This application is based upon French Patent Application No. FR 19 05863, filed Jun. 3, 2019, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference thereto in its entirety, and the priority of which is claimed under 35 U.S.C. § 119.
The invention relates to the field of bindings for gliding boards, and more particularly relates to a support plate for such a binding. The invention is applicable to gliding sports, in particular downhill skiing and ski touring.
Bindings on gliding boards for shoes or boots, hereafter “shoes,” generally comprise at least one retaining element, configured to hold the shoe on the gliding board, and a support plate on which the sole of the shoe takes support when it is engaged with the retaining element. The support plate comprises a chassis, fixed on an upper surface of the gliding board, and a support element on which the sole of the shoe takes support.
There are commercially available support plates comprising a rubber damping plate interposed between the chassis of the support plate and the upper surface of the ski. This construction makes it possible to provide flexibility and elasticity to the shoe support. However, this stiffness is not adjustable.
A support plate is also known from the patent document EP 0595170, such support plate comprising a chassis, a support element, one end of which is connected to the chassis via an elastically deformable zone, and a wedge enabling the support stiffness, or hardness or rigidity, to be adjusted. The support plate can have two configurations, including a flexibility configuration and a stiffness configuration, thus making it possible to adapt the behavior of the binding as desired by the user. The user can thus give preference to damping and his comfort by selecting the flexibility configuration, or conversely, can give preference to responsiveness and the precision in controlling the gliding board by selecting the stiffness configuration.
In the flexibility configuration, under the effect of a vertical force, the support element is capable of performing a downward movement until reaching a stop, by bending the elastically deformable zone. The rigid configuration is obtained by blocking the bending movement and, consequently, immobilizing the support element. The blocking is achieved through a wedge acting as a stop between the support element and the chassis. The transition from one configuration to the other is carried out by pulling or rotating the wedge, for example with a screwdriver.
However, this support plate has drawbacks. In particular, when using the support plate in the flexibility configuration, the successive deformations of the deformable region can cause fatigue of said zone, or even its rupture, limiting the stability of the rigid and/or flexible behavior over time, or even the lifetime of the ski binding.
The present invention provides a binding support plate for a gliding board having improved robustness compared to the solution described above.
The present invention also provides a solution for adapting the behavior of the binding, in particular the stiffness of the shoe support on the support plate, while maintaining a stable behavior over time.
Other objects, characteristics, and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon examining the following description and the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood that other advantages can be incorporated.
To achieve this objective, the invention relates to a support plate for the binding of a gliding apparatus, the support plate comprising:
The support plate comprises a wedge made of a material that is less compressible than the material constituting the damping plate, the wedge being movable between at least:
Thus, the hardness configuration enables the force between the shoe and the gliding board to be transmitted mainly via the wedge without damping, which makes it possible to provide greater control to the user. In the flexibility configuration, because the third portion is set back, the transmission portion of the wedge can freely deform/move. This results in inhibiting the effect of the wedge. Thus, the force is mainly transmitted to the damping plate which damps it at least partially, which makes it possible to provide greater comfort to the user. In addition, the hardness and flexibility configurations of the support plate are obtained by a transmission of the force mainly via compression of a more or less hard material. The risk of fracture of the material is therefore minimized compared to a transmission of the force via a bending of an elastically deformable material as proposed in the patent document EP 0595170 mentioned above. Thus, the robustness and stability of the hardness and flexibility configurations are improved over time.
Optionally, the invention may further have at least any of the following features.
According to an example, the wedge, the damping plate and the chassis are arranged so that, in its hardness configuration, the wedge is positioned in relation to the chassis so that, when a vertical force is exerted, typically by the sole, the chassis retransmits the force to the upper surface of the gliding board, mainly via a portion of the wedge, inhibiting, at least partially, a compression of the damping plate between the chassis and the gliding board under the effect of this force.
