This specification relates to golf, golf clubs, and holders for golf clubs in a golf club stand,
The origins of golf are not clear, but the modern game of golf is generally considered to have begun in Scotland during the Middle Ages. Golf began to find substantial international popularity beginning in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and more specifically in the United States during the roaring twenties. Even so, golf remains widely viewed as a game of the upper classes, requiring a good deal of money and time to play. Because of the time needed to play a full game of golf, driving ranges are often used by golfers to practice their swing when they do not have the time for eighteen holes of golf. However, hitting golf balls at a driving range has often been considered a rather boring pastime, even when targets are provided on the golf range.
More recently, however, this notion has changed with the development of interactive golf ranges, where the successful hitting of a target with a golf ball is automatically identified in a computer system. For example, the TopGolf company has developed Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology for golf balls and targets that enables rapid feedback for golf balls hit by specific players into specific targets on a golf range. Details of RFID and other golf related technologies can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,607,123, 7,056,221, 7,059,974, 7,160,196, and 7,337,965, which are hereby incorporated by reference. Such technologies allow the development of innovative and exciting games of golf that increase the fun for new players while still providing an authentic golf experience for established players. These exciting games, along with golf range facilities that include high quality food and drink, and other on-site entertainments, open the doors to a much larger public interested in playing golf.
A system for providing loaner clubs to novice golfers includes a coding scheme for golf club holders, which can be provided at a golf range having targets, in order to facilitate play by people entirely new to the game of golf. For example, a golf club stand can include one portion for holding traditional golf club bags brought by established players, and another portion for holding freely available clubs for use by new players who do not own golf clubs of their own. The portion of the golf club stand that holds the freely available clubs can include visual indicators, such as colors, that correspond to targets of different distances within the golf range. This can provide significant advantages for new players that may have very little knowledge of the game of golf, who would otherwise have no idea how to select a club for a particular game of targeted golf currently being played. Other advantages of various embodiments of the present invention can also be realized. For example, the total time needed for new players to complete a game can be reduced, and the total cost of golf club stands can also be reduced.
In general, one innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification can include a golf club stand including holders for golf clubs of different types, and visual indicators associated with the holders for the golf clubs of different types, where the visual indicators correspond to targets of different distances within a golf range. Each of the holders for the golf clubs of different types can have more than one of the visual indicators associated therewith.
The visual indicators can be colors that match colors associated with the different targets. The golf club stand can include a panel including discrete sections, each of the discrete sections including a color and a distance value corresponding to one of the different targets. The holders golf club stand can include holes in the panel, and each of the holders can have three different colors associated therewith, thereby indicating three different targets for a club in the holder.
The golf club stand can include a first portion and a second portion, where the first portion includes the holders and the visual indicators, and the second portion includes openings for golf club bags. The second portion can include an angled base and a stop for each of the openings for golf club bags.
According to another innovative aspect of the subject matter described in this specification, a system can include a golf ball hitting bay, and a golf range in front of the bay, where the range includes targets having different distances from the bay, and each of the different targets has an associated identifier. The system can include a device in the bay, wherein the device delivers golf balls retrieved from the different targets, and also include a golf club stand associated with the bay, wherein the golf club stand holds clubs of different types and includes visual indicators corresponding to the different targets. The golf ball hitting bay can be a first bay that includes at least part of the golf club stand, and the system can include a second bay that includes at least part of the same golf club stand. The golf club stand can have two sides, each of the sides holding clubs and including visual indicators corresponding to the different targets, where the first and second bays share the golf club stand.
The golf range can include additional targets having similar distances from the bay as the targets having different distances from the bay. The different targets can include circular targets, or other shaped targets. The golf club stand cam include discrete portions for the different types of golf clubs, where each of the discrete portions has more than one of the visual indicators associated therewith. Moreover, the identifiers and the visual indicators can be colors, and the golf club stand can include a panel including discrete sections, each of the discrete sections including a color and a distance value corresponding to one of the different targets. The discrete portions for the different types of golf clubs can be holes in the panel. The discrete portions can each have three different colors associated therewith and be in either a men portion or a ladies portion of the panel.
The golf club stand can include a first portion and a second portion, where the second portion includes openings for golf club bags, such as noted above. Moreover, the system can include the clubs of different types, wherein at least the drivers, “woods” and hybrids are configured to be more durable than golf clubs sold at retail outlets.
