The present invention relates to the field of athletics training, and provides a rowing machine which closely simulates the feel of a scull or boat.
Rowing machines have been known for many years. Examples of such machines are shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 228,845, 381,187, 641,596, 1,504,375, 2,586,024, 3,572,700, 4,047,715, 4,396,188, 4,743,011, 4,846,460, 4,880,224, 4,884,800, 4,984,986, 5,013,033, 5,092,581, 5,295,931, 5,441,469, and 5,779,600. The disclosures of the above-cited patents are incorporated by reference herein.
Rowing machines are used by the majority of rowing clubs and teams to improve fitness during inclement weather, as well as to supplement rowing training when there are a large number of athletes and insufficient coaches.
A typical rowing machine of the prior art has a sliding seat which moves along the longitudinal axis of a simulated boat. In an actual racing scull or boat, the seat is movable along a pair of tracks, so that the seat slides during each rowing stroke.
As the scull or boat moves through the water, its center of gravity translates with the athlete. The boat may weigh as little as thirty pounds, and may thus constitute only about 10-15% of the total mass of the system which includes the boat and the athlete. In relation to the motion of the center of mass of the entire system, it is more accurate to describe the boat as translating with respect to the athlete, than to characterize the athlete as moving on the slide.
Although rowing machines of the prior art have generally used a sliding seat to accommodate the rowing motion, they do not accurately reproduce the “feel” of the boat. Rowing machines typically incline the tracks, within which the seat translates, to simulate the actual feel of the boat, as the athlete progresses through a stroke.
Some of the rowing machines of the prior art do not simulate the motion of the oars about an oar lock, and therefore do not exercise the same muscles that would be used in actual rowing. In such cases, the athlete must deal with an abrupt transition between what is experienced during training and what is felt during actual rowing.
The present invention provides a rowing trainer which more closely simulates the actual experience of rowing a scull or boat. The device of the present invention also accurately simulates the movement of the oars. It also enables the athlete to monitor the progress of the rowing activity.
The present invention comprises a rowing trainer having a frame and a seat which is affixed to the frame. The seat does not move relative to the frame when the rowing trainer is in use. The device further includes a rigger which supports an oar assembly, the rigger being slidable relative to the frame. The device also includes at least one flywheel, mounted to the frame, such that the flywheel does not translate relative to the frame.
The oar assembly includes at least one oar which is connected, by a link, to an underframe arm, the link being held within a hollow tube that is rigidly connected to a frame of the rigger. Pulling on the oar rotates the link, and therefore causes the underframe arm to rotate, in a manner similar to that of the oar.
The underframe arm has a free end to which there is attached a cord. The cord passes around a castering pulley, which is attached to the rigger, and then around a pulley or sprocket positioned at or near the flywheel. The cord then extends substantially the length of the frame, and is attached to the frame, preferably through a spring or other elastic component. When the athlete pulls the oar, the energy of the oar is transmitted to the underframe arm, through the cord, and to the flywheel.
The rigger preferably includes a foot rest, which translates with the rigger, relative to the frame. Thus, not only does the athlete push and pull on the oars, but the athlete also pushes on the foot rest, which will move back and forth with the rigger.
The rowing trainer of the present invention may also include a monitor or display screen, mounted to the frame, and positioned to be visible by the athlete using the machine. The monitor may display a comparison of the rotational velocities of two flywheels, to show the athlete the trajectory of the simulated boat.
The rowing trainer thus described minimizes the amount of energy consumed during the rowing operation, insofar as the majority of the mass of the athlete's body does not move during the rowing stroke, due to the fact that the seat is stationary. The only component which exhibits translational motion relative to the frame is the rigger and oar assembly. The motion of the flywheel is rotational only; the flywheel does not translate relative to the frame.
The invention also includes the method of operating the rowing trainer described above.
The present invention therefore has the primary object of providing a rowing trainer.
The invention has the further object of providing a rowing trainer which closely simulates the experience of rowing a boat or scull.
The invention has the further object of providing a rowing trainer which minimizes the energy expended in moving the athlete's body.
The invention has the further object of providing a rowing trainer with a non-translating flywheel, so that work can be performed in turning the flywheel by operation of the oars.
The invention has the further object of providing a rowing trainer which can be made with either one or two oars.
The invention has the further object of providing a rowing trainer which displays, to the user, information concerning the rowing operation.
The invention has the further object of providing a method of operating a rowing trainer.
