This invention concerns snowshoes of the type having a boot binding secured to the snowshoe, either permanently or by attachment. Specifically the invention concerns a snowshoe binding with a system of straps easily tightened by the wearer, including a heel strap connected to an arch area strap such that tightening the arch strap draws the heel strap tight.
Snowshoe bindings, and bindings for cleats or other terrain-engaging footgear, are shown in Atlas Snowshoe Co. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,440,827, 5,918,387, 6,374,518, 6,401,310, 6,526,629, 6,694,645 and 6,694,646. U.S. Pat. No. 5,687,491 disclosed a contoured footbed in a boot binding (the term “boot” as used herein refers to a boot or a shoe). U.S. Pat. No. 6,694,646 disclosed a snowshoe harness with buckles and straps configured such that a single pull can tighten the harness down to the boot, and including toe area and arch area straps whose tails were connected together as a loop, such that the user need only pull on the loop. As shown in nearly all the above listed patents, a heel strap is provided to secure the user's boot in the binding, to prevent against pulling back of the boot from the tightened toe and arch areas on the binding during use of the snowshoe or cleat device.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,694,646 described a snowshoe binding with a versatile, adjustable, convenient and efficiently used means for tightening toe and arch straps. That binding system works well, but it would be desirable to allow the user to tighten the heel strap at the same time as tightening one or both of the arch and toe straps, thus to avoid the need for the twisting and bending motion involved in drawing tight a heel strap.
Atlas Snowshoe Co. U.S. Pat. No. 6,694,645 shows a lace binding for a snowshoe wherein the lace tightens harness webbing over the top of the boot and also pulls tight a heel strap.
Pursuant to this invention, a binding for a snowshoe or other terrain-engaging sport wear includes a heel strap that is connected to at least an arch area strap, so that a pull to tighten the arch area strap draws the heel strap tight. In a preferred embodiment the arch area and toe straps of the binding have tail ends connected together to form a single loop that tightens both, as in the '646 patent discussed above, and with the arch area strap continuing through guides in the binding harness to serve as a heel strap. Thus, a single pull by the user on the loop tightens both over-the-boot straps and also the heel strap. The harness shell to which the straps are attached can be formed similarly to that of the '646 patent, but with one or more strap guide slots for continuing the arch area strap to extend into the heel strap, rather than having the arch strap fixed to the binding shell or webbing at that location. In addition, the binding shell preferably has a strap guide extension extending back toward the heel, to help hold the heel strap in position, and a further flexible but relatively stiff strap guide is included at the opposite side of the binding, secured to or enclosing the heel strap at such opposite side so as to hold the heel strap in a generally horizontal position and ready for the user to step a boot into the binding and to engage the strap system without having to manually position the heel strap.
The binding can additionally include a flexible footbed, with flexibility for bending at the metatarsal phalangeal joint of the foot. The footbed in this embodiment is only rigid at the toe area, forward of the metatarsal phalangeal joint location (where it is secured to a toe cleat), and the over-the-boot strap in the arch region is connected to the back portion of a flexibly compliant footbed element. The footbed can also include a sliding width adjustment at the arch.
In one particular embodiment the snowshoe binding of the invention comprises a footbed for engagement against the bottom of a user's shoe or boot and adapted for securing to a snowshoe, with a boot binding extending up from the footbed, the binding at one side having a shaped, flexible harness shell adapted to engage the shoe or boot at the side and at least partially over the top of the shoe or boot. At an opposite side of the binding is another flexible harness element.
A first flexible strap is fixed to the one side at the footbed, extending to the other side and looping through the flexible harness element, then returning back toward the harness shell and being engaged in and passing through an adjustable locking buckle connected to the flexible harness shell.
A second flexible strap is connected at said other side to the footbed and crosses generally to a position above the arch area to a second adjustable locking buckle connected to the flexible harness shell.
A heel strap extends back from the boot binding in a generally horizontal loop, fixed to the boot binding at one side and held in place by a guide or stiffener. The heel strap at the opposite side is secured to (and can be continuous with) the second flexible strap, and can be held by a slip-through slide guide on the binding, whereby tightening of the second flexible strap generally over the arch area is effective simultaneously to tighten the heel strap.
Preferably the two straps, for the toe area and arch area, are connected at their tail ends to form a grippable handle extending generally between the two buckles, capable of being pulled by the user to draw both straps with one pull, such that the pulling of the strap handle effects tightening of the toe area, the arch area and the heel. In a preferred form, all straps comprise one continuous strap.
In one specific embodiment of the invention the width of the snowshoe binding and strap engagement against the boot in the arch area are adjustable, preferably via a simple lateral slide mechanism, to accommodate boots of different widths. The arch region strap and an adjustment buckle for the strap are so arranged that the pulling of the arch region strap to tighten the binding will tend to pull the slide adjustment device into contact with the sides of the boot as the strap is tightened.