The details of one or more embodiments of the subject matter described in this specification are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, aspects, and advantages of the subject matter will become apparent from the description, the drawings, and the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
Included in the golf range 100 are targets 120, 130, 140, 150, 160, 170, 180 having different distances from the building 115, where people stand to hit golf balls toward the targets. As shown, additional targets 125, 135 can be provided that have similar distances from the building 115 as the other targets 120, 130, 140, 150, 160, 170, 180. The distances will not be exactly equal, due to small variations in placement of the targets for any given site, and due to the variation in distance caused by the specific location of a golfer in the building 115. Nonetheless, the targets will be grouped into distance categories that generally represent their distance from the building 115 and thus the difficulty of hitting targets in that category from any given bay in the building 115. As will be appreciated, various numbers of targets can be provided in each of these distance categories. Moreover, the targets can be circular or have other shapes, such as a rectangular trench target 180.
Each of the targets 120-180 can include a mechanism for identifying and collecting the golf balls that enter the target. For example, each target can include netting that funnels the golf balls into an RFID reader box, where RFID tags inside the balls are read as each ball passes through the box. Each reader box can be equipped with an RFID antenna that is connected with an RFID reader, which in turn is connected with a computer system for the golfing site 100 that manages the golf games. Moreover, one or more of the targets 120-180 can include discrete sections of nets such that information regarding which portion of the target a particular golf ball lands in can be determined, and different points or game features can be applied accordingly. Each such net section can have its own reader box and RFID antenna, and multiple such antennas can be multiplexed into a single RFID reader to reduce the total number of RFID readers needed for the golfing site 100.
Once the golf balls are read and collected in a common location within each target, they can be manually or automatically returned to the building 115 for another hit. For example, each target can include a collection point that includes a helical screw to capture and direct the golf balls to a vacuum intake point where the golf balls can be individually sucked through pneumatic tubes back to the building 115. Moreover, the golf balls can be individually washed and read again by an additional RFID reader at the building 115 before being placed back into play.
Each of the different targets 120, 130, 140, 150, 160, 170, 180 also has an associated identifier, which can be seen from the building 115 by the golf players. These identifiers should be readily apparent, and can include colors, patterns, alphanumeric characters, or other types of characters that are readily identifiable (e.g., images of well-known celebrities or cartoon characters). For example, the identifiers for the targets can be different colors, as shown in
The identifiers can be located prominently near the targets 120-180 or be integrated with the targets. For example, in some implementations, the netting in the targets 120-180 have the corresponding colors, and lighting in the targets 120-180 also provide the corresponding colors for game play at night.
Each of the golf bays in the building 200 can be the same, or there can be different levels of accommodation for different types of golf bays. The golf bays on the first level, such as golf bays 220 and 260, can have direct access to the golf range, whereas golf bays on higher tiers will typically have safety netting extending horizontally away from the building 200 to prevent injury should someone accidentally fall out of the front of the bay. In addition, each golf bay can include one or more tee off locations.
The two bays 220, 260 can share a golf club stand 210, which is described in further detail below, and an electronic hub 225. The electronic hub 225 can include various power lines and cables to support separate televisions and computer terminals for each bay 220, 260. Each computer terminal can be a touch screen device that connects with the central computer system for the building 200 and provides the players with direct control over their game play, including selecting the type of game to play and the current player.
The device 245 can include a proximity sensor, a light emitting diode (LED), an RFID reader, a ball release mechanism, and electronics to control all of these together. Thus, a current player stepping into the tee off area 240 can waive a golf club in front of the proximity sensor, which triggers the release mechanism and the LED (to alert the player that the golf ball is coming). The golf ball is then released from a container and passes through a tube to be read by the RFID reader, thereby associating that specific golf ball with the current player and that player's location, before being output to the tee area 240.
Although
The second portion 350 can include openings 355 for golf club bags. Each opening 355 can include an angled base 360 and a stop 365. For example, the angled base 360 can be a flat surface placed at an angle between five and thirty degrees (inclusive) with respect to the ground to cause a golf club bag to tip outward from the golf club stand 300 to facilitate access to the established player's own clubs. In some implementations, the angle is at or about (plus or minus 0.4 degrees) 5 degrees. This angle helps to guarantee that the average bag stored in the bag stand will tilt outwards enough to facilitate club access without being prone to falling out or taking up too much space. Alternatively, each opening 355 can include a hook or a bar from which the golf club bag is hung by a strap or handle on the bag. In such implementations, the 5 degree angle can also be used, governed by the typical length of a golf club bag in comparison with the length between the attachment mechanism for the top of the bag and the stop against which the bottom of the bag would rest.
