Field of the Invention
The invention relates to the simple and effective in situ cleansing of tackle box contents after fishing expeditions.
Description of Related Art
Modern tackle boxes tend to be made of mostly if not completely plastic materials, unlike their metal counterparts from years and decades past. Such plastics generally include polycarbonate and other plastics which are adequately rigid for good structural performance but which are pliable enough not to crack or craze under stress. Plastic constituents in a tackle box are well designed to withstand the insult of salt water, mud or other contaminants that inevitably splash into or otherwise contaminate a tackle box during use.
Unlike the typical plastic components of a tackle box, many items forming the contents of a tackle box are particularly susceptible to deterioration or rust, especially upon contamination with salt water in particular. Many lures and baits as well as fishing line parts and accessories are made of metals which are susceptible of rust or other corrosion. Some flashy baits contain biological materials, such as hair and feathers, which when kept clean and dry are relatively shelf-stable but are otherwise vulnerable to deterioration. The traditional way to clean a tackle box after the conclusion of a fishing trip, particularly a salt water fishing trip, was to dismantle the box and clean and dry each individual item stored within the box. Because such traditional cleaning is enormously time- and labor-intensive (and virtually “no fun”) tackle box contents often suffer widespread deterioration or rust and have to be replaced between fishing trips. Even in fresh-water fishing environs, it is impossible to avoid contamination of tackle box contents by any or all of splashed mud; natural perspiration, sebum and the inevitable fish-related contaminants on the fingers; and the typical electrolytic composition of fresh water which, although not saline, is typically “hard” water containing a variety of dissolved minerals which are in their own way as troublingly corrosive as saline, to name a few.
A need therefore remains for a tackle box which is designed or equipped in such a way that it can be easily and speedily cleaned and the contents safely dried, to preserve the leftover tackle box contents in between fishing trips while enhancing the fishing experience for the user.
In order to meet this need, the present invention is a tackle box in which both the lid and the base are fitted with a clean water inlet and waste water outlet, respectively, with an optional outlet hose attached to the water outlet. Inside the box, all of the vertical partitions are perforated, that is, are configured to allow clean flush water to pass freely through the partition walls while still containing the contents of the tackle box in each respective tackle box compartment. As a general rule—with possible exceptions—the horizontal surfaces of the compartments within the tackle box are not perforated. By introducing clean water into the clean water inlet, water flushes throughout the tackle box including through the perforated partitions, and from there waste water exits via the waste water outlet, either through the waste water outlet in the box itself, or via the waste water outlet and through the optional hose connected thereto. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the tackle box has a false bottom (interior additional base) which is sloped at a gentle angle toward the water outlet aperture, to enhance complete drainage. As part of the present cleaning process, after the tackle box has been flushed thoroughly with clean water, the box is typically left open for a few hours to overnight to dry, and the cleaned contents do not rust or corrode because they have just been cleansed with clean, preferably deionized, water. By contrast, if tackle box contents are left in contact with contaminants inevitably introduced during any sort of fishing venture, without the present or some other cleaning process corrosion or deterioration of the tackle box contents are virtually assured.
As described above, the present invention is a tackle box in which both the lid and the base are fitted with a clean water inlet and waste water outlet, respectively, with an optional outlet hose attached to the water outlet. Inside the box, all of the vertical partitions are perforated, that is, are configured to allow clean flush water to pass freely through the partition walls while still containing the contents of the tackle box in each respective tackle box compartment. As a general rule—with possible exceptions—the horizontal surfaces of the compartments within the tackle box are not perforated. By introducing clean water into the clean water inlet, water flushes throughout the tackle box including through the perforated partitions, and from there waste water exits via the waste water outlet, either through the waste water outlet in the box itself, or via the waste water outlet and through the optional hose connected thereto. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the tackle box has a false bottom (interior additional base) which is sloped at a gentle angle toward the water outlet aperture, to enhance complete drainage. As part of the present cleaning process, after the tackle box has been flushed thoroughly with clean water, the box is typically left open for a few hours to overnight to dry, and the cleaned contents do not rust or corrode because they have just been cleansed with clean, preferably deionized, water. By contrast, if tackle box contents are left in contact with contaminants inevitably introduced during any sort of fishing venture, without the present or some other cleaning process corrosion or deterioration of the tackle box contents are virtually assured.
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A second embodiment of the invention appears in
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There are other ways of configuring self-cleaning tackle boxes that are contemplated as part of the present invention. Instead of a common cavity within the tackle box, which is cleaned and flushed all together at the same time, it is possible to configure the interior compartments so that they flush in a more prescribed, multiple conduit configuration. Having said that, however, the embodiments shown in the Figures are preferred because they drain more quickly and completely than more complicated conduits or water paths could possibly drain. Therefore, a common features among all the embodiments of the invention is that the entire tackle box is configured—with ample perforations in an adequate number of interior vertical partitions—for cleaning by flushing with clean water in an operation that cleans the entire tackle box and its content all at once. For similar reasons, even though it is possible to attach a number of the present tackle boxes in series so that a continuous stream of water enters and exits all of the tackle boxes from a single water source, in practice it is preferred that every tackle box be cleaned with a starting stream of clean water and so the cleaning of each tackle box by itself is the preferred practice of the invention.
Although the invention has been described with particularity above, with specific reference to individual structures and even certain dimensions, the invention is only to be limited insofar as is set forth in the accompanying claims.
This patent application claims priority to, and incorporates herein by reference, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/198,447 filed 29 Jul. 2015.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62198447 | Jul 2015 | US |