Claims
- 1. An educational toy for exploring technology, comprising:
a frame; an object suspended from said frame; a flexible line connecting said object to said frame; at least one sensor having a mass attached to a spring connected to said object; whereby said object under the influence of gravity moves freely after being manually energized, and said spring deflects when said object accelerates normally in the direction said spring deflects.
- 2. The educational toy of claim 1, wherein said object is a cylindrical body of hard rubber material having holes routing and gripping said line.
- 3. The educational toy of claim 1, wherein said line is one piece clamped to said object and said frame at multiple pivot points forming two triangular-shaped loops spaced apart that suspend said object on four like sections of said line;
whereby said line slides relative to said frame and said object to adjust and align the position of said object.
- 4. The educational toy of claim 1, wherein said line is connected to said frame at two pivots spaced apart,
whereby said object coasts as a glider type swing with parallel suspension arms when manually energized in the direction of a line between said pivots, and coasts as a simple swing with one composite suspension arm when energized in a direction perpendicular to said line.
- 5. The educational toy of claim 1, wherein said suspension line is comprised of an elastic upper section connected to a flexible lower section,
whereby said object falls freely for a period of time after being lifted and dropped, or pulled down and released, and said object both swings and bounces freely when energized horizontally.
- 6. The educational toy of claim 1, wherein an array of said sensors mounted on said object both sense and suppress the motion of said object.
- 7. The educational toy of claim 1 wherein said spring is a flat plastic beam,
having one end connected to said mass, and the other end connected to a mounting-adapter block made of hard rubber material that connects to said object.
- 8. The educational toy of claim 1 wherein said sensor is comprised of said mass connected to one the end of another flexible line,
and the other end connected to the bottom of said object; whereby gravity acting as a spring tends to restore said sensor to its neutral, vertical position.
- 9. The educational toy of claim 1 wherein
said frame is a formed metal rod connected to a wood base block, whereby manually moving the top of said rod back and forth gradually builds up big swinging excursions of said object.
- 10. A motion-sensor mounting adapter composed of a block of hard-rubber material connected to said motion sensor,
having a cylindrical hole smaller than a mating post protruding from the test object, and having a mounting surface contour similar to that of said test object, whereby when installed, said block grips said post, and residual stresses clamp said mounting surfaces together in intimate contact.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
[0001] This application is a continuation in part of application Ser. No. 09/031,611 filed Feb. 27, 1998, and issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,443,736 B1 on Sep. 3, 2002.
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09031611 |
Feb 1998 |
US |
Child |
10631247 |
Jul 2003 |
US |