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(1) Field of the Invention
The present invention pertains to the process of cleaning baseballs, softballs, and other leather goods, which have been discolored or dirtied in use by polishing them with small pieces of rubber.
(2) Description of the Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98
As baseballs are used, they collect dirt and grass stains on the leather cover, resulting in discoloration. The blemishes on the balls detract from the players' ability to discern the ball's rotation by reducing the contrast between the seams and the leather, making the seams less visible. Because players look for the seams and watch for the ball's rotation, balls eventually are discarded due to their discoloration. Cleaning the balls extends their useful life.
Baseballs are cleaned by many methods, including traditional leather cleaning goods, and the use of erasers (real or synthetic) to spot polish the discolored area and remove the stains.
Rotating containers which mix small blocks of rubber with baseballs are known in the industry. These devices clean leather baseballs and other similar items by tumbling them in a container with rubber or gum material, similar to the way that a gem polishing device operates. One example of this device is the “Baseball Renewer”, found at http://baseballrenewer.wordpress.com/baseball-renewer/.
Existing devices are heavy and awkward to move. The balls must be separated from the rubber material, or pulled out of the container individually. What is needed in the industry is a ball cleaner that is more mobile, sifts the balls from the rubber polishing material, and allows the balls to be removed or poured from the container without an additional filtering step requiring human action.
The general object of the invention is to employ a construction of the invention so that the rotating container may be removed from the rest of the device with ease. This advantage allows the device to be kept in a storage facility, and the ball container used as a mobile container for baseball transport. When the game play is ended, the balls can be collected and put back into the container, and then the container placed back into the apparatus, allowing the ball cleaning cycle to easily be repeated.
The container may also be fashioned so that a strainer placed in its interior can separate the eraser material from the balls merely by changing the orientation of the container from lying on its side (as it does during the cleaning process while it is rotates), to a vertical position, when the strainer allows the rubber material to fall through. The strainer's filtering holes must be a matching size to the rubber pieces, so they fall through, but the baseballs do not.
Additional objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows, and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations pointed out in the appended claims.
The attached drawings are provided as a non-limiting example of the invention, specifically:
FIG. 1—Orthogonal view of the invention.
FIG. 2—A front sectional view of the drum, including an optional internal filter and side drum door.
FIG. 3—Exploded view of the invention.
According to the present invention, the foregoing and other objects and advantages are attained by a hollow drum container 11 that is mounted on a supporting apparatus 13 that rotates the drum, as seen in
As seen in
Baseballs may be placed in the drum by removal of one of the drum ends, or by an optional door 21 in the side of the drum, as seen in
The means for rotating the apparatus are varied and many. One method is shown in the exploded view of the apparatus in
The invention was developed to clean baseballs and softballs, but may be used in different-sized versions to clean footballs, volleyballs or soccer balls, or any leather object sufficiently rugged to be abrasively cleaned by the rubber material.
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