The present invention relates to an improved buckle for securing the connecting ends of a rope halter for horses. The usual method for connecting the ends of a horse halter has been with a hand-tied knot. One end of the rope halter is pulled over the horses head and neck and then connects through a corresponding loop on the other side of the rope halter. The non-looped rope halter end is then interwoven around and through the loop to form a knot that secures the rope halter to the horses head. The knot must be tied and untied each time the halter is placed on or removed from a horse.
In the past there have been attempts to use a mechanical method to replace the rope halter knot. The only design that is commercially available requires that the rope halter be changed to accommodate the attachment buckle.
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The present invention is fundamentally different than any of the previous mechanical inventions. It replaces the hand-tied knot with a new metal connecting plate/buckle and a cam-locking washer that acts as a floating center bar. It will work on a standard rope halter without modification to the rope halter.
The buckle is installed on the non-looped end of the halter rope that is pulled over the horse's head and neck. The buckle can slide up and down the non-looped end of the rope halter to adjust the tightness of the fit on the horse and the cam-locking washer component of the buckle locks the buckle in place so that it will not slide under normal pressure from the horse. Once the buckle is installed on the non-looped end of the horse halter, the rope halter may be connected/attached by pulling the non-looped end of the rope halter, with the buckle installed, through the rope halter loop until the rope halter loop locks on the underside of the buckle. The rope halter will remain connected, with the installed buckle, and resist pressure from the horse against the rope halter. To release the buckle and the non-looped end of the horse halter, simply disengage the rope halter loop from under the buckle and pull the buckle and the non-looped rope back out of the rope halter loop. The rope halter may be attached and reattached multiple times without adjusting the position of the buckle or the cam-lock washer.
In order that this invention may be clearly understood a preferred embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying pictures and drawings:
As seen in Drawing 1, a rope halter consists of a rope that is tied in a series of knots in a pattern that is intended to encircle a horse's head in such a way as to allow secure attachment of a lead line or restraining line to the horse. The loop at Drawing 1 “A” is installed around the horse's nose. The two connecting ends of the halter, shown in Drawing 1, are looped around the horse's neck and tied together at Drawing 1 “B”. The lead line or restraining line is attached at
Drawing 2 shows the two connecting ends of the halter: the non-looped end of the rope halter and the rope halter loop.
Drawing 3 shows the knot that is commonly used to connect the two rope ends that secure the halter to the horse. In the past, this knot must be tied and untied each time the halter is installed or removed.
The essence of this invention is the use of the floating cam-lock washer. The buckle base, shown in Drawing 4, consists of a plate with a figure-eight hole in the center. The cam-lock washer, shown in Drawing 5, is used in conjunction with the buckle base. The non-looped end of the rope halter, shown in Drawing 2, is inserted from the underside of the buckle and pulled through to the point of adjustment on the horse. The non-looped end of the rope halter is then inserted and pulled through the cam-lock washer, shown in Drawing 6 and inserted back through the buckle base to exit on the underside of the buckle. The non-looped end of the rope halter is then pulled tight to the top of the buckle with the washer at a 90 degree position to the base of the buckle, also shown in Drawing 6. To lock the buckle in place, the washer is rotated 90 degrees (which expands the width of the washer as it is the center bar of the buckle) to a parallel position with the buckle base, shown in Drawing 7. To unlock the buckle, the washer is rotated 90 degrees back to a vertical position, shown in Drawing 6—this reduces the pressure of the non-looped end of the rope halter with respect to the buckle base and allows the buckle, on the non-looped end of the rope halter rope, to be easily slid through the base and the floating washer to tighten or loosen the rope halter. The fact that the washer is floating rather than attached makes the