The present invention relates generally to archery bows and more particularly pertains to a cable guard for use with and mounted to archery bows.
Certain archery bows, such as compound bows, store energy by a cable arrangement involving a bowstring, rotational elements and additional cable portions extending between the respective ends of the bow. In certain arrangements, cable guards are used to engage the cable arrangements to provide clearance, assisting the bowstring and arrow to be drawn and released without interference from other cable portions.
Archery bow arrangements according to certain preferred embodiments described herein include an archery bow body defining opposing limb tips and a bowstring extending between the limb tips. At least one cable portion extends between the limb tips and a cable guard extends from the archery body bow body. A pair of pulleys are rotationally mounted to the cable guard in which the pair of pulleys in combination encircle at least 360 degrees of the circumference of the at least one cable.
In certain embodiments, an archery bow comprises an archery bow body defining opposing limb tips having rotational elements and a bowstring extending between the limb tips. At least one cable portion extends between the limb tips. A cable guard extends from the archery body bow body and a pair of pulleys are rotationally mounted to the cable guard wherein the pair of pulleys retain the at least one cable between them and are vertically offset from each other.
In a further embodiment, an archery bow contains an archery bow body defining opposing limb tips and a bowstring which extends between the limb tips. Further, the archery bow includes at least one cable portion which extends between the limb tips and a cable guard which extends from the archery body bow body. A pair of pulleys are rotationally mounted to the cable guard and retain at least one cable between them. Each pulley defines an outer radius and the pair of pulleys are mounted horizontally offset from each other by a distance less than the sum of their respective outer radii.
Certain embodiments of a cable guard for an archery body include a cable guard arm having a forward end mountable to the riser of an archery bow and an opposing rearward end. A pair of forward pulleys are mounted along the length of the cable guard arm and a pair of rearward pulleys are spatially separated from the pair of forward pulleys. The rearward pulleys are mounted to the cable guard arm rearward of the forward pulleys and vertically offset from the forward pulleys.
Other objects and attendant advantages will be readily appreciated as the same become better understood by references to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the disclosure, reference will now be made to the embodiments illustrated and specific language will be used to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of the disclosure is thereby intended, such alterations, modifications, and further applications of the principles being contemplated as would normally occur to one skilled in the art to which the invention relates.
The portion of the cable which defines the bowstring cable 34 includes an upper portion 28 and a lower end portion 30 which are fed-out from idler wheel 16 and cam 18 when the bow is drawn. The upper end portion 28 is part of a longer cable which has a medial portion mounted around idler wheel 16 with the ends mounted to cam 18. The non-bowstring portion of the cable extending from wheel 16 to cam 18 can be referred to as the return cable portion 35. Additionally, a y-yoke anchor cable 32 has a lower end mounted to cam 18 which extends to two upper ends mounted adjacent opposing ends of axle 20. Each cable has a thickness and a round cross-section defining a circumference. From the perspective of the archer, the bowstring is considered rearward relative to the riser which defines forward.
When the bowstring 34 is drawn, it causes idler wheel 16 and cam 18 at each end of the bow to rotate, feeding out cable and bending limb portions 12 and 14 inward, causing energy to be stored therein. When the bowstring 34 is released with an arrow engaged to the bowstring, the limb portions 12 and 14 return to their rest position, causing idler wheel 16 and cam 18 to rotate in the opposite direction, to take up the bowstring 34 and launch the arrow with an amount of energy proportional to the energy initially stored in the bow limbs. Bow 10 is described for illustration and context and is not intended to be limiting.
Certain embodiments can also be used with dual or two cam compound bows. An example two cam bow 10′ is illustrated in
The present disclosure can also be used in other types of bows, for example hybrid cam bows or crossbows, which are considered conventional for purposes of the present invention. For convenience, the combination of riser 11 and either single or quad limbs forming upper limb 12 and lower limb 14 may generally be referred to as archery bow body 15. Accordingly, it should be appreciated that the archery bow body can take on various designs in accordance with the many different types of bows with which the present invention can be used.
In the illustrated embodiments, a cable guard 110 or 110′, as seen in
Cable guard 110 as more clearly seen in
In certain embodiments, a roller arrangement 130, illustrated in detail in
Typically each pulley defines a peripheral track or groove sized to receive and at least partially encircle a cable portion. For example, rearward pulley includes a groove defined by sidewalls 133 extending from an inner groove radius 134, and forward pulley includes a groove defined by sidewalls 137 extending from an inner groove radius 138. Inner pulleys 132′ and 136′ have similar structure. Preferably the sidewalls 133 and 137 of pulleys 132 and 136 each define an outer radius R1 and R2, and the inner grooves 134 and 138 each define an inner radius G1 and G2.
In alternate arrangements, the roller arrangement may include alternate elements to the illustrated pulleys. Examples of such rolling elements include one or more rolling bars or a roller formed with a groove having concave or convex sidewalls. In further, less preferred embodiments, the arrangement may use non-rolling elements which engage the cable portions as disclosed herein, which allow the cable portions to linearly slide relative to the element in non-rolling movement.
