Claims
- 1. A bouncing apparatus, comprising:a) a carriage assembly that can support a person; b) a foot alternately retracting toward and extending away from the carriage assembly; c) a thrust assembly, mounted to the carriage assembly and to the foot, having a tension force, supplied by a plurality of tension elements, that impel the extension and resist the retraction; d) a shield member protecting the person from contact with at least a portion of the thrust assembly; and e) an access feature enabling engagement and disengagement of at least one of the tension elements for adjustment of the tension force, the access feature comprising a mount having an opening through which an end of at least one of the tension elements can be passed.
- 2. The bouncing apparatus of claim 1, wherein the access feature comprises an assembly that mechanically engages and disengages at least one of the tension elements.
- 3. The bouncing apparatus of claim 1, wherein the shield member is provided by a monocoque structural member that also supports a handle that serves as a control feature.
- 4. The bouncing apparatus of claim 1, wherein the shield member comprises a platform integral with the carriage assembly.
- 5. The bouncing apparatus of claim 4, wherein the thrust assembly is a scissor-lift.
- 6. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the foot comprises a universal joint.
- 7. A scalable spring apparatus, comprising:a) a carriage assembly that can support a person; b) a foot alternately retracting toward and extending away from the carriage assembly; and c) a thrust assembly, mounted to the carriage assembly and to the foot, having a tension force that impels the extension and resists the retraction; wherein d) the thrust assembly comprises a plurality of tension elements enclosed in a channel; and wherein e) the channel is adapted to allow immediate access to at least one of the tension elements for adjustment of the tension force.
- 8. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein the channel is provided by a monocoque structural member that also supports a handle that serves as a control feature.
- 9. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein the channel comprises a panel that can be displaced to allow the immediate access.
- 10. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein each tension element in the thrust assembly is individually mountable and individually demountable.
- 11. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein the tension force can be adjusted by engaging at least one other tension element.
- 12. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein the tension element can be adjusted by disengaging at least one of the tension elements.
- 13. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein:a) the thrust assembly comprises: i) a piston alternately retracting upwardly toward and extending downwardly away from the carriage assembly and having the foot at a distal end; ii) at least one bearing, mounted between the carriage assembly and the piston, for easing the retraction and the extension and for limiting lateral movement of the piston relative to the carriage assembly; iii) the tension elements, mounted to the carriage assembly and to the piston, impelling the extension and resisting the retraction; and iv) an arresting assembly for limiting the extension; and b) the carriage assembly comprises a frame enclosing the tension elements in the channel and enclosing at least a portion of a path traversed by a proximal end of the piston.
- 14. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein the thrust assembly comprises:a) a scissor-lift assembly, mounted to the carriage assembly and to the foot, for enabling the retraction and the extension; wherein b) the scissor-lift assembly comprises a plurality of tension elements impelling the extension and resisting the retraction.
- 15. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein the foot comprises a universal joint.
- 16. A pogo apparatus, comprising:a) a vertically elongated carriage assembly that can support a person in an upright position; b) a piston alternately retracting upwardly toward and extending downwardly away from the carriage assembly and having a foot at a distal end; c) at least one bearing, mounted between the carriage assembly and the piston, for easing the retraction and the extension and for limiting lateral movement of the piston relative to the carriage assembly; d) a plurality of tension elements, mounted to the carriage assembly and to the piston, impelling the extension and resisting the retraction; e) an arresting assembly for limiting the extension; wherein f) the carriage assembly encloses a channel that accommodates the tension elements; and wherein g) the carriage assembly is adapted to allow immediate access to at least one of t tension elements.
- 17. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein the arresting assembly is adjustable.
- 18. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein:a) the arresting assembly comprises: i) a feature, on the carriage assembly, having an upper face, and ii) a feature on the piston at a distance from the distal end, having a lower face; and b) contact of the faces limits the extension of the piston downwardly away from the carriage assembly.
