is a perspective view of a further alternative embodiment of a toy system according to the present invention, this system including the representative element of

FIG. 5

, and a third embodiment of a housing according to the present invention.











Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. Although the drawings represent embodiments of the present invention, the drawings are not necessarily to scale and certain features may be exaggerated or simplified in order to better illustrate and explain the present invention. The exemplification set out herein illustrates an embodiment of the invention in alternative forms, and such exemplification is not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.




DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION





FIGS. 1



a


through


1




c


show a first embodiment of a representative element according to the present invention. Representative element


20


simulates a carton of soft drink bottles


22


, although it is to be understood that the scope of the present invention is not intended to be limited to bottles, or even to containers. It will be appreciated that a representative element according to the present invention may simulate any of a variety of things, and use various photochromatic color changes as herein described to simulate a change in the condition of the represented thing as a result to being exposed to a source of ultraviolet light or having been within a housing in which such a source is located. Thus, a representative element according to the present invention may simulate, in its alternative states, various articles which have a first condition and a second, different condition. The first simulated condition may be, for example, the absence of “something” associated with the element represented, and the second simulated condition may be the presence of that something. In the depicted embodiment, the first simulated condition is one of the bottles being substantially empty of liquid and the second simulated condition being one of the bottles being substantially full of that liquid. Hence, in this example, the abovementioned “something” is the liquid which would be contained in an actual bottle.




The portion of representative element


20


which is shaped to represent bottles


22


is molded from a resin having a photochromatic concentrate therein. Suitable such resins include, for example, a high density polyethylene or a polypropylene; such resins are available from 2nd Story Concepts, 1922 26th Street, N.E., Canton, Ohio, 44705, and are there known as MASTER BATCH or M-BATCH™. Alternatively, this portion may be provided, by means of a dip or spray, with a photochromatic coating or film. Suitable such sprays include, for example, one which is also available from 2nd Story Concepts and which is there known as J-SPRAY. It is the portion of the representative element provided with a photochromatic material which changes color when exposed to UVA light, thereby simulating the bottles having been filled with a soft drink. Another portion of representative element


20


simulates carton or case


24


in which bottles


22


are disposed. Those skilled in the art will recognize that the bottles and the case may be simultaneously molded of a common material, or may be sequentially molded into an integrated, single unit, the case portion not including photochromatic material. The portion of representative element


20


which simulates the case also serves as base


24


for the element.




As mentioned above, bottles


22


have a first state which represents the condition of the bottles being substantially empty and a second state having a condition which represents the bottles being substantially full, the change from the first to the second state manifested by a color change. The second state is achieved in response to the photochromatic portion of element


20


being exposed to a source of UVA light, and is only a temporary state. The photochromatic material comprising bottles


22


will return to its “natural” state a short time after its exposure to the UVA light has ended. The first, or natural state of bottles


22


may be one in which they appear to be colorless, or a shade of white, gray or yellow, in the visible light spectrum, and in this state the bottles will appear to have the condition of being empty. In their first state, bottles


22


may also appear to be transparent or translucent.




When the bottles are exposed to a UVA light source, radiation from the source is be absorbed by the photochromatic material and a color change of the material will be effected. In this second state, the bottles may be shades of various colors, such as, for example, black, brown, green, orange, yellow or gray. In this state, the bottles may also be substantially opaque. The bottles thus will have a second state which represents a condition of the bottles being substantially full. The photochromatic material, when activated by UVA light, provides a color which substantially matches that of the simulated liquid which “fills” the bottle. For example, a cola drink may be black, and beer may be brown.




Extending from bottom surface


26


of case or base


24


is a plurality of parallel, resilient bristles or fingers


28


which are inclined towards the rear of the base. Representative element


20


is supported by fingers


28


. It is well known in the pertinent art that when such fingers are in contact with a vibrating surface, motion of the representative element will be induced in the forward direction, opposite to that which the fingers are generally inclined. Thus, in response to vibration of the surface on which it rests, representative element


20


will be induced to move in the direction indicated by arrow A. Examples of representative elements having such means for inducing such directionally controlled movement in response to a vibratory input are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,660,001 (Smith et al.), and U.S. Pat. No. 2,973,604 (Digirolamo et al.), respectively issued Nov. 24, 1953 and Mar. 7, 1961, the disclosures of which are both expressly incorporated herein by reference.




