The present embodiments relate generally to seat for a lightweight floating watercraft wherein the watercraft can be used for fishing and repair of bridges, installation of endangered water plants and other uses. The lightweight floating watercraft enables a person to sit or stand on the watercraft without flipping over during poling, rowing, fishing and other activities.
Fishing boats traditionally are standard monohull designs, such as those used for bass boats, Boston Whalers™ or standard rowboats. With monohull designs, fishermen could not stand up in a boat without flipping over the boat or simply falling out of the boat.
A need exists for a safer boat design with a hull design in which fisherman can stand up in during fishing, or poling without concern for tipping over that can be molded in a unitary construction that is fast to make, durable, and inexpensive to manufacture and has a sturdy seat that can be multifunctional and removable.
Metal bass boats, wooden boats and thick hulled fiberglass boats, like Boston Whalers' are heavy, and generally require at least two people to lift the boat onto a car top due to the weight. A need exists for an 11 foot to 18 foot watercraft that can be lifted and used by one person without strain and has a removable seat.
The present embodiments provide the seat for these types of stabilized fishing watercrafts.
The detailed description will be better understood in conjunction with the accompanying drawings as follows:
The present embodiments are detailed below with reference to the listed Figures.
Before explaining the present embodiments of the seat invention in detail, it is to be understood that the embodiments are not limited to the particular embodiments and that the invention can be practiced or carried out in various ways.
The present embodiments relate to a molded two piece seat for sitting on or standing on, when using a lightweight watercraft. The seat can be used with watercraft that enables a person or two persons weighing up to a collective weight of 500 pounds to paddle or pole the watercraft from a standing position for fishing, for biological study of plant life or planting of endangered species or for repair of floating structures.
The molded two piece seat enables a biologist to safely protect samples taken during study, or a fisherman to hold his catch in a cool and safe container and then remove the seat without disturbing the contents for transport.
The molded two part seat is a floatation device wherein the walls of the seat can have foam filler disposed therein for insulation and floatation purposes.
The molded two piece seat is particularly usable on a watercraft described in detail in below.
The molded two piece seat has the benefit of being made from a strong, high density polymer homopolymer or copolymer for material, such as a polyamide like nylon.
The seat has a benefit in that it can hold at least three fishing poles simultaneously.
The seat has a benefit of having a pivoting lid that can also be sat upon or stood upon without deformation.
The seat is made of a material resistant to ultraviolet radiation degradation and is resistant to corrosive action from salt. The seat is also highly impact resistant and will hold it shape in the event it is dropped.
The inventive seat is made quickly, in 10% of the time of conventional wooden seats or other non-molded seats. The seat can be made at a fraction of the cost because material costs for molded seats are extremely low and only 1 person can run the molding process compared with multiple persons needed to craft custom seats in other fishing boats.
In an embodiment, the seat has four legs for engaging in grooves formed on the deck of a watercraft. Other embodiment have six legs. The grooves could be in the form of an insert placed in non-molded watercraft. The insert containing the grooves can then be secured to the deck of other types of flat watercraft, using screws or a similar device.
The exemplary watercraft to which this seat can be used is a highly stable watercraft requiring only a few inches of water to float, generally less than six inches of water, and generally not more than 3 inches of water.
The exemplary watercraft is a one piece molded watercraft having a port and a starboard hull extension connected by a bridge and a tapered graduated water channel formed between the bow and stern in the bottom of the watercraft.
The graduated channel provides for increased stability in the watercraft and allows a person(s) to stand and sit on the exemplary watercraft without tipping the watercraft or enabling the watercraft to be loaded to over 500 pound of gear without tipping over, while maintaining a draft of only a few inches. Embodiments of the exemplary watercraft can be watercraft between 10 feet to 20 feet in length. Exemplary watercrafts for use of the seat can have lengths of 10.5 feet, 14 feet, 16 feet, and 18 feet.
The exemplary watercraft has sloped edges that extend from bow to stern. A deck is formed located over and integral with the sloped edges.
In a preferred embodiment, the material of an exemplary watercraft on which the seat would operate is a watercraft made from a moldable curable polymer, or polymer composite. If a simple curable polymer is used, the polymer may be a homopolymer or a copolymer. The polymer can be polyamide but can contain optionally polypropylene, polyethylene, resins, or even some fiberglass,
Inside the exemplary watercraft is inserted an expandable liquid foam to enhance buoyancy of the watercraft and to increase strength of the watercraft to prevent deformation or collapse of the watercraft from selected weights being placed on the watercraft.
