1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to exercise equipment for home use, and more particularly to home use exercise equipment allowing exercise motions in substantially any plane of motion.
2. Description of Related Art
Recently, there has been considerable emphasis on marketing exercise equipment that allows for an integrated approach to fitness. Such integrated exercise equipment allows a user to exercise multiple muscle groups using the same piece of equipment, and may support toning and range-of-motion exercises, rather than traditional strengthening or muscle building.
In particular, a type of exercise based upon a combination of yoga and dance movements has become popular. This type of exercise focuses almost entirely on a user's muscle tone and range-of-motion, emphasizing circular movements of the body and limbs during exercise. A variety of specialized exercise equipment has been developed to support these types of circular, free-form exercise movements. U.S. Pat. No. 4,850,586 to Horvath, for example, discloses an exercise apparatus that has resistive rotors as a primary component. These rotors provide resistance for circular movements in a variety of planes.
The apparatus of Horvath has been developed for professional environments, such as gyms and exercise studios. In professional settings, the Horvath apparatus typically includes a tower structure having a directional pulley system that allows the user to exert force against the resistive elements in the tower in arbitrary planes of motion. When a tower is used, the bench and rotor assembly of U.S. Pat. No. 4,850,586 is spaced some distance away from the tower while the user performs exercises. The force exerted by the user against the resistive elements in the tower tends to tip the tower in a forward direction, toward the user and the bench. This tipping force can be significant, as resistive elements or directional pulleys are often placed at the top of the tower and the bench is usually spaced at a relatively large distance from the tower.
The tower and bench are typically prevented from tipping by placing heavy counterweights to oppose the tipping force, or by providing the tower structure with large, heavy feet which add stability. Additionally, the tower usually uses free weights as resistive elements, and the weight provided by these free weights increases the stability of the tower.
The need to provide such a large, heavy tower in order to ensure stability has hindered efforts to successfully market the Horvath apparatus, which has thus far been used only by very specialized exercise studios. While a large, heavy piece of equipment may be acceptable for very specialized studios, which typically focus their business on that piece of equipment, such equipment is usually unacceptable to less specialized exercise studios and gyms, which must accommodate a variety of exercise equipment.
Additionally, people are most inclined to engage in a particular type of exercise if a version of the necessary exercise apparatus is available for home use. Typically, home use exercise equipment must be designed so that it is lightweight and storable, since the home user may not have a dedicated area for fitness, and may need to move the equipment and store it between exercise sessions. The size and weight of the typical Horvath apparatus precludes the average home user from owning one, because it is not especially portable and is relatively difficult to store.
Therefore, a relatively lightweight, storable version of the Horvath apparatus is needed. Such an apparatus would allow the Horvath exercise method and apparatus to reach nearly untapped consumer markets.
The present invention is a lightweight, portable exerciser. The exerciser comprises a frame assembly including a base structure and an upright structure fixed to the base structure and extending upwardly therefrom. The base structure has downwardly facing surfaces for engaging an upwardly facing surface to support the frame structure thereon. The base structure extends forwardly of the upright structure so that the upright structure cannot be tipped over forwardly except by the entire frame being tipped forwardly about the forward end of the base acting as a fulcrum.
The upright structure includes a pair of flexible exercising pull lines carried by the upright structure at an upper end portion thereof so as to extend downwardly and forwardly therefrom. Each of the pull lines has interconnecting structures configured to be interconnected by a user either with the user's hands or the user's feet.
The upright structure also carries an extensible and retractable spring system. The spring system is operatively connected to the pull lines so as to resiliently resist movement of the pull lines in a direction downwardly and forwardly from the upper end portion of the upright structure.
The exerciser also includes a bench assembly configured and positioned to support a user in a prone, supine or sitting position thereon so as to enable the user so positioned to interconnect with said user interconnecting structure and pull said pull lines downwardly and forwardly against the resilient resistance of the spring system. The resistance provided by the spring system provides the user with exercise while creating a force on the upper end portion of the upright structure. The force tends to tip the upright structure forwardly about the fulcrum provided by the forward end of the base structure.
The bench assembly includes a bench frame and a bench pad mounted on the bench frame for movement between a raised operative user supporting position spaced above the bench frame and a lowered operative position disposed adjacent to the bench frame. The bench frame includes an inner end portion which has a load transmitting connection with the base structure and an outer end portion extending forwardly beyond the forward end of the base structure. The outer end portion has downwardly facing surfaces for engaging the upwardly facing horizontal surface engaged by the downwardly facing surfaces of the base structure.
The load transmitting connection between the bench frame and the base structure is partitioned when the bench pad is within the raised or lowered operative position thereof so as to transmit a portion of the load defined by the weight of a user supported on the bench pad to the base structure at a position spaced inwardly of the forward end to provide additional tipping resistance. The load transmitting connection is also constructed and arranged to allow the bench frame and bench pad, when the lowered position, to be moved into a connected storage position wherein the bench pad and bench frame are upright alongside the upright structure.
Another aspect of the present invention is embodied in an exerciser having the features described above but without a load-transmitting connection between the bench frame and the base structure.
