The invention relates to a method and apparatus for providing a shoe sole with improved flexibility.
Historically, most shoe soles typically have a homogenous hardness and are often made of a material with uniform properties throughout the sole. Soles that may be made of a rigid material may provide protection and support to a user's foot. However, a sole made of a rigid material may be uncomfortable in the areas of the sole that flex, such as the toe area, because the rigid sole may inhibit flexing.
On the other hand, a sole made of a soft material may provide comfort to the user's foot in addition to providing improved flexibility in the areas of the sole that are flexed. However, a sole made of a soft material may not provide sufficient support or protection to a user, which may lead to injuries or fatigue. Moreover, a soft material may not provide sufficient structural integrity to hold a predetermined shape over time, which in turn may lead to discomfort.
To alleviate the above problem, soles made of varying hardnesses may have been developed to provide both flexibility and support.
U.S. Publication No2003/0056397 to Hsiao appears to relate to a sole having a hard portion and a soft portion, where the hard and soft portions represent different hardnesses of the sole and where the hard portion seems to gradually change over to the soft portion and vice versa. The sole seems to eliminate a definite border, or separation, between the hard and soft portions.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,931,110 to Pietrocola appears to relate to a sole having two different materials, each being of a different hardness. A rigid material may be poured into a mold to form a majority of the sole, the rigid material may be a single unit having a plurality of holes. When cured, the rigid material is typically placed in a second mold where soft material may be poured into, and left to solidify within, the plurality of holes.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,899,467 and 4,658,516 to Mackey and Beck seem to relate to soles similar to the Pietrocola patent, where a majority of the sole is typically of a rigid material and where a soft material is normally placed in a selected area, such as the ball of the foot.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,025,573 and 4,348,003 to Giese and Beneteau seem to relate to soles having at least one layer of rigid material being fixed to at least one layer of soft material.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,020,569 and 6,571,491 to Fukuoka and Safdeye seem to relate to compounds for making a shoe sole, where the compounds are typically mixtures of rigid and soft materials.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,165,841 to Rollman seems to relate to a sole having a soft material making up a majority of the sole and a rigid material often located under a steel toe. Because the sole usually includes soft material over a majority of the sole, Rollman may lack sufficient support or structural integrity.
Although Pietrocola, Giese, Beneteau, Mackey, and Beck seek to provide soles with improved flexibility and adequate support for the shoes, the flexibility appears to be limited because the soles are substantially made of a rigid material. Pietrocola, Beck, and Mackey seem to show soles made of rigid materials having apertures in selected areas of the rigid materials and where soft materials are placed in the apertures. Giese and Beneteau seem to show soles having rigid materials substantially extend over the entire sole and where soft materials are attached to the rigid materials at particular locations. Although all of these references strive to improve flexibility over traditional shoes, the flexibility seems to be limited. Moreover, it appears that improving rigidity is at the detriment of flexibility, and vice versa.
What is desired, therefore, is a sole that overcomes the limited flexibility or limited rigidity problems associated with the prior art. What is also desired is a sole having improved flexibility without sacrificing support or structural integrity. A further desire is a sole having improved rigidity without negatively affecting flexibility.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to provide a sole that improves flexibility by having pliable materials placed in selected areas between harder, stronger materials along a length of the sole so that the harder, stronger materials are separated from one another.
Another object of the invention is to concentrate the pliable materials in selected areas of the sole.
A further object is to provide a sole that permits increased flexibility without loss of rigidity and a sole that permits increased rigidity without loss of flexibility.
Yet another object is to provide a sole having pliable materials adequately secured to rigid materials.
These and other objects of the invention are achieved by a sole having a first material and a second material. The first material includes a plurality of extensions and the second material includes a plurality of sections, where each section is spaced apart from an adjacent section by at least one extension being placed between each section and each adjacent section.
In some embodiments, the modulus of elasticity of the first material has a higher modulus of elasticity than the second material. In other embodiments, the hardness of the first material is lower than the hardness of the second material. Still in further embodiments, the modulus of elasticity and hardness for the first and second materials are the same.
The sole may include a top surface and a bottom surface, where the first material extends from the top surface to the bottom surface. In addition to or instead of extending from the top surface to the bottom surface, the first material may also extend from the bottom surface to a location between the top and bottom surfaces. Likewise, in addition to or instead of extending from the top surface to the bottom surface, the first material may extend from the top surface to a location between said top and bottom surfaces.
In another embodiment, the sole includes a second material having a plurality of sections, where each section is discretely separated from an adjacent section.
In another aspect of the invention, a method for providing a sole includes the steps of molding a first material to provide a plurality of extensions, molding a second material to provide a plurality of sections, and spacing each section apart from an adjacent section by at least one extension.
In further embodiments, the method includes providing a top surface and a bottom surface of the sole. In some of these embodiments, the method extends the first material from the top surface to a location between the top and bottom surfaces of the sole. In other embodiments, the method may extend the first material from the bottom surface to a location between the top and bottom surfaces of the sole. In still other embodiments, the method extends the first material from the top surface to the bottom surface of the sole.
