This invention relates to mask and helmet design and manufacture, and more particularly to masks used in the practice of various types of sporting activities such as hockey, baseball, motor-cross, and paintball war games.
Many sport practitioners must shield parts of their bodies against harmful impacts. In particular, hockey, baseball, motor-cross and paintball enthusiasts, commonly wear protective masks or helmets which cover and protect their entire heads from such impacts. Such covering, though protective, tends to restrict the passage of sound therethrough. Hearing sounds from the field of play can often determine the next move a player will make. It is therefore important that sound attenuation caused by the mask be minimized.
Existing designs such as those for baseball helmets, provide holes through the mask walls near the user's ears for sound passage. However, in many sports and in motor-cross and paintball gaming in particular, such holes would allow an inordinate amount of either mud or paint through to the user's ear. Further, these existing designs do not selectively boost sounds coming from a particular direction and attenuate sounds from other directions. Further, a user cannot adjust the direction of sound selectivity apart from movement of the user's head.
The present invention results from an attempt to accommodate both ear protection and the adequate passage of sound while providing some user control of sound direction selectivity.
The principal and secondary objects of this invention are to provide a sports mask or helmet which shields the user's ear from debris while allowing adequate passage of sound therethrough, and provides the user with selectability of direction from which sounds will be boosted and those that will be attenuated.
These and other valuable objects are achieved by a sound-collecting and transmissive protector swivelingly mounted within a circular aperture of a helmet proximate to a user's ear. The protector incorporates a substantially parabolic reflector surface oriented to boost sound pressure levels arriving from a particular direction which is generally perpendicular to the direction which is normal to the surface of the mask. The disk-shaped protector has a series of holes which allow passage of the sound therethrough and a user-manipulable actuator nib positioned on a peripheral portion of the protector to direct rotational movement.
Referring now to the drawing, there is shown in
An adjustably mounted protector 2 comprises a substantially disk-shaped body 3 swivelingly mounted within a substantially circular aperture 4 extending through from an outer surface 5 to an inner surface 6 of a portion 7 of a mask located near or positioned over a user's ear. The protector is formed to have a peripheral channel 8 in which rides within the corresponding edge 9 of the aperture in the mask to allow swiveling movement about an axis 10 of rotation which is generally normal to the surface of the mask and thereby intersects it. The protector has, therefore, an inner surface 12 facing the user's ear and an opposite outer surface 13. A user-manipulable actuator nib 14 extends axially outwardly from a peripheral portion 15 of the outer surface of the protector. In this way, a user's finger can touch upon the nib and provide torque for moving the protector in an an angularly adjusting or swiveling motion 16 about the axis 10.
The protector has an outer surface which is formed into a substantially parabolic reflector 20 oriented substantially perpendicular to the axis of rotation 10. The reflector magnifies sound levels for sounds arriving from a particular direction 14 and correspondingly attenuates sound levels arriving from other directions thereby directing sound from the preferred direction onto the holes. A series of holes 21, 22, 23 located in front of the concave side of the reflector and penetrating through from the outer 13 to inner 12 surfaces allow passage of sound therethrough. The size of the holes is selected to allow passage of sound but to reduce the ability of significant amounts of paint, mud or other matter to pass through. Therefore, the diameter of the holes are preferably selected to be between 1 and 5 millimeters and more preferably between 2 and 5 millimeters. Most preferably, the holes will have a range of sizes, wherein a first series or grouping 21 of holes oriented in an arc congruent with the curve of the reflector have a relatively larger diameter and are placed close to the reflector since the raised porton 24 of the protector behind the reflector blocks fluid arriving from behind the reflector. A second 22 and third 23 series or grouping of holes each oriented in an arc have a diameter which is successively reduced as the distance ādā from the reflector surface increases. In other words, hole diameter is inversely proportional to the probability of impacted paint upon the location of the hole. In this way, the cummulative size of the holes can be maximized for sound through-put while maintaining the adequate protection from the passage of particulate matter according to the probablistic direction of incidence of that matter.
Referring now to
While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been described, modifications can be made and other embodiments may be devised without departing from the spirit of the invention and the appended claims:
This application claims the benefit of Provisional application Ser. No. 60/360,643, filed Feb. 28, 2002.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030159199 A1 | Aug 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60360643 | Feb 2002 | US |