This invention relates to buoys. More specifically, the invention is directed to a buoy having a pocket in which a tethering device is retained to prevent its contact and damage to a vessel tethered to the buoy.
Mooring buoys are well known for mooring a vessel in open water without having to dock the vessel pierside. One drawback of the typical mooring buoy is its exposed shackle, which can contact a vessel hull due to wave action and other forces acting on the vessel and the buoy. Contact between the vessel hull and the conventional buoy mars the vessel hull and in some cases, may cause significant damage and affect the vessel's seaworthiness.
A mooring buoy is needed that safeguards vessel hulls from contact by exposed shackles and the associated damage caused by such contact.
The present invention provides a buoy having a shackle pocket in which the shackle is recessed beneath a plane of an outer surface of the buoy to protect a vessel moored to the buoy from exposure to the shackle. The component parts of the buoy are simple and economical to manufacture, assemble, and use. Other advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and the attached drawings or can be learned through practice of the invention.
According to one aspect of the invention, a buoy for mooring vessels is provided with a shell having an outer surface with a pocket defined therein. The pocket is formed to maintain a fastening device below a plane of the outer surface in a direction of a midpoint of the buoy such that a vessel moored to the buoy is shielded from contact by the fastening device. A buoyant element is retained within the shell to provide flotation for the buoy.
In another aspect of the invention, a mooring device for a buoy is provided having a shackle for attaching a mooring line from a vessel; a pocket defined in a surface of a buoy to retain the shackle below the surface in a direction of a midpoint of the buoy such that a hull of the vessel moored to the buoy is shielded from contact by the shackle; and a protrusion disposed proximate the pocket depending from the surface of the buoy in a direction away from the midpoint, the protrusion configured to increase a size of the pocket such that the shackle is further removed from the surface of the buoy, the protrusion further configured to make contact with the vessel in lieu of the shackle.
Other aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and the attached drawings, or can be learned through practice of the invention.
The above and other aspects and advantages of the present invention are apparent from the detailed description below and in combination with the drawings in which:
a shows a conventional buoy and particularly, damage to a vessel hull caused by an exposed shackle;
b shows a buoy similar to
Detailed reference will now be made to the drawings in which examples embodying the present invention are shown. The detailed description uses numerical and letter designations to refer to features in the drawings. Like or similar designations in the drawings and description have been used to refer to like or similar parts of the invention.
The drawings and detailed description provide a full and detailed written description of the invention, and of the manner and process of making and using it, so as to enable one skilled in the pertinent art to make and use it, as well as the best mode of carrying out the invention. However, the examples set forth in the drawings and detailed description are provided by way of explanation of the invention and are not meant as limitations of the invention. The present invention thus includes any modifications and variations of the following examples as come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
As broadly embodied in
With particular reference to
The shell 12 in
The shackle 30 in
Turning to
b shows the unique shackle pocket 20 in operation. In this example, the vessel V is moored to the buoy 10 by attaching the line 32, which can be a chain, a rope, a cable, a line or similar rigging. The buoy 10 itself is anchored in an area of water by the anchor chain 34, which also can be a rope, cable, line or the like. As shown, the shackle 30 is safely recessed within the shackle pocket 20 in contrast to the conventional mooring buoy Bc and its exposed shackle Sc. Thus, the shackle 30 does not contact a hull H of the vessel V due to wave or wind action or movement of the vessel V or varying aspect angles of the buoy 10 and the vessel V relative to each other.
Also shown in
A pipe or tube 18 inserted in the core 16 and is therefore also coaxially aligned with the centerline CL and passes through the midpoint M. The tube 18 defines a first end 18a and a second end 18b, which respectively lie in co-circumferential relationship with the first and second openings 16a, 16b of the core 16.
In one aspect of the invention, an inner diameter of the tube 18 is about 1½−3 inches but can be sized to accommodate various sizes of anchor chain 34. Similarly, a length of the tube 18 can be varied in accordance with a size of the buoy 10.
The tube 18 is made from any material such as a hardened plastic (having a thickness of at least about ¼ inch polyethylene), a metal, or another suitably hard material made to resist wear and tear by the anchor chain 34 as the anchor chain 34 moves within the tube 18 due to wave or wind action, a motion of the vessel V, or combinations of these external forces. Further description of the tube 18 and its attachment and interaction with the support plate 28 are discussed below.
The first end 18a of the tube 18 is attached to the support plate 28 on one side 28a such as by welding or appropriate mechanical attachment. The shackle 30 is attached to an opposing side 28b of the support plate 28 by adhesives, screws, rivets, bolts, and similar mechanical attachments. In this manner, as the anchor chain 34 (see, e.g.,
Also shown in
Further, the collar can be detachable for subsequent attachment to or detachment from the buoy 10.
As shown, the annular lip 26 virtually increases a depth or length L of the pocket 20 relative to the surface 12a to further shield the shackle 30 within the pocket 20.
Specifically, the lip 26 serves to limit an extent of a distal end 30a of the shackle 30 since the length L of the pocket 20 from proximate the plate pocket 22 at the centerline CL to an outermost edge of the lip 26 is greater than the extent of the distal end 30a. Thus, the distal end 30a terminates short of the outermost edge of the lip 26; i.e., within the pocket 20. However, even without the lip 26, the pocket 20 is sufficiently deep to terminate the distal end 30a of the shackle 30 below the surface 12a of the shell 12. Alternatively stated, if the shell 12 covered the pocket 20, the distal end 30a would also be covered. Accordingly, with further reference to
Turning to
The step of forming the shell 12 is performed by rotational molding (rotomolding), injection molding, blow molding or the like. By way of example, the rotomolding process starts with a quality cast or fabricated mold 52 as schematically shown in
Rotational speed, heating and cooling times are all controlled throughout the foregoing process and each can be adjusted to modify characteristics of the shell 12, such as its wall thickness. As noted above, the shell 12 can have differing wall thicknesses in particular sections, for instance, about 3/16 of an inch of HDPE at upper and lower sections of the buoy 10 and about ½ of an inch HDPE in a middle section of the buoy 10. Further, although rotomolding the shell 12 has been described by way of example, the shell 12 can be otherwise formed using other steps and materials; for example, by blow molding polypropylene.
The step of bonding the tube 18 into the shell 12 can be performed when the resin 56 is loaded into the mold 52, or after the shell 12 is released from the mold 52. Similarly, the buoyant element 14, described in detail above, can be preformed and placed about the tube 18 for subsequent encapsulation by the shell 12, or injected as a foam for hardening about the tube 18, or as a gas following formation of the shell 12.
Another step in the exemplary method is to affix the lip 26 in the form of a collar device if the lip 26 was not unitarily formed with the shell 12. Also, the shell 12 can be colored during its formation or subsequently painted, and/or customized graphics or color schemes 60 can be applied. The ballast 62 can also be added prior to insertion of the buoyant element 14 or thereafter. Additionally, an underwater float 64 can be attached to the anchor chain 34, for instance, to locate the chain 34.
While preferred embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, those skilled in the art will recognize that other changes and modifications may be made to the foregoing embodiments without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. For example, specific buoy sizes and dimensions and specific shapes of various elements of the illustrated embodiments may be altered to suit particular applications. It is intended to claim all such changes and modifications as fall within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
Moreover, references herein to “top,” “lower,” “bottom,” “upward,” “downward,” “upright”, and “side” structures, elements and geometries and the like are intended solely for purposes of providing an enabling disclosure and in no way suggest limitations regarding the operative orientation of the exemplary embodiments or any components thereof.
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3992934 | Clark | Nov 1976 | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050170718 A1 | Aug 2005 | US |