Because first material 20 has a higher modulus of elasticity than second material 40, sole 10 provides more flexibility to a shoe in areas of sole 10 where first material 20 is located. Increasing the amount of first material 20 improves flexibility and increasing the amount of second material 40 improves support and protection to the user. In traditional shoes, improving flexibility tends to reduce the ability of sole 10 to support and protect a user wearing a shoe, and vice versa.
Sole 10 overcomes this disadvantage by allowing both flexibility and rigidity to be increased without either being negatively affected because each section 44 of rigid material is separated from an adjacent section 46 of rigid material. In this fashion, the rigidity of section 44 does not affect the movement, such as bending or flexing, of adjacent section 46 relative to section 44. Sole 10 separates section 44 from adjacent section 46 by placing at least one extension 24 between each section 44 and adjacent section 46 of the plurality 42 of sections, whereby each section 44 is discretely separated from adjacent section 46.
In this manner, first material 20 may be placed in areas of sole 10 where flexing is desired and second material 40 may be placed in areas of sole 10 where support or protection is desired. For example, first material 20 may be concentrated in areas of sole believed to bend due to walking, such as the ball of the foot or toe area, and second material 40 may be concentrated in the heel or arch of sole 10.
In addition, as shown in
Referring to
It is also understood first material 20 may be placed in selected areas of sole 10 and need not be symmetric about any axis of sole 10. The attachment of first material 20 to second material 40 includes all known or novel manners for attachment, such as adhesives, fasteners, ultrasonic welding, chemical bonding, and the like. The manner for attachment of first and second materials 20 and 40 should not be a limitation of the invention.
In the embodiment shown in
However, in further embodiments, the modulus of elasticity and hardness of both first and second materials, 20 and 40, are the same. In these embodiments, it is sufficiently flexible and rigid to have section 44 and adjacent section 46 separated from one another, thereby allowing flexing and bending relative to one another. Hence, first material 20 need not have different properties for the invention to operate.
In further embodiments, shown in
In some embodiments, method 60 provides 72 a sole with a top surface and a bottom surface. In these embodiments, method 60 may extend 76 the first material from the top surface partially through the sole to a location between the top and bottom surfaces. Similarly, method 60 may extend 76 the first material from the bottom surface partially through the sole to a location between the top and bottom surfaces. In other embodiments, method 60 extends 76 the first material completely through the sole from the top surface to the bottom surface.
It is envisioned that the method for making the sole includes injecting the first, pliable material into a mold and, when solidified or substantially solidified, placing the first material in a second mold. There, a second, rigid material in liquid form is poured over the first material. Then both first and second materials are solidified completely. The result is a sole formed of a single unit where the first, pliable material acts as a vertebrae for the sole.
Another benefit sole 10 provides is that sole 10 reduces the concentration of weak points over traditional soles that have soft materials bonded to rigid materials. Flexing the sole while walking stresses the areas of contact between dissimilar materials, such as soft and hard materials. Having fewer contact points lessens the quantity of weak points but increases the stress, or concentration of stress, at the remaining contact points between soft and hard materials. Plurality 22 of extensions and plurality 42 of sections spread the stresses from walking over the entire sole because, in some embodiments, plurality 22 of extensions and plurality 42 of sections extend all over, or substantially over, sole 10.
Additionally, in some embodiments, particular placement of second material 40 controls how or where sole 10 is flexed, which may affect how a user walks or flexes his/her foot. In these embodiments, sole 10 acts as an orthodic. A forepart of sole 10 shown in
Although the invention has been described with reference to a particular arrangement of parts, features and the like, these are not intended to exhaust all possible arrangements or features, and indeed many other modifications and variations will be ascertainable to those of skill in the art.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2931110 | Pietrocola | Apr 1960 | A |
3165841 | Rollman | Jan 1965 | A |
4020569 | Fukuoka | May 1977 | A |
4255874 | Sironi | Mar 1981 | A |
4309376 | Ueno et al. | Jan 1982 | A |
4348003 | Beneteau | Sep 1982 | A |
4564966 | Chen | Jan 1986 | A |
4658516 | Beck | Apr 1987 | A |
4837949 | Dufour | Jun 1989 | A |
4899467 | Mackey | Feb 1990 | A |
5024007 | DuFour | Jun 1991 | A |
5025573 | Giese et al. | Jun 1991 | A |
5396675 | Vincent et al. | Mar 1995 | A |
5843268 | Lyden et al. | Dec 1998 | A |
5862614 | Koh | Jan 1999 | A |
6061929 | Ritter | May 2000 | A |
6237249 | Aguerre | May 2001 | B1 |
6571491 | Safdeye et al. | Jun 2003 | B1 |
6701643 | Geer et al. | Mar 2004 | B1 |
6910287 | Truelsen | Jun 2005 | B1 |
20020116843 | Harrison | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20030046832 | Knoerr et al. | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20030056397 | Hsiao | Mar 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2092431 | Jan 1981 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050150134 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |