The present invention relates to a rope guide apparatus. More particularly, the present invention relates to a rope guide apparatus configured as a boat mooring line apparatus.
In many applications it is desirable to attach a rope to an object that is beyond a person's reach. A particularly common circumstance in which a person may wish to attach a rope to an object beyond their reach is when mooring a boat, when a boatman standing on a boat may wish to attach a mooring rope to a mooring fixture on the dock.
The process of docking or mooring a vessel generally requires that a docking or mooring line be thrown by the boatman from the boat to dock personnel on the dock, which dock personnel may then secure the end of the line to a mooring fixture such as a mooring piling or dock cleat. The mooring line may then be used to draw the vessel closer to the dock, at which time further mooring lines may be secured as required.
However, in some circumstances, considering in particular the docking of a small vessel such as a pleasure craft, dock personnel to whom a rope could be thrown may not be available. Moreover, a small vessel such as a pleasure craft may often be ‘single-handed’, i.e. comprise only a single crew member, and in the absence of additional crew members the helmsman may himself be required to perform the additional operation of attaching the mooring line to the mooring fixture.
When attaching a docking line to a mooring fixture in the absence of dock personnel, the boat personnel may be required to jump from the boat to the dock whilst holding a free end of a mooring rope. This presents a first problem inasmuch that the helmsman is required to manoeuvre the boat sufficiently close to the dock, whilst avoiding striking the dock, that the crew member may jump between the boat and the dock. It will be appreciated that jumping from the boat in this manner, and in particular if mooring a boat having a relatively high freeboard, is an unsafe practice which may result in the boatman falling from the boat. Moreover, problems associated with attaching a mooring line to a mooring point are particularly exasperated in a one-man crew situation, in which instance the helmsman may find it difficult or impossible to attach the mooring line to the mooring point.
Accordingly, it is desirable to provide an apparatus that more easily allows for attachment of a rope to an object that is beyond a person's reach, and in particular to allow for the attachment of a boat mooring line to a mooring fixture, such as a mooring piling or cleat, which obviates the above mentioned problems.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a rope guide apparatus; the apparatus comprising an axially elongated pole having first and second ends; and a length of rope having first and second ends; in which said length of rope is slidably retained by said elongated pole at a first point of retention located adjacent said first end of said elongated pole from which point said first end of said rope extends freely from said axially elongated pole, and in which said rope is arranged to extend from said first end thereof towards said second end of said elongated pole and is slidably retained by said elongated pole at a second point of retention adjacent said second end thereof, and in which said rope is arranged to extend continuously from adjacent said second end of said elongated pole towards said first end of said elongated pole and is slidably retained by said elongated pole at a third point of retention located at said first end of said elongated pole or intermediate said first and second ends of said elongated pole, and in which said second end of said length of rope extends freely from said axially elongated pole.
Preferably, said elongated pole is substantially rigid along its length.
Preferably, said third point of retention is located between said second end of said elongated pole and the mid-point of said elongate pole between said first and second ends.
Preferably, said length of rope is slidably retained by said elongated pole at each point of retention such as to allow said rope to slide relative to said point of retention generally parallel to the axis of said pole and so as to retain the rope close to or within the elongated pole at each point of retention.
Preferably, at least said third point of retention is defined by a retaining fixture.
Preferably, said retaining fixture is formed by a protrusion defined by said elongated pole which protrusion is shaped to slidably retain said length of rope at the point of retention.
Preferably, at least said third point of retention is an eyelet and said rope is arranged to pass through each said eyelet.
Preferably, said elongated pole is an elongated tube having first and second open ends and defining internally an axial bore extending therebetween.
Preferably, said length of rope is arranged to extend at least partly within said elongated tube along said axial bore, and is arranged such that said first end of said rope extends freely outwardly of said first open end of said elongated tube, and such that said second end of said rope extends outwardly of said second open end of said elongated tube and continuously therefrom towards said first end of said elongated tube.
Preferably, said length of rope is arranged such that said rope extends outwardly of said elongated tube and continuously therefrom towards said first end of said elongated tube external to said elongated tube.
Preferably, said elongated tube defines an eyelet at said third point of retention protruding radially outwardly of the outer surface of the elongated tube.
Preferably, said elongated pole is comprised of a plurality of discrete pole sections.
Preferably, said plurality of discrete pole sections are configured to be readily separable and attachable.
Preferably, said plurality of discrete pole sections are configured to be readily attachable by way of partial insertion of an end of a first pole section into an open end of a second pole section.