According to one example, the wedge, the damping plate and the chassis are arranged so that, in its flexibility configuration, the wedge is positioned in relation to the chassis so that, when the vertical force is exerted, typically by the sole, the chassis retransmits the force to the upper surface of the gliding board, mainly via the damping plate, inhibiting, at least partially, a compression of the wedge between the chassis and the gliding board.
According to one example, the wedge can be rotatably mounted on the chassis in relation to a vertical axis. According to an alternative embodiment, the wedge can be slidably mounted on the chassis along a translational movement in the axis longitudinal or transverse to the upper surface of the gliding board, or even a combination of rotational and/or translational movements.
According to one example, the wedge may comprise a control member, which can be manipulated by the user, enabling the wedge to be tilted selectively from one configuration to the other.
According to one example, the wedge may further comprise at least one elastic tab, and according to one embodiment, a non-compressible elastic tab, the end of which forms the transmission portion.
According to one example, said at least one elastic tab can be elastically deformable in bending.
According to one example, the damping plate can comprise or be entirely formed by a damping portion made of a material having a hardness less than 80 Shore A, such as rubber or polypropylene.
According to one example, the chassis comprises at least one deactivation recess arranged so as to be positioned vertically opposite a portion of the wedge, when the wedge is positioned in the flexibility configuration, the support plate being configured so that at least a portion of the damping plate compresses without the wall of the deactivation recess coming into contact with said portion of the wedge.
According to one example, the thickness of the damping portion of the damping plate can be between 2.0 mm and 5.0 mm.
According to one example, the damping plate comprises mechanisms for affixing to the chassis.
According to one example, the lower surface of the chassis may have a fourth portion extending mainly in a plane and intended to come and take support on the upper surface of the gliding board, and a housing extending from the contact surface and in the direction of the upper surface of the chassis, the housing and the damping plate being configured so that the lower surface of the damping plate can be flush with the fourth portion of the lower surface of the chassis.
According to one example, the support surface is carried by a support element, the support plate being able to be fixed to the chassis. According to a particular example, the support element can be movably mounted on the chassis, preferably said support element can be slidably mounted along a direction transverse to a longitudinal direction of the chassis.
According to another aspect, the invention relates to a binding comprising a support plate as defined above.
According to another aspect, the invention relates to a gliding board comprising a support plate as defined above.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will be better understood from the description that follows, with reference to the annexed drawings illustrating, by way of non-limiting embodiments, how the invention can be carried out, and in which:
The drawings are given as examples and are not limiting to the invention. They constitute schematic representations intended to facilitate the understanding of the invention and are not necessarily to scale for practical applications. In particular, the thicknesses and dimensions of the various portions can be modified.
The following description makes use of terms such as “vertical”, “longitudinal”, “transverse”, “upper”, “lower”, “top”, “bottom”, “front”, “rear”. These terms should be considered as relative terms in relation to the normal position of use of a support plate assembled on a gliding board. For example, “longitudinal” means with respect to the longitudinal axis of the board.
Also, reference points are used in which the rear/front direction corresponds to the X axis, the transverse or right/left direction corresponds to the Y axis, and the vertical or bottom/top direction corresponds to the Z axis.
In the following description, the term vertical force will relate to both a vertical downward force exerted by a shoe towards the ground and an upward vertical reaction force exerted by the ground towards toward the shoe.
An example of a support plate 1000 according to the invention will next be described in detail with reference to
The support plate 1000 according to the present invention is intended to be coupled to a binding of a gliding board 2000, for example a ski. As illustrated in
The support plate 1000 is arranged on an upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000. The support plate comprises a chassis 1200. The chassis 1200 comprises a lower surface 1202 oriented opposite the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000. The lower surface 1202 is comprised of a plurality of portions 1202a, 1202b, 1202c, and 1202d. The portion 1202d corresponds to the portion of the lower surface 1202 intended to be in contact with the upper surface of the gliding board. The portions 1202a, 1202b, and 1202c are set back from the portion 1202d. A portion is “set back” from a reference portion when it is offset upwards when the chassis is mounted on the gliding apparatus. Thus, a housing or recess is created opposite the set back portion, between this portion and the reference portion. The depth of this housing corresponds to the distance between the plane containing the set back portion and the plane containing the reference portion. In the illustrated embodiment, the first 1202a, second 1202b, and third 1202c portions correspond to continuous lower surfaces of the chassis 1200. Alternatively, one or more portions may be comprised of a plurality of distinct surfaces having the same depth, that is to say, each of the distinct surfaces characterizing a portion has the same distance between the plane of this distinct set back surface and the plane containing the reference portion. The reference portion 1202d can also be formed of a plurality of distinct surfaces. Having portions forming a discontinuous surface or, in other words, a set of separate surfaces having the same set back position, makes it possible to obtain a chassis with less material and therefore to lighten the portion.
