Not Applicable
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
A problem exists in the in the field of domino toppling: the painful process of resetting them upright. The current invention solves the problem of a player having to manually reset each individual toppled domino to the pre-toppled state by hand.
Aside from the usual games of matching numerical values, dominos often have a secondary use, and that is to stand them up close to each other, usually in some grandiose configuration, then topple them down. The problem is the ratio of time needed to setup such ostentatious configurations versus the time it takes to run the topple sequence is greatly biased towards the former. The current invention relocates the bias of time to the latter. That is, the resettable track will make setting up the toppling configuration take LESS time than the playback of the topple sequence.
The current invention defines two mutually exclusive modes of the resettable track: air compressed and electromagnetic. The amount of domino “reset” time it takes using the air compressed tracks is dependent on the length of connected track and the amount of air delivered by manual pump. The amount of time needed in the electromagnetic version, by comparison, is instantaneous.
Figure Description
2 connected air-piston type track runners T1 with affixed pistons P1, dominos D and domino-track keys K, all assembled
2 connected air-piston type runners T2 with affixed pistons P2, dominos D and domino-track keys K, all assembled
2 connected air-piston type runners T3 with affixed pistons P3, dominos D and domino-track keys K, all assembled
2 connected electromagnetic type runners T3 with affixed dominos D and domino-track keys K, all assembled
Referring now to the drawings illustrating the invention, beginning with
For tracks which are of the air-compressed type, a main capillary, defined by endpoints A1-C1, which runs the length of the track is found therein through which air is compressed through. The current invention allows for varying locations of the main capillary as long as it services the outlets E1 and pistons P1, which in turn service the dominos D, and as long as main capillary inlet A1 is able to connect to connector C1 on another track of the same.
The current figures depict three different types of air compressed tracks, T1, T2, and T3, where the location of the main capillary and outlets varies. In these figures, tracks of T1 only connect to other tracks of T1, T2 only to T2, and T3 only to T3. Furthermore, pistons P1 connect only to outlets E1 found only on tracks T1, pistons P2 only to outlets E2 found only on tracks T2, pistons P3 only to outlets E3 found only on tracks T3.
Connected to the main capillary, at intervals according to the spacing of upright dominos, are air outlets E1.
Pistons P1 are inserted into the outlets E1. When air is not compressed through the capillary, pistons remain “seated” on the outlets, in the down position. That is, the top of the piston is shaped such that when it falls through an outlet due to gravity, it is unable to fall completely through because of collision with the top of the piston and an outlet stopper, found at the top of every outlet E1. In all figures of the present invention, the outlet stopper has a shape , yet any shape would suffice so long as it allows sufficient air leakage and adequate piston movement within the outlet.
Either of the section views,
The body of the piston, not considering the top portion thereof previously described in paragraph 0008, is fashioned such that as air is compressed through the main capillary A1-C1 and therefore subsequent outlets E1, air is allowed to narrowly escape between the piston body and the outlet walls of E1, thereby pushing the piston in the direction of the escaping air. The piston is prevented from completely exiting the outlet due to the same outlet stopper that also prevents it from completely entering the same. Any of the section views,
It is this leaky piston design which subsequently raises a domino from the fallen toppled position, back into its upright position, via air compression.
The other type of resettable track that the current invention describes is electromagnetic.
Each track is capable of creating a number of circuits in parallel, the number being equal to the number of dominos the track supports.
In order to topple the domino sequence, the circuit must be opened so no electromagnets exist in the play field. Once the circuit is closed on any track, all metal inserts M on said track and metal inserts on all connected tracks become electro magnets causing a magnetic force to be applied in the immediate vicinity of M, thereby pulling on the metallic base version of domino D, which is also in the vicinity of M, causing it to rise back to its upright position.
It isn't enough to simply place a domino in an upright position on the surface of a resettable track, regardless of the resetting mechanism, air compressed or electromagnetic. This is because the topple and/or reset process can and will likely displace the domino from its ideal location in the sequence. The dominos must be affixed to the track in a way so as to disallow it from leaving the track or deviating far from its initial footprint. The only allowable motion is the topple motion, therefore a hinge is needed at the axis of topple rotation created at the base of the domino and track.
A hinged key K couples a domino to its track. The protrusion of K inserts into the hole at the base of a domino as depicted in
Any suitable resettable track will have hinge points R that each domino will attach to. The present invention allows for the domino to directly attach to said hinge points or to indirectly attach to them using a hinge key K. Depicted tracks T1, T2, T3, and T4 all use the indirect method of a hinge key K. The hole in hinge key K attaches to hinge point R.