Embodiments herein relate to the field of fasteners, and, more specifically, to a slide fastener slider body with one or more features to minimize jamming of materials within the slider body during operation of a slide fastener.
Jackets and other outerwear often incorporate a fabric liner. The liner may be part of a multi-fabric sandwich or a separate piece of fabric. Liners serve many purposes including to enhance the inside appearance of a garment and to enhance the wearability of the garment. Liner fabrics are typically thin materials, and are sized slightly larger than the lined material for some amount of “give”. This characteristic makes liners prone to bunching, and such bunching typically occurs near trimmings such as slide fasteners or zippers, thereby resulting in snagging.
Snagging also is common in Jackets and other outerwear made from heavier fabrics that use a heavier zipper. Heavier zippers have larger sliders that are more prone to snag a garment liner. In addition, lined jackets that include a stretchable waist band are particularly prone to snags since the liner has to be loose enough to accommodate the maximum stretch allowed in the waist band. Other garments may be composed of very light weight fabrics, or may include decorative elements made from light weight fabrics. Such light weight fabrics can similarly become enmeshed in the slider body of a slide fastener, causing jams.
There are numerous types of zippers, with a wide variety of sliders, used throughout the garment, equipment, and accessory industries. Typical slide fasteners comprise metal zippers, molded zippers, and coil-type zippers. In each case, the zippers used in various products (garments, outdoor/camping equipment, bags, etc.) tend to be of a larger size such as a number 5, 6, or 7. While the larger size does not itself make a slider more prone to jams, the larger size sliders have larger openings into which fabric can wedge.
Conventional zippers are also prone to snagging due to the geometry of the slider (the size of the throat openings, the tight tolerances between the side rails and the zipper teeth, the overall tolerances between the throat openings and the size of the zipper teeth), and the rotation imparted to the slider body when the pull tab is pulled to close the zipper. This rotation causes the slider body to rotate towards the liner fabric, and therefore increases the likelihood of a snag. While this rotation is less pronounced with a larger size zipper, as mentioned above, the larger size is more prone to snagging because of the larger openings in the slider body.
Embodiments will be readily understood by the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. Embodiments are illustrated by way of example and not by way of limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings.
a illustrates a side view of a conventional slider body being operated to open a slide fastener;
b illustrates a side view of a conventional slider body being operated to open a slide fastener;
a illustrates a top view of a conventional slider body with a portion of a zipper tape engaged with the slider body;
b illustrates a cutaway view of a conventional slider body along section line X-X of
c illustrates a side view of a conventional slider body with a portion of zipper tape engaged and an additional layer of material;
a-b illustrate side views of a modified slider body in accordance with various embodiments;
a-8j illustrate side views of modified slider bodies with bottom plate and/or plate coupler protrusions in accordance with various embodiments;
a and 9b illustrate a modified slider body with a bottom plate protrusion in accordance with various embodiments;
a illustrates a conventional slider body with horizontally and vertically parallel top and bottom side rails;
b-10d illustrate a modified slider body with a protruding plate coupler and offset top and bottom side rails in accordance with various embodiments;
a illustrates the conventional slider body of
b-c illustrate the modified slider body of
In the following detailed description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof, and in which are shown by way of illustration embodiments that may be practiced. It is to be understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural or logical changes may be made without departing from the scope. Therefore, the following detailed description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, and the scope of embodiments is defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.
Various operations may be described as multiple discrete operations in turn, in a manner that may be helpful in understanding embodiments; however, the order of description should not be construed to imply that these operations are order dependent.
The description may use perspective-based descriptions such as up/down, back/front, and top/bottom. Such descriptions are merely used to facilitate the discussion and are not intended to restrict the application of disclosed embodiments.
The terms “coupled” and “connected,” along with their derivatives, may be used. It should be understood that these terms are not intended as synonyms for each other. Rather, in particular embodiments, “connected” may be used to indicate that two or more elements are in direct physical or electrical contact with each other. “Coupled” may mean that two or more elements are in direct physical or electrical contact. However, “coupled” may also mean that two or more elements are not in direct contact with each other, but yet still cooperate or interact with each other.