Portions of the cable arrangements, for example the anchor cable and the return cable portions preferably pass between the inner and outer pairs of pulleys. The cables may travel vertically or linearly through the roller arrangement, yet are retained laterally to be held out of the way of the arrow and bowstring during a release of an arrow.
In certain embodiments, the sidewalls and groove of each pulley define a horizontal cross-section which at least partially encircle a portion of the circumference of a cable portion, which encirclement may be less than or more than 180 degrees. In certain preferred embodiments, the cable portion is within the pulley groove with the sidewalls extending past the largest diameter of the cable, in effect encircling the cable circumference by at least 180 degrees. In certain embodiments, the pulleys are arranged so that the inner pair of pulleys in combination encircle at least 360 degrees of the circumference of one cable portion and the outer pair of pulleys in combination encircle at least 360 degrees of one cable portion, thereby retaining the cable portions between the paired pulleys. In alternate combinations, one pulley may encircle more than 180 degrees of a cable portion while a paired pulley or another component encircles less than 180 degrees, yet the combination retains the cable portion between the paired pulleys.
In certain embodiments of the roller arrangement, the forward pulley or pulleys are horizontally offset and vertically offset from the rearward pulley or pulleys. For example, as illustrated in
In certain embodiments, the rearward pair of pulleys may be vertically offset upward relative to the forward pair of pulleys, as is illustrated in
In certain embodiments, as illustrated in
In certain embodiments, a portion of the anchor cable, such as anchor cable 32 in a single cam arrangement, is retained between the outer facing pair of pulleys 132 and 136, while a cable portion, such as a return cable extending between the upper and lower rotational elements, is retained between the inner facing pair of pulleys 132′ and 136′. Each pair of pulleys provides bearing surfaces which form a bend point for the respective cable portion retained in the pair of pulleys. In a brace or undrawn position, the cables each form a brace angle θ1 and α1 measured between the portions extending towards the opposing limb tips from the cable bend point. As the bowstring and bowstring are moved to a drawn position, the limb tips will correspondingly move horizontally and vertically along an arcuate path and the rotational elements in the limb tips will pivot. The combined movement of the limb tips and pivoting of the rotational elements will cause the respective retained cables to move linearly through the respective cable pairs and will also change the angular orientation of cable angles to drawn angles θ2 and α2 measured between the portions extending towards the respective limb tips from the cable bend point.
In certain embodiments, the retained cable portions are encircled by and contact the groove portions and inner radii G1 and G2 of both the inner pair of pulleys or both the outer pair of pulleys in a brace position and remain in contact with the groove portions of a respective rearward and forward pulley pair during the draw and release cycle. In alternate embodiments, the retained cable portions each contact the groove portion of a forward one of the inner pair of pulleys or the outer pair of pulleys in a brace position and move to contact the groove portions of the respective rearward pulleys during the draw. Depending on the embodiment and component orientations, if a cable portion moves to contact a rearward pulley during a draw cycle, it may or may not simultaneously remain in contact with a forward pulley. The contact may occur, for example, by a cable portion being translated rearward from a forward pulley and towards a rearward pulley or contact may occur when the cable angle changes.
In certain embodiments, one or both retained cable portions are arranged to apply a substantially lateral force against a respective forward pulley when the bow is in the brace position. The movement of the bow and/or change in cable angle causes the magnitude of the force applied against the respective forward pulley to decline as the bow is pulled to a drawn position. Correspondingly, the movement of the bow and/or change in cable angle causes force to be applied and to increase in magnitude against the respective paired rearward pulley as the bow is pulled to a drawn position. The decrease and increase of the magnitudes of the respective forces may or may not be accompanied by physical movement of the cable portions which may, for example, remain in contact with a forward and rearward pulley continuously through the brace and draw cycle. Preferably, the majority of the lateral force is transferred from one to the other of the pair of pulleys as the bow is moved to the drawn position.
In further alternate embodiments, the cable guard and roller arrangement 130 retains the cable portions laterally from the plane which includes the bowstring and arrow, yet roller arrangement 130 travels and/or is displaceable along the roller guard arm. In one example, the roller arrangement is mounted as or to a sliding arrangement which can translate along a primarily forward-rearward aligned slot, groove or edge defined by the roller guard arm. In certain of these embodiments, the roller arrangement slides or uses a rolling arrangement to translate forward or rearward along the roller guard arm in response to the force applied to the roller arrangement by the retained cable portions as the bow is drawn and released. This translation movement accommodates the applied rearward and/or forward force and substantially reduces or eliminates the bearing force of the cables against the rollers.
While the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, the same is to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character, it being understood that only the preferred embodiment has been shown and described and that all changes and modifications that come within the spirit of the invention are desired to be protected.