The chassis 1200 also carries a support surface 1110 intended to be in contact with a lower portion of a sole of a shoe, for example a ski boot.
According to one embodiment, the support surface 1110 is supported by a support element 1100 mounted on the chassis. As illustrated in
According to a first example, the support element 1100 is affixedly mounted on the chassis 1200. For this, the support element 1100 can be fixed to the chassis by any suitable means, such as one or more screws, clips, glue, and welding, for example.
According to one embodiment, the support element 1100 can be removably mounted on the upper surface 1201 of the chassis 1200. This enables the user, for example, to change the support element, and in particular to use support elements of various heights and/or of various hardnesses or rigidities, so that the behavior of the binding is adaptable to add degrees of comfort or control for the user.
According to a particular embodiment, such as that described in
According to another example not illustrated, the support plate 1000 does not include a support element 1100. The sole of the shoe is then in direct contact with the upper surface 1201 of the chassis 1200.
The support plate 1000 also comprises a damping plate 1300 configured, at least in a configuration of use, to damp at least a portion of the vertical forces applied by the shoe onto the support element 1100 or of the vertical reaction forces applied by the ground (for example snow or ice) to the shoe. Thus, this damping plate 1300 absorbs a portion of the impacts between the ground and the shoe, and thus improves the comfort of the user.
The damping plate 1300 is shaped, in particular its material and its thickness, so as to at least partially damp a force corresponding to a gliding phase with a reception phase on the ground, a braking phase, a phase of evolution in a curve, or a shock absorption phase due to a relief of the ground. This compression increases with the amplitude of the force exerted.
In a particular embodiment, the damping plate 1300 is interposed between a first portion 1202a of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis 1200 and the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000. The first portion 1202a is set back in relation to the portion 1202d of the lower surface of the chassis. According to one embodiment, the first portion 1202a is offset upwards, in relation to the portion 1202d, by a distance equal to or substantially equal to the thickness e1 of the damping plate. Thus, when the damping plate is positioned on the chassis, it is positioned in a first housing opposite the first portion 1202a. In this configuration, a lower surface 1320 of the damping plate is flush or substantially flush with the portion 1202d of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis while the upper surface of the damping plate is in contact with the first portion 1202a of the lower surface of the chassis.
According to one embodiment, the damping plate 1300 is at least partially in contact with the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000.
The chassis 1200 is further suitable for receiving at least one wedge 1400. This wedge 1400 is made of a material that is less compressible than the material forming the damping plate 1300. This wedge 1400 can thus be defined as rigid.
This wedge 1400 is movable in relation to the chassis between at least two configurations.
A first configuration is a hardness configuration for which a transmission portion 1431 of the wedge 1400 is positioned opposite a second portion 1202b of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis. The second portion 1202b is set back in relation to the portion 1202d of the lower surface of the chassis. According to one embodiment, the second portion 1202b is offset upwards, in relation to the portion 1202d, by a distance equal to or substantially equal to the thickness of the transmission portion of the wedge. Thus, when the transmission portion 1431 of the wedge 1400 is positioned in a second housing opposite the second portion 1202b of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis, the lower surface of the transmission portion is flush or substantially flush with the portion 1202d of the lower surface of the chassis while the upper surface of the transmission portion is in contact with the second portion 1202b of the lower surface of the chassis.