The reader skilled in the art will recognize other objects and advantages of the present invention, from a reading of the following brief description of the drawings, the detailed description of the invention, and the appended claims.
a, 1b, and 1c provide perspective views illustrating the three basic components of a rowing stroke, in the prior art.
a and 13b provide, respectively, a perspective view and a top view, of the rowing trainer of the present invention, in the “catch” position of the stroke.
a and 14b provide, respectively, a perspective view and a top view, of the rowing trainer of the present invention, in the “drive” position of the stroke.
a and 15b provide, respectively, a perspective view and a top view, of the rowing trainer of the present invention, in the “finish” position of the stroke.
The present invention comprises a rowing trainer which simulates the actual experience of rowing a scull or boat.
a-1c illustrate the three major stages of a rowing stroke. These stages are labeled “catch”, “drive”, and “finish”, and apply both to the prior art and to the present invention. Reference will be made, later, to these stages, in describing the device of the present invention.
a shows a rower in a scull or boat, in the “catch” position. In this position, the athlete's legs are compressed, and the arms are extended. The oars are about to engage the water to perform the work of rowing.
b shows the rower in the “drive” position. The athlete's legs are nearly extended, and the arms are beginning to bend. This is the portion of the stroke which accomplishes most or all of the work of rowing, as the oars are moved through the water, with the oar blades oriented for maximum engagement with the water.
c shows the rower in the “finish” position. The athlete's legs are extended, the arms are bent, and the oar grips are at the athlete's side. The work of the rowing stroke has been completed.
Although the seat does not move relative to the frame while the rowing trainer is in use, the seat may be made adjustable, so that its position along the frame may be changed, to suit the preferences of an individual user. However, the movement of the seat occurs only while the device is not in use. When actual rowing is in progress, the seat remains fixed relative to the frame.
The foot rest may be provided with one or more straps or shoes (not shown) to secure the athlete's foot to the foot rest during the rowing operation. Such straps or shoes enable the athlete to pull the rigger simply by moving his or her feet towards the seat. Straps and shoes, attached to a foot rest of a rowing machine, are well known in the art, and are therefore not shown in the drawings.
The cords are visible, in part, in
Monitor 13 may be mounted on the frame, through flexible mount 14, for the purpose of providing feedback to the athlete regarding the progress of the rowing activity. One type of such feedback could include information about whether the simulated boat is turning. To provide such feedback, the flywheels can be connected to encoders, or their equivalents, and the angular displacements, or velocities, or both, of the flywheels can be calculated by a computer, and compared. If the flywheels are turning at different rates, the computer can be programmed to indicate, either graphically or numerically, or both, through monitor or display screen 13, that the simulated boat is not traveling along a straight line.
The rowing trainer of the present invention is shown further in the top view of
The frame of the rigger is intended to be a single, rigid component. In practice, it may be formed of various pieces that are welded together, like a bicycle frame.
Because the rigger frame is a rigid structure, the angle formed by the arms 62, relative to the rectangular portion 61, is fixed. Thus, throughout the rowing stroke, the tubes, and thus the vertical links, are located at a fixed position relative to the rigger, and translate back and forth with the motion of the rigger.
As the sliding rigger translates, the athlete is pulling on the grip portions of the oars, and the work applied to the grip portions rotates the vertical links 21. The vertical links cause movement of underframe arms 19, such that the underframe arms move at substantially the same angular velocity as the oars. The underframe arms pull the cords which are looped around the castering pulleys, thereby redirecting tension in the cords to the flywheel pulleys, thus rotating the flywheels.
a and 13b provide perspective and top views, respectively, of the rowing trainer of the present invention in the “catch” position.
In either or both of the single-oar and double-oar embodiments of the present invention, the oar can be provided with the oar handle described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,126,500, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein.
The rowing trainer of the present invention therefore provides a device in which 1) the moving mass is minimized, 2) the oars realistically simulate the motion of oars in a boat, and 3) the seat is stationary. The moving mass is minimized, in part, by making both the seat and the flywheels stationary relative to the frame. It is only the rigger and oar assembly which slides back and forth.
The flywheel system of the present invention is illustrated as including a relatively massive wheel and a “squirrel cage” fan. Flywheels used in the prior art have included fans, as well as magnetic, fluid, and/or frictional resistance. The flywheels used in the present invention can be made with any or all of the foregoing constructions.
The rowing trainer of the present invention may be provided with covers (not shown) on the flywheels and cables to prevent injury, i.e. to prevent items of clothing, or body parts, from becoming caught in the moving parts of the device.
The rowing trainer of the present invention can be modified in various ways, as will be understood by the reader skilled in the art. For example, the transmission of energy from the oars to the flywheels could be varied. The parameters displayed on the monitor could be changed. The microprocessor could be programmed to provide a very detailed graphical and/or numerical summary of the movements of the simulated boat. All of the above modifications should be considered within the spirit and scope of the following claims.
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