The present invention refers to a sport footwear comprising, further to a leg-piece articulated on a (lower) shell and an optional soft inner lining shoe, two side flaps that are adapted to cover the opening for introduction and extraction of the user's foot. The reference made throughout this description to ski boots shall not be understood as limiting the field of the invention.
The purpose of the above-cited flaps, which extend at least along the instep and are adapted to be superimposed upon each other, is to take up and distribute the forces originating at the moment the boot is tightly closed and fastened onto the wearer's foot. In addition, they are of course intended to prevent snow from penetrating into the boot itself.
Owing to the fact that the wearer's foot may be introduced into a ski boot or extracted therefrom even under prevailing conditions of quite low temperatures, e.g. outside on the skiing ground, the details concerning the opening where said flaps are provided are of a major consideration when designing a new boot model.
Then, since the flaps are usually moulded integrally as a unitary piece with the shell and leg-piece of the boot, respectively, and must be capable of most easily open apart even under the conditions of quite low temperatures, the flaps are designed as very thin parts, i.e. parts with a reduced thickness which represent a weak point in the construction of a boot.
A first solution to such problem is known from DE-A-198 15 344; this solution envisages the use of strips of textile material as hinges for connecting the flaps to the rest of the lower and upper shell, respectively. Notwithstanding the use of textile materials of a high tensile strength and impermeability to water (e.g., plastics-impregnated textiles), it can be reasonably expected that—at least after a more or less extended period of use of the boot—the flaps will structurally undergo a certain extent of yielding that will prevent them from closing in a uniform manner the opening of the boot.
Another solution, known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,553,401, envisages to make the flaps as parts to be moulded separately from the leg-piece and the shell of the boot and, as a result, loose, i.e. disengaged from the means (levers and racks) used to fasten the boot. Each flap has a lower or concealed portion that is moulded integrally as a unitary piece with an upper or exposed portion (which distributes the pressure originated and imposed by the fastening means) to which is connected via a thin-film hinge. Said upper portion of the flap opens and closes with a transverse movement for permitting the foot to slip into and out of the boot, whereas the lower portion is secured by means of a bolt to shell of the boot and is able to slide in the longitudinal direction of the boot. Quite clearly, due to the repeated flexural stresses they are going to be subject to, thin-film hinges represent weak points of the boot.
A third solution, known from WO-A-03 001937, envisages the use of panels in the form of real lids connected to the shell and/or the leg-piece of a ski by metal book-like (flat) hinges. Anyway, even this kind of hinges represents a critical aspect in the boot design, especially when the hinges need to be replaced; they furthermore are relatively expensive parts.
At last, from EP-A-551 881 a footwear for ski is known which comprises one or more interchangeable flaps removably associable with the quarter (leg-piece) and/or with the shell through rivets integrally formed with the flaps.
It therefore is a main aim of the present invention to provide a ski boot, in which introducing the foot into the boot and, extracting therefrom, is quite easy to perform.
Another aim is to provide a reliable and effective solution to the problem of enabling the wearer's foot to most easily slip into and off the boot under any environmental condition in which it may be used, and turns furthermore out as being a relatively inexpensive solution.
According to the present invention, these and further aims are reached by a ski boot structure incorporating the features as defined and recited in the appended claims. In particular, the present invention envisages the use of at least a pad, in which the border of such pad on the opposite side of the border where the boot fastening means are intended to act is housed with a certain clearance in a seat provided in the remaining portion of the leg-piece. The pad is moulded as a separate part and preferably more rigid.
The main features and advantages of the present invention will be more readily understood from the description of a preferred embodiment that is given below by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
As shown in the figures, the ski boot comprises a lower shell and a leg-piece, generally indicated at 10 and 20, respectively, which are in a well known manner manufactured out of injection-moulded synthetic materials, as well a soft inner lining shoe 18 (partially visible) where the user foot is comfortably received and accommodate the foot of the skier. Starting from a rigid sole 12, the shell 10 comprises a portion 14, which—as illustrated by a dashed line in FIG. 1—extends beyond and above the horizontal-axis articulation pins 15 connecting the shell 10 with the leg-piece 20 so that the latter is able to deflect (within pre-established limits) forward and backward.
In order to allow for the foot introduction into the boot, and its subsequent extraction therefrom, the shell 10 is provided with a front passage opening 16 extending approximately along the longitudinal mid plane M of the boot and adapted to be closed when two parallel, relatively flexible flaps 17 and 18 (which, as can be seen in
According to a major feature of the present invention, the leg-piece 20 is comprised of at least two portions, which are moulded separately and subsequently joined to each other in an articulated manner.
The first portion of the leg-piece 20, which forms also the flap of the passage 19 situated on the internal side of the boot (i.e. the side that faces the other boot during use), consists of a pad 23 on which there is secured, close to the free edge 24 thereof extending approximately vertically, at least a rack 35. This pad 23 is a part of the boot that is moulded separately from the rest of the leg-piece 20, so that it can most advantageously be made of a higher-grade synthetic material having superior mechanical properties.
The second portion 25 of the leg-piece 20 comprises the other flap 22 of the passage opening 19, i.e. the flap situated on the external side of the boot. Thanks to the greater robustness ensured by the pad 23, the flap 22 can also be thinner than in conventional boots construction; it terminates with a free edge 29 that, during use, i.e. when the wearer's foot is inside the boot, remains under the free edge 24 of the pad 23 so as to close the passage opening 19. To this flap 22 there is secured the lever 36 connected to the buckle 37 that, jointly with the rack 35, is part of generally well-known fastening means of the boot.
The three cross-sectional views appearing in
To this purpose, also the seat 30 has a cross-section in the shape of a T, wherein the transverse portion 31 of said T-shaped seat 30 has a width and a thickness that are larger than the width and the thickness of the transverse member 27 of the second edge 26 of the pad 23, whereas the base portion 32 of said T-shaped seat 30 has a greater width and a smaller thickness than the width and the height, respectively, of the base member 28 of the second edge 26 of the pad 23. In view of preventing the pad 23 from coming loose accidentally as it is being opened, or as the boot is being used, the transverse member 27 of the second edge 26 of the pad 23 will of course be so shaped and sized as to cause it to be temporarily in an interference fit with the corresponding portions 31 and 32 of the seat 30 during manufacturing (assembly) of the boot or during a possible replacement of the pad 23.
The advantages of the present invention may be summarized as follows:
Among the other manners in which the present invention may be implemented within the scope thereof as defined by the appended claims, the following ones can be cited:
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IT2005/000341 | 6/16/2005 | WO | 00 | 1/10/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/134617 | 12/21/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5381611 | Tonel et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5553400 | Wittmann et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
5553401 | Wittmann et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
5611154 | Lucchetta et al. | Mar 1997 | A |
5718065 | Locker | Feb 1998 | A |
6112435 | Collavo | Sep 2000 | A |
6779284 | Cagliari et al. | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6829846 | Cagliari et al. | Dec 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
19815344 | Jun 1999 | DE |
0551881 | Jul 1993 | EP |
WO03001937 | Jan 2003 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080148603 A1 | Jun 2008 | US |