Referring now to

FIG. 2

there is shown housing


30


, an enclosure through which representative elements


20


are conveyed. Housing


30


represents a building; as depicted, this building is a bottling plant in which bottles


22


appear to be filled. It is to be understood that housing


30


need not be a structure which is substantially fully enclosing the representative elements, as shown; that aspect of depicted housing


30


, however, lends itself to more suitable representation of a building. It is envisioned that a housing according to the present invention may be configured to merely provide a structure under or past which the representative elements are disposed or moved, and to which the UV lights are attached, as described below. Thus it is to be understood that the term “housing” as used herein encompasses any structure, fixed or moveable, which has a UV light source attached thereto, the light source temporarily placed in proximity to the representative element(s). The representative elements are exposed to the UV radiation and consequently experience a change in color.




As shown in

FIG. 3

, U-shaped vibrating conveyor portion


36


extends from the train to entrance door


32


of housing


30


, through the interior of the housing and from its exit door


34


back to the train. As best seen in

FIG. 2

, conveyor portion


36


may be provided with side shoulders


39


which help to guide the representative elements along the conveyor. Conveyor portion


36


is vibrated by any suitable, known means for inducing movement of such representative elements. Examples of such means are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,660,001 and 2,973,604.




Within housing


30


, located above conveyor portion


36


, are blacklights


38


which emit UVA light radiation onto representative elements


20


as they progress through housing on conveyor portion


36


. Lights


38


may be either, or any combination of, the fluorescent tube type or the incandescent bulb type. In any known manner, lights


38


may be selectively activated by switching means (not shown) which will direct power to the UV lights in response to the sensed presence of a representative element within the housing. By this switching means, lights


38


are on only when the representative elements are being conveyed through the housing. Alternatively, lights


38


may be selectively manually activated or may remain on for extended periods.





FIGS. 3 and 4

show train


40


comprising car


42


having wheels


44


which roll along track


46


. Car


42


is provided with loading doorway


48


which communicates with the beginning of conveyor portion


36


and unloading doorway


50


which communicates with the end of conveyor portion


36


. Car


42


may be provided, at its doorways


48


,


50


, with automatically opening and closing doors (not shown) of any suitable type known in the art, such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,450,867 (Smith) issued Oct. 5, 1948, which is expressly incorporated herein by reference. Alternatively, doorways


48


,


50


may be provided with doors which are manually opened and closed. It is to be understood that the inventive toy system which is a toy railway accessory is but an exemplary embodiment of the present invention. It is envisioned that the car on which the representative elements are conveyed need not be a railway car. Rather, certain unshown embodiments of the inventive toy system may include toy cars which are toy automobiles, trucks, trailers, wagons, and the like which are not moved along a track. Thus, the term “car” as used herein encompasses a variety of means by which the representative elements are conveyed.




Within car


42


, extending between loading doorway


48


and unloading doorway


50


is conveyor portion


52


which is also provided with vibrating means such as disclosed in incorporated U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,660,001 or 2,973,604. In the known manner, the means for vibrating conveyor portion


52


within a railway car are actuated when car


42


is positioned along a section of track


46


in proximity to the station at which the bottles are unloaded and loaded. In this position, the beginning of conveyor portion


36


is aligned with the end of conveyor portion


52


, and the end of conveyor portion


36


is aligned with the beginning of conveyor portion


52


. Notably, car


42


can contain a plurality of representative elements


20


on conveyor portion


52


while the train is moving, and while the bottles are being conveyed along track


46


by car


42


, the effect of the UV radiation on the photochromatic material wears off, and the bottles revert to their first, natural state.