The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention are further described in the detailed description which follows, with reference to the drawings, and by way of non-limiting exemplary embodiments of the present invention, wherein like reference numerals represent similar parts of the present invention throughout the several views and wherein:
Referring now more particularly to the drawings,
Two elongate, hollow tubular members 106 serve as the major component of the base structure 102, connecting with the tower 104 at contoured contact surfaces 108 provided at the bottom of the tower 104. The tubular members 106 are fixedly secured to the tower 104 by means of bolts 110 inserted through the tubular members 106 and contact surfaces 108. The tubular members 106 extend outwardly to the rear of the tower 104 and in parallel forward of the tower 104. The outward extension of the tubular members 106 behind the tower 104 provides the apparatus 100 with better stability. In general, the base structure 102 extends forwardly of the tower 104 such that the apparatus 100 cannot be tipped over forwardly except by the entire apparatus 100 being tipped forwardly about the forward end of the base structure 102 (i.e., tipped about the forward ends of the tubular members 106). Each tubular member 106 is provided with rubberized endcaps 112 to prevent slipping on smooth or polished floor surfaces.
The tower 104 includes a set of flexible exercising pull lines 112, the pull lines 112 directed by swiveling directional pulley assemblies 114 to extend downwardly and forwardly from the tower 104 when in use. The pull lines 112 terminate in user interconnect, or grip, assemblies 128. The grip assemblies 128 in this embodiment include a set of nested nylon loops 129 connected to the pull lines 112 by means of metal rings 127. The grip assemblies 128 are suitable for either a user's hands or feet.
The pull lines 112 are coupled to a retractable spring system, generally indicated at 116. The spring system 116 is comprised oftwo identical spring sub-assemblies 118. Each sub-assembly 118 is comprised of three springs 120 connected to a connecting plate 122. In each sub-assembly 118, pull lines 112 run between a first pulley set 124 connected to the connecting plate 122 and a second pulley set 126 proximate to the top of the tower 104 before running into the directional pulley assemblies 114. The structure and function of the spring system 116 will be further described below.
In this embodiment, a lower set of directional pulleys 114 and a lower set of grip assemblies 128 are provided on a lower portion of the tower 104. The first and second pulley sets 124, 126 of this embodiment are double pulley sets, and the pull lines 112 and pulley sets 124, 126 are constructed and arranged such that each spring sub-assembly 18 provides resistance for an upper and a lower set of grip assemblies 128 (e.g., the left-side spring sub-assembly provides resistance for the left-side upper and left-side lower grip assemblies 128).
The apparatus 100 also includes a bench assembly, generally indicated at 130, configured and positioned to support a user in a prone, supine or sitting position so as to enable the user to use the grips 128 to pull the pull lines 112. The bench assembly 130 includes a bench 136 and bench pad 138 connected to a bench frame 178, 166, 168, 172. The bench 136 is moveable between a raised operative user supporting position and a lowered operative position in which the bench pad 138 and bench 136 are disposed adjacent to the bench frame 178, 166, 168, 172. In
The bench assembly 130 has a load transmitting connection to the base structure 102. This load transmitting connection allows the weight of a user to be transmitted to the tubular members 106, thus stabilizing the tower and preventing the tower 104 from tipping forward when the exercise apparatus is in use. The load transmitting connection is formed by a crossbrace 142 that connects the forward portion of the two tubular members 106 with a corresponding crossmember 144 of the bench assembly 130. The crossbrace 142 has a threaded hole 186 formed through its center, and a corresponding hole is formed in the corresponding crossmember 144. A threaded rod 146 having a user manipulable knob attached to one end forms a rigid, removable connection between the crossbrace 142 and the crossmember 144, and thus, between the bench assembly 130 and the tubular members 106 of the tower structure 104.
The bench assembly 130 is constructed and arranged to be moved into a connected storage position with respect to the tower 104 when not in use. The movement of the bench assembly 130 into this connected storage position is facilitated by a pivotal connection between the two tubular members 106 of the base structure 102 and the bench assembly 130 at a pivot-crossbrace 148. The connected storage position will be described below.
In the exercise apparatus 100, several pegs 160 are fixedly mounted to a tower crossmember 158, which is fixed to the tower 104 at approximately the level of the tops of the springs 120. The resistive force provided by each of the spring sub-assemblies 118 can be adjusted by detaching one or more of the springs 120 from the S-hooks 154 that connect them to the connecting plate 122. Springs 120 that are detached from the connecting plate 122 can be temporarily stored by placing the end of the spring on one of the pegs 160. Preferably, the user removes only the center spring 120 from the each connecting plate 122 so that the connecting plate 122 remains balanced, but because the connecting plate 122 is pivotally mounted for rotation about an axis defined by the bolted connection 156, a user may remove either one or two springs from each of the spring sub-assemblies 118 and continue to use the apparatus 100 with a commensurately reduced amount of resistance. Alternately, a user may choose to reduce or increase the resistance provided by only one of the spring sub-assemblies 118, for instance, to compensate for a strength imbalance in the limbs or an injury to a particular limb.