Preferably, said apparatus is configured as a boat mooring line apparatus.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a boat mooring line apparatus; the apparatus comprising: a substantially rigid axially elongated tube having first and second open ends; and a length of rope having first and second ends; in which said length of rope is arranged to partly extend within said tube along said axial bore, and is arranged such that said first end of said rope extends freely outwardly of said first open end of said elongated tube, and such that said second end of said rope extends outwardly of said second open end of said elongated tube and continuously therefrom towards said first end of said elongated tube external to said elongated tube, and in which said length of rope is slidably retained by a retaining fixture protruding outwardly of the outer surface of the elongated tube located intermediate said second open end and said midpoint of said elongated tube, and in which said second end of said length of rope extends freely from said axially elongated tube.
The invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings, which are purely schematic and not to scale, of which:
An example of an environment in which a boat mooring line apparatus according to a specific embodiment of the present invention can be used is illustrated in a perspective view in
Referring to the Figure, a boat mooring line apparatus 101 according to one embodiment of the present invention is being used by a boatman 102 aboard boat 103 to attach the boat 103 to a mooring fixture, in the specific example to the mooring piling 104, fixed to dock 105. As will be described in further detail in relation to later Figures, boat mooring line apparatus 101 comprises principally of a substantially rigid elongated pole 106 and a length of mooring line rope 107 guided by the pole 106 so as to extend substantially the length of the pole.
It will of course be appreciated that, whilst in the specific example of the invention described in detail herein, boat mooring line apparatus 101 is shown being used to attach a rope about mooring piling 104, in practice boat mooring line apparatus 101 could be used to attach a rope about any mooring point fixture. In particular, it will be appreciated that, in certain territories, for example, the United Kingdom, a more common form of mooring point fixture is a ‘cleat’, usually constructed of metal. It will be appreciated that boat mooring line apparatus 101 may be used to attach a mooring line rope to a variety of different forms of mooring point fixtures, including both traditional pilings and the more modern cleat.
Thus, as shown in the Figure, the boatman 102 may guide the boat 103 under its own power towards the dock 105 to bring the boat 103 near and generally parallel to the dock 105. The boatman may then lean outwardly of the boat with mooring line apparatus 101, grasping one end of pole 106, and using pole 106 to guide the loop of mooring rope 107 over mooring piling 104. As illustrated in the Figure, the free ends of mooring line rope 107 may be secured to the boat 103, for example, to the mid ship cleat 108 of the boat 103, so as to attach the boat 103 to the dock 105 by the loop of mooring line 107.
It will of course be appreciated however that, although a rope guide apparatus according to the present invention may find particular utility when configured as a boat mooring line apparatus for mooring a boat, it is not limited in its utility to such an application. Rather, a rope guide apparatus, possibly similar in construction to mooring line apparatus 101, may be used for attaching a loop of rope to an object in other situations, for example, for a person standing on a dockside to attach a loop of rope about an object floating in water adjacent the dock, to thereby allow retrieval of the object. In a particular alternative example, a rope guide apparatus according to one alternative embodiment of the present invention might be configured for use for rescue purposes, for example, to be used by rescue personnel aboard a rescue vessel to retrieve a person floating in the water. As a still further alternative example, a rope guide apparatus might be used by ground personnel for steadying of a structural beam being lowered into position by a crane.
A method of using the mooring line apparatus previously identified in
Referring to the Figures, the situation of boat 103 in
Once the mooring line rope is looped about the mooring piling 104, as in
Thus, as shown in
Mooring line apparatus 101 is shown in a close up perspective view in
As previously described, in the specific embodiment the rope guide apparatus is configured as a boat mooring line apparatus 101 suitable for mooring of boats, and comprises principally of an axially elongated pole 106 having first and second ends 301, 302 respectively, and a length of mooring line rope 107 having first and second free ends 303, 304 respectively. In the embodiment, said rope 107 is comprised of braided strands of a polyester plastics materials, but it will of course be appreciated could be comprised of alternative materials, such as textile strands or metallic wires. In essence, rope 107 should be flexible and sufficiently strong as to not be broken when relatively high tensile forces are exerted thereon.
As will be described, in the specific embodiment, pole 106 is an axially elongated hollow tube, the first and second ends 301, 302 of which are open, and which are communicated by an axial bore 305 extending the full length of the tube between the first and second open ends. In the embodiment, elongated tube 106 is constructed of a carbon-fibre reinforced plastics material, which construction is selected for its advantageous combination of strength, high rigidity, and low weight. In the embodiment, elongated tube 106 is constructed so as to be substantially rigid along its length, such that the tube may conveniently guide and support the mass of rope 107 without undergoing excessive distortion. It will of course be appreciated that tube 106 could alternatively be constructed of other materials, for example, a homogenous plastics materials, wood, or metal.