With car


42


at the station where housing


30


is located, the unloading and loading doorways of the car are aligned with conveyor


36


. The doors of car


42


, if any, are opened and vibration of conveyor portions


36


and


52


commences. Representative elements


20


then move along conveyor portions


52


and


36


in the direction of arrow A, and the “empty” bottles (i.e., while elements


20


are in their first state) are unloaded from car


42


. The empty bottles are transferred to bottling plant


30


along the conveyor, and therein are exposed to UVA radiation from lights


38


.




After the bottles have been “filled” (i.e., after elements


20


have reached their second state), they are reloaded onto car


42


. It is to be noted that if the door associated with unloading doorway


50


is closed after car


42


has been unloaded, the filled bottles subsequently loaded will abut along conveyor portion


52


and form a closely packed row of representative elements. Once car


42


is full, the door associated with loading doorway


48


may be closed, the conveyor vibrating means deactivated, and the train then leaves the station, where the bottling plant is located, along track


46


. Notably,

FIGS. 3 and 4

show conveyor portions


36


and


52


substantially full of representative elements


20


, although it is envisioned that only so many elements will be provided to fill car


42


. Further,

FIGS. 2 and 3

show elements


20


in their first and second states, as well as in transition therebetween.




Referring now to

FIG. 5

, there is shown a second embodiment of a toy system according to the present invention. Housing


130


, a second embodiment of a housing according to the present invention, again has the form of a cola bottling plant building, however in the embodiment shown in

FIG. 5

the housing is disposed over a section of track


46


; i.e., track


46


extends through housing


130


and train


140


enters housing


130


through its entrance door


132


and exits through its exit door


134


. Representative elements


120


are carried on car


142


and remain on the car while they are exposed to UVA radiation emanating from blacklights


138


. Lights


138


may be either, or any combination of, the fluorescent tube type or the incandescent bulb type. As in the above-described embodiment, switching means (not shown) may be provided to activate the lights as the train enters the housing, and to deactivate them as the train leaves. Alternatively, the lights may remain on for an extended period.




Bottles


122


simulate the condition of being empty as the train enters the bottling plant, and the condition of being filled when the train leaves the plant. Train


140


may temporarily stop while car


142


is disposed within housing


130


, to allow time for sufficient exposure of bottles


122


to lights


138


, or alternatively, the train may merely reduce its speed sufficiently to allow the representative elements to change from their first, natural state, to their second, colored state. Because it does not require offloading or animation of the representative elements, a toy system according to the second embodiment will be substantially less costly to produce than that of the first embodiment, although it will still provide a means for simulating different first and second conditions in the inventive manner. As mentioned above, the inventive toy system need not be a toy railway accessory, and the car need not be one which moves along a track. Rather, the representative elements may be conveyed by a car which is a toy automobile, truck, trailer, wagon or the like, and exposed to the UV light with the car itself disposed within, or brought into operative proximity with the UV lights of, the housing. Further, as mentioned above, it is to be understood that the housing need not be substantially fully enclosing of the representative elements, as shown in FIG.


5


. Rather, the housing may be any structure to which the UV light is attached, and which allow the UV light to be placed in temporary proximity to the representative element, whereby its color is consequently changed.




Referring now to

FIG. 6

, there is shown a third embodiment of a housing according to the present invention. Unlike second embodiment housing


134


(

FIG. 5

) through which car


142


moves, third embodiment housing


230


according to the present invention moves about car


142


. As shown in

FIG. 6

, housing


230


comprises separable first and second housing portions


250


and


252


, respectively, within which blacklights


238


are attached. The first and second housing portions have rollers


254


rotatably attached thereto, and on these rollers the two housing portions advance toward and part away from each other on lateral tracks


256


which extend generally perpendicularly to railroad track


46


, along which car


142


travels.




