Band-powered spear guns are ubiquitous in the popular sport of spear fishing. A band-powered spear gun includes a spear, or “shaft” that may be propelled from a stock of a spear gun via energy that is stored in one or more stretched elastic bands.
The shaft has an elongated cylindrical portion that has a pointed tip on a front end and a detent on a rear end. The pointed tip is for penetrating fish and other prey. The detent on the rear end engages a trigger mechanism that is typically integrated into the stock.
The shaft also includes one or more tabs that protrude from the rear end of the cylindrical portion of the shaft. In a profile view, each tab protrudes from the cylindrical portion of the shaft to have an appearance similar to a miniature shark fin, so that a rear edge of the tab can receive and removeably capture a portion of the elastic band when the spear gun is in a loaded state.
The portion of the elastic band received by the tab is called a “wishbone”, which typically includes a short piece of rope or cord that enables the elastic band to engage with a corresponding tab when the elastic band is in a stretched position. The number of tabs that protrude from a shaft typically corresponds to the number of elastic bands that are included in the spear gun. With the elastic bands in the stretched position, the spear gun is in the loaded state. During discharge (firing state) of the spear gun, the trigger mechanism releases the shaft and the elastic bands propel the shaft in a direction that is led by the pointed tip on the front end of the shaft.
In commercially available shafts, the tabs are typically attached to the cylindrical portion of the shaft in a configuration shown in
In view of the above, there is a need for a shaft assembly that may reduce the complexity of manufacturing processes.
A shaft assembly according to embodiments of the present invention comprises a cylindrical body that includes at least one recessed slot each having a length aligned with a main axis of the cylindrical body, and having a width and a depth profile. The shaft assembly also includes at least one tab, each having a base and a fin portion. The base is adapted to engage the recessed slot within the length and the width of the recessed slot, and has a base profile to match the depth profile of the recessed slot.
The present invention can be better understood with reference to the following Figures. The components in the Figures and the different views shown are not necessarily to scale. Emphasis is instead placed upon illustrating the principles and elements of the present invention.
The cylindrical body C of the shaft assembly S shown in
Alternatively, the penetrating tip P may include a machined or threaded portion (not shown) that is adapted to engage a “slip-tip”, screw-on tip, or other separately manufactured tip mechanism. With some types of tip mechanisms, such as slip-tip, the flopper FL may be redundant or unnecessary, and may be omitted from the shaft assembly S. Various tip mechanisms and configurations are known in the art of spear guns and are commercially available from various suppliers. The shaft assembly S according to embodiments of the present invention may include any machined or otherwise formed front end that is suitable to accommodate any of a variety of configurations of penetrating tips P and manufactured tip mechanisms. For clarity, one or more of the penetrating tip P, the flopper FL and a detent D may be omitted from the various Figures in order to emphasize various details of the shaft assembly S according to the embodiments of the present invention.
On a rear end of the cylindrical body C distal to the penetrating tip P, the cylindrical body C typically includes a “tang”, or detent D (shown in
The cylindrical body C of the shaft assembly S includes one or more recessed slots 10, each having a length LS aligned with a main axis A of the cylindrical body C, having a width WS and having a depth profile DP as shown in the example embodiment of the present invention in
The shaft assembly S also includes the one or more tabs T that are seated within the recessed slots 10 of the cylindrical body C of the shaft assembly S as shown in
Each tab T includes a fin portion F and a base B. The fin portion F of each tab T has a profile that resembles a shark fin and has a convex leading edge 11 and a concaved trailing edge 12. The convex leading edge 11 of the fin portion F provides for efficient flow through water when the shaft assembly S is propelled from a spear gun. The convex leading edge 11 also enables smooth disengagement of the elastic bands and reduces entanglement of the elastic bands with the tabs T as the shaft assembly S is propelled from the stock of the spear gun during the firing state. The convex leading edge 11 may also facilitate loading a spear gun, by enabling an operator of a spear gun to easily maneuver the wishbone of the elastic bands past this convex leading edge 11 when stretching an elastic band over the tab T to place the spear gun in the loaded state. The concaved trailing edge 12 of the fin portion of the tab T is adapted to receive and engage the wishbone of the elastic band when the spear gun is in the loaded state.
The tab T, including the fin portion F and base B, is typically formed by a milling process. Alternatively, the tab T may be formed by stamping, water-jet cutting, chemical etching, laser cutting, by a combination of these processes, or by any manufacturing process suitable to result in the tab T having the fin portion F and the base B. The convex leading edge 11 of the fin portion F is optionally “softened”, by chamfering, beveling, grinding, polishing, tumbling or other suitable process to avoid sharp edges, to further facilitate “loading” of the spear gun, whereby the one or more elastic bands are stretched beyond the convex leading edge 11 to engage the concaved trailing edge 12. The concaved trailing edge 12 may optionally be similarly “softened” by chamfering, beveling, grinding, polishing, tumbling or other suitable process to avoid any sharp interfaces of the concaved trailing edge 12 that may otherwise damage the elastic band or wishbone. In one example, the edges of the fin are “softened”, or made less sharp, by machining a micro-bevel on the edges of the convex leading edge 11 and the convex trailing edge 12, while the edges of the base B remain well-defined and controlled. The optional softening of either one or both of the convex leading edge 11 and the concaved trailing edge 12 may be omitted to simplify manufacturing of the tab T.
The base B of the tab T shown in the example embodiments of
When positioned into the recessed slot 10, the base B of the tab T is seated within the cylindrical body C of the shaft assembly S, while the fin portion F is exposed and protrudes from the cylindrical body C in a radial orientation from the main axis A as shown in
In one example, the mechanical coupling between the tab T and cylindrical body C is enhanced by a fusion weld. Fusion welding, alternatively referred to as “fuse welding”, or “seam welding”, provides a localized fusion of the metals at the interface I1 between the cylindrical body C and the junction between the fin portion F and the base B, as shown in
Alternatively, the tab T is welded to the cylindrical body C using a deeper penetration weld that forms a larger fillet 16 between the fin portion F and the cylindrical body C as shown in the example shaft assembly S of
The tab T typically includes a hole or “eye” 19 through the fin portion F to accommodate a shooting line or other tether (not shown) for the shaft assembly S, so that the shaft assembly S may be retrieved once the shaft assembly S is fired from a spear gun. When the shaft assembly S includes a single tab T recessed within and fastened to the cylindrical body C, that single tab T typically includes an eye 19. When the shaft assembly S includes multiple tabs T, the fin portion F of at least one of the tabs T includes the eye 19. In one example, the front-most tab T of the multiple tabs T includes the eye 19. For manufacturing uniformity, all of the multiple tabs T of the shaft assembly S may include an eye 19.
When the shaft assembly S includes multiple tabs T, the tabs T are typically arranged in a tandem configuration, so that the tabs T are collinear and aligned with the main axis A of the cylindrical body C of the shaft assembly S.
While the embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated in detail, it should be apparent that modifications and adaptations to these embodiments may occur to one skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention as set forth in the following claims.
The present application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) from commonly owned U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/064,173, filed on Oct. 15, 2014, to Chris W. Chaput. The entire disclosure of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/064,173 is specifically incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62064173 | Oct 2014 | US |