Toy play sets and accompanying toy vehicles are a source of entertainment to persons using them. Toy play sets can include track sections and apparatuses that guide the motion of one or more toy vehicles. Various types of motion are possible on a toy play set including linear and rotational motion. Different toy vehicle propulsion means can be used with toy play sets, such as storing energy for propulsion in the vehicle, drawing energy for propulsion from an external power source, or manually propelling the vehicle. Toy vehicles may maintain contact with a play set due to gravity, magnetic forces, and/or mechanical attachment of the toy vehicle to the play set.
The following are prior examples of toy play sets that are incorporated here by reference for all purposes: U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,239,395, 3,126,670, 3,299,565, 3,665,636, 3,690,393, 3,797,164, 4,068,402, 4,087,935, 4,185,409, 4,221,076, 4,254,576, 4,468,031, 4,519,789, 4,536,168, 4,661,080, 4,697,812, 4,979,926, 5,052,972, 5,452,893, 5,601,490, 5,678,489, 5,865,661, 5,890,945, 6,193,581, 6,478,654, 6,508,179, 6,676,480, RE32,106 and U.S. Publication No. 2003/0224697.
The present disclosure is directed to a toy play set for use with a toy vehicle comprising a platform attached to a support structure. In some examples, the toy play set may include a base and a support structure pivotally attached to the base with the support structure adapted to pivot relative to the base. In some examples, the toy play set may include a platform pivotally attached to the support structure and adapted to rotate in a toy vehicle's direction of travel. In some examples, the toy play set may include first and second elongate tracks and means for rotating a toy play set component to allow a toy vehicle to travel from the first elongate track to the second elongate track.
This disclosure will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings where:
A toy play set may entertain persons using the toy play set. It can provide entertainment by facilitating movement of a toy vehicle thereon or by moving the toy vehicle itself. A toy play set may facilitate movement of a toy vehicle thereon by including one or more vehicle support surfaces for a toy vehicle to travel upon. Alternatively, instead of the toy vehicle moving relative to the toy play set, the toy play set may move while supporting the toy vehicle.
Motion of a toy vehicle may occur by a variety of propulsion means. Toy vehicle propulsion means can include storing energy for propulsion in the vehicle, drawing energy for propulsion from an external power source, or manually propelling the vehicle. Storing energy in a toy vehicle may occur by electrically or mechanically storing energy. For example, energy can be stored electrically by charging a battery on a toy vehicle or energy can be stored mechanically by spinning an inertial flywheel. A toy vehicle may have a different speeds and may change speeds selectively while moving on a toy play set.
A toy play set may include a support structure and a platform assembly for use with a toy vehicle. Such a toy play set may include one or more movement mechanisms for moving the support structure or the platform assembly. Movement may occur with multiple degrees of freedom including in a linear fashion along an x-axis, a y-axis, and/or a z-axis. Optionally, movement may occur in a rotational fashion, such as about one or more of an x-axis, a y-axis, a z-axis, and/or an axis traverse to one or more these axes. In other examples, movement may be rectilinear, curvilinear, or both linear and rotational.
Rotational motion may be angularly limited or unlimited. Rotation of 360° about an axis may occur or rotation may stop before or after reaching 360°. For example, rotation may stop after 180° or 90° or 1° and anywhere in-between. Optionally, rotation may occur about different axes and different rotation angles may occur at each axis. Further optionally, different components may rotate about different axes and with different rotation angles.
A movement mechanism may comprise an arcing mechanism for moving a platform assembly along an arc. Alternatively, a movement mechanism may comprise an inversion mechanism for inverting the platform assembly. The toy play set may include one or more arcing mechanisms independent of an inversion mechanism, or it may include one or more inversion mechanisms independent of an arcing mechanism, or it may include one or more of an arcing mechanism and an inversion mechanism in combination. Many variations of such play sets may be envisioned. For example, for the purpose of increasing the level of enjoyment a person may derive from playing with a toy play set, a plurality of movement mechanisms may be included.