In this hardness configuration, the transmission portion 1431 of the wedge 1400 is positioned in relation to the chassis 1200 so that, when a vertical force is exerted, typically by the sole, the chassis 1200 retransmits the force to the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000, mainly via a portion of the wedge 1400, inhibiting, at least partially, a compression of the damping plate 1300 between the chassis 1200 and the gliding board 2000 under the effect of this force. Thus, in this hardness configuration, the force between the shoe and the gliding board 2000, or the force between the ground and the shoe, is transmitted via the wedge 1400 without damping, or with less damping than when this force is transmitted via the compression plate 1300, thereby making it possible to provide greater control to the user.
A second configuration is a flexibility configuration for which the transmission portion 1431 of the wedge 1400 is positioned opposite a third portion 1202c of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis. The third portion 1202c is set back in relation to the second portion 1202b of the lower surface of the chassis. According to one embodiment, the third portion 1202c is offset upwards, in relation to the second portion 1202b, by a distance greater than the thickness of the transmission portion of the wedge. Thus, when the transmission portion is positioned in a third housing opposite a third portion 1202c of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis, the lower surface of the transmission portion is flush or substantially flush with the portion 1202d of the lower surface of the chassis while the upper surface of the transmission portion is distant from the second portion 1202b of the lower surface of the chassis. The transmission portion is therefore no longer in contact with the chassis.
In this flexibility configuration, the transmission portion 1431 of the wedge 1400 is positioned in relation to the chassis 1200 so that, when the vertical force is exerted, typically by the sole, the chassis 1200 retransmits the force to the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000, mainly via the damping plate 1300, inhibiting, at least partially, a compression of the wedge 1400 between the chassis 1200 and the gliding board 2000. In the flexibility configuration, the force between the shoe and the gliding board 2000 or the force between the ground and the shoe is transmitted via the damping plate 1300 which damps it at least partially, thus bringing greater comfort to the user.
Thus, the flexibility configuration of the support plate 1000 is obtained by a transmission of the force mainly via the compression of the material of the damping plate 1300. This enables the support plate 1000 to generate a stable behavior over time and to be particularly robust.
According to one embodiment, the damping plate 1300 is made of a material having a hardness of less than 80 Shore A. The damping plate 1300 can be made for example of rubber or polypropylene.
According to one embodiment, the wedge 1400 is made of a material that is not very compressible. Thus, the wedge does not deform or deforms only slightly in compression, or by no more than 5% of its thickness, when it is subject to a compressive force less than or equal to 100 kg. Such a material can, for example, have a modulus of elasticity greater than 2,500 MPa.
The 1400 wedge can be a monolithic piece. Alternatively, it can include, or be formed from, a stack of layers. It can comprise, or be formed of, a matrix possibly embedded in an encapsulant less rigid than the matrix. This can reduce the weight of the wedge 1400.
The alternative transition from the hardness configuration to the flexibility configuration is carried out by manipulation of a control member 1410, and carried, or formed, by the wedge 1400. The user can thus adapt the configuration of the support plate 1000 as desired, for example depending on his fitness level or snow conditions.
The control member 1410, or controller, can be accessible manually by the user, without requiring any additional tool. This control member clearly appears in
The cooperation between the chassis 1200, the damping plate 1300, and the wedge 1400 will next be described in detail.
The chassis 1200, the damping plate 1300, and the wedge 1400 are arranged so that a movement of the movable wedge 1400, actuated by the control member 1410, makes it possible to selectively obtain either one of the hardness or flexibility configurations. This movement of the wedge 1400 can be a translation, a rotation, or even a combination of translation and rotation. For example, the movement of the control member 1410, between two “soft” and “hard” stops as illustrated in
To obtain the hardness configuration, the wedge 1400 is positioned so that at least one transmission portion 1431 of the wedge is in contact with the chassis 1200, more particularly with the second portion 1202b of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis 1200, on the one hand, and with the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000, on the other hand. The wedge 1400 being made of a material less compressible than the material forming the damping plate 1300, the force between the shoe and the gliding board 2000 or the force between the ground and the shoe is transmitted via the wedge 1400.
To obtain the flexibility configuration, the wedge 1400 is positioned so that at least one transmission portion 1431 of the wedge is opposite the third portion 1202c of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis 1200. This third portion 1202c is sufficiently distant from the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000 so that the transmission portion of the wedge is not in contact with the third portion 1202c when the wedge is in the flexibility configuration. Furthermore, at least a portion of the damping plate 1300, called the damping portion, is in contact with the first portion 1202a of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis 1200, on the one hand, and with the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000, on the other hand. Consequently, in this configuration, the force between the shoe and the gliding board 2000 or the force between the ground and the shoe is transmitted via the damping plate 1300. During this bias, the transmission portion 1431 of the wedge will move/deform in the space allocated opposite the third portion 1202c.
Naturally, even in the hardness configuration, the lower surface 1202 of the chassis 1200 can be provided to initially compress a portion of the damping plate 1300, and, thereafter, to come into abutment on the wedge 1400. In this case, the wedge 1400 does not entirely inhibit the deformation of the damping plate 1300 but inhibits a portion thereof. Depending on the dimensions of the damping plate 1300 and the wedge 1400, it is possible to provide for the user to perceive a first damping phase before perceiving a hardness phase.
The wedge 1400 can comprise a portion interposed between the chassis 1200 and the damping plate 1300. The wedge 1400 can be contained between the chassis 1200 and the damping plate 1300 and, in a particular embodiment, with the exception of the control member 1410 accessible manually by the user. Thus, unlike a configuration as described by the patent document EP 0595170, the wedge is protected from possible impacts, thereby improving the stability of the flexibility and hardness configurations over time.
Furthermore, the wedge 1400 can be the only movable element of the assembly formed by the chassis 1200, the damping plate 1300 and the wedge 1400. For this, the wedge 1400 is rotatably or translationally mounted, or mounted so as to allow a combination of translation and rotation, on the chassis 1200, more particularly on the lower surface 1202 of the chassis 1200, on the one hand; and the damping plate 1300 is fixedly mounted in relation to the chassis 1200, on the other hand.
In addition, the damping plate 1300 can be inserted in the chassis 1200, more particularly in the first housing 1230a suitable for receiving the damping plate 1300 opposite the first portion 1202a of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis, for example as illustrated in
A structural example of the cooperation between the chassis 1200, the damping plate 1300, and the gliding board 2000 is next described in detail. As illustrated in
The first housing 1230a of the chassis 1200 may further comprise mechanisms 1234a and 1234b for affixing the chassis 1200 to the damping plate 1300. Alternatively, or in combination, the damping plate 1300 may comprise mechanisms 1350 for affixing to the chassis 1200. According to the embodiment illustrated in
A structural example of the cooperation of the wedge 1400 with the chassis 1200 and the damping plate 1300 is next described in detail. The movable wedge 1400 is mainly interposed between the chassis 1200 and the damping plate 1300. To guide the movement of the wedge 1400, the chassis 1200 may comprise a projecting element 1231, the wedge comprising a complementary profile 1330 to this projecting element 1231. In the example illustrated, the movement of the wedge 1400 being a rotation, the projecting element 1231 can be provided to have a circular cross section or substantially circular cross section and the wedge 1400 to have an opening 1420 complementary to this cross section and within which the projecting element 1231 is inserted. Thus, the projecting element 1231 acts as a shaft on which the wedge 1400 is rotatably mounted.
The dimensions of the circular projecting element 1231 can be selected so as to allow the rotation of the wedge 1400 while minimizing its lateral displacements. For example, the diameter of the projecting element 1231 is less than the diameter of the opening 1420 so that there is a slight clearance between the projecting element 1231 and the opening 1420. Furthermore, the thickness of the projecting element 1231 can be greater than the height of the walls of the opening 1420, and less than the sum of the height of the walls of the opening 1420 and the thickness e1 of the damping plate 1300. According to this example, the damping plate 1300 comprises a circular opening 1330 suitable for being arranged around the projecting element 1231. Similarly, the diameter of the circular opening 1330 of the damping plate 1300 can be selected so that there is a slight clearance between the projecting element 1231 and the circular opening 1330.
