Claims
- 1. A self-contained foot cushioning device comprising:
- two superimposed plies of a lightweight, flexible, non-elastic, fluid-impervious woven fabric material, of a shape generally suited to cushion a foot, or selected portions of a foot; P1 the adjacent surfaces of which are sealed around the periphery thereof to form a pressure-tight bladder which, when pressurized with a pressurizable fluid under sufficient pressure to adequately support and cushion the forces applied by the human foot, does not weaken or lose its shape;
- the adjacent surfaces of which are also sealed within the periphery at preselected regions disposed generally perpendicular to the transverse axis of said bladder to define a plurality of internal chambers within said bladder at least some of which are fluidly communicable with each other;
- restricted fluid passageways communicating between adjacent chambers, defined at the periphery of the bladder during the sealing process by leaving unsealed a portion of the surfaces between the peripheral seal and the inner sealed regions of the bladder, and sized appropriately to permit a restricted fluid flow from one chamber to another whereby pressure equalization between chambers may take place when the bladder is pressurized but with a back-pressure build-up effect sufficient to prevent sudden surges of fluid from one chamber to another and to provide additional pressure to resist and cushion the impact of sudden heavy forces on the outside of the chamber.
- 2. The device of claim 1, further including means disposed at at least one predetermined location on said bladder for introducing pressurized fluid therethrough.
- 3. The device of claim 1, wherein the fabric material is made from woven aramid fiber and coated on at least one side with polyurethane.
- 4. The device of claim 3, wherein the adjacent coated surfaces of the fabric are heat sealed to each other.
- 5. A foot support member comprising:
- a pressure-tight bladder, suitably shaped to support at least a portion of the foot, and adapted to contain a pressurized fluid without distending or otherwise losing its shape when pressurized and subjected to the compressive forces associated with the shifting weight of the human foot;
- said bladder being further characterized in that the walls thereof are thin, non-elastic and flexible, and at least the inner surfaces thereof are coated with a fluid-impervious thickness of heat sealable material;
- a plurality of void, non-pressurizable regions within said bladder defined by sealing together the upper and lower walls of said bladder in a predetermined pattern disposed generally perpendicular to the transverse axis of the bladder, and comprising at least twenty percent (20%) of the total surface of the bladder which is exposed to the foot;
- a plurality of internal pressurizable chambers within said bladder, defined by the pattern of said void regions, at least some of which chambers are fluidly communicable with adjacent chambers;
- fluid passageways located around the periphery of said bladder to permit pressurized fluid flow between at least some chambers and defined between the outer walls of the bladder and the internal sealed off regions of the bladder, said passageways being sized appropriately such that the fluid flow from one chamber is restricted, when the bladder is pressurized, as a result of the flexible walls of the bladder folding over themselves at the fluid passageways.
- 6. The foot support member of claim 5, further including means disposed at a predetermined location on said bladder for introducing pressurized fluid therethrough.
- 7. The foot support member of claim 5, wherein the fabric material is made from woven aramid fiber and coated on at least one side with polyurethane.
- 8. The foot support member of claim 5, further comprising tread means disposed on the underside of the bladder and means for attaching the support member to the human foot.
- 9. The foot support member of claim 8 wherein the tread means is detachable from the bladder.
- 10. A shoe comprising:
- (a) a tread piece fixedly attached to an upper, the upper and the tread piece being cooperable to define a bladder-receiving region therewithin;
- (b) a flexible, non-elastic, self-contained, pressurizable bladder disposed within said bladder-receiving region, said bladder having an upper and lower surface, said bladder adapted to contain a pressurized fluid therein, the bladder being arranged such that at a predetermined number of positions a portion of the interior of the upper surface is secured to a portion of the interior of the lower surface to define a plurality of sealed regions extending substantially across and generally perpendicular to the transverse axis of said bladder and terminating a predetermined distance from the peripheral edge of the bladder, said sealed regions defining a plurality of fluid containment chambers fluidly communicable with each other, the flexibility of said bladder being sufficient to cause said sealed regions to act as joints, folding over and restricting fluid communication from one fluid containment region to another as pressure is applied to different portions of said bladder during the human gait cycle.
REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 842,250, filed Oct. 14, 1977 and now pending, which in turn is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 774,276, filed Mar. 4, 1977 and now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (18)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
467772 |
Mar 1929 |
DE2 |
996111 |
Aug 1951 |
FRX |
358205 |
Oct 1931 |
GBX |
Continuation in Parts (2)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
842250 |
Oct 1977 |
|
Parent |
774276 |
Mar 1977 |
|