1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a blade for an archery arrowhead or for a crossbow bolt, wherein a cutting section has serrations for cutting through relatively tough target material or animal material.
2. Discussion of Related Art
Many conventional arrowheads have blades with teeth, notches or serrations, for cutting through relatively tough materials, such as animal hides and animal bones.
Many conventional arrowhead blades that have a straight cutting edge with no teeth, notches or serrations will break or otherwise significantly dull upon impact with relatively tough materials, such as bone material. Upon target impact, an edge of some conventional blades will peen or roll over and thus dull the blade. Impact with bone material can also cause arrowheads to undesirably steer or deflect away from an intended flight path. A misguided arrow can result in only seriously wounding but not expiring an animal.
There is an apparent need for an arrowhead blade that can easily pass through relatively tough target material, such as animal hides, animal bones and animal muscle tissue, particularly without dulling the cutting edge or changing the direction or course of the arrowhead and the attached arrow shaft.
A serrated blade for an arrowhead, a crossbow bolt or any other similar projectile that has a head structure with one or more blades, can be used to better cut through relatively tough target materials or animal structural components. According to this invention, two blade surfaces intersect or meet with each other to form a cutting edge. In some embodiments of this invention, the cutting edge forms two or more straight or relatively straight sections that are similar to many conventional straight blades for arrowheads.
Blades according to this invention also include a mixed serration section. The mixed serration section can extend along at least a portion of a length of the cutting edge. Depending upon the particular cutting results desired, different configurations of straight sections and serrated sections can be configured or arranged along a cutting edge of the blade.
The mixed serration sections of the blade according to this invention can have many different sizes and/or shapes that result in different cutting capabilities. In some embodiments of this invention, one or more larger serrations can be positioned next to or adjacent one or more smaller serrations. In some embodiments of this invention, the mixed serration section is positioned adjacent at least one straight cutting edge.
The straight section or straight cutting edge can help to cleanly cut animal material, for example, whereas a serrated section can help tear or saw through tough target material or animal material. If for some reason a clean cut is not desired, then according to some embodiments of this invention, an entire length of the blade cutting edge can have the mixed serration section, with no straight cutting edge or straight section.
Although the blade of this invention is particularly useful for arrowheads, crossbow bolts and/or other similar projectiles, the blade according to this invention can also be used in any other structure, apparatus or device that is used to cut through material, particularly relatively tough material.
The above and other features and objects of this invention are better understood from the following detailed description taken in view of the drawings wherein:
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,941,784 and 4,381,866 each describes a mechanical arrowhead or a fixed blade arrowhead, respectively, and the entire teachings of U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,941,784 and 4,381,866 are incorporated into this specification by reference.
As shown in
Conventional blades of arrowheads have teeth, notches or serrations uniformly positioned along a cutting surface, which cut through target material but also tend to undesirably load with pieces of the target material, as the arrowhead passes through the target. Other conventional arrowheads have blades with relatively larger uniformly spaced teeth, notches or serrations, which do not load as much with small pieces of the target material but rather are so large that the target material is not properly cut. According to some embodiments of this invention, mixed serration section 40 comprises a combination of smaller serrations and larger serrations, which can better provide a back-and-forth sawing action, even though blade 30 passes the target material in one direction. Mixed serration section 40 according to this invention allows blade 30 to travel in one direction and act or cut like a hand saw that uses a back-and-forth motion.
As shown in
As shown in
In some embodiments according to this invention, radius of curvature 43 and/or radius of curvature 47 can be generated within body 31 by rotating a cylindrical tool at an acute angle with respect to a general plane defined by body 31 of blade 30.
Large serration 42 and/or small serration 46 can have a cross section of a circular arc or of a non-circular arc, such as a cross section of a hyperbolic function. With a circular section, radius of curvature 43 and/or radius of curvature 47 is constant along a surface of the corresponding serration 42, 46. With a non-circular cross section of large serration 42 and/or small serration 46, radius of curvature 43 and/or radius of curvature 47 has a variable radius along a surface of the corresponding serration 42, 46.
In certain embodiments according to this invention, radius of curvature 47 of small serration 46 has a dimension or area that is less than radius of curvature 43 of large serration 42.
As shown in
The number, size and/or shape of large serration 42 and/or small serration 46 can be varied to accomplish different cutting and/or tearing results. More small serrations 46 can positioned adjacent or next to each other to form an overall relatively fine set of teeth. However, in that configuration although each tooth carries a relatively light load, the wasted target material can undesirably clog the relatively fine teeth. Likewise, relatively large serrations 42 can be used in situations where each tooth carries a relatively higher load, but not as many teeth or large serrations 42 can fit within a same length of cutting edge 32.
As shown in
In some embodiments according to this invention, blade surface 35 and/or blade surface 37 is generally planer. In other embodiments according to this invention, blade surface 35 and/or blade surface 37 is generally curved or non-planar. It is also possible to have both planer and non-planar sections of blade surface 35 and/or blade surface 37.
While in the foregoing specification this invention has been described in relation to certain preferred embodiments, and many details are set forth for purpose of illustration, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that this invention is susceptible to additional embodiments and that certain of the details described in this specification and in the claims can be varied considerably without departing from the basic principles of this invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100299942 A1 | Dec 2010 | US |