More particularly, the projecting element 1231 is arranged in a lower recess 1230 of the chassis, suitable for at least partially receiving the wedge 1400, and configured so as to allow the movement of the wedge 1400.
In the illustrated embodiment, this projecting element 1231 is supported by the chassis 1200. Alternatively, the construction is reversed, the projecting element is a portion of the wedge, and the chassis comprises a hole for receiving the projecting element of the wedge. According to another embodiment, it is possible to provide that the wedge 1400 be guided by the damping plate 1300. In this case, it is the latter that carries the projecting element 1231.
According to an embodiment not illustrated, the device comprises fixing mechanisms making it possible to maintain the wedge 1400 assembled on the chassis 1200. For example, this assembly can be carried out by clipping. The chassis 1200 and/or the wedge 1400 can carry an elastic tab or an elastically deformable element.
The lower recess 1230 comprises the first 1230a, second 1230b, and third 1230c housings located in relation to the first 1202a, second 1202b, and third 1202c portions, respectively, of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis 1200. The lower recess 1230 also comprises a fourth recess 1230d to contain the body of the wedge, except for the transmission portion 1431.
In this example, the first 1202a, second 1202b portions of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis 1200 are at the same level; in other words, the second portion 1202b is flush with the first portion 1202a.
The third housing 1230c is intended to constitute a housing for deactivating the transmission of the force, in the flexibility configuration. For this, in the flexibility configuration, the third housing is intended to be opposite at least one transmission portion 1431 of the wedge 1400, so that this portion of the wedge is not in contact with the chassis 1200 along a direction orthogonal to the main plane of the support plate 1000. The depth of this third housing, that is to say, the distance between the plane containing the portion 1202d and the plane containing the portion 1202c, is therefore selected so as to prevent the wedge 1400 from being brought into contact with the chassis 1200, along a direction orthogonal to the main plane of the support plate 1000, when a force is exerted, and in particular during a possible deformation of the chassis 1200. At least, during a first phase where the force is exerted.
Adjoining the third housing 1230c, the second housing 1230b is intended to constitute a housing for activating the transmission of the force, in the hardness configuration. For this, at least a second portion 1202b of the lower surface 1202 of the chassis is intended to be opposite at least one transmission portion 1431 of the wedge 1400, so that the wedge 1400 is in contact with both the chassis 1200 and the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000 along a direction orthogonal to the main plane of the support plate 1000.
According to an embodiment illustrated in
A structural example of the wedge 1400 is next described. The wedge 1400 comprises the control member 1410 and at least one effector element for the transmission of the force in the hardness configuration. According to the embodiment illustrated in
In order to allow the transition from one to the other of the configurations of the support plate 1000, the wedge 1400 and the damping plate 1300 are, for example, structurally arranged in the following manner. The at least one elastic tab 1430 is configured so as to be inserted into an opening 1340 of the damping plate 1300. In this fashion, the end 1431 of each elastic tab 1430 is capable of being in contact with the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000, and this, whether in the hardness or the flexibility configuration of the support plate 1000. Furthermore, the opening 1340 of the damping plate 1300 can be adapted to allow the movement of the elastic tab 1430, caused by the movement of rotation, of translation, or even the combination of rotation and translation, of the movable wedge 1400, as illustrated for example in
A structural example of the respective hardness and flexibility configurations is now described. We consider the particular embodiment according to which the support plate 1000 is configured so as to allow for a rotational movement about the axis Z of the wedge 1400, comprising four elastic tabs, as illustrated in
As illustrated in
When a vertical force is transmitted to the support plate 1000, for example applied by a shoe to the support plate 1000, this force is transmitted, via their respective contact surfaces, from the sole of the shoe to the chassis 1200, and then, from the chassis to the wedge 1400, and more particularly to the end 1431 of an elastic tab 1430, and finally, from the wedge to the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000, as represented by the arrows F1 in
