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1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to selector weight systems and more specifically to an incremental weight system that allows the addition of resistant weights in between those already available in a selector weight system.
2. Description of the Related Art
Prior attempts have been made in the art with respect to incremental weight systems for use in physical therapy, sports training, and otherwise. Generally, these incremental weight systems are used to provide additional resistant weight in increments that are smaller than those that are generally available in standard selector weight systems.
There are numerous selector weight systems in use today on the myriad of exercise machines that are sold on the market from any of a number of companies that manufacture exercise equipment. The primary function of a selector weight stack, as it is most commonly referred to, is to provide the user of an exercise machine with a convenient way of selecting weight resistance for exercising in increments of 10, 15, or 20 pounds. Although there are many weight stack styles and types used by the various companies, the most common weight stack in use today is comprised of nineteen 10 pound weights, for a total of 200 pounds, and will allow the user to select, by means of a selector pin, any variation in weight increments from 10 pounds to 200 pounds. Some weight stacks that are comprised of 15 pound weights, or even 20 pound weights and may provide maximum resistance levels of perhaps 300 or 400 pounds.
The resistance provided by these weight stacks (that is, selectable in 10, 15, or 20 pounds increments) is satisfactory for most applications by the average exercise machine user and may even be desirable in some cases for exercise equipment designed for body building purposes. However, in many exercise equipment applications such as equipment used by elderly people, disabled people, or people being treated for injuries by a physical therapist, much smaller weight resistance increments are needed. It has been determined that selective weight resistance increments of 2½ pounds are preferred by the majority of physical therapists and sports medicine clinics.
Obviously, if a weight stack were comprised of only 2½ pounds weights, the weight stack, if it were to offer at least 100 pounds of resistance, would be very narrow and unusually tall. In fact, a weight stack design such as this could be used for little else and would not be practical for use on the average exercise machine. Prior attempts in the art include a number of attempts to provide a different weight system apparatus, although, not necessarily those that would allow incremental or intermediary values between a certain selected weight in a selector weight system. Additionally, many of these prior art attempts do not allow retrofitting of current selector weight systems in order to provide easy modification of existing selector weight stacks. In other attempts, side weights or collateral weights are engaged by pins or the like in a manner that far exceeds the needs for an incremental weights system.
As a result, the art would be improved by providing a therapy or other incremental weight system that was easily retrofitable to existing systems as well as providing only the weights needed in order to provide the incremental weight steps between discreet weight plates in existing selector weight stack systems.
In view of the foregoing disadvantages inherent in the known types of incremental weight systems now present in the prior art, the present invention provides an incremental weight system that is easily retrofittable wherein the same can be used for providing incremental weights for resistance training and the like.
The general purpose of the present invention, which will be described subsequently in greater detail, is to provide a new incremental weight system that is particularly adapted to therapeutic or sports training uses, the incremental weight system having many of the advantages of weight systems mentioned heretofore many novel features that result in a new incremental weight system which is not anticipated, rendered obvious, suggested, taught, or even implied by any of the prior art incremental weight systems for other weight systems, either alone or in any combination thereof.
Provided herein is a system or a device by which two or more supplemental weights may be added to a standard selector weight stack and are fixed so that they may be incrementally selected to work with any desired weight selection available on the weight stack. For example, a therapist or trainer may wish to use 20 pounds for a given exercise in order to train a client, then increase the resistance by an additional 2½ pounds, then an additional 5 pounds, etc.
The device set forth herein accomplishes the selectivity features that are described above. It is different from other similar devices known in the art that attempt to provide these same supplemental weight resistance features. Other systems have introduced devices that have supplemental weights that are on a separate system off to the side of the weight stack, or, must be manually selected by physically moving the supplemental weights into the desired position by means of a sliding bar, or by simply adding loose weights to the top of the selector weight stack itself.
The device provided herein is mounted upon the top plate of the selector weight stack and is designed in such a way that supplemental weights may be added in 2½ pound (or selectable other) increments. Increments are selectively added by means of the device and are lifted and used in conjunction with the weights that are selected on the weight stack. In one embodiment, the device uses a spring-loaded disk, or plate, at the rear of which three male pins have been fixed for the purpose of selecting and lifting any of the three supplemental weight plates from their docking position on the rear of the weight stack.
A dial and handle on the front of the spring-loaded disk allows the user to pull slightly against the spring tension and rotate the disk to any of four different positions. The three uppermost positions on the dial are set to correspond with the three supplemental weights. When the dial has been rotated and the handle is released into any one of the three upper marked positions, one of the three pins on the rear of the disk is then engaged with one of the supplemental weights.
In the first of the selected positions, one supplemental weight is lifted, in the second position, two supplemental weights are lifted, and in the third position, all three supplemental weights are lifted. If for any reason the dial is rotated to any position between the three marked positions and released, no supplemental weight is engaged and only the weight that has been selected on the main weight stack will be operative. Also, there is a fourth, and neutral position, marked at the bottom of the dial for the purpose of locking in the dial making it unlikely to accidentally rotate the dial and select a supplemental weight.
In one embodiment, an incremental weight system having a plurality of selectable weights has an incremental weight stack having a plurality of incremental weights with each of the incremental weights having a slot. A selector plate has a number of pins equal to the number of incremental weights with each pin uniquely corresponding to a single one of the incremental weights on a one-to-one basis so that each pin has a uniquely corresponding incremental weight and vice versa. Each of the pins is positioned on the selector plate to uniquely engage the slot of the corresponding incremental weight.