One example of a toy play set 20 having movement mechanisms 21 is illustrated in
Inversion mechanism 23 may include a platform assembly 24 having a vehicle support surface 49. The vehicle support surface 49 may define a plane on which a toy vehicle 22 can travel. The vehicle support surface 49 may include a left wheel lane 50 and a right wheel lane 52 on opposite sides of a void 51 in the vehicle support surface. The platform assembly may include a metallic strip 56 imbedded in the vehicle support surface 49, which may interact with a toy vehicle 22 optionally including magnetic elements. The platform assembly may include walls 46 projecting normally from lateral edges the vehicle support surface 49. The vehicle support surface 49 may define a direction of travel, represented by arrow 53, for a toy vehicle 22. The direction of travel, represented by arrow 53, is the path a toy vehicle 22 follows when entering the platform assembly 24 at a trailing edge of the vehicle support surface 49 and traveling across the vehicle support surface 49 to a leading edge of the vehicle support surface 49.
The platform assembly 24 may include a gateway mechanism 47 toward the leading edge of the platform. The gateway mechanism 47 may include a stop member 48 attached to the platform assembly 24. The stop member 48 may be adapted to project from the vehicle support surface 49 and stop a toy vehicle 22 traveling along the vehicle support surface 49. The gateway mechanism 47 may stop the toy vehicle 22 indefinitely or temporarily. When stopping the toy vehicle temporarily, the gateway mechanism 47 may stop the toy vehicle 22 for a certain time or until the toy vehicle 22 is moved to a certain position by the toy play set 20. Alternatively, the gateway mechanism 47 may include a stop member 48 attached to a movable member, such as a magnetic strip 58 pivotally attached to the platform assembly 24. A magnetic strip 58 may comprise a ferromagnetic material, a single magnet, or multiple magnets, such as a first magnet 60 and a second magnet 62. The magnetic strip 58 may interact with a magnetically attractable elements optionally included in a toy vehicle 22, for example the second magnet 62 may hold a toy vehicle in place on the vehicle support surface 49 against the force of gravity when the platform 24 is in an inverted orientation.
The gateway mechanism 47 may include a void 51 in the vehicle support surface 49 configured to receive the magnetic strip 58 as it pivots relative to the vehicle support surface 49 at hinge 76. The gateway mechanism 47 may be adapted to pivot the stop member 48 between a stopping position above the vehicle support surface 49 and a passage position below the vehicle support surface 49. The gateway mechanism 47 may include a first biasing member 82 adapted to bias the magnetic strip 58 into the stopping position wherein the stop member 48 projects from the vehicle support surface 49.
The platform assembly 24 may have a center of gravity 64 offset from the center of the vehicle-support-surface width by a dimension D1 as depicted in
An inversion retention mechanism 29 may include a sliding assembly 67, a biasing mechanism 69, and detent mechanisms 73, 77. The sliding assembly 67 may include a magnet 60 slidably oriented in a magnetic strip 58 and a release member 68 slidably oriented in the platform assembly 24. The first magnet 60 may be attached to a tab 66 adapted to engage a release member 68. The release member 68 may contact a first detent mechanism 73. The first detent mechanism 73 may include a first detent member 72 which is adapted to interface with a first detent port 84 on the support structure 26 as shown in
A biasing mechanism 69 may bias the release member 68 into a locking position wherein the first detent member 72 extends beyond the trailing edge of the platform assembly 24. The biasing mechanism 69 may include a second biasing member 70, such as a spring, and a first biasing housing 71. The first magnet 60 may move when a toy vehicle 22 moves above it on the vehicle support surface 49. Movement of the first magnet 60 from a first position to a second position may move tab 66 against the release member 68 and counteract the biasing force applied by second biasing member 70. The force applied by tab 66 against the release member 68 may overcome the biasing force and cause release member 68 to move from a locking position to a release position, thereby pulling the first detent member 72 out of the first detent port 84.
A second detent mechanism 77 may include a second detent member 74, a third biasing member 75, and a second biasing housing 79. The second detent mechanism 77 may be adapted to bias the second detent member 74 outward to engage a second detent port 86. The second detent mechanism 77 may provide sufficient biasing force to hold the platform assembly 24 weight while at rest, but insufficient biasing force to resist unbiasing the second detent member 74 as it contacts the support structure 26 during inversion. Optionally, the detent mechanisms 73, 77 and detent ports 84, 86 may be oriented on the leading edge of the platform assembly 24.
The arcing mechanism may include support structure 26 pivotally attached to a base 28 at an arc axis 42. The support structure 26 may have a height H1 exceeding the length L1 of the vehicle support surface 49. While the support structure height to platform length ratio may range from less than unity to more than unity, a ratio that exceeds unity provides for a reduced change in orientation for a given travel distance of the platform assembly 24. Additionally or alternatively, an increased arc length A1 may provide a user of the toy play set with more enjoyment. Accordingly, the arc length traveled by a platform assembly 24 may be greater than the length of the support structure 26.