As illustrated in
When a vertical force is transmitted to the support plate 1000, for example applied by a shoe to the support plate 1000, this force is transmitted, by their respective contact surfaces, from the sole of the shoe to chassis 1200, and then, from the chassis 1200 to the damping plate 1300, and finally, from the damping plate to the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000, as shown by the arrows FT and F2″ in
In addition, as each elastic tab 1430 is deformable in bending, the mechanical stresses that can be exerted on the wedge 1400, during its movement between one and the other of the configurations, are minimized. In particular, the mechanical stresses are minimized during the insertion of the end 1431 of the elastic tab 1430 between the surface 1202 of the housing 1230 of the chassis 1200 and the upper surface 2100 of the gliding board 2000, for the transition to the hardness configuration as shown in
According to a particular embodiment, indexing elements can be incorporated into the support plate 1000 so as to stabilize one and/or the other of the configurations. According to the example illustrated in
It is to be understood that additional recesses can be made on the elements included in the support plate 1000, so as to limit its weight and thus lighten the binding of the gliding board.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments described above and extends to all the embodiments covered by the claims.
The invention is not limited to these embodiments. It is possible to combine these embodiments.
For example, the damping plate 1300 can be provided to be monolithic or not. It can for example be made of a single material, more compressible than the material forming the wedge. Alternatively, it can be formed from a stack of layers, of various hardnesses and possibly of various thicknesses. At least one of these layers forms a damping portion and has less hardness than that of the wedge.
A stack of layers having various hardnesses can, for example, make it possible to vary the progressiveness of the damping, as a function of the amplitude of the vertical force received by the chassis 1200. For example, one can provide a damping that is or is not linear.
Furthermore, if the damping plate 1300 has a rigid upper layer such as an upper coating, this can make it possible to reduce the coefficient of friction between the wedge 1400 and the damping plate 1300, even when a force is exerted by the user. For example, when the force is static and limited to the weight of the user, the coefficient of friction between the wedge 1400 and the damping plate 1300 allows for and facilitates the displacement of the wedge 1400. The user can then modulate the damping provided by the binding even when the shoe is engaged with the binding. It will then be necessary to provide that the control member 1410 be accessible in the presence of the shoe. The thicknesses and materials of the various layers will be selected so that the damping plate 1300 effectively plays its damping role.
The wedge can also be provided to be movable between more than two configurations, one of the configurations being an intermediate configuration, in which the chassis, during a first phase, partially compresses the damping plate and then abuts on the wedge, which stops the compression of the damping plate. This embodiment offers a compromise between the hardness and flexibility configurations to the user. It enables a damping on limited impacts while maintaining precise control of the gliding board.
Further, at least because the invention is disclosed herein in a manner that enables one to make and use it by virtue of the disclosure of particular exemplary embodiments, such as for simplicity or efficiency, for example, the invention can be practiced in the absence of any additional element or additional structure that is not specifically disclosed herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1905863 | Jun 2019 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5280942 | Ruffinengo | Jan 1994 | A |
5320377 | Ruffinengo | Jun 1994 | A |
5326126 | Ruffinengo | Jul 1994 | A |
5393086 | Le Masson | Feb 1995 | A |
5879019 | Mantel | Mar 1999 | A |
6666472 | Joubert Des Ouches | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6991240 | Grella | Jan 2006 | B2 |
20120190473 | Swist | Jul 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0557737 | Sep 1993 | EP |
0595170 | May 1994 | EP |
2431306 | Feb 1980 | FR |
2655867 | Jun 1991 | FR |
2657269 | Jul 1991 | FR |
Entry |
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French Search Report issued in French Patent Application No. 1905863, dated Feb. 4, 2020. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20200376360 A1 | Dec 2020 | US |