The stop 365 can be a crossbar, as shown, that prevents the golf club bag from tipping out of the golf club stand 300 entirely. Other types of stops are possible. In this example golf club stand 300, the crossbar 365 is placed at or about (plus or minus 0.4 inches) twenty three inches from the angled base. This height can assist in preventing the golf club bag from tipping out of the golf club stand 300 without imposing an undue restriction or obstacle when placing the golf club bag in the golf club stand 300. For implementations with this dimension,
The first portion 310 of the golf club stand 300 can include discrete portions for holding different types of golf clubs that are made freely available to players who may not have their own clubs, i.e., leaner clubs. For example, the discrete portions can include holes 320 in a panel 330. These holes 320 can be openings into an empty interior of the first portion 310 of the golf club stand 300, which thus form holders for clubs when they are placed therein, grip side first. Alternatively, there can be internal structure for the first portion 310 of the golf club stand 300 that helps keep the golf clubs in position when placed in the holders. For example, each hole 320 can be an opening to a tube (e.g., a PVC pipe with an inner diameter of 1.5 inches) that holds the shaft of the club at a consistent angle relative to the ground.
In addition, if the first portion 310 of the golf club stand 300 is taller than the golf clubs, an additional base can be included, which is higher than the bottom of the golf club stand 300, such that the grip of each club comes to a rest thereon (within the interior of the first portion 310) so that the club is not supported by its head resting on the panel 330. Alternatively, the first portion 310 of the golf club stand 300 can be much shorter than the golf clubs, such that less than half of each club shaft or handle is held within the first portion 310. Further, in some implementations, the first portion 310 need not include sides, but rather can be made of two arrays of aligned rings through which the club handles and/or shafts pass for holding in position.
The materials used to construct the golf club stand 300 can include cold rolled steel of various gauges, with a powder coat protective finish. The golf club stand 300 can be assembled using threaded fasteners. This can facilitate on-site assembly, which can reduce shipping expenditures when deploying many sites per year. In some implementations, other materials can be used, such as aluminum and stainless steel. Moreover, in some implementations, the assembly can be welded, or the golf club stand 300 can be made out of plastics.
Each of the holes 320 has at least one visual indicator placed nearby that corresponds to the indicator for a target on the golf range. For instance,
The holders 410-446 can be split between a men portion for holders 410, 420, 422, 430, 432, 440, 442, and a ladies portion for holders 415, 424, 426, 434, 436, 444, 446. Each of the holders 410-446 can have a single club held therein and can have three associated colors. For example, the holder 410 can be for a driver and can include visual indicators 402, 404, 406 corresponding to blue (for a target placed around 150 yards out), white (for a target placed around 185 yards out), and black (for a target placed around 215 yards out). Thus, this arrangement quickly identifies an appropriate club to grab for any given target. As described further below, there is overlap among the identified clubs for the specific targets. This is because different people are able to hit golf balls different distances with different types of clubs. Thus, there is not necessarily a one-to-one correspondence for a given target and a given type of club. In some implementations, the correspondence between holders, clubs and targets are as shown in Table 1 below (referencing the targets of
Note that the panel 400 can include labels for the club types written on the panel itself in the location where the reference numbers are shown on the figures.
In some implementations, the correspondence between holders, clubs and targets are as shown in Table 2 below (referencing the targets of
In some implementations, the odd and even irons can be alternated in the golf club stand 300. Thus, one side of the golf club stand 300 can use correspondence between holders, clubs and targets as shown in Table 1, while the other side of the same golf club stand 300 can use correspondence between holders, clubs and targets as shown in Table 2.
The examples of Tables 1 & 2 include seven holders for clubs for men and seven holders for clubs for women, as shown in
In general, the distance assignments can be adapted to accommodate a given target layout to provide a guideline for beginner golfers. As will be appreciated, some first time golfers will hit the ball farther than indicated by the guide, and other first time golfers may hit the ball shorter than indicated by the guide.
In addition, other implementations can include more than one club in each holder of the golf club stand 300. Furthermore, in some implementations, the golf clubs provided as loaner clubs can be configured to be more durable than golf clubs sold at retail outlets. At a minimum, such durability configuration can be applied to the clubs other than irons and wedges. For example,
While this disclosure contains many specific implementation details, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of any inventions or of what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features specific to particular embodiments of the invention. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate embodiments can also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination can in some cases be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a subcombination or variation of a subcombination.
Thus, particular embodiments of the subject matter have been described. Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims. For example, the specific selections of club types and visual indicators can be changed, depending on various factors, including the number and distances of the targets used a specific golfing site, and the nature of the general public at a particular location, which can impact the types of clubs that are appropriate for the average person likely to arrive at the bay at the golfing site.
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