The present invention relates to a table which can be converted into a billiard table of the American or French type.
Billiard tables of the French type comprise a rectangular central plate which is covered with a cloth and which forms a planar rolling surface which is bordered by a frame, inside which an assembly of rebound bands which are produced from a resilient material, such as, for example, rubber, is arranged in order to cause the billiard balls to rebound.
In the case of billiard tables of the American type, the assembly of bands comprises circular-arc-shaped recesses which are arranged at the corners of the frame and also at the centre of the long sides of this frame. In that case, a longitudinal gutter for recovering the balls is arranged below each long side of the frame.
It is known to convert American billiard tables into French billiard tables by providing a closure member in each recess in order to form a continuous band over the entire periphery of the central plate.
However, this arrangement has a disadvantage in that the height of the band is identical for the two types of billiard table, whereas in reality the height of the band must be greater for French billiards than it is for American billiards.
It is also known to convert American billiard tables into French billiard tables by a system of removable bands which allow the bands provided with recesses to be replaced with bands which are continuous over the entire periphery of the plate.
In that case, the conversion requires a given number of manipulations.
It is also known to convert a French or American billiard table into a table. In that case, the central plate as well as the bands are covered with a panel of wood or any other material which forms a table top. However, this arrangement has a disadvantage principally in that the covering panel has a height which corresponds to the height of the bands, that is to say, a height in the order of 80 cm (31.5 inches), that is, a height greater than the height of a conventional table.
The covering panel has large dimensions and weight, which does not facilitate its manipulation. Furthermore, the panel takes up a large amount of space during the use of the billiard table.
Therefore, the object of the invention is to provide a table which can be converted into a billiard table of the French type or American type which overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages.
Therefore, the invention relates to a table which can be converted into a billiard table, characterised in that it comprises:
According to other features of the invention:
The features and advantages of the invention will be appreciated from the description below which is given by way of example and with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
For this purpose and as illustrated in
The cross-pieces 12 are arranged at the short sides of the fixed frame 10 and the central plate 13 in such a manner that a free space 14 is provided between the long sides of the fixed frame 10 and the central plate 13. Each side of the fixed frame 10 is constituted by a U-shaped profile section 15.
The table 1 also comprises a movable frame 20 which is illustrated in particular in
Each profile section 21 of the movable frame 20 carries internally a rebound band 23 which is produced, for example, from resilient material, such as rubber. The movable frame 20 can be displaced by control means which are generally designated 30 (
In the lower position of the movable frame 20, the vertical covers 22 completely cover the portion of the feet 11 seen from outside the table 1.
In this configuration of the conventional table type, the central plate 13 is covered by at least one protection panel 2 and, in the embodiment illustrated in
With reference now to
The means 30 for controlling the displacement of the movable frame 20 are constituted by an operating member 31 which is formed, for example, by a crank, which is intended to cooperate with a transverse rod 32 which extends through the profile section 15 of a short side of the fixed frame 10, as shown in
The transverse rod 32 opens inside the profile section 15 of the short side of the fixed frame 10 and is connected to a bevel gear-box 33, of known type, comprising a system of gears for transmitting the rotation movement of the rod 32 which is driven by the crank 31 in various directions. The bevel gear-box 33 comprises two outputs 33a and 33b, each provided with a rod 34a and 34b, respectively. The rods 34a and 34b are both opposed and arranged in the profile-section 15 which forms a short side of the fixed frame 10. The rod 34a is connected, by a bevel gear-box 35, to a rod 36 which extends over the entire length of the adjacent long side of the fixed frame 10. Similarly, the rod 34b is connected, by a bevel gear-box 37, to a rod 38 which extends over the entire length of the adjacent long side of the fixed frame 10. The rods 36 and 38 are arranged inside the profile section 15 of the fixed frame 10. When the crank 31 is caused to rotate, the rods 34a, 34b, 36 and 38 are also caused to rotate.
The control means 30 also comprise at least two horizontal runners 40 which are arranged at two opposite sides of the fixed frame 10 and which support the movable frame 20.
Preferably, and as illustrated in the embodiment in
With reference now to
As shown in these FIGS., the assembly of struts 41 comprises two pairs of opposite struts 42 and 45, respectively. The first pair of struts comprises two parallel struts 42, each having a first end 42a which is articulated to the runner 40 and a second end 42b which is articulated to a carriage 43 comprising rollers 43a which rest on the base of the profile section 15 of the fixed frame 10. The carriage 43 comprises an actuation element which is formed by a nut 44 which engages with a worm screw portion 48 which is caused to rotate by the rod 38.
The second pair of struts comprises two opposite struts 45, each having a first end 45a which is articulated to the runner 40 and a second end 45b which is articulated to a carriage 46 comprising two rollers 46a which rest on the base of the profile section 15 of the fixed frame 10. The carriage 46 comprises an actuation element which is formed by a nut 47 which engages with a worm screw portion 49 which is caused to rotate by the rod 38.
The screw portions 48 and 49 are mutually aligned and connected to each other by a sleeve 50, as shown in
In this manner, when the rods 34a, 34b, 36 and 38 are rotated by means of the crank 31, the assembly of the worm screw portions 48 and 49 is caused to rotate and the runners 40 are displaced simultaneously between the retracted position in the profile section 15 of the fixed frame 10 and the deployed positions, or vice versa, by means of the assembly of struts 41 in order to displace the movable frame 20.
The table 1 also comprises means for blocking the rotation of the rods 34a, 34b, 36 and 38 as well as the screw portions 48 and 49 in each upper position of the movable frame 20.
These blocking means which are illustrated in particular in
The blocking means also comprise a latch 61 which can be tilted vertically and which is arranged between the nut 57 and the stop 60. The latch 61 is connected to a lever 62 which is arranged on the lower face of the profile section 15 of the fixed frame 10. This lever 62 controls the vertical tilting of the latch 61 between a retracted position opening up the space between the nut 57 and the fixed stop 60 and a position interposed between the nut 57 and the stop 60. In the retracted position of the latch 61, when the screw portion 58 is rotated, the nut 57 comes into contact against the stop 60, which corresponds to the upper position of the runners 40, in which the movable frame 20 is in a configuration for French type billiards. In the position in which the latch 61 is interposed between the nut 57 and the fixed stop 60, when the screw portion 58 is rotated, the nut 57 comes into abutment against the latch 61, thereby limiting the travel of that nut 57 corresponding to the position of the movable frame 20 in a configuration for American type billiards. The thickness of the latch 61 is defined in order to correspond to the desired position of the bands 23.
As
As
As
The central portion 66 in the form of a basket comprises, at the upper portion thereof and below each point of articulation to the bracket 67, a rod 75 which extends in parallel with the longitudinal axis of the central portion 66. Each rod 75 is connected to the movable frame 20 by a strut 76. To that end, each strut 76 comprises a first end 76a which is articulated to the movable frame 20 and a second end 76b which is articulated to the rod 75 of the central portion 66 of the gutter 65. Preferably, the second end 76b of each strut 76 is in the form of a fork, inside which the rod 75 is arranged. In this manner, when the movable frame 20 is lowered, each strut 76 applies a thrusting force to the corresponding rod 75, which brings about the tilting of the central portion 66 about each point of articulation to the brackets 67. During this pivoting, the end 68 of each lateral portion 68 slides in the central portion 66. Therefore, the gutter 65 is in a retracted position.
When the movable frame 20 is raised again, the central portion 66 of each gutter 65 pivots, under the action of the struts 76, about the points of articulation to the brackets 67 and is therefore displaced from the retracted position into the deployed position in order to recover the balls which fall through the recesses 25 and 26.
In this manner, each gutter 65 can be displaced by pivoting between a rest position which is retracted in the location of the free space 14 between the fixed frame 10 and the plate 13 into the lower position of the movable frame 20 and an active position below this annular space 14 in order to recover the balls in the upper position of the movable frame, in the configuration for American type billiards.
In the configuration for French type billiards, the recesses 25 are temporarily closed by a removable closure member 70 in the form of a block which has the same profile as the assembly of bands 23 and which brings about the joint between the long side and the short side of this assembly of bands 23. Similarly, each recess 26 is closed by a removable closure member 71 (
The closure members 70 and 71 are provided, at the underside and at each side, with a panel 72 which comprises an impression 73 on the lower face thereof. Each panel 72 is intended to co-operate with a housing of complementary shape which is not illustrated and which is arranged below the band 23 at each side of the recesses 25 and 26. Each housing is provided with a ball (not illustrated) which is intended to rest on each panel 72 when each closure member 70 and 71 is positioned in the corresponding recess 25 and 26 in order to hold them in place. In this position, each gutter 65 is retracted and its shape is defined to allow the balls to remain in the gutter.
Finally, as shown in
When the table 1 is positioned in the configuration of a conventional table, as shown in
If the user wishes to use the table 1 as a table for board games, it is simply necessary for him to turn over one or more panels 2 in order to cause the patterns 3 for the games printed on the other face of these panels 2 to appear, as shown in
If the user wishes to use the table 1 for billiards, he removes the panels 2 in order to expose the central plate 13. Next, he turns the crank 31 so as to cause the rods 34a and 34b and the rods 36 and 38 to rotate by means of the bevel gears 33, 35 and 37. These rods cause the screw portions 48 and 49 to rotate, which brings about the displacement of the carriages 43 and 46 of each runner 40 towards each other and, consequently, simultaneously the lifting of the assembly of the runners 40 and, consequently, the movable frame 20. During the rotation of the rods and in particular the rod 34b, the carriage 56 is displaced in the direction of the stop 60.
If the user wishes to play American billiards, he displaces the lever 62 in order to position the latch 61 between the nut 57 of the carriage 56 and the fixed stop 60. He continues to rotate the crank 31 until the carriage 56 is stopped against the latch 61. In this position, the assembly of bands 23 is located at a height in the order of 35 mm (1.38 inches) relative to the central plate 13, which corresponds to the height for American billiards.
The user carries out the withdrawal of the closure members 70 and 71 in order to open up the recesses 25 and 26 and, in this configuration, the gutters 65 are deployed below these recesses in order to be able to recover the balls.
In order to use the billiard table for French type billiards, the user re-positions the closure members 70 and 71 in the recesses 25 and 26, respectively, then he displaces the lever 62 in order to retract the latch 61 in order to open up the space between the nut 57 and the fixed stop 60. Next, the user rotates the crank 31 in order to bring, by means of the rods 34a, 34b, 36 and 38, screw portions 48 and 49 and struts 42 and 45, the runners 40 into the second upper position which corresponds to the position of the assembly of bands 23 for French billiards and at a height in the order of 38 mm (1.5 inches) relative to the central plate 13.
In order to bring the table 1 either into the configuration for American billiards or into the configuration for a conventional table, the user rotates the crank 31 in the opposite direction.
The convertible table according to the invention allows, by simple means, the table to be converted for French type billiards or American type billiards, whilst still having the appearance of a conventional table. It also provides a quality of play which is completely comparable to nonconvertible billiard tables.
The table according to the invention further has another advantage which consists in that, in the table configuration, the covering panels are at a height in the order of 75 cm (29.53 inches) which corresponds to a normal table height. It is possible to comply with this height because of the lowering of the movable frame, that is to say, the assembly of bands, in this configuration.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03 13065 | Nov 2003 | FR | national |
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15440 | Sep 1881 | DE |
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2625912 | Jul 1989 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050101396 A1 | May 2005 | US |