The arcing mechanism may include an arc retention mechanism 27. The arc retention mechanism 27 may include a locking mechanism 87 and a locking port 90. The locking mechanism 87 may include a locking member 88, a fourth biasing member 89, and a locking housing 91. The fourth biasing member 89 as depicted in
In some examples, toy play set 20 may include a stop member release activator 36. The stop member release activator 36 may interface with a stop member release 54 attached to the platform assembly 24. The stop member release 54 may be attached to a magnetic strip 58 pivotally attached to the platform assembly 24. In some examples, the stop member release 54 may be attached to the magnetic strip 58 on a side opposite a stop member 48. The stop member release activator 36 may interface with the stop member release 54 by contacting in a mating relationship. As depicted in
A toy play set 20 may include a vehicle receiving apparatus 34 as depicted in
A toy play set may include a first elongate track 30 and/or a second elongate track 32. The first elongate track 30 may include a first elongate track vehicle support surface and the second elongate track 32 may include a second track vehicle support surface. The first and second elongate tracks 30, 32 may lie at different heights. In some examples, the first elongate track 30 may reside at substantially the same height as the vehicle support surface 49 when the support structure 26 is oriented substantially vertical. Optionally, the first elongate track 30 may be oriented near the vehicle support surface 49 such that a toy vehicle 22 can travel from the first elongate track 30 to the vehicle support surface 49. In some examples, the second elongate track 32 may extend from a ramp 38 in a vehicle receiving apparatus 34 and be and be adapted to receive a toy vehicle 22 traveling down ramp 38.
Another example of a toy play set 20 comprises a base 28, a support structure 26 pivotally attached to the base 28 and adapted to pivot about an axis perpendicular to a direction of travel of a toy vehicle, and a platform assembly 24 with a vehicle support surface 49, which defines the direction of travel, wherein the platform assembly 24 is attached to the support structure 26. In this example, platform assembly 24 may not rotate about a platform axis 44. The support structure 26 may pivot about an axis both perpendicular to the direction of travel and parallel to the ground. Further optional features in this example may include a first elongate track 30, a second elongate track 32, and a vehicle receiving apparatus 34.
A further example of a toy play set 20 comprises a support structure 26 and a platform 24 that includes a vehicle support surface 49, which defines a direction of travel for a toy vehicle 22, wherein the platform is pivotally attached to the support structure 26 and adapted to pivot about an axis parallel to the direction of travel. In this example, the support structure 26 may not pivot about a pivot axis 42 and the toy play set 20 may not include a base 28. The platform 24 may pivot about a platform axis both parallel to the direction of travel and parallel to the ground. Further optional features in this example may include a first elongate track 30, and a second elongate track 32.
While embodiments of a toy play set and methods of operating a toy play set have been particularly shown and described, many variations may be made therein. This disclosure may include one or more independent or interdependent inventions directed to various combinations of features, functions, elements and/or properties, one or more of which may be defined in the following claims. Other combinations and sub-combinations of features, functions, elements and/or properties may be claimed later in this or a related application. Such variations, whether they are directed to different combinations or directed to the same combinations, whether different, broader, narrower or equal in scope, are also regarded as included within the subject matter of the present disclosure. An appreciation of the availability or significance of claims not presently claimed may not be presently realized. Accordingly, the foregoing embodiments are illustrative, and no single feature or element, or combination thereof, is essential to all possible combinations that may be claimed in this or a later application. Each claim defines an invention disclosed in the foregoing disclosure, but any one claim does not necessarily encompass all features or combinations that may be claimed.
Where the claims recite “a” or “a first” element or the equivalent thereof, such claims include one or more such elements, neither requiring nor excluding two or more such elements. Further, ordinal indicators, such as first, second or third, for identified elements are used to distinguish between the elements, and do not indicate a required or limited number of such elements, and do not indicate a particular position or order of such elements unless otherwise specifically stated.
Inventions embodied in various combinations and subcombinations of features, functions, elements, and/or properties may be claimed through presentation of claims in a related application. Such claims, whether they are directed to different inventions or directed to the same invention, whether different, broader, narrower or equal in scope to the other claims, are also regarded as included within the subject matter of the present disclosure.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/691,465 filed on Jun. 16, 2005, Mexican Application No. 2005/011764, filed Nov. 1, 2005 of the same title, and Canadian Application No. 2,525,039, filed Nov. 1, 2005 of the same title, which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
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