1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a basketball stand, and more particularly to a basketball stand that supports a backboard and rim assembly and includes a base and frame for supporting the assembly.
2. Description of Related Art
The prior art includes a variety of portable basketball stands that support backboards and rim assemblies a predetermined distance above a playing surface. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,628,508 to Koole describes a portable basketball stand, including a base, a support system, a set of springs, and an assembly of cams, rods and laths that co-operate with the springs and the support system to lift at least part of the weight of the stand from the playing surface and render the stand stationary.
A portable basketball stand should have a simple and reliable construction that minimizes the cost of fabrication and assembly and allows easy operation and portability. The prior art, however, includes devices with complex constructions and a multiplicity of moving parts and co-operating components. Unlike these prior devices, the portable basketball stand of the present invention is a simple and durable construction that facilitates portability, reduces the costs of manufacture and assembly, and provides consistent and reliable performance.
In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, a portable basketball stand comprises a frame member for supporting a backboard and rim assembly, a base member for supporting the frame member, and wheels that allow the base member to move over a supporting surface. A reciprocating actuator displaces the frame member between a storage position and a playing position. One or more front wheels lie adjacent the front or first end of the base member, the end most proximate the backboard and rim assembly when the frame extends to the playing position. This front wheel or wheels move relative to the base member between a lowered position in which the base member lies above the supporting surface and a raised position in which the base member engages the supporting surface.
For a more complete understanding of this invention, one should now refer to the embodiment illustrated in greater detail in the accompanying drawings and described below by way of an example of the invention. In the drawings:
While the following disclosure describes the invention in connection with one embodiment, one should understand that the invention is not limited to this embodiment. Furthermore, one should understand that the drawings are not to scale and that graphic symbols, diagrammatic representations, and fragmentary views, in part, may illustrate the embodiment. In certain instances, the disclosure may not include details which are necessary for an understanding of the present invention.
Turning now to the drawings and referring specifically to
The frame member 12 includes a beam element 16 and two leg elements 17 and 18. The beam element 16 is an elongate component with an angled profile, a first end portion which receives the backboard 13 and the rim 14, and an opposite, second end portion which connects to the leg elements 17 and 18. The leg element 17 includes two parallel segments and lies pivotally connected at one of its distal ends to the distal end of the first end portion of the beam element 16, as at 19, and at its opposite distal end to the base member 15, as at 20, in the mid-section of the base member 15. The leg element 18 comprises a generally triangular lattice-type structure (see
The base member 15 is a platform-like structure with longitudinal elements 15a, transverse elements 15b, cross-bracing 15c and vertical elements 15d and 15e that pivotally connect to leg elements 17 and 18, respectively. All of these elements are welded or otherwise fixedly secured to one another. The base member 15 supports the frame member 12 (including the backboard 13 and the rim 14), and it supports a hydraulic cylinder assembly 23 (including a pump, motor, tubing and appropriate controls, See
The base member 15 (and thus the stand 11) rides on two pairs of rear wheels 25 and a pair of front caster assemblies 26. The rear wheels 25 rotate about an axis of rotation defined by an axle 27 which extends transversely across the rear end portion of the base member 15 and rotatably mounts the wheels 25 to the base member 15. Each caster assembly 26 lies pivotally mounted to a transverse element 15f of the base member 15, as at 28, so that it may move between the lowered position shown in FIG. 5 and the raised or retracted position shown in
Each caster assembly 26 includes a swivelled wheel 26a and a mounting plate 26b. (See FIG. 6). A pivot connection 30 connects one end of the mounting plate 26b to the transverse element 15f and a linkage assembly 31 connects an opposite end of the mounting plate 26b to the leg element 18 of the frame member 12. (The stand 11 includes two linkage assemblies 31 as well as two caster assemblies 26, See FIG. 8). The linkage assemblies 31 transmit the movement of the frame member 12 to the caster assemblies 26 as the frame moves from the playing configuration to the storage/transport configuration. Each linkage assembly 31 includes an outer tube 31a and an inner tube 31b disposed in telescoping relation with each other (See FIG. 7). A pivot connection 32 connects the outer tube 31a to the leg element 18; and a pivot connection 33 connects the inner tube 31b to the mounting plate 26b of the caster assembly 26 through a transverse member 15h that connects the mounting plates 26b of the two caster assemblies 26. The linkage assembly 31 produces an over-center connection at 33, as shown in
The hydraulic cylinder 23 drives the frame member 12 from the storage/transport position to the playing position. Specifically, the cylinder 23 drives the leg element 18 to the playing position shown in
To return the frame member 12 to the storage/transport position, the operator disengages the cross brace 34 and releases the cylinder 23 to allow the leg element 18 to pivot downwarkly towards the base member 15. The linkage assembly 31 transmits this movement to the caster assemblies 26 and drives the caster assemblies downwardly (to the position shown in
In the lowered position shown in
While the above description and the drawings disclose and illustrate one embodiment, one should understand, of course, that the invention is not limited to this embodiment. Those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains may make other modifications and other embodiments employing the principles of this invention, particularly upon considering the foregoing teachings. Therefore, by the appended claims, the applicants intend to cover any modifications and other embodiments as incorporate those features which constitute the essential features of this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3137502 | Duganich | Jun 1964 | A |
3427025 | Porter | Feb 1969 | A |
3841631 | Dolan | Oct 1974 | A |
4412679 | Mahoney et al. | Nov 1983 | A |
5100132 | Anderson | Mar 1992 | A |
5628508 | Koole | May 1997 | A |
20010045498 | Davis et al. | Nov 2001 | A1 |
20030040383 | Squibb | Feb 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040157688 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |