The present invention consists of a square end ball-lock pedal spindle for easy and secure mounting of pedals to crank arm. The spindle is lightweight and strong, efficient for high performance pedaling. Here, it is claimed that the unique square attachment end design and spindle ball-lock mechanism is an innovation to how pedals are secured to their corresponding crank arms.
In traditional bicycle pedals, the mechanism that maintains a pedal's rocking synchronicity with the rotating crank consists of a spindle that extends in the interior of the pedal's cylindrical housing that is typically furnished with ball bearings, a washer, and a nut at the endmost part of the pedal to secure all of its axle components in place. To attach to the crank arm, the right side pedal spindle typically has a right-hand thread and removes counterclockwise while installs clockwise, and the left side pedal spindle has a left-hand thread that removes clockwise and installs counterclockwise. While the mechanical aspect remains relatively unchanged in this pedal spindle design, the present invention does facilitate the mounting of bicycle pedals by using a square end (i.e. the four flat sides to the mounting end of the spindle) and a ball-lock mechanism to secure the pedal to the crank arm.
As early as Lallement's improvement of velocipedes in 1866 (P. Lallement, No. US000059915) with the adoption of the modern crankset for mechanically propelling the bicycle in its early developments, the pedal spindle has virtually remained unchanged. In 1922, the Italian immigrant, Tony Bacigalupi, designed the first innovation to the pedal spindle (T. Bacigalupi, No. US00492191) by threading the interior of the spindle attachment end and incorporating a cap screw to fix the pedal to the crank arm. Bacigalupi's invention; however, was merely intended to resolve the issue of pedals becoming frozen onto their spindles, thereby making the changing of pedals a task that could potentially damage the crank arm in the process. To be sure, Bacigalupi's innovation changed nothing on the functional aspect of the pedal spindle and little on how it is actually mounted onto the crank arm.
The present pedal spindle (
The most obvious distinctive feature of this pedal spindle invention is the square attachment end 3. This attachment end can be retrofitted with a thread adapter having a square center (albeit, square end dimensions will differ slightly), or it can be fitted on a crank arm designed for this spindle as seen in
A square end ball-lock pedal spindle for easy and secure mounting of pedals to crank arm.
This invention is an improvement on traditional pedal spindles in that it does not require any tools to mount to the crank arm, thereby facilitating the switching between different types of pedals for different types of cycling.
The advantages of this invention will become clear in the explanation and accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals designate like parts throughout the figures:
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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| 5315896 | Stringer | May 1994 | A |
| 5586472 | Lin | Dec 1996 | A |
| 6568296 | Lin | May 2003 | B1 |
| 7296534 | Fink | Nov 2007 | B2 |
| 8490514 | Giudici | Jul 2013 | B2 |
| 20030205103 | Vaughn | Nov 2003 | A1 |
| 20100098484 | Chen | Apr 2010 | A1 |
| 20100229676 | Chen | Sep 2010 | A1 |
| 20180274581 | Anderes | Sep 2018 | A1 |
| Number | Date | Country |
|---|---|---|
| 102006052480 | May 2007 | DE |
| 102010005895 | Jul 2011 | DE |
| 202019106030 | Jan 2020 | DE |
| Entry |
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| Machine Translation of DE 10 2006 052 480, obtained Oct. 23, 2020. |
| Machine Translation of DE 20 2019 106 030, obtained Oct. 23, 2020. |
| Machine Translation of DE 10 2010 005 895, obtained Oct. 23, 2020. |