The exercise apparatus 100 uses a total of two pull lines 112; a single pull line runs from each spring sub-assembly 118 to the upper and lower grip assemblies 128 served by that assembly. One end of the pull line 112 is attached to the grip structure 128 and the upper directional pulley 114. From the upper directional pulley 114, the pull line extends through the first pulley set 124, and from the first pulley set 124 to the second pulley set 126. The pull line 112 then extends from the second pulley set 126 to the lower directional pulley 114, terminating at the grip assemblies 128. The arrangement ofthe first and second pulley sets 124, 126 and the pull lines 112 allows the user to use both the upper and lower grip assemblies 128 that are attached to the same spring sub-assembly simultaneously. The arrangement of the pulleys 124, 126 and pull lines 112 also provides the user with a significant mechanical advantage against the resistive bias of the spring sub-assemblies; therefore, relatively stiff springs (i.e., springs having a large spring constant) may be used to provide adequate resistance for some exercises.
Referring to
As is shown in
The arrangement of the legs 166 is better illustrated in
The fourth leg 168 is comprised of two hollow tubular members, an outer tubular member 170 and an inner tubular member 172 mounted concentrically within the outer member 170. The length of the fourth leg 168 changes when the inner tubular member 172 slides relative to the outer tubular member 170. The fourth leg 168 can be fixed at either a raised-position length or a lowered-position length by inserting a pin 174 through one of two sets of co-linear holes 176 formed through the diameter of the leg 168.
As shown in
If the exercise apparatus 100 is to be placed in its connected storage position, the user first places the bench assembly 130 in the lower operative position of
In
The exercise apparatus 100 can provide resistive bias in an arbitrary plurality of planes to support exercise motions. The ability to provide resistive bias in an arbitrary plurality of planes is provided by the swiveling directional pulley assemblies 114 on the upper and lower portions of the tower 104. As a user pulls one of the grip assemblies 128 attached to the pull lines 112 in an arbitrary direction, the corresponding directional pulley assembly 114 swivels, thus providing resistance in that plane (i.e., that line of motion).
In
In
In the exercise illustrated in
In
In the exercise shown in
Although the tower structure 304 and bench assembly 330 are constructed and arranged to be used while disconnected from one another, the exercise apparatus 300 may be placed in raised and lowered operative positions and a connected storage position similar to that of the apparatus 100. In order to hold the bench assembly 330 in the connected storage position, the base structure 302 of the apparatus 300 includes two tubular cradle members 350, one tubular cradle member 350 attached to each of the tubular members 306 and projecting inwardly therefrom. The connected storage position of the exercise apparatus 300 will be discussed in more detail below. With the exception of the weight plates 305 and tubular cradle members 350, the tower structure 304 of the exercise apparatus 300 is identical to the tower structure 104 of the exercise apparatus 100, therefore, the discussion presented above with respect to the tower structure 104 will suffice to describe the tower structure 304.
In bench assembly 330, a single, central floor contact member 362 is provided, extending in a direction parallel to that of the bench 336 proximate to floor level. Two crosspieces 364, 365 are fixedly connected to and extend in a direction perpendicular to the central floor contact member 362. One crosspiece 364 is fixedly connected to one of the terminal ends of the central floor contact member 362; the other crosspiece 365 is fixedly connected to the central floor contact member 362 just adjacent to the other terminal end of the central floor contact member 362. The ends of the crosspieces 364, 365 and the central floor contact member 362 are each provided with rubberized endcaps 312 to prevent slipping. Two legs 366 are pivotally mounted on the crosspiece 365 for rotation between the central floor contact member 362 and the bench 336, one leg 366 on each side of the central floor contact member 362. A third leg 366 is pivotally mounted between the central floor contact member 362 and the bench frame 336 at the opposite end of the central floor contact member 362. The extendable and retractable fourth leg 368 is pivotally mounted for rotation between the bench 336 and the central floor contact member 362. As in the bench assembly 130, the bench assembly 330 cannot be moved between the raised and lowered operative positions unless the length of the extendable and retractable fourth leg 362 is changed. The fourth leg 362 is held in position by a pin 374 inserted through holes 176 through the members of the leg.
In bench assembly 330, the removable chest and back support 332 mates with a pair of receptacles 334. The removable chest and back support 332 is of adjustable height in this second embodiment; it has a number of holes 376 drilled along the lengths of its tubular members 377 and a pair of pins 375 are inserted into the holes 376 to hold the removable chest and back support at a particular height.
As shown in
It will thus be seen that the objects of this invention have been fully and effectively accomplished. It will be realized, however, that the foregoing preferred specific embodiments have been shown and described for the purpose of illustrating the functional and structural principles of this invention and are subject to change without departure from such principles. Therefore, this invention includes all modifications encompassed within the spirit of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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90201007 | Jan 2001 | TW | national |
This application is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/743,255, filed Dec. 22, 2003, now allowed, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/910,942, filed Jul. 24, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,669,609, and claims priority from Taiwanese patent application 90201007, filed on Jan. 18, 2001, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10743255 | Dec 2003 | US |
Child | 11509669 | Aug 2006 | US |
Parent | 09910942 | Jul 2001 | US |
Child | 10743255 | Dec 2003 | US |