The present invention pertains to flotation aids used in swimming, and more particularly to a pull buoy designed to immobilize and/or float a swimmer's legs in order to allow the swimmer to focus on his/her upper body motions.
Currently, the predominant pull buoys for swimming involve a figure-eight shaped float that a swimmer holds tight between his/her thighs. Other pull buoys involve an ankle cuff with openings on the outside of each ankle cylinder which allows the swimmer to insert or remove his/her ankles from the buoy. One ankle cuff approach involves fins on the buoy while another approach excludes the fins.
The existing solutions require varying degrees of inconveniences while swimming. For example, the figure-eight shaped float requires the swimmer to squeeze his/her thighs tightly to keep the pull buoy in place. The pull buoy requires frequent placement adjustments while swimming and is difficult to keep in place, for example, when kicking off a wall of a pool to change direction. The ankle buoy approach is easier than the figure eight format because the buoy stays in place by hanging around the ankles. However, this design also has key limitations. First, because both ankles are cuffed, the ankle buoy creates some difficulty when the swimmer turns around and kicks off a wall. Second, the ankle buoy may not maintain a precise position due to ample room present within the holes, leaving the ankles ample freedom, so the ankle buoy does not provide a snug fit. If the swimmer pulls the ankle buoy upwards to the calf or below the knee, then there is pressure around the circumference of the calf but there is not sufficient pressure to keep the ankle buoy in place during swimming. Finally, the presence of the flotation device so far to the tail end of the body creates an unnatural ballast, increasing the difficulty for the swimmer to keep the legs aerodynamically streamlined behind the body, and the legs wag.
Another approach involves an upside down T-shaped flotation device that is held between the legs with a strap that is wrapped around the swimmer's waist. This approach improves upon the figure eight design but the T-shape device is not able to immobilize the swimmer's legs and allows the legs to sink. As a result, the T-shaped pull buoy does not streamline the swimmer's legs, which is often the goal of a pull buoy.
Another approach includes a simple rubber band that binds the ankles together without any flotation. Again, this device allows the swimmer's legs to sink.
In view of the above, the inventor recognizes a need to offer a swimmer a pull buoy that may be placed in any position along the legs, including between the thighs, the upper calves or the ankles. The pull buoy can be secured in a manner that is snug, streamlines the swimmer aerodynamically, and/or can immobilize the legs. Additionally, the pull buoy can also allow the swimmer to easily kick off the side of a pool and resume swimming in a different direction.
A flotation component, such as for a pull buoy, can be sized and shaped to be placed between the legs of a swimmer. The flotation component can include one or more features to assist in maintaining the flotation component in place while the swimmer is swimming. A pull buoy formed using the flotation component can include a strap that assists in holding the flotation component in place. The flotation component can include a waist portion having a lateral diameter that decreases from one end to the opposite end. Accordingly, the end of the waist portion pointing towards the swimmer's groin can be wider than the end of the waist portion pointing towards the swimmer's feet. This tapering of the waist portion provides better ergonomics and counteracts the rearward pressure of water flow as the swimmer moves forward in the water.
The present aspects of the invention provide a pull buoy and a means to secure the pull buoy to at least one leg using at least one strap or any other means which will surround the leg sufficiently to secure the pull buoy to prevent rotation around the at least one leg.
A first aspect of the invention provides a buoy, comprising: a flotation component configured to be secured between legs of a swimmer, wherein the flotation component includes: a top portion having a first lateral diameter; a waist portion having a second lateral diameter smaller than the first lateral diameter, wherein the second lateral diameter decreases from a first end of the flotation component to a second end of the flotation component; and a bottom portion having a third lateral diameter larger than the second lateral diameter.
A second aspect of the invention provides a buoy, comprising: a flotation component configured to be secured between legs of a swimmer, wherein the flotation component includes: a top portion having a first lateral diameter; a waist portion having a second lateral diameter smaller than the first lateral diameter; and a bottom portion having a third lateral diameter larger than the second lateral diameter; and a strap including two ends extending from a top location and a bottom location a first lateral side of the flotation component, wherein the top location is located between a vertical center of the buoy and a vertical location of the first lateral diameter, and wherein the bottom location is located between the vertical center of the buoy and a vertical location of the third lateral diameter; and means for securing the two ends of the strap around one of the legs.
A third aspect of the invention provides a buoy, comprising: a flotation component including a set of angled slots, wherein the set of angled slots include a pair of openings located on a first lateral side of the flotation component, and wherein an end of each angled slot in the set of angled slots furthest from the first lateral side is closer to a vertical center of the flotation component than each opening located on the first lateral side of the flotation component; a strap routed through the set of angled slots in the flotation component and extending from a pair of openings located on a first lateral side of the flotation component; and means for securing the first lateral side of the flotation component to a swimmer using the strap.
Embodiments of the invention provide a buoy that fits properly between the thighs, the upper calves or the ankles, with a strap or other means to secure the buoy to one leg.
Embodiments of the invention include material(s) that provides a support for the leg that is connected to the strap, e.g., to provide a degree of comfort, fit, and/or flotation.
Embodiments of the invention include material(s) that provides a support for the leg that is not connected to the strap, e.g., to prevent the buoy from floating upwards by reducing any rotational force that may cause the buoy to slip upwards and rotate around the strapped leg. The material also can act as a “shelf” on which the un-strapped leg can be placed after kicking off a wall. The material can stabilize the buoy so that the swimmer does not need to squeeze the buoy between his/her legs in order to keep the buoy from moving.
Embodiments of the invention can incorporate strap(s) for securing both legs, which can fully immobilize both of the legs and may be preferred by some swimmers.
Embodiments describe use of one or more straps to secure the buoy to the leg(s) of a swimmer. However, other solutions can be implemented to secure the buoy to a leg. For example, an opening may be cylindrical or nearly cylindrical with the material of the flotation device having enough elasticity to stretch around a leg, but still provide enough tension to remain secured to a desired location on the leg.
A buoy could be made of a variety of materials. In an embodiment, the buoy can be made of a foam material. In another embodiment, the buoy can be made of an inflatable form. However, it is understood that the buoy can be formed of any other buoyant material.
The illustrative aspects of the invention are designed to solve one or more of the problems herein described and/or one or more other problems not discussed.
These and other features of the disclosure will be more readily understood from the following detailed description of the various aspects of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings that depict various aspects of the invention.
It is noted that the drawings may not be to scale. The drawings are intended to depict only typical aspects of the invention, and therefore should not be considered as limiting the scope of the invention. In the drawings, like numbering represents like elements between the drawings.
As indicated above, aspects of the invention provide a swimming pull buoy with means for securing the buoy to a desired location on a swimmer. In illustrative embodiments, the means includes at least one strap connecting the buoy to at least one leg.
Turning to the drawings,
As illustrated in
In an embodiment, the rounded bottom portion 16C has a diameter that is approximately 1.55 times (e.g., in a range of 1.4 to 1.7 times) the diameter of the rounded top portion 16A and approximately 1.75 times (e.g., in a range of 1.6 to 1.9 times) the diameter of the narrowed waist portion 16B. Additionally, the diameter of the rounded bottom portion 16C can be approximately 45% (e.g., in a range of 40% to 50%) of the height of the flotation component 12A. In an embodiment, the rounded top portion 16A can have a diameter that is approximately 1.15 times (e.g., in a range of 1.05 to 1.25 times) the minimum diameter of the narrowed waist portion 16B. The minimum diameter of the waist portion 16B can be at a location approximately one third (e.g., in a range of 28% to 38%) from the top of the flotation component 12A. When the bottom portion 16C and top portion 16A are the same size, the bottom portion 16C and top portion 16A can have a diameter that is in a range of 1.05 to 1.7 times the minimum diameter of the narrowed waist portion 16B. Regardless, it is understood that the various differences in diameters are only illustrative, and embodiments of a flotation component described herein can have diameters that are beyond the ranges described herein.
As illustrated, the strap 14A can comprise a single strap that is internally routed through slots 18A, 18B located within the flotation component 12A. In an embodiment, the slots 18A, 18B are angled. In a more particular embodiment, a top slot 18A can include an opening 20A located approximately 25% (e.g., in a range of 20% to 30%) from the top of the flotation component 12A and an opening 20B located approximately 40% (e.g., in a range of 35% to 45%) from the top of the flotation component 12A. Additionally, a bottom slot 18B can include an opening 22A located approximately 33% (e.g., in a range of 28% to 38%) from the bottom of the flotation component 12A and an opening 22B located approximately 50% (e.g., in a range of 45% to 55%) from the bottom of the flotation component 12A. Openings 20A, 22A can be located on the same side of the flotation component 12A and spaced sufficiently apart to allow the user to place a portion of his/her leg comfortably there between. As illustrated, the openings 20A, 22A can be located closer to a vertical center of the flotation component 12A than the corresponding vertical locations 17A, 17C for the top and bottom maximum lateral diameters.
The strap 14A can include top and bottom external ends 24A, 24B, respectively, which are configured to attach to one another around a leg/ankle of a user. One or both of the external ends 24A, 24B can include a set of mechanisms for securing the external ends 24A, 24B to one another. For example, the external ends 24A, 24B can have complementary components of a hook and loop fastener fastened thereto using any solution (e.g., sewn, glued, and/or the like). Alternatively, one external end 24A, 24B can include a wraparound clasp, which can allow the other external end 24A, 24B to be looped through and folded back to fasten onto itself (e.g., via a hook and loop fastener or the like). Other securing mechanisms also can be utilized including, for example, any of various types of buckles (e.g., side release buckles), which can enable the external ends 24A, 24B to be secured in multiple alternative locations, and/or allow adjustment of a location of the buckle mechanism located on one or both external ends 24A, 24B.
The strap 14A further includes a central portion 24C, which is routed within the top and bottom slots 18A, 18B of the flotation component 12A and between the openings 20B, 22B located on the opposing side of the flotation component 12A as the external ends 24A, 24B. The external ends 24A, 24B and central portion 24C each can be fabricated from any combination of one or more suitable materials. For example, each external end 24A, 24B can be formed of any material that can securely encompass the swimmer's leg so that the buoy 10A does not rotate around the swimmer's leg or shift up or down the swimmer's leg during normal swimming. For example, each external end 24A, 24B can be formed of a neoprene fabric, rubber, and/or the like. In an embodiment, the central portion 24C can be formed of the same material as the external ends 24A, 24B. However, it is understood that the central portion 24C also can be formed of a different material, which can be configured to provide additional support. For example, the central portion 24C can be formed of a material having additional stiffness, such as a plastic. When formed of different pieces (e.g., different materials), the central portion 24C can be permanently attached to the external ends 24A, 24B using any solution, such as sewing, adhesive, and/or the like. When internally routed, it is understood that the ends of one or more of the external ends 24A, 24B can be fabricated to have an increased stiffness than the remainder of the external ends 24A, 24B to facilitate routing the strap 14A through the flotation component 12A.
The flotation component 12A and strap 14A can include one or more attributes selected to facilitate securing the pull buoy 10A to a desired location on a swimmer's leg. To this extent, for a pull buoy 10A intended to be secured between the thighs of a swimmer, the flotation component 12A can have a size conducive for comfortable placement between the thighs of a typical swimmer. In an embodiment, the flotation component 12A can have an overall height of approximately 9.5 inches (e.g., in a range of 8 to 11 inches), and the bottom portion 16C can have a maximum diameter of approximately 4.3 inches (e.g., in a range of 3 to 5.5 inches), with the waist portion 16B and top portion 16A proportionally smaller as described herein.
Furthermore, the openings 20A, 22A can be located approximately four inches (e.g., in a range of three to five inches) apart. Additionally, the external ends 24A, 24B of the strap 14A can be approximately two to three inches wide, with an overall front to back width of the flotation component 12A being approximately six inches (e.g., five to seven inches). Regardless, it is understood that these dimensions are only illustrative and different size pull buoys 10A can be fabricated for use with smaller or larger swimmers and/or for placement in different locations of the legs, such as the calves, ankles, and/or the like. To this extent, embodiments of a pull buoy 10A can include dimensions that are scaled larger or smaller than these dimensions, while maintaining a similar ratio of sizes for the various features.