In the particular embodiment shown in

FIG. 6

, as train


140


(

FIG. 5

) approaches housing


230


, housing parts


250


and


252


part, thereby allowing the train to pass therebetween on track


46


. Car


142


may be disconnected from the remainder of the train and left alone on track


46


while the train moves away. The two housing portions may then advance toward each other on lateral tracks


256


, and close about car


142


. Once closed, lights


238


are energized, and representative elements


120


are exposed to UV radiation, causing a color change as described above. Notably, a roller


254


in each housing portion may be driven by a reversible electric motor


258


controlled in any suitable manner, thus automating the opening and closure of housing


230


. Once representative elements


120


have been sufficiently exposed to UV radiation to effect their color change (i.e., bottles


120


have been “filled”), housing


230


again opens, with housing portions


250


,


252


parting along lateral tracks


256


, and car


142


is retrieved from the section of track


46


about which the housing closes. Car


142


, with its complement of “full” bottles, is then coupled to train


140


and pulled along track


46


away from housing


230


, which subsequently closes again. In any suitable, known manner, lights


238


may be selectively energized only when housing


230


is closed with car


142


inside. Further, as mentioned above, it is to be understood that the housing need not be substantially fully enclosing of the representative elements, or comprise two separable portions, as shown in FIG.


6


. Rather, such a housing may be any structure to which the UV light is attached, and which is temporarily moved into proximity with a representative element including photochromatic material; for example, the housing may be a structure which approaches the representative elements from one side, without substantially enclosing them, and while the housing is in close proximity to the representative elements, they are exposed to UV light. Moreover, it is not necessary that the car carrying the representative be decoupled from the train, or even be a railway car; as mentioned above, the term “car” as used herein encompasses a variety of means by which the representative elements are conveyed.




While this invention has been described as having exemplary designs, the present invention may be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. For example, the scope of the present invention is to be understood as encompassing toys other than those associated only with toy railways, or simulation of the presence or absence of something, e.g., a liquid in a bottle. For example, the scope of the present invention also encompasses toy ovens having a UVA light source therein, and a representative element which represents food to be baked or cooked and which has a first state in which a first, unbaked or uncooked condition is simulated, and a second state in which a second, baked or cooked condition is simulated. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains.