- 19. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein:a) the arresting assembly comprises an elongated tensile member having an upper end attached to the carriage assembly and a lower end attached to the piston; and b) extension of the piston downwardly away from the carriage assembly is limited when the tensile member becomes taut.
- 20. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein the tension elements are pre-tensioned.
- 21. The apparatus of claim 20, wherein the arresting assembly effects the pre-tension.
- 22. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein the carriage assembly comprises a frame enclosing the tension elements and at least a portion of a path traversed by a proximal end of the piston.
- 23. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein the frame has a rectangular cross-section defining a channel accommodating the tension elements.
- 24. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein:a) each tension elements is attached at one end to the carriage assembly by a carriage mount and at another end to the piston by a piston mount; and b) a length of travel of the piston can be adjusted.
- 25. The apparatus of claim 24, herein:a) the piston comprises a central shaft and the piston mount attached to the central shaft; b) the piston mount can slide relative to the central shaft through a range of positions to adjust the length of travel; c) the piston mount can be secured to the central shaft at one of the positions.
- 26. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein the foot comprises a universal joint.
- 27. A scissor-lift apparatus, comprising:a) a carriage assembly that can support a person in an upright position; b) a foot alternately retracting upwardly toward and extending downwardly away from the carriage assembly; and c) a scissor-lift assembly, mounted to the carriage assembly and to the foot, for enabling the retraction and the extension; wherein d) the scissor-lift assembly comprises a plurality of tension elements impelling the extension and resisting the retraction; e) the scissor-lift assembly comprises a vertically ordered set of arm pairs, each arm pair having paired arms joined to one another by a medial hinge having a horizontal axis; f) an uppermost arm pair of the set is attached to the carriage assembly by a fixed hinge at a proximal end of one arm of the pair and by a sliding hinge at a proximal end of another arm of the pair; g) a lowest arm pair has a short arm having an operable length terminating at the medial hinge and a long arm attached at a distal end to the foot.
- 28. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein:a) the set comprises a plurality of arm pairs; b) each arm pair has at least one proximal arm end and at least one distal arm end; c) each arm pair is joined to an adjacent arm pair of the plurality in that the proximal arm end of a lower pair of the joined pairs is attached by at least one hinge to the distal arm end of an upper pair of the joined pairs.
- 29. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the uppermost arm pair is also the lowest arm pair.
- 30. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the carriage assembly comprisesa) a vertically extending support structure; b) at least one handle, on the support structure, that can be grasped by the person; c) at least one pedal, on the support structure, on which the person can stand.
- 31. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the carriage assembly comprises:a) a longitudinal platform that can support a person in a standing position with the person's feet longitudinally separated and with at least one foot transversely oriented; and b) at least one control feature.
- 32. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the foot comprises a universal joint.
- 33. A pogo apparatus, comprising:a) a carriage comprising a pedal surface on which a person can stand, a handle member which the person can grasp, and a column supporting the handle member; b) a foot suitable for making contact with the ground; c) a piston attached to the foot and slidably associated with the carriage, wherein the sliding is colinear with an axis of the piston; d) a tension spring comprising a set of individually engageable and individually disengageable elastomeric spring elements; wherein e) the column comprises a cavity which accommodates at least the spring elements and a proximal end of the piston, whereby the person is shielded from accidental contact with any portion of the apparatus that moves relative to the carriage; and wherein f) access features are provided enabling engagement and disengagement of the spring elements.
- 34. The apparatus of claim 33, wherein the cavity is an interior of a monocoque column.
- 35. The apparatus of claim 33, wherein the foot comprises a universal joint.
- 36. A ridable bouncing apparatus, comprising:a) a carriage comprising a pedal surface on which a person can stand; b) a foot suitable for making contact with the ground; c) a linkage assembly attaching the foot to the carriage and constraining motion of the foot relative to the carriage to a linear trajectory substantially normal to the pedal surface; wherein d) the linkage assembly is a scissor-lift apparatus comprising i) an uppermost hinged pair of arms whereof one of the arms is attached to the carriage by a fixed hinge and the other of the arms is attached to the carriage by a sliding hinge, and ii) a lowermost hinged pair of arms whereof one of the arms is attached to the foot and the other of the arms has an operable length terminating at the mutual hinge of the lowermost pair.