The selector plate is positioned proximate and adjacent to the incremental weights so that the pins may selectably engage the slots as the selector plate is positionable so as to selectably and uniquely engage one or more of the incremental weights.
In another embodiment, an incremental weight system has a plurality of selectable incremental weights that are supported by a stand. The incremental weight stack has a plurality of incremental weights of similar weight, with each of the incremental weights having a slot. A selector plate has a number of pins equal to the total number of incremental weights with each pin positioned to uniquely correspond to a single slot in a single one of the incremental weights on a one-to-one basis so that each pin has a uniquely corresponding incremental weight and incremental weight slot and vice versa. The selector plate is also positionable so that it does not engage the incremental weight stack with any of the pins.
The selector plate is proximate and adjacent the incremental weights so that the pins may selectably engage the slots. The selector plate is positionable so as to selectably and uniquely engage one or more of the incremental weights with a corresponding pin. The incremental weight stack is offset a generally small distance from a center of the selector plate.
Each of the slots of the incremental weights are disposed a different radial distance from the center of the selector plate with each of the pins also disposed the same different radial distance from the center of the selector plate such that by displacing and turning the selector plate, individual ones of the incremental weights may be engaged by a corresponding pin which is able to pass through a corresponding slot.
A chassis that is adapted to engage a selector weight stack provides support for the selector plate. Generally, the selector weight stack has a number of uniform weights. The incremental weight system also includes: a retaining plate; a post slidably passing through the retaining plate and coupled at a distal end to the selector plate: a biasing spring system biasing the post and the selector plate toward the incremental weight stack; and a handle coupled to the post. The chassis, the retaining plate, the post, the biasing system, and the handle together may weigh approximately the same as an individual one of the incremental weights with each of the incremental weights weighing approximately one-fourth (¼) of the weight of one of the uniform weights of the selector weight stack.
The detailed description set forth below in connection with the appended drawings is intended as a description of presently-preferred embodiments of the invention and is not intended to represent the only forms in which the present invention may be constructed and/or utilized. The description sets forth the functions and the sequence of steps for constructing and operating the invention in connection with the illustrated embodiments. However, it is to be understood that the same or equivalent functions and sequences may be accomplished by different embodiments that are also intended to be encompassed within the spirit and scope of the invention.
Referring to the drawings where like numerals of reference designate like elements throughout it will be noted that the incremental weight system 100 is generally used in conjunction with a selector weight system W such as that shown in
As shown in
Turning now to
The spring 150 biases the selector plate 130 towards the incremental weights 156. The spring is held in place by compression by the slidable distal end 162 of the housing 152 and the retaining plate 138. As the spring pushes these two elements apart, the handle 134 with its distal end 142 is held in place by the selected positioning hole 140 until manually repositioned.
The biasing force of the spring 150 may be overcome by manual engagement by pulling the handle 134 away from the retaining plate 138 so that the handle's distal end 142 disengages the positioning hole 140. The handle 134, post 136, and selector plate 130 may all be turned freely once the handle's distal end 142 has disengaged the positioning hole 140 and any pin 1514 has disengaged its corresponding weight slot 158. The distal end 142 of the handle 134 may then be positioned into a different positioning hole 140. In doing so, one of the pins 154 is then generally disposed into the uniquely corresponding hole or slot 158 in the corresponding one of the incremental weights 156. This is shown in
Upon disposing one of the pins 154 into one of the incremental weights 156, one or more of the incremental weights 156 is selected and engaged by the selector plate 130. That incremental weight 156 and any weights 156 above it are then engaged by the selector plate 130 and will travel with it as the chassis 110 is raised and lowered with the other weights of the selector weight stack W that have been selected by the exerciser.
For example, in
In this way, additional incremental weights can be added to the resistive weight provided by the selector weight stack W. Generally, each of the selector weight stack W are uniform in weight. Each of the incremental weights 156 is generally a fraction of the weight of one of the selector weight stack weights. For example, if each of the weights in the weight stack W is ten pounds, each of the incremental weights 156 may be two and a half pounds. In one embodiment, the remaining portion of the incremental weight system 100 is as light as possible, possibly made of lightweight composite materials or otherwise so that they add little additional weight to the selector weight stack W with most of the additional weight being delivered by the incremental weights 156. Alternatively, the remaining portion of the incremental weight system 100 may weigh the same or similarly to one of the incremental weights 156 so that, for example, when no incremental weights 156 are engaged (
Generally, the fraction that each incremental weight 156 is with respect to a single weight of the selector weight stack W determines how many incremental weights 156 there are. Generally, quarter units may be preferred to ensure that only one pin is able to engage an incremental weight at any one time.
It should be noted that the means by which the pins 154 are able to engage the slots 158 and the incremental weights 156 is due to the difference in radial displacement of both the slots 158 and the pins 154 with respect to the center 160 of the selector plate 130. The center of a pin 154 must be the same distance away from the center 160 of the selector plate 130 as the center of the corresponding slot 158.
In use, the incremental weight system 100 is added to a selector weight stack W in a manner suggested by
While the present invention has been described w ith regards to particular embodiments, it is recognized that additional variations of the present invention may be devised without departing from the inventive concept.
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