The devices and methods described below relate to skateboarding shoes and particularly to the design of the sole of skateboarding shoes.
A skateboard is controlled primarily through the rider's feet. Greater control of a skateboard may be provided by appropriate footwear and allow the rider to perform more skateboard tricks, such as ollies, kickflips, and crooks, with a greater degree of mastery. Any shoe designed for use during skateboarding should be designed to allow flexibility of the rider's feet while appropriately gripping the skateboard. In other words, the shoe should be designed to account for the required flexibility used by a skateboard rider to control the skateboard. In addition, the shoe should be designed to provide the rider with comfort and a better grip of the skateboard.
Presently, the outsoles of skateboard shoes have a unitary design that allows little flexibility and movement. Outsoles are manufactured as a single unitary component from a single material such as a polymer. Outsoles may also be manufactured from several different materials bonded together to from a unitary structure. What is needed is a skateboard shoe with a segmented midsole and outsole that provides greater flexibility to the rider. The skateboard shoes described below have a structure that provides appropriate flexibility and grip between the shoe and a skateboard to allow a rider to perform skateboard tricks.
The shoes described below provide for improved flexibility in shoe with an air cushion bladder in the sole or mid-sole. The sole of the shoe comprises a longitudinally and transversely segmented midsole and a longitudinally segmented outsole wherein the inner sole and outsole are segmented longitudinally at substantially the same locations. The segmentation of the midsole and outsole allows the individual segments of the outsole to move and grip the skateboard independently from the other segments.
The longitudinally spaced rows of fluid chambers 10 can flex along with the natural motion of the rider's foot while providing impact cushioning. Furthermore, the longitudinally spaced rows of fluid chambers 10 stabilize the rider's foot when the foot is in motion. Thus, the midsole 3 acts as both a stabilizing midsole 3 and an impact cushioning midsole 3 while improving the fit of the shoe so it moves with the foot.
The ribs 9 are integrally formed with the bottom wall and the outer wall of the midsole. Alternatively, ribs 9 may be bonded to the bottom wall and the outer wall surface by an adhesive or thermal bonding. Suitable materials for the midsole include thermoplastics such as thermoplastic urethane.
The longitudinally spaced segments 26 in the outsole along with the longitudinally spaced rows of fluid chambers can flex along with the natural motion of the rider's foot while providing impact cushioning. Thus, the midsole 3 and the outsole 4 act to improve the fit of the shoe so it moves with the foot. The outsole may be manufactured from natural rubber, synthetic rubber, thermoplastic rubber or other elastomers. The bottom surface of the outsole is provided with a tread pattern 30 adapted to increase the amount of friction or grip between the shoe 1 and a skateboard. (Although our trademark tread pattern is shown, any tread pattern may used.)
According the description above, the shoes incorporate a midsole which comprises a plurality of fluid chambers, with each of the chambers being longitudinally fixed to adjacent chambers near the top of the chambers, while being detached and longitudinally displaceable near the bottom of the chambers. The outsole comprises a plurality of outsole segments, and each outsole segment is sized and dimensioned to cover the bottom surface of a corresponding fluid chambers. One or more elastomeric bridge members are used to connect adjacent outsole segments. The bridge members are preferably more flexible than the outsole segments (which are preferably tough enough to withstand extended street wear). The flexibility of the bridge members may be achieved by making them of a material of low modulus of elasticity relative to the outsole segments, or by reducing the width or thickness of the bridge members to achieve a low spring strength relative to the outsole segments.
In addition to skateboarding shoes, the flexible midsole 3 and outsole 4 may be used in hiking boots, snowboarding boots, running shoes, basketball shoes, BMX shoes and sandals. The components of the shoe have been described with reference to the common construction of athletic shoes, with common terms such as the sole and mid-sole. However, the various components may be made separately and assembled thereafter (as illustrated), or manufactured integrally with one another, such that, for example, the outsole and midsole components are formed together and do not have discrete boundaries. Thus, while the preferred embodiments of the devices and methods have been described in reference to the environment in which they were developed, they are merely illustrative of the principles of the inventions. Other embodiments and configurations may be devised without departing from the spirit of the inventions and the scope of the appended claims.