- 37. The apparatus of claim 36, wherien the foot comprises a universal joint.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/187,167 filed Mar. 6, 2000, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
This invention relates generally to ridable bouncing apparatuses and more particularly to such apparatuses which achieve high performance, have radically adjustable spring strength or are intended to be controlled by the rider's feet (a form hereinafter referred to as a “bounceboard”); or which employ compound elastomer springs, scissor-lift linkages or enclosed thrust assemblies.
Steel-spring pogo sticks are the dominant form of ridable bouncing apparatus, and forms are known which aspire to high performance or adjustability or which have enclosed springs. High performance (that is, energy storage and return in the kilojoule range) is problematic for steel spring devices because the storage capacity of the material is low: about 80 joules/kilogram. 1000 joules of storage thus requires about 12 kilograms (26 pounds) of spring. An apparatus of such weight would be unwieldy, unappealing and hazardous due to its own momentum. Manufacturers have stopped at about one-third of this level (which still makes for a rather heavy apparatus). A group of engineering students at the Oregon Institute of Technology, however, has produced a pogo stick with a 47-inch custom-made steel spring intended to propel 250 pounds to a height of 5 feet (implying a capacity of 1700 joules, and a spring weight approaching 40 pounds). Their attained height is 18 inches; they express disappointment, and blame the unwieldiness of the design.
No radically-adjustable steel-spring pogo is known, although devices which suggest such a development were discussed as early as 1881. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 438,830 to Yagn in 1890 discloses compound-coil-spring jumping stilts. Several designs which precompress a coil spring to effect a form of adjustability have been presented, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 238,042 to Herrington in 1881; U.S. Pat. 2,793,036 to Hansburg in 1957; and U.S. Pat. No. 3,773,320 to Samiran et al. in 1973. Such pre-compression does not scale the spring (that is, change its strength), and is of little mechanical significance.
Pogo sticks with enclosed coil springs are shown by Hohberger (U.S. Pat. No. 2,712,443 in 1955), Rapaport (U.S. Pat. No. 2,871,016 in 1957) and Gaberson (U.S. Pat. No. 3,116,061 in 1963). Hohberger assembles his molded frame permanently around the coil. Rapaport places a flexible plastic cover around the spring. Gaberson places the spring inside the piston, and adds a frame-attached plunger to compress it. All of these designs are limited by the modest capacity of their steel springs.
Air-spring pogo sticks have achieved commercialization using low-pressure air springs, the air being contained either in a ball-like bladder or in a block of low-density plastic foam. Such devices are successful as children's novelties but are not well-suited to more demanding applications due to the bulk of the entrapped air column. High pressure air springs are theoretically capable of achieving any desired level of performance, and also hold the promise of straightforward adjustability. Their use in pogo sticks was suggested by Woodall (U.S. Pat. No. 2,865,633 in 1958), who stressed the benefit of adjustability, and others (Bourcier de Carbon in U.S. Pat. No. 2,899,685 in 1959; Guin in U.S. Pat. No. 3,351,342 in 1967). There is, however, a practical problem: the energy stored is present in the form of heat at the bottom of the stroke - and due to the relatively large amount of energy and relatively small amount of gas, temperatures of several hundreds of degrees are attained. A leading manufacturer has told me of experiments which ended in dismay when the cylinder became hot enough to burn the jumper's legs.
Elastomer-powered pogo designs appear in Gaffney and Weaver (in U.S. Pat. No. 2,783,997 in 1957). Their primary concern was with jumping stilts; their pogo design was minimally modified from a conventional tubular design, and had its rubber mounted externally in two bundles, one on either side of the frame tube. These bundles would have made the upper mount about three inches wide - and this unshielded object would rake up and down between the knees and thighs of the jumper on each stroke; if the rider attempted to ride bowlegged to avoid it, his contact with and ability to control the stick (as well as his concentration) would suffer.