For the purposes of the description, a phrase in the form “A/B” or in the form “A and/or B” means (A), (B), or (A and B). For the purposes of the description, a phrase in the form “at least one of A, B, and C” means (A), (B), (C), (A and B), (A and C), (B and C), or (A, B and C). For the purposes of the description, a phrase in the form “(A)B” means (B) or (AB) that is, A is an optional element.
The description may use the terms “embodiment” or “embodiments,” which may each refer to one or more of the same or different embodiments. Furthermore, the terms “comprising,” “including,” “having,” and the like, as used with respect to embodiments, are synonymous.
As used herein, “zipper tape” may be used to refer to the stringers and the interlocking teeth/coils of a slide fastener, which are coupled in rows to each of two stringers. “Zipper teeth elements” may be used to refer to any interlocking element of a slide fastener (e.g. teeth, coils). “Slider body” may be used to refer to the movable slide fastener component coupled to the zipper tape and operable for opening and closing the slide fastener. “Tape slot” is defined herein as the space or gap between the top surface of a bottom side rail and the bottom surface of a top side rail. A “flanking region” is defined herein to include the space between the top surface of a bottom side rail and the bottom surface of the top plate, and the space between the bottom surface of a top side rail and the top surface of the bottom plate. A “flanking region” may be contiguous, connected, and/or in communication with a “tape slot”.
As used herein, standard sizes (e.g. size 3, size 5, size 8, size 9.5, etc.) may be used in descriptions of embodiments of a modified slider body to indicate zipper tape size. These sizes are not used to describe the dimensions of a slider body or modified slider body. For example, the term “size 5 modified slider body” is used to herein to indicate that the described modified slider body is configured for use with a standard size 5 zipper tape. In some embodiments, a modified slider body may be configured for use with zipper tapes within a range of sizes. While the descriptions refer to standard sizes, embodiments may include modified slider bodies configured for use with zipper tapes of non-standard and/or custom sizes.
Embodiments herein provide a modified slider body configured to minimize jamming when used as a component of a zipper that is used in, for example, a lined garment, sleeping bag, or in any other application where loose fabric is in close proximity to the slide fastener and/or slider body during operation of the slide fastener. The geometry of various embodiments of a modified slider body described herein, as well as the means of operation of such a slider body by the wearer of a lined garment, may inhibit the liner (or other) fabric from entering the throat of the slider and thereby becoming jammed in the slider body. In embodiments, the geometry of a modified slider body may help divert or push loose fabric away from the joining length of the modified slider body, thereby resisting jamming during operation.
In some embodiments, a modified slider body may include one or more features to reduce the rotation of the slider body while the garment wearer pulls the pull tab to close the zipper. Reducing the rotation may reduce the proximity of the liner fabric to the zipper teeth near the slider body, thereby helping to minimize snagging. In other embodiments, a modified slider body may comprise one or more features such as a forward- and/or downward-protruding feature to push liner fabric away from the zipper teeth near the modified slider body opening. In still other embodiments, the geometry of the side rails of the modified slider body may be configured to enable the rails to push loose fabric away from the throat openings of the modified slider body. Various embodiments may include one or more of the above features in any combination, providing for a modified slider body suitably enabled to push materials away from the modified slider body opening and/or to reduce the rotation of the modified slider body when the pull tab is pulled during operation of the slider body.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a modified slider body may include a protrusion on the back plate of the slider body. Such a protrusion may comprise a separate element adhered to the flat plate back of a conventional slider body, or the protrusion and plate back/slider body may be molded/formed as a single unit/piece. The protrusion may be in the form of any number of shapes, including but not limited to a plow shape, a wing shape, an arc, and/or a simple half-barrel shape. It is recognized that a variety of shapes may be employed for the protrusion of the modified slider body disclosed herein.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the side rails of the top plate, the bottom plate, or some combination of both are shortened (in comparison to a conventional design where the rails are of equal length on both the top and bottom plates). It is recognized that a variety of differing lengths may accomplish the objective of the present invention.
