STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT
Not applicable
REFERENCE TO SEQUENCE LISTING, TABLE, OR DISK APPENDIX
Not applicable
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Spinning reels are typically designed with an internal oscillation system to oscillate their associated spool back and forth beneath a rotating winding member. The function of the oscillation system directly affects the winding of line on said spool with one characteristic of the line winding being the flat lay of line. The flattest possible lay of line is a desirable characteristic of spinning reels.
PURPOSE OF THE INVENTION
The purpose of this invention is to provide an improved fishing reel oscillation system for improved winding of line on a reel spool.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a drawing of the main components of a standard oscillation system.
FIG. 2 shows speed curve comparisons between the characteristics of a standard oscillation system and an ideal oscillation system.
FIG. 3 shows the characteristics of an improved oscillation system of the invention.
FIG. 4 shows the speed curve of FIG. 3 mirrored and superimposed on itself to easily compare the speed curve in both directions of oscillation.
FIG. 5 shows the characteristics of an alternate sectioned-line oscillation system.
FIG. 6 shows the improved characteristics of an oscillation system that combines portions of the oscillation of FIG. 3 with a portion of the oscillation system of FIG. 5.
FIG. 7 shows the speed curve of FIG. 6 mirrored and superimposed on itself to easily compare the speed curve in both directions of oscillation.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 illustrates portions of a standard spinning reel oscillation system. Spinning reels typically utilize an oscillation system with a rotating oscillation gear upon which is fixed an oscillation pin 2 moving along circular path 1. The oscillation pin is positioned to ride within a groove 7 formed about centerline axis 4 in oscillation block 6, and the oscillation block is fixed through a drive shaft, not shown, to spool 11 of the spinning reel such that as the oscillation pin rotates around its circular path the spool is urged alternately in a first oscillation direction and then in a second and opposite oscillation direction under a winding member, not shown, of the reel.
Oscillation stroke 10 is defined as the distance that the oscillation block and its associated spool travel in one full 360° rotation of the oscillation gear.
The speed of the oscillation stroke directly affects the flatness of the line wound onto the spool. Since the oscillation pin rotates along a circular path, a typical oscillation block with a straight groove urges the oscillation block back and forth such that it produces a sinusoidally shaped speed curve 8 and forces uneven line-lay 12 on the spool.
In FIG. 2 a theoretically perfect oscillation speed curve 14 is characterized by an unchanging straight-line slope between oscillation stroke extremes and an instant direction change at both ends of the oscillation stroke. Proper design of the oscillation block groove can alter a standard sinusoidal speed curve to approach the perfect oscillation straight-line speed curve in order to produce a flat line-lay on the spool.
If an oscillation block is designed to produce an output correction in synchronized opposition to the sinusoidal urging of the rotating oscillation pin, then an optimum correction may be approached to flatten the line wind on the spool. By plotting the standard sinusoidal speed curve 8 on top of the ideal speed curve 14 any number of error measurements 16,18 may be measured. These error measurements may be plotted 17,19 respectively along a straight line axis to produce correction curve 21. Correction curve 21 is not sinusoidal, and true sinusoidal curve 20 reveals the difference between correction curve 21 and a true sinusoidal curve.
It can be seen that a true sinusoidal correction curve 21 may be established by plotting the same error measurements 16,18 along the ideal straight-line speed curve, 14.
The curve comparisons of FIG. 2 imply that a properly aligned sinusoidal curve correction function dimensioned by the oscillation pin's rotational path may be considered a basis for designing a correction shape to the oscillation block to achieve an optimal oscillation speed curve.
FIG. 2 demonstrates that in order to alter the function of a standard sinusoidal oscillation speed curve 8 to produce an ideal straight line curve 14 there is a requirement to apply a sinusoidal correction function 21 in synchronized opposition to said standard oscillation speed curve 8.
In the oscillation system of FIG. 3, oscillation block 22 shows an oscillation pin groove 23 shaped around a sinusoidal center line 24. The continuation of the sinusoidal centerline 25 is sketched to illustrate the complete sinusoidal curve on which the oscillation block centerline is based. The sinusoidal centerline's amplitude D is dimensionally identical to the oscillation pin path diameter D.
The resultant speed curve 27 of sinusoidal oscillation block 22 indicates a much flatter and improved center section 28 and quicker direction changes 29, 30 than the conventional sinusoidal oscillation speed curve of FIG. 1. Speed curve 27 is mirrored and superimposed upon itself in FIG. 4 to allow a visual comparison of the speed curve in both oscillation directions of the FIG. 3 system.
While the oscillation system of FIG. 3 is theoretically correct, it has a functional flaw. When oscillation pin 31 is at either the 0° or 180° position, the oscillation pin is pushing either up against or down against the horizontally aligned walls of the oscillation block, and there is no urging in either of the two oscillation directions and the system can jam. It is therefore necessary to modify the design of FIG. 3 in order to allow the oscillation system to function correctly.
Any modification to the FIG. 3 oscillation system should also consider making center section 28 of the FIG. 3 system flatter, the direction changes 29, 30 quicker and both directions of oscillation speed curve retrace the exact same plot.
Alternate oscillation system, FIG. 5 shows a tri-fold straight-line oscillation block design that yields an improved speed curve 39 over the sinusoidal speed curve of the standard oscillation system of FIG. 1. The oscillation speed curve of the FIG. 5 system includes the characteristics of quicker direction changes 34, 35, a center section flatness 36 degraded from the FIG. 3 system, and an improved retrace of the oscillation speed curve 37.
The oscillation system of FIG. 6 illustrates an oscillation block design 44 which combines the center straight-line section 40 of the FIG. 5 oscillation system with the sinusoidal end sections 41, 42, of the oscillation system of FIG. 3. Waveform extension 43 illustrates the completion of the sinusoidal shape that is the basis of the FIG. 6 oscillation block design.
Adding straight line section 40 to the purely sinusoidal oscillation system of FIG. 3 both resolves the jamming flaw of the FIG. 3 design and produces a speed curve 45 that is substantially improved over either the FIG. 3 or FIG. 5 systems. Comparing speed curve 45 to the speed curve results of FIG. 3, speed curve 45 has a flatter mid section 46 and quicker direction changes 47, 48. The mirrored and superimposed drawing of speed curve 45 illustrated in FIG. 7 shows that speed curve 45 also has a substantially improved retrace pattern 49 and overall closely approximates the desired and theoretically perfect speed curve 14. Oscillation speed curve 45 indicates an improved oscillation system in which a sinusoidal correction applied in synchronous opposition to the urging of the oscillation pin's sinusoidal speed curve produces a very flat line wind on its associated spool.
It is understood that changing the length and/or angle of center section 40, the horizontal stretch of sinusoidal shape 41, 43 as well as other dimensions shown on the accompanying figures will be obvious to those with knowledge of the art in order to affect the resultant oscillation speed curves.