Bourcier de Carbon (cited above) shows an elastomer-powered stilt, and appears to be the first in this context to mention that rubber is a more efficient spring material than steel and can provide higher levels of performance. His upper mount is exposed, which is viable for a stilt; he does not show a ridable design.
Hoffmeister (U.S. Pat. No. 3,065,962 in 1962) gives a quantitative statement of the startling superiority of rubber: 18 pounds of steel, he points out, can be replaced by 3.75 ounces of rubber. His mechanical design (which is for jumping stilts), however, is extraordinarily unsafe. He attaches the bottom of the tension spring to the top of the frame tube (rather than the bottom, as shown by Gaffney and Bourcier de Carbon). This results in rod ends projecting past the rider's knees and moving upward relative to the rider as he lands. A jumper landing in a skier's tuck position will strike the ends of the piston rods with his chest at up to 11 mph.
Prueitt (U.S. Pat. No. 4,449,256 in 1984) cites the scalability of rubber-band springs as a virtue of his design. The design is for multi-piston jumping stilts with exposed piston-heads.
Regarding scissor-lift bouncing apparatuses, a second Hoffmeister patent (U.S. Pat. No. 3,205,596 in 1965) shows several forms of an elastomer-powered jumping shoe which employs multi-bar linkages. One form has a scissor-lift mechanism. The scissor-lift, however, is mounted with its long axis horizontal, attached to the shoe platform by a central fixed hinge and two sliding hinges. This arrangement affords very limited travel; indeed, Hoffmeister cites a gain ratio in which a long spring motion powers a short vertical travel as a goal. Another drawback is that the design puts three hinges near the ground - two of which are not intended as ground-contact elements but will strike the ground if the shoe is pitched forward or backward by a relatively slight amount.
Franz (U.S. Pat. No. 5,080,382 in 1992) proposes to convert a skateboard into a bounceboard by attaching pistons containing coil springs in place of wheel-trucks. The low capacity of steel springs of course limits such a device, but a more serious defect is the absence of control features. A skateboard is controlled by frictional forces derived from the rider's weight, and by steering effects which result from the structure of the trucks; a bouncing apparatus and its rider are in freefall once they leave the ground, so that weight-derived forces are unavailable - and of course there are no trucks. A jumper using Franz's device would be able to obtain a modest and transient grip (due to inertia) by thrusting against the board, as skateboarders do when jumping; however, this thrust would quickly launch the board on an independent trajectory.
Therefore, there is a need for a bouncing apparatus capable of unprecedented performance.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus having a thrust function that can be scaled to match the weights and inclinations of a broad range of rider sizes, thus affording each rider an optimal apparatus that exploits the travel available in its linkage.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus that shields the rider from the moving parts of the apparatus.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus in which the noise, shock and wear that result from the abrupt acceleration of the piston at liftoff are greatly reduced.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus having a foot that is capable of tilting in any direction without rotating, and that can be used on soft surfaces such as lawns, and that can offers improved traction on hard surfaces.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus having adjustable piston travel, so that various levels of challenge are available to suit the skill and inclination of the rider.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus with a piston that is fully retractable, so that the apparatus may be collapsed into a compact form for storage or transportation.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus that has a handle, and the height of the handle can be adjusted to accommodate riders of various sizes.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus with a spring that can conveniently be pre-tensioned for use and relaxed for storage.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus having a design that minimizes tooling and assembly costs.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus with a novel scissor-lift assembly.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus that overcomes the limit that frame height can impose on piston length, and that is capable of matching the performance achieved when using some trampolines.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus that can be controlled solely by the rider's feet.
There is also a need for a bouncing apparatus using an elastomer spring assembly that permits immediate access to tension elements of the assembly for adjustment of a tension force of the assembly.
US Referenced Citations (22)
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
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60/187167 |
Mar 2000 |
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