In yet another embodiment of the present invention, a modified slider body may have an elongated joining length (as compared to a conventional slider body) in proportion to the width of the modified slider body, and/or the spring cap may be elongated. A pull tab of a conventional slider generally pivots around an axis that is within the lateral confines of the spring cap. The elongated slider cap of this embodiment allows the pull tab of a slide fastener with a modified slider body to translate along the length of the modified slider body, and to rotate as in a conventional slider cap, when the pull tab is pulled to open and close the slide fastener.
The bottom plate 108 of the slider body 104 typically has a flat lower surface and upwardly protruding bottom side rails 118. The top plate 109 may include downwardly protruding top side rails 119 along its lower surface. Top side rails 119 and bottom side rails 118 may be separated by a tape slot 123, through which the zipper tape passes during operation of the slide fastener. Top plate 109 and bottom plate 108 are usually joined by post 132, which divides the front end of the slider body 104. In conventional slider bodies, joining length 102 is greater than the length of post 132. Typically, the length of post 132 is less than one half the joining length 102, and is approximately one third, one fourth, or one fifth the length of joining length 102.
Slider cap 101 is mounted to the upper surface of top plate 109 of the slider body and holds the pull tab 103 in place. Slider cap 101 may include a locking pin mechanism that moves locking pin 105 when pull tab 103 is pulled in the direction of arc 120 when the slider body is moved along a length of zipper tape to close a slide fastener. Pull tab 103 bears against element 107, which forces pull tab 103 to bear against the underside of slider cap 101. This causes slider cap 101 to rotate around pivot point 106 along an arc essentially parallel to arc 120, thereby moving locking pin 105 out of the teeth of the zipper tape.
a and 3b illustrate a side view of a conventional slider body being operated to open (
In
a illustrates a top view of a zipper tape 110, comprising zipper teeth elements 111, coupled to a conventional slider body 104.
As shown in
c illustrates a side view of the conventional slider body of
a and 5b illustrate side views of an improved slider body in accordance with various embodiments. As shown in
Slider cap 201 may be coupled to top plate 209. In some embodiments, slider cap 201 may be coupled to a locking pin 205, which may be positioned within an opening passing through the thickness of top plate 209. Top plate 209 may be coupled along its upper surface to one or more elements 207. In some embodiments, top plate 209 and element 207 may be formed as a single unit, while in other embodiments top plate 209 and element 207 may be formed as separate components that are subsequently coupled. Pull tab 203 may be coupled to slider cap 201 to pull the modified slider body 204 in direction 221 in order to open a slide fastener and in direction 220 in order to close the slide fastener.
In some embodiments, such as the embodiment illustrated in
In operation, pulling the pull tab 203 may rotate the pull tab 203 around pivot point 213, forcing pull tab 203 against element 207 and against the underside of slider cap 201. The force applied against slider cap 201 may cause slider cap 201 to rotate around pivot point 206, thereby moving locking pin 205 out of the teeth of a zipper tape. Some embodiments may lack a locking pin 205, pivot point 206, and/or element 207.
The upper surface of bottom plate 208 of modified slider body 204 may comprise a flat surface portion. The increased length of the slider cap 201 relative to the slider cap 101 of a conventional slider body may permit pull tab 203 to slide within the elongated area of open space between the upper surface of top plate 209 and the lower surface of slider cap 201 as the pull tab 203 is pulled to open a slide fastener (pulling in direction 221) or to close a slide fastener (pulling in direction 220). In either case, when the pull tab 203 is pulled, the sliding of pull tab 203 results in the positioning of pivot point 213 at a significant distance from the center of mass (near center of mass point 245) of modified slider body 204, thereby reducing rotation of the modified slider body 204 around the center of mass point 245. The reduction in rotation results in reducing the potential for snagging of the zipper.