Claims
  • 1. A toy system comprising:a housing; an ultraviolet light source provided in said housing; and a representative element comprising photochromatic material, said representative element being temporarily disposed in said housing, said representative element being exposed to said ultraviolet light source while in said housing, said representative element having a first state in which a first condition is visually simulated and a second state in which a second condition is visually simulated, said first and second visually simulated conditions being different from one another; wherein one of said first and second states is achieved in response to said representative element having been within said housing and exposed to said ultraviolet light source, whereby a corresponding one of said first and second conditions is simulated by said representative element having been within said housing.
  • 2. The toy system of claim 1, wherein said housing is representative of a building.
  • 3. The toy system of claim 2, wherein the building represented by said housing is a container filling plant and said representative element is representative of at least one container.
  • 4. The toy system of claim 1, wherein at least a portion of said representative element is formed of a molded resin having a photochromatic concentrate therein.
  • 5. The toy system of claim 1, wherein at least a portion of said representative element is provided with a photochromatic coating.
  • 6. The toy system of claim 1, wherein said representative element represents at least one container, said first state of said representative element is being at least partially a first color, whereby said first simulated condition of said represented container is one of being substantially empty and being substantially full, and said second state of said representative element is being at least partially a second color, whereby said second simulated condition of said represented container is the other of being substantially empty and being substantially full.
  • 7. The toy system of claim 6, wherein at least a portion of said representative element is, in its said first state, substantially translucent.
  • 8. The toy system of claim 7, wherein said at least a portion of said representative element is, in its said second state, substantially opaque.
  • 9. The toy system of claim 6, wherein one of said first and second colors is a shade of a color selected from the group consisting of black, brown, green, red, orange, yellow and gray.
  • 10. The toy system of claim 1, wherein said system includes at least one movable car, and means for transferring at least one said representative element from said car to said housing, and means for transferring said at least one representative element from said housing to said car.
  • 11. The toy system of claim 10, wherein said car comprises a train.
  • 12. The toy system of claim 10, wherein each said means for transferring comprises vibrating means for inducing movement of said representative element.
  • 13. The toy system of claim 12, wherein said vibrating means includes a conveyor along which said representative element moves, a portion of said conveyor extending through said housing.
  • 14. The toy system of claim 13, wherein said conveyor portion is a first portion, and a second portion of said conveyor extends through said car.
  • 15. The toy system of claim 12, wherein said vibrating means includes a portion of said car.
  • 16. The toy system of claim 12, wherein said representative element comprises a base on which are provided a plurality of resilient fingers on which said representative element is supported, said transferring means comprising said fingers.
  • 17. The toy system of claim 1, further comprising said representative element being moveable into said housing from a location outside of said housing.
  • 18. The toy system of claim 1, further comprising said housing being moveable to an at least partially enclosed position about said representative element.
  • 19. The toy system of claim 1, wherein said system includes a toy railway including a moveable car, and a track on which said car is disposed and along which said car moves, a said representative element disposed on said car, and wherein a section of said track extends into said housing, whereby said representative element is exposed to said ultraviolet light source when said car is disposed on said section of track and within said housing.
  • 20. The toy system of claim 19, wherein said section of track extends completely through said housing.
  • 21. A toy system comprising:a movable toy car; a representative element which includes photochromatic material and which is transported by said car; and a housing within which said representative element is temporarily disposed, said housing including a source of ultraviolet light to which said representative element is exposed while said representative element is disposed within said housing; wherein said representative element has a first state of appearance in which a first condition is simulated, and a temporary second state of appearance different from said first state of appearance in which a second condition different from said first condition is simulated, said second state being in response to said representative element having been exposed to said source of ultraviolet light, said representative element being reverted to its said first state of appearance when said representative element is no longer disposed within said housing.
  • 22. The toy system of claim 21, wherein said first state of appearance includes at least a portion of said representative element being a first color, and said second state of appearance includes said portion of said representative element being a second color different from said first color.
  • 23. The toy system of claim 21, wherein said housing is representative of a building.
  • 24. The toy system of claim 23, wherein said car is received within said housing.
  • 25. The toy system of claim 23, wherein said representative element is separable from said car, and further comprising means for transferring said representative element from said car and into said housing and for transferring said representative element from said housing to said car.
  • 26. The toy system of claim 25, wherein said means for transferring includes a conveyor.
  • 27. The toy system of claim 26, wherein said means for transferring further comprises means for vibrating said conveyor.
  • 28. The toy system of claim 21, wherein said toy car is a toy railway car.
  • 29. A toy comprising a housing, an ultraviolet light provided in said housing, and at least one photochromatic toy element which has first and second simulated conditions, said element being temporarily disposed in said housing and exposed to said ultraviolet light, whereby the color of said toy element is changed, wherein a change between said conditions is simulated by the color change.
  • 30. A toy system comprising:a representative element comprising photochromatic material, and having a first color and a second color, said first and second colors being different from each other, a first condition simulated by said first color and a second condition simulated by said second color, said first and second conditions being different from each other; and a housing having a source of ultraviolet light attached thereto; said representative element and said source of ultraviolet light being selectively proximal to each other and in said selective proximity said representative element being exposed to ultraviolet light, whereby a change in color of said representative element from one of said first and second colors to the other of said first and second colors is effected by said exposure.
US Referenced Citations (14)
Number Name Date Kind
2312450 Smith Mar 1943
2313335 Godfrey Mar 1943
2373148 Smith Apr 1945
2450867 Smith Oct 1948
2634551 Smith Apr 1953
2658602 Bonanno et al. Nov 1953
2660001 Smith et al. Nov 1953
2664664 Bonnano et al. Jan 1954
2973604 Digirolamo et al. Mar 1961
4917643 Hippely et al. Apr 1990
5166345 Akashi et al. Nov 1992
5208132 Kamada et al. May 1993
5465524 Vallone et al. Nov 1995
5743185 Hippely et al. Apr 1998