1. Field of the Invention
The present application relates generally to a tool for repairing or restoring the surface of a golf ball and more specifically to a portable, hand-held, lightweight tool for repairing surface damage on the cover of a golf ball.
2. Background of the Invention
The game of golf is a very popular sport. Professional, amateur, and casual players alike enjoy the challenges that golf presents. Unlike other sports, golf is an individual sport where a player combines several skills on each hole to try to lower his score. For example, in a given hole of golf, a player may attempt a long drive, pitch his way out of a sand trap, strategically place the ball on the green, read the layout of the green, and execute a putt with the proper angle and force to place the ball into the cup and finish the hole below par.
The drive in particular demands a great amount of attention from players. The drive itself can make or break a hole. The player attempts to hit the ball with enough distance and accuracy to make each following shot easier, and to ultimately reduce the number of strokes it takes to complete the hole. Players often visit driving ranges to perfect all the components of their swings to increase distance and accuracy during the drive.
A great amount of research and development goes into improving golf clubs and golf balls to achieve better results, particularly with respect to the drive. The golf club that is used to drive the ball off the tee, the driver, is considered by many players to be the most important club in the bag, and players often covet the latest and greatest driver on the market. In addition, the golf ball itself has seen an evolution starting with the original featherie ball, which was a leather pouch that was filled with goose feathers, stitched shut, dried, oiled, and painted white. The gutta-percha ball was made from the gum of the Malaysian Sapodilla tree, which was heated and molded into a sphere. A common golf ball consists of a rubber core with wound rubber thread and an enamel cover, although golf ball manufacturers are always attempting to improve the design.
The cover of the current golf ball has rows of dimples, which affect certain aerodynamic forces. When in flight, a sphere experiences two types of drag. The first type is the obvious drag due to friction, which only accounts for a small part of the drag experienced by a golf ball in flight. The majority of the drag comes from the separation of the flow behind the ball. This drag is known as pressure drag due to separation. The dimples achieve a fairly constant drag, even when the speed of the golf ball increases. Dimples also cause a pressure differential between the top and bottom of a back-spinning ball, which causes lift.
In one illustrative embodiment, a portable tool for modifying a surface of a golf ball comprises a three-dimensional core of material having at least one exterior surface and at least one abrasive surface portion attached to the at least one exterior surface. The at least one abrasive surface portion has a grade of granularity such that application of the at least one abrasive surface portion to an exterior surface of a golf ball modifies material of the exterior surface of the golf ball to lessen negative effects on dynamic properties caused by surface damage.
In another illustrative embodiment, a tool for modifying a surface of a golf ball comprises a core of material having at least one exterior surface and at least one abrasive surface portion attached to the at least one exterior surface. The at least one abrasive surface portion has a grade of granularity such that application of the at least one abrasive surface portion to the exterior surface of a golf ball modifies material of the exterior surface of the golf ball to lessen negative effects on dynamic properties of the golf ball caused by surface damage. The tool further comprises a backing. The core of pliable material is affixed to the backing, and the backing slides into a mounting bracket.
In another illustrative embodiment, a ball washer comprises an exterior housing, an interior ball washing mechanism, a mounting bracket, a core of material having at least one exterior surface, and at least one abrasive surface portion attached to the at least one exterior surface. The at least one abrasive surface portion has a grade of granularity such that application of the at least one abrasive surface portion to the exterior surface of a golf ball modifies material of the exterior surface of the golf ball to lessen negative effects on dynamic properties of the golf ball caused by surface damage. The ball washer further comprises a backing. The core of material is affixed to the backing, and the backing slides into the mounting bracket.
In yet another illustrative embodiment, a golf club grip comprises a tactile cover that fits over a handle portion of a golf club on a first end of the golf club grip and a golf ball repair tool on a second end of the golf club grip. The golf ball repair tool comprises an abrasive surface portion. The abrasive surface portion has a grade of granularity such that application of the at least one abrasive surface portion to an exterior surface of a golf ball modifies material of the exterior surface of the golf ball to lessen negative effects on dynamic properties of the golf ball caused by surface damage.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be described in, or will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art in view of, the following detailed description of the exemplary embodiments of the present invention.
The invention, as well as a preferred mode of use and further objectives and advantages thereof, will best be understood by reference to the following detailed description of illustrative embodiments when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The illustrative embodiments provide a tool for repairing or restoring the surface of the material of a damaged golf ball. A portable, hand-held, lightweight tool comprises one or more abrasive surfaces for repairing surface damage on the cover of a golf ball. The cover of a golf ball is the hard coating on the outside of a golf ball. As used herein, the term “surface” refers to the outside surface of the material of the cover of the golf ball. The tool is configured to repair, remove, or lessen material damage to the surface of the golf ball by application of one or more of the abrasive surfaces. As used herein, the term “application” refers to manipulation of an abrasive surface while in contact with the surface of a damaged golf ball or manipulation of the golf ball while in contact with an abrasive surface. The tool may be made from a pliable material, such as foam rubber, to conform to the curved surface of a golf ball. The tool may include a fastener so that the tool may be attached to a belt loop, golf bag, key chain, golf cart, or the like. In other exemplary embodiments, the tool may be an article of clothing or other golf equipment, such as a glove, towel, golf club cover, golf ball washer, or the like.