In
Protrusion 250 may push loose portions of inner layer 241 further away from zipper tape 210 and guide channels 215 than a slider body without a protrusion 250, further reducing jamming or snagging of inner layer 241 within the modified slider body 204. Embodiments may vary as to the size and/or shape of protrusion 250. In some embodiments, protrusion 250 may be wider and/or thicker than bottom plate 208. In other embodiments, protrusion 250 may be curved, plow-shaped, pointed, V-shaped, U-shaped, and/or wider/thicker at one end. Protrusion 250 may extend above bottom plate 218. In some embodiments, protrusion 250 may also extend laterally from bottom plate 218.
a-8j illustrate side views of modified slider bodies with bottom plate and/or plate coupler protrusions in accordance with various embodiments.
j shows an embodiment of a modified slider body with a first slider cap 201 coupled to top plate 209 and a second slider cap 271 coupled to bottom plate 208. A post 232 may join top plate 209 to bottom plate 208. In some embodiments, post 232 may join one or more slider caps, such as first slider cap 201 and second slider cap 271, to another component of the slider body (e.g. to top plate 209 and/or to bottom plate 208). First slider cap 201 and/or second slider cap 271 may be elongated to minimize rotation of the slider body. In some embodiments, first slider cap 201 and/or second slider cap 271 may include a plow-shaped and/or prow-shaped protrusion extending outwardly to the front, rear, top, bottom, and/or side of the slider body. Such slider caps/protrusions may be shaped to push fabric or other materials away from the zipper tape during operation of the slider body. In various embodiments, a slider cap may include a protrusion shaped essentially as shown in any of
a and 9b illustrates a modified slider body with a bottom plate protrusion in accordance with various embodiments.
a shows a conventional slider body with horizontally and vertically parallel top and bottom side rails. The conventional slider body illustrated in
In
In contrast,
As shown in
Embodiments may include one or two side walls 296 extending vertically along one or both sides of the modified slider body and covering at least some portion of plate coupler 232, first protrusion 291, second protrusion 292, and/or top side rail 209. Other embodiments may lack a side wall 296. In some embodiments, side walls 296 may be shaped to push materials away from a zipper tape during operation of a slide fastener.
A modified slider body may include a tape slot 223 with a vertical height measured as the distance between the lower surface of a top side rail 219 and the upper surface of the opposing bottom side rail 218. As shown in
Top side rail 219 may extend to the rear terminus of top plate 209 (i.e. end opposite plate coupler 232). Bottom side rail 218 may be set at a length 298 from the front of bottom plate 208 and may terminate before reaching the rear terminus of bottom plate 208, leaving a length 299 of bottom plate 208 at the rear terminus and a length 298 of bottom plate 208 without a bottom side rail 219. In one embodiment, the top side rail 219 may be approximately the same length as bottom side rail 219 and may be offset toward the rear terminus of top plate 209 in comparison to bottom side rail 218. For example, top side rail 219 may begin at a distance from the front of top plate 219 equal to the sum of length 298 and length 299, extending to the end terminus of top side plate 219 (i.e. the end opposite plate coupler 232).
The tape slot 223 may be flanked at one end by a first flanking region with a bottom side rail 218 and no top side rail 219, and may be flanked at the other end by a second flanking region with a top side rail 219 and no bottom side rail 218. In embodiments with top and bottom side rails of equal heights, the first and second regions may be of equal heights. As shown in
Embodiments may vary in the height of tape slot 223, length 299/298, height 228/229, and the length/height of the top and bottom side rails 219/218. For example, in one embodiment of a size 5 modified slider body (e.g. a modified slider body configured for use with the zipper tape of a standard size 5 zipper), tape slot 223 may have a height of about 0.055 inches, length 299 and length 298 may be about 0.080 inches, height 228 may be about 0.073 inches, top side rail 219 and bottom side rail 218 may have heights of about 0.018 inches, and height 229 may be about 0.091 inches. In other embodiments of a size 5 modified slider body, tape slot 223 may have a height within a range of about 0.050-0.060 inches, length 299 and length 298 may be within a range of about 0.070-0.090 inches, height 228 may be within a range of about 0.065-0.085 inches, top side rail 219 and bottom side rail 218 may have heights within a range of about 0.014-0.022 inches, and height 229 may be within a range of about 0.075-0.105 inches.
In other embodiments of a modified slider body, tape slot 223 may have a height within the range of about 0.030 to 0.090 inches, length 299/298 may be within the range of about 0.040 to 0.150 inches, height 228 may be within the range of about 0.035 to 0.150 inches, and height 229 may be within the range of about 0.040 to 0.180 inches. Top and/or bottom side rails 219/218 may have a length within the range of about 0.150 inches to 0.500 inches. Top and/or bottom side rails 219/218 may have a height within the range of about 0.005 to about 0.060 inches. In some embodiments, top side rails 219 and bottom side rails 218 may be of different lengths and/or different heights.