In one embodiment a molded seat for individually propelled watercraft having a deck with sloped sides extending there from and a plurality of opposing grooves of a defined shape formed in the deck and sloping sides. The seat can have a multi-component raised friction fitting non-sliding removable base expending above a deck comprising a molded foam filled insulated container. The base can have at least 4 legs to integrate into corresponding grooves formed into the deck, where the base can have a bottom integral with the at least 4 legs and 4 integral side walls rising from the bottom, and where two side walls opposing each other can have small extensions to extend over the sloping sides of a watercraft for a secure engagement with the watercraft and where at least one side wall comprises at least one rod holder. The base can also have a pivoting insulated lid secured to the base container in addition to having the ability for the legs of the base container fit snugly into the opposing grooves of substantially the same shape as the legs.
In one embodiment between 1 and 4 fishing rod holders can be molded into a wall.
In an alternate embodiment the seat can have a hole molded into the seat for receiving a sliding drawer.
In yet an alternate embodiment the molded seat can have a holder molded into the base for supporting a coffee cup or a beer can.
In one embodiment the molded seat can have a magnetic latch disposed in the container of the base.
In one embodiment the molded seat can have at least one depression in the container to hold a battery inside the container and a groove for allowing the battery cable to exit the container disposed in one wall of the seat.
In an alternate embodiment the molded seat can have a drain plug to drain water from the container.
In yet another embodiment a handle can be disposed on opposing side walls for transporting the seat.
With reference to the figures,
As shown in
The graduated channel 11 is between the port hull section 12 and the starboard hull section 14.
In this bottom view, the port and starboard hull section and the graduated channel each contain 4 support columns that extend from the bottom of the hull interior to the deck. The port hull section bottom 28 sports port support columns 13a, 13b, 13c, 13d, and 13e while starboard hull section bottom 30 sports starboard support columns 15a, 15b, 15c, 15d and 15e. The vessel can have at least 4 support columns and up to 10 support columns are in each hull section and between 3 and 10 support columns are in the mid hull section.
The bottom of the hull forming the channel is the mid hull section 16 and has mid hull section support columns 17a, 17b, 17c, 17d, 17e and 17f.
Integral to the bottom of the hull and penetrating to the deck, is a bow hole 20 forming the bow handle 22 and a stern hole 24 forming the stern handle 26.
The port hull section and starboard hull section each have sloped edges, the port side hull is shown in
The watercraft requires very little draft. For example, the watercraft can use only three inches of draft, thereby making the watercraft usable in the shallowest of bodies of water of just a few inches while supporting a 165 pound man and a 100 pound Labrador retriever.
The one piece molded watercraft is so steady so that the person on the boat can cast a fishing line without worrying about tipping the boat or falling into the water
The grooves are molded just into the sloping edges for supporting accessories that are placed removably on the deck, such as a seat. However, the grooves are not required on a vessel when no accessory is desired. To support the seat in a secure way, yet permit the seat to be removable, a groove in the port side has a companion groove in the starboard side. Each groove receives a leg of the seat. An adjacent groove gaain on the port side of the deck has a companion groove in the starboard side for receiving the remaining two legs of the removable seat.
In
Further the deck is formed to have at least one air release valve 56 disposed in the deck. A second air release valve 58 is also shown.
The deck in an embodiment can also be made with shallow channels 66a, 66b, 66c, 66d, 66e, 66f, 66g enabling water to drain off the deck so that the water does not pool up on the deck. The channel also provides additional non-skid feature for a user.
Additional grooves can be created in the deck to provide the ability to move or reposition the seat as needed by the user.
In an embodiment, such as the one shown in
A seat 78 is shown in
The seat can be made of a plastic which is light, and hollow yet strong enough to support the weight of an individual while holding a stash of caught fish.
Complimentary opposing grooves are in the starboard side are opposite the port grooves. Both sets of grooves have a defined shape that fit the 6 legs of the seat shown in this figure. The legs are scalloped in shape in this embodiment given the circular shape of the grooves.
The seat has a base 79 that is a bottom and 4 integral side walls rising from the bottom.
The legs of the container fit snugly into the opposing grooves of the defined shape which are identical to the shape of the legs. Two opposing walls, 92 and 96 of the seat have small extensions 122 and 124, shown in
Returning to
The embodiments have been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments, thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the scope of the embodiments, especially to those skilled in the art.
The present application is a CIP to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/139,939 filed on May 27, 2005 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,111,569.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4146279 | Stahel | Mar 1979 | A |
4773709 | Slinkard | Sep 1988 | A |
5050526 | Nelson et al. | Sep 1991 | A |
5662061 | Salathe | Sep 1997 | A |
7111569 | Sanders | Sep 2006 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11139939 | May 2005 | US |
Child | 11517679 | US |