In an embodiment, at least a portion of the flotation component 12A and/or strap 14A that is intended to directly contact the swimmer's leg when the pull buoy 10A is utilized can include one or more features to increase an amount of friction to further assist in holding the pull buoy 10A in place during use. For example a surface of the flotation component 12A and/or strap 14A can be textured. In an embodiment, at least a portion of an external end 24A, 24B can include a plurality of flexible rubber beads to increase the friction against the swimmer's leg.
The pull buoy 10A can be manufactured using any solution. For example, in an embodiment, the flotation component 12A comprises three die-cut foam pieces, which are adhered together to form the pull buoy 10A. Each die-cut foam piece can correspond to the rounded top portion 16A, the narrowed waist portion 16B, and the rounded bottom portion 16C. The narrowed waist portion 16B can be permanently secured (e.g., glued) to the top and bottom portions 16A, 16C along either side of the corresponding slot 18A, 18B. Prior to securing one or both sides of the slots 18A, 18B, the central portion 24C of the strap 14A can be routed therein. In this case, the external ends 24A, 24B of the strap 14A can be larger than the openings of the slots 18A, 18B, thereby preventing the strap 14A from being removed from one or both of the slots 18A, 18B.
As discussed herein, a pull buoy described herein can be utilized by a swimmer. In particular, a pull buoy described herein can be held at any location between the swimmer's legs. To this extent,
As illustrated in
Alternatively, a flotation component can include one or more portions 16A-16C having a diameter that varies significantly (e.g., +/−5% or greater) along the front to back width of the flotation component. For example, the flotation diameter can include one or more tapered regions, which can be configured to counteract the flow of water by creating a force that pulls the pull flotation component towards the groin of the swimmer. To this extent,
As illustrated in
Similar to the pull buoy 10A, the pull buoy 10B is shown including a strap 14A that is configured and internally routed through the flotation component 12B in the same manner as the strap shown and described in conjunction with the pull buoy 10A. However, it is understood that there are various alternative configurations for configuring and/or routing a mechanism for securing a pull buoy described herein to a swimmer.
To this extent,
In the various embodiments shown in
In each of the embodiments shown in
In the various embodiments shown in
Additionally, embodiments of a flotation component described herein can have a shape that is non-symmetrical about the top to bottom center axis that runs from the front to the back of the flotation component. For example,
Any of the flotation components shown in
For example, for the flotation component 12H shown in
While most of the various pull buoys shown herein include only a single strap, it is understood that any of the pull buoys described herein can include multiple straps and/or a strap configured to secure both legs of the swimmer to both sides of the flotation component. For example, a pull buoy described herein can include a second strap located on the opposite lateral side of the flotation component. Both straps can be configured similarly or include different mechanisms for creating tension between the pull buoy and the leg of the swimmer. In an illustrative embodiment, a single strap can be routed through a flotation component to provide a snug fit on both legs of the swimmer. For example, the strap 14A shown in
In an embodiment, a strap described herein can be formed of a singular elastic material with no detachable ends (e.g., an elliptical strap). In this case, the strap can be formed of a material sized and having sufficient elasticity to allow the swimmer to insert his/her leg while still providing a snug, secure fit. Such a strap can be formed of a neoprene fabric, rubber, and/or the like. Additionally, the strap can include one or more features to increase an amount of friction against the swimmer's leg (e.g., flexible rubber beads or the like). In an embodiment, one or both lateral sides of the flotation component can include one or more features to increase an amount of friction against the swimmer's leg.
Alternatively, a pull buoy can be implemented without a strap, e.g., particularly when the flotation component includes lateral sides configured to create sufficient pressure to hold the flotation component in place while the user is swimming and making turns in a pool. For example, the flotation components shown in
It is understood that in any of the embodiments, the clasping options for the straps are illustrative only. A variety of foam combinations may be implemented for any of the embodiments. For example, a softer material may be incorporated in the area surrounding the leg to encourage a more snug fit. Finally, the strap itself may route internally or its ends may be mounted onto the surface of the flotation component using any solution.
The foregoing description of various aspects of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. The exact form of the buoy may vary. The description is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and obviously, many modifications and variations are possible. Such modifications and variations that may be apparent to an individual in the art are included within the scope of the invention as defined by the accompanying claims.
REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS The current application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/360,933, filed on 11 Jul. 2016, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62360933 | Jul 2016 | US |