Other dimensions of a modified slider body may vary among embodiments. For example, in one embodiment, top and bottom plates 209/208 may be about 0.020 inches thick from their upper to lower surfaces, top side rail 219 and/or bottom side rail 218 may be about 0.005 inches thick from side to side, side walls 296 may have a height of about 0.365 inches, sloping downward and forward from a rear portion of the bottom plate 208 at an angle of approximately 13.46 degrees, and the width of the front of the modified slider body (i.e. front of plate coupler 232 and side walls 296) may be about 0.125 inches.
In some embodiments, modified slider bodies of different sizes (e.g. size 3, size 5, size 8, size 10, etc.) may have one or more relative proportions that are the same or similar. For example, a ratio of the height of tape slot 223 to height 228 may be substantially the same among a size 3, a size 5, a size 8, and/or a size 10 modified slider body. As another example, a ratio of the length of a top/bottom side rail to the length of a modified slider body may be substantially similar among a range of modified slider body sizes. In some embodiments, a ratio of flanking region length to side rail length may be approximately the same among modified slider bodies of different slider body sizes. In other embodiments, one or more of the size 5 modified slider body dimensions described above may be scaled up accordingly for larger sizes and/or scaled down accordingly for smaller sizes.
c illustrates a bottom view of the modified slider body of
d illustrates a rear view of a modified slider body. In
a illustrates the conventional slider body of
In contrast,
As illustrated in
As discussed above, embodiments of a modified slider body may vary in dimensions. In the example shown in
For example, in an embodiment of a size 5 slider body with a width 305 of approximately 0.508 inches and a second width 303 of approximately 0.429 inches, and bottom side rails 218 offset anterior to top side rails 219 by approximately 0.080 inches, approximately 15.6% of the width of the slider body (i.e. across the anterior portions of bottom side rails 208 preceding the tape slot) is positioned to push materials away from the tape slot. In other examples, approximately 10%-20% of the width of the modified slider body may be positioned to push materials away from the tape slot before horizontal twisting of the modified slider body. In comparison, as the modified slider body is twisted, the horizontal rotation of the modified slider body increases the exposure of the flanking portions of the tape slot to extraneous fabric/material (see e.g.
As described above, these dimensions are examples and are not intended to be limiting. Modified slider bodies of different sizes may have substantially similar proportions, and/or dimensions may be scaled up or down accordingly in larger or smaller modified slider body sizes. Therefore, in some embodiments, the offsetting of top and bottom side rails 218/219 may result in improved performance of a modified slider body and decreased jamming/snagging during horizontal twisting/rotation, due in part to the participation of both a bottom side rail 218 and a top side rail 219 in pushing fabric/materials away from the tape slot.
Embodiments described herein may include one, two, three, four or more anti-jamming/anti-snagging features such as a modified slider cap, an altered center of mass (e.g. due to a shorter tape slot 223 and/or modification of plate coupler 232), a forward-, upward-, laterally- and/or downward-projecting protrusion, increased height and/or decreased length of tape slot 232 and/or flanking regions at one or both ends of the tape slot 232, and/or other features as described above, alone or in any combination.
Although certain embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that a wide variety of alternate and/or equivalent embodiments or implementations calculated to achieve the same purposes may be substituted for the embodiments shown and described without departing from the scope. Those with skill in the art will readily appreciate that embodiments may be implemented in a very wide variety of ways. This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the embodiments discussed herein. Therefore, it is manifestly intended that embodiments be limited only by the claims and the equivalents thereof.
The present application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/697,118, filed Jan. 29, 2010, titled “Snag Resistant Slide Fastener,” which claims priority to U.S. Patent Application No. 61/148,749, filed Jan. 30, 2009, titled “Snag Resistant Slide Fastener,” the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61148749 | Jan 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12697118 | Jan 2010 | US |
Child | 14709442 | US |