The illustrative embodiments may be utilized with many different types of sports balls or other projectile objects. In order to provide a context for the description of the specific elements and functionality of the illustrative embodiments,
During play, a golf ball may come into contact with several objects or surfaces. For instance, a game of golf is typically initiated by striking (driving) the ball from a wooden or plastic tee. The ball may bounce and come to rest on a fairway, the rough (areas of long grass), a sand trap (areas of sand that are usually around the green), the green (areas of short grass around the cup), and the cup. The ball also comes into contact with the clubs themselves. In addition, the ball may strike other objects, such as trees, golf carts, cement or gravel cart paths, and so forth.
As a result of the abuse a typical golf ball endures, the surface of the ball may suffer surface damage, such as burs, gouges, scratches, etc. The term “surface damage,” as used herein, refers to any such damage to the material surface of the ball that may affect the aerodynamics and rolling dynamics of the ball, including, but not limited to, gouges and scratches. Because the cover surface of the golf ball is specifically designed for long, accurate flight, maintaining the integrity of the surface of the golf ball is very important. Many pro shops and driving ranges collect damaged balls and send them to be resurfaced using complicated and expensive machinery. However, during the course of the game, the only solution for damage to the surface of the ball is to replace it with a new one.
In accordance with an illustrative embodiment, a tool is provided for substantially repairing or restoring the surface of a golf ball. That is, the tool modifies the material surface of the ball to reduce the effects of surface damage and to lessen the negative effects on aerodynamics, rolling dynamics, or other dynamic properties caused by surface damage. In one exemplary embodiment, the tool is portable, hand-held, and lightweight so that it may be carried on the golf course to allow the player to modify the surface of the ball on the fly rather than relying on an expensive, cumbersome machine. The tool may comprise one or more abrasive surfaces for reducing the effects of surface damage on the material of the cover of a golf ball.
In another exemplary embodiment, tool 300 may have a fastener 312. Using fastener 312, a player may attach tool 300 to a belt loop, a golf bag, a golf cart, or the like. Alternatively, tool 300 may be small and portable enough to keep in the player's pocket or on a keychain.
Tool 300 may be made of a pliable core material, such as foam rubber. Surfaces 302-310 may be paper or fabric surfaces that are applied to the outside surface of the core of tool 300 with adhesive, for example. In an alternative embodiment, an abrasive may be applied to the outside surface of the core of the tool 300 using a spray or the like. Thus, when the player rubs the golf ball into a surface, such as surface 302, for example, the shape of tool 300 conforms to the curvature of the ball, allowing more surface-to-surface contact. Rubbing the golf ball against an abrasive surface of tool 300 effectively modifies the surface of the golf ball at the initial point of contact as well as surrounding areas to repair, remove, or lessen the damaged portion with little effort. With the surface of the golf ball thus modified or repaired—that is, with the negative effects on dynamic properties of the ball effectively limited—the player may continue use of the ball without any significant effect on the flight of the ball.
While tool 300 is depicted as a rectangular block, tool 300 may take a variety of different forms depending upon the implementation. For example, tool 300 may be a cube, pyramid, cylinder, tetrahedron, or the like.
In other embodiments, the portable tool may also take the form of an article, such as clothing or other items used on the golf course. For example, the tool may be incorporated into a glove, shirt, pants, hat, visor, or the like. The tool may also be incorporated into a golf bag, golf cart, golf club, etc.
In an alternative embodiment shown in
In accordance with an illustrative embodiment, ball washer 700 has golf ball repair tool 702 mounted thereon or incorporated within. Golf ball repair tool 702 may have a plurality of abrasive surfaces, such as surface 704, thereon to modify the surface of the golf ball to limit the negative effects on aerodynamics, rolling dynamics, or other dynamic properties caused by surface damage. Each abrasive surface, such as surface 704, may be concave to match the curvature of a golf ball.
Tool 702 may be made of a pliable, deformable material, such as foam rubber. Surface 704, for example, may be a paper or fabric surface that is applied to the outside surface of tool 702 with adhesive, for example. Thus, when the player rubs the golf ball into surface 704, for example, the shape of tool 702 conforms to the curvature of the ball, allowing more surface-to-surface contact.
Tool 810 is affixed to a backing 822, which may be secured within a mounting bracket 824.
The golf ball repair tool may be mounted to other objects, such as a golf bag or golf cart, for example.
Thus, the illustrative embodiments provide a tool for modifying the material of the surface of a golf ball to limit the negative effects on aerodynamics, rolling dynamics, and other dynamic properties caused by material surface damage. A portable, hand-held, lightweight tool comprises one or more abrasive surfaces for removing or lessening material damage from the cover of a golf ball. The tool may be made from a pliable, deformable material, such as foam rubber, to conform to the curved surface of a golf ball. The tool may include a fastener so that the tool may be attached to a belt loop, golf bag, key chain, golf cart, or the like. In other exemplary embodiments, the tool may be an article of clothing or other golf equipment, such as a glove, towel, hat, visor, or golf club cover.
The description of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description, and is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the invention in the form disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention, the practical application, and to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.