Thus, referring to the drawings, in the embodiment the boat mooring line apparatus 101 comprises axially elongated tube 106 having first and second open ends 301, 302, tube 106 defining internally an axial bore 305 extending therebetween, and a length of flexible mooring line rope 107. Said flexible mooring line rope 107 is arranged such that approximately a first half of its length extends from the first end 301 to the second end 302 of the tube 106, and a second half of its length extends in the opposite direction, such that both ends 303, 304 of the rope 107 extend freely from the tube 106. Rope 107 is thus supported by tube 106 so as to generally form a closed loop, in which both free ends of the rope are returned generally towards the first end of the tube 106.
Referring in particular to
As shown in the drawings, said rope 107 is arranged so as to extend outwardly of the second open end 302 of the tube 106, and then return backwardly generally towards the first open end 301 externally to the tube 106. Thus, as illustrated, said rope 107 is arranged to extend outwardly of the second end 302 of the tube 106 and continuously therefrom generally towards said first end 301 of said pole 106 towards retaining fixture 307.
In the specific embodiment, retaining fixture 307 takes the form of an eyelet protruding radially outwardly of the outer surface of the tube 106, and through which the rope 106 passes to thereby slidably retain the rope 107 close to the tube 106 at the point of the eyelet 307. Eyelet 307 is located between said first and second ends 301, 302 of said tube 106, in the specific embodiment, eyelet 307 is located between said second end 302 of said tube 106 and the midpoint of said tube 106. As illustrated, said rope 107 is not retained relative to the tube 107 between the second open end 302 of the tube 106 and the retaining eyelet 307, and thus the rope 106 is allowed to hang freely between the second open end 302 of the tube 106 and the eyelet 307 thereby defining a loose loop.
In the specific embodiment, tube 106 comprises a further eyelet 306 positioned intermediate the midpoint of the tube 106 and said first open end 301. Thus, as illustrated, in the embodiment rope 107 is arranged to pass through eyelet 306 after passing through eyelet 307 so as to slidably retain rope 107 close to the tube 106, and rope 107 is arranged to extend freely from eyelet 306. Eyelet 306 ensures that the second free end 304 of rope 107 is returned generally towards the first end 301 of the tube 106 rather than hanging freely from the eyelet 307.
Thus, as described, said rope 107 is arranged as a loop, slidably retained with respect to the tube 106, such that the rope is guided to extend through tube 106, entering through said first open end 301, exiting the tube through the second open end 302, and being guided back towards the first end 301 by way of eyelets 306 and 307. In this way, both free ends of said rope 107 will tend to fall naturally proximal the first end 301 of the tube 106.
Rope 107 is advantageously slidably retained with respect to said tube 106, firstly by the internal wall of said tube 106, and subsequently by said eyelets 306 and 307, such that the rope 107 is retained close to or within the tube 106 at the points of retention, but such that rope 107 may readily slide with respect to tube 106 in a direction generally parallel to the axis of said tube 106. Specifically, in the example, said rope 107, said axial bore 305, and said eyelets 306 and 307, are dimensioned such that the cross-sectional width of the rope 107 is substantially less than the width of said axial bore 305 and of the apertures of eyelets 306 and 307. In this way, rope 107 may readily slide relative to each of the points of retention, with each point of retention only exerting minimal frictional resistance on the rope. In the specific example, axial bore 305 has a cross-sectional width of approximately 40 millimetre, the apertures of eyelets 306, 307 a width of approximately, 20 millimetre, and rope 107 a width of approximately 15 millimetre, although it will of course be appreciated that these dimensions may be varied in the case of alternative embodiments of the invention.
As described, rope 107 is arranged so as to form a continuous loop between said first and second free ends 303, 304, with both free ends 303, 304 being supported generally proximal the first end 301 of the tube 106. Moreover, as described, rope 107 is slidably retained about the loop to tube 106, and may slide freely relative to tube 106, through said tube 106 and the apertures of said eyelets 306 and 307, along an axis generally parallel to the axis of tube 106. That both free ends 303, 304 of said rope 107 extend freely and are not secured to the tube 107, and that the rope is allowed to slide freely relative to the tube 106, advantageously means that the rope 107 does not exert any tension on the tube 106 when the rope is attached to an object, for example, to a mooring point, rather, all tension is borne solely by the rope 107.
It will be appreciated then that a benefit of the claimed arrangement is that the tube 106 serves solely as a guide for the rope 107, which in the specific embodiment may be used to guide the loop of rope 107 formed between the second open end 302 of the tube 106 and the first eyelet 307 about a mooring point. As neither end of the rope 107 is secured to the tube 106, and as the rope 107 may slide freely through the tube 106 and the eyelets 306, 307, tensioning of the rope 107, as would occur when the apparatus is being used to moor a boat in the manner previously described with reference to
As a result, tube 106 may have a relatively lighter weight construction, as it is required to resist deformation or breakage only to relatively low applied loads. It will be appreciate that, were one or more ends of rope 107 secured to tube 106, for example, secured to tube 106 proximal the second end 302 so as to form the loop, or if the rope were statically, rather than slidably, retained to the tube, then tube 106 would be required to resist the full tensile load exerted on the rope between the boat and the dock, and so would be required to have a stronger, and thus likely heavier, construction.
Further, that rope 107 is guided by tube 106 so as to form a loop, with both free ends 303, 304 of the rope 107 hanging freely from the tube 106, allows a relatively weaker/thinner rope to be used, as the tension exerted on the rope during mooring is divided equally between the two halves of the rope. It will be appreciated that a disadvantage of using a single length of rope, potentially arranged to extend through the tube 107 and forming a closed loop at the end of the single length, is that a relatively stronger, and so likely thicker, rope would be required. Moreover, as will be described with particular reference to
Indeed, referring in particular to
A particular advantage of this modular construction of said elongated tube 106 is that the overall length of the tube may be readily increased or decreased simply by adding or removing additional pole sections from the end of the tube. Thus, as an example, in the event that the mooring line apparatus is to be used to moor a relatively large boat, it may be desirable for the elongated tube 106 to be relatively longer in length than a mooring apparatus used for mooring of a relatively small pleasure craft.
As an alternative to the readily separable and attachable discrete pole sections illustrated in
A method of using the boat mooring line apparatus 101 is shown in
Referring to the Figures, the condition of the boat mooring line apparatus in
Referring then to
Alternative embodiments of a boat mooring line apparatus according to the present invention are shown in
Referring firstly to
In this embodiment, pole 502 is provided with a plurality of retaining fixtures 508 to 511, each in the form of an eyelet extending radially outwardly of the outer surface of pole 502, which eyelets slidably retain the rope 505 close to the pole 502 at each position. Thus, eyelet 508 is located adjacent said first end 503 of said pole 502, from which point said first end 506 of said rope 505 extends freely, and eyelet 511 is located adjacent said second end 504 of said pole 502, and rope 505 is arranged to extend between said eyelets 508 and 511, being slidably retained intermediate the first and second ends 503, 504 of the pole 502 by intermediate eyelets 509, 510. From eyelet 511 rope 505 is arranged to extend continuously towards the first end 503 of the pole, and is slidably retained by intermediate eyelets 510 and 509, from which eyelets the second end 507 of rope is allowed to extend freely from the pole 502.
Referring secondly to
It will be noted that the principal difference between apparatus 512 and apparatus 101 is that the rope of apparatus 512 is routed through the axial bore of tube 513 both in a first direction from the first end 514 of the tube towards the second end 515, and in the reverse direction. Accordingly, given that both halves of the rope are slidably retained internally by the tube 513, tube 513 is not provided with externally protruding retaining fixture, such as the retaining eyelets of apparatus 101.
Referring finally to
It will of course be appreciated that, like apparatus 101, apparatus according to the present invention taking the form of any of apparatus 501, 512, and 516 are not strictly limited in their utility to use as a boat mooring line apparatus. Rather, more broadly, may find utility for guiding a rope about any object in a number of different environments.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1711515 | Jul 2017 | GB | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3224404 | De Jong | Dec 1965 | A |
3878808 | Mock | Apr 1975 | A |
4667617 | Molitor | May 1987 | A |
5586514 | Yuscavage | Dec 1996 | A |
20040237867 | Dunn | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20120228891 | Howard et al. | Sep 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
20200120 | May 2003 | DE |
2426965 | Dec 2006 | GB |
WO2012119202 | Sep 2012 | WO |
Entry |
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Extended European Search Report dated Nov. 6, 2018 issued in European Patent Application No. 180060.25 which claims priority from UK Application No. GB1711515.5 (the subject U.S. patent application also claims priority from UK Application No. GB1711515.5), pp. 1 to 8 (NPL1). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190023355 A1 | Jan 2019 | US |