The present invention relates to attachments for securing a strap to an instrument such as a guitar or the like.
Musicians, particularly guitar players, often use a strap to suspend the instrument from their bodies in order to play while standing. The strap typically has end pieces made from leather or similar semi-rigid materials. Each end piece has a stamped hole and contiguous slot that is designed to slip over an end pin that rigidly projects from the guitar body. Over time, due to both the weight of the instrument and the repeated application and removal of the strap, the stamped hole can become distorted and enlarged. When this occurs, the end piece can slip off of the pin, disengaging the strap from the instrument and causing the instrument to fall to the floor, resulting in damage.
The unintended slipping of the end piece from the end pin is greatly reduced or eliminated by our novel end pin, which attaches to the instrument strap in such a way that removal is quite difficult if not impossible unless deliberate steps are taken by the player.
We disclose an end pin that has a composite top or shoulder with a fixed half and a rotatable half such that the halves are alignable in a first, installation mode of minimal footprint relative to the hole and slit while the pin is inserted through the hole in the end piece, whereupon one half is rotated into a second, locking mode that increases or maximizes the footprint relative to the hole and slit.
In the first mode the strap can be easily attached to the instrument, and then easily locked in the second mode by applying rotation to a portion of the pin. This creates a very wide surface area contact areas between pin and strap end. The enlarged contact area prevents the pin from inadvertently slipping back through the stamped hole and slot in the strap end.
One embodiment is directed to an end pin unit for attachment to a musical instrument body, comprising a lower pin member forming a lower shoulder; an upper pin member forming an upper shoulder; a screw for attaching one of the pin members in fixed orientation on a musical instrument body; and a rotatable connection between the upper and lower pin members. The shoulder of one pin member can be alternately rotated into a first mode in which the upper and lower shoulders are oriented to permit attachment of the end strap and a second mode in which the upper and lower shoulders are aligned differently, to prevent detachment of the end strap.
In one preference, the screw has a head and a threaded shank and the lower pin member has a central bore for threadably receiving the screw shank and thereby assuming a fixed orientation relative to the instrument body when the screw is threaded into the body. Thus, the upper shoulder is rotatable relative to the fixed lower shoulder.
In another preference, the rotatable connection includes detents for alternately holding the shoulders in the first and second modes.
The method embodiment is directed to a first mode, characterize by passing a slotted opening of the end piece over a composite shoulder of the end pin so that the composite shoulder protrudes above the end piece, followed by a second mode in which one portion of the composite shoulder remains fixed, while another portion of the composite shoulder is rotated. In the second mode the total area of the shoulder portions that face the end piece, is larger than the total area of the shoulder portions that face the end piece in the first mode, thereby trapping the end piece beneath the shoulders.
The preferred embodiment will be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
As shown in
The boss or protrusion 30 in the lower half passes through (e.g., radially inwardly of the rim of) the upper half counterbore 36 to a point slightly proud of the bottom or rim of the counterbore. This forms a rotatable joint between the upper 22 and lower 24 pin members. The wave washer 32 is placed around the boss 30, and rests on the counterbore face and extends above the boss 30 at its uppermost points. The screw 18 is passed through both upper and lower halves 22, 24 and screwed to the instrument until the screw head 34 abuts the lower half boss 30. At this stage the spring 32 is slightly compressed, applying force between screw head 34 and counterbore 36, holding the upper half protrusions 28 into the lower half detents 26. There is still enough “play” for the washer 32 to be compressed into a flat shape.
The installation procedure will be described with reference to
Reversing the rotation procedure realigns the upper and lower halves 22, 24 to the installation configuration (
In a general way, the procedure can be summarized as first, passing a slotted opening 12, 14 of the end piece 10 over a composite shoulder 22, 24 of the end pin unit 16 so that the composite shoulder protrudes above the end piece. While one shoulder 24 remains fixed, another portion 22 of the composite shoulder is rotated, whereby after rotation the total footprint area of the transversely oriented composite portions that directly face downwardly toward the end piece (i.e. the radially outer areas of 22 and 24), is larger that the total footprint area of the composite portions that directly face downward toward the end piece immediately after the end piece is passed over the composite shoulder (i.e., only the area of member 24).
In the illustrated embodiment, the lower pin member 24 has a centerline, the shoulder on the lower pin member is oblong and symmetrical about that centerline, and likewise the upper pin member 22 has the same centerline (axis of rotation) and the shoulder on the upper pin member is oblong and symmetrical about that common centerline. The shoulders are identical in a somewhat lens shape and when oriented in the first mode the congruent shoulders also form a larger lens shape. In the second mode the shoulders are transverse.
Both members should have a substantially circular central area where at least four quadrilaterally symmetric detents and protrusions (e.g., 26 and 28) can be engaged and disengaged via relative rotation of the upper and lower shoulders. The cross section views of
In the preferred embodiment of the lower member 24 shown in
It should be appreciated, however, that other shapes for the upper and lower pin members 22, 24 and associated shoulders are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the fixed, lower pin member 24 can have a more conventional, round top defining an annular shoulder, while the rotatable, upper pin member can be oblong as shown at 22.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §109(e), of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/517,346 filed Apr. 18, 2011 for “Rotatable End Pin for Instrument Strap”.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61517346 | Apr 2011 | US |