It is thus among the objects of the invention to improve on boot bindings for snowshoes or other terrain-engaging footgear, such as snow cleats or ice cleats, by providing for greater convenience and ease of use in tightening the binding on the user's boot. These and other objects, advantages and features of the invention will be apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments, considered along with the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings,
The stiffener or guide sleeve 20 is flexible so as to bend around the back end of the boot and to conform to the boot as needed, but is relatively stiff in the other direction of bending, such that it reliably holds the strap in the generally horizontal loop position shown, and the user need only step the boot into the binding, once the straps are sufficiently loosened, then pull the strap handle loop 12 to tighten the heel strap along with the over-the-boot straps.
In the form shown, the strap or strap portion 16 is further guided by a slotted guide piece 32 secured to the harness element 26, and this guide 32 along with the one or more slot guides 24 serve to transition the strap in its sliding movement from the arch area portion 16 to the heel strap 18, allowing for smooth tightening and loosening of the heel strap when the strap 16 is tensioned.
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,694,646, which is fully incorporated herein by reference, the looped strap handle arrangement was similar, except that the arch area strap, in the position of the strap 16, was fixed to a portion of the boot binding or harness shell, rather than continuing into the heel strap.
It should be understood that the snowshoe binding 10 of the invention can be made, if desired, without the loop 12 connecting the tail ends of the forward and rear straps 14 and 16. Although the single-pull loop form is preferred, a rear strap or arch area strap 16, independent of the forward strap 14, and which connects with or is continuous with a heel strap 18 such that tightening of the arch area strap also tightens with the heel strap, is within the principles of the invention.
As can be seen from
Strap buckles 44 may comprise cam lock buckles as disclosed in the '646 patent, which can be generally of the type shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,526,629. Alternatively, these buckles can comprise other types of slip-through adjustable locking buckle, well known in the art.
As mentioned above, the snowshoe binding 10 of the invention can include a flexible footbed, if desired, as disclosed in co-pending application Ser. No. 11/335,848. Such a flexible footbed, which can be formed of plastic, is secured to the metal cleat member 30 only at the forward end of the footbed, allowing the user to bend the boot and foot at the metatarsal phalangeal joint, thus making use of the snowshoe or terrain-engaging device much more comfortable. In that case the rear portion of the footbed “floats”, relative to the metal cleat 30, and the binding elements 22, 26 and the straps move along with the rear portion of the footbed.
In addition, as also described in the referenced co-pending application, the arch area of the footbed can include a slidable width adjustment if desired. With such a width adjustment, the two opposed portions 22 and 26 of the harness shell are actually separate pieces, slidable toward and away from one another at the rear or arch region via a simple sliding element. Tightening of the rear strap 16 and the heel strap 18 has the effect of sliding the width adjustment device together, to engage the boot at the desired width. A detail of such a slide adjustment is shown in the transverse sectional view of
It should be understood that the harness shell 22 and harness element 26 shown in the drawings and discussed above need not be configured as shown. Some type of transitioning strap-passing device is needed for transitioning the strap between the arch area strap 16 and the heel strap 18, and this element should be attached to the footbed, but the remainder of the harness element 26 can be configured otherwise. For example, the front strap 14, 14a could merely pass through a slide loop at the side of the footbed rather than through the arching loop portion 26a as shown. Further, the strap portion 14a could simply be fixed to the footbed at the near side of the binding as seen in
A heel strap stiffener 20a is also visible in
The above described preferred embodiments are intended to illustrate the principles of the invention, but not to limit its scope. Other embodiments and variations to these preferred embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art and may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
919118 | Blacklock | Apr 1909 | A |
5440827 | Klebahn et al. | Aug 1995 | A |
5687491 | Klebahn | Nov 1997 | A |
5740621 | Wing et al. | Apr 1998 | A |
5918387 | Emerson | Jul 1999 | A |
6374518 | Warner | Apr 2002 | B2 |
6401310 | Warner et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6526629 | Warner et al. | Mar 2003 | B1 |
6694645 | Messmer et al. | Feb 2004 | B2 |
6694646 | Messmer et al. | Feb 2004 | B2 |
20030126766 | Messmer et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20040231200 | Forrest et al. | Nov 2004 | A1 |
20050183291 | Kiniry et al. | Aug 2005 | A1 |
20070163151 | Monsees et al. | Jul 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0786274 | Jul 1997 | EP |
2419086 | Oct 1979 | FR |
WO03099396 | Dec 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070163153 A1 | Jul 2007 | US |