The present disclosure is directed generally to footwear with enhanced traction features and, more specifically, to embedded traction enhancing devices for use with the sole of a footwear product.
Articles of footwear have been designed and worn by humans since early in recorded history. Articles of footwear were initially designed to protect the bottom of the feet of wearers while walking or running over rough surfaces. Although the primary purpose of footwear remains basically unchanged, the various types of activity and surfaces on which wearers run, walk, or stand on have led to an ever increasing diversity in the style and construction of footwear. For examples, humans engage in a wide variety of physical activities, such as walking, running, standing, etc. on a wide variety of surfaces, including slippery surfaces. There is a need for enhanced traction on slippery surfaces, such as ice, snow, etc.
Embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to traction enhancing devices for footwear. A footwear assembly configured in accordance with one embodiment of the disclosure includes a footwear product, such as a boot, shoe, overshoe, tracking accessory, etc., with an outsole or other carrier portion that has one or more embedded traction enhancing devices. Each traction enhancing device can be a stud that is at least partially embedded in the carrier portion and that partially projects from the carrier portion. Each stud can be configured to reduce or eliminate relative movement between the stud and the carrier portion to prevent the stud from loosening or falling out. For example, each stud can include a shaft having an engaging surface, such as a threaded, ribbed, or textured surface, that engages the carrier portion. Each stud can also include a portion having an enlarged surface area, such as a head, embedded in the carrier portion to improve retention of the stud in the carrier portion.
Enhanced traction devices for use with footwear assemblies, and associated methods for using and making such assemblies and devices are described in detail herein in accordance with embodiments of the present disclosure. Certain details are set forth in the following description and Figures to provide a thorough and enabling description of various embodiments of the disclosure. Other details describing well-known structures and components often associated with footwear assemblies and methods of forming such assemblies, however, are not set forth below to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the description of various embodiments of the disclosure.
Many of the details, dimensions, angles, relative sizes of components, and/or other features shown in the Figures are merely illustrative of particular embodiments of the disclosure. Accordingly, other embodiments can have other details, dimensions, angles, sizes, and/or features without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure. Moreover, certain features described with reference to specific embodiments may be combined with other embodiments of the disclosure. In addition, further embodiments of the disclosure may be practiced without several of the details described below, while still other embodiments of the disclosure may be practiced with additional details and/or features.
In the illustrated embodiment, the outsole 104 includes a tread portion 106 (including, e.g., a forefoot tread portion 106a and a heel tread portion 106b) with a plurality of gripping features or treads 108 extending from the outsole 104. The treads 108 can be arranged in a variety of patterns to create tread portions 106 for different conditions. In certain embodiments, the treads 108 can be integrally formed with the outsole 104. In other embodiments however, the treads 108 can be removably attached to the outsole 104, for example, with a removable web or similar system, including, for example, the system disclosed in the following patent applications: U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/144,414, entitled “FOOTWEAR ASSEMBLIES WITH REMOVABLE ENHANCED TRACTION DEVICES AND ASSOCIATED METHODS OF USE AND MANUFACTURE,” filed Jan. 13, 2009, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/267,791, entitled “FOOTWEAR ASSEMBLIES WITH REMOVABLE ENHANCED TRACTION DEVICES AND ASSOCIATED METHODS OF USE AND MANUFACTURE,” filed Dec. 8, 2009, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/686,919, entitled “FOOTWEAR ASSEMBLIES WITH REMOVABLE ENHANCED TRACTION DEVICES AND ASSOCIATED METHODS OF USE AND MANUFACTURE,” filed Jan. 13, 2009, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
In the illustrated embodiment, the treads 108 extend from the outsole 104 and are configured to contact and/or grip the ground or surface where the assembly 100 is used. The individual gripping features 108 can include any suitable shape and can be arranged in any suitable pattern for the tread portion 106 to accommodate different conditions. In the illustrated embodiment, for example, the gripping features 108 include multiple webs or ridges extending partially across the outsole 104 at a peripheral portion of the outsole 104, as well as multiple protrusions positioned at a center portion or mid-portion of the outsole 104. In other embodiments the tread portion 106 can include protrusions with different shapes, forms, and/or patterns. Moreover, in still further embodiments, the outsole 104 may not include any treads 108 in the tread portion 106.
According to another feature of the illustrated embodiment, the footwear assembly 102 includes multiple traction enhancing devices or studs 110 projecting from the outsole 104. More specifically, each stud 110 projects from a corresponding gripping feature 108. Each stud 110 is at least partially embedded in the corresponding gripping feature 108 and extends from the outsole 104 to increase or enhance the traction of the tread portion 106, thereby enhancing a user's traction on slippery or rough terrain. In certain embodiments, the studs 110 are made from steel, steel alloys, other suitable materials for traction enhancing studs 110. As described in detail below, each stud 110 is configured to be securely retained in the outsole 104, and to prevent the stud 110 from loosening or falling out of the outsole 104 over the life of the outsole. Moreover, although the illustrated embodiment includes the studs 110 embedded in the corresponding gripping features 108, in other embodiments the studs 110 can be embedded directly into the outsole 104 without any of the gripping features 108.
The studs 110 can be embedded in any of the gripping features 108 of the tread portion 106, or in any other portions of the outsole 104. For example, although the illustrated embodiment shows the studs 110 positioned in a few individual gripping features 108 throughout the tread portion 106, in other embodiments the studs 110 can be embedded in all of the gripping features 108, in the gripping features 108 in the mid-portion of the outsole 104, in the gripping features 108 around the peripheral portion of the outsole 104, and/or any other combination or pattern of the gripping features 108. Moreover, multiple studs 110 can be embedded in a single gripping feature 108. In addition, in certain embodiments the gripping features 108 can be integrally formed with the outsole 108. In other embodiments, however, the gripping features 108 can be removably attached to the outsole 104, for example, with a removable web or similar system.
In the illustrated embodiment, the gripping feature 108 and/or the outsole 104 are constructed of materials so that at least the tip 214 of the stud 110 remains exposed to engage the ground or other surface. Accordingly, the studs 110 are substantially not retractable under the weight of a wearer while standing, walking, or running on hard ground or a hard surface. Moreover, in certain embodiments and as explained in detail below, the studs 110 can also include several features that at least partially prevent the studs 110 from retracting or compressing into the corresponding gripping feature 108 or other portion of the outsole 104.
In the illustrated embodiment, the textured engagement portion 218 of the shaft 212 is configured to securely engage the interior material of the gripping feature 108 and resist axial movement of the shaft 212 into or away from the gripping feature 108. Accordingly, the head 216 and textured engagement portion 218 act to fixedly hold the stud 210 in the gripping feature 108 and prevent the stud 210 from loosening, falling out or being inadvertently pulled out of the gripping feature 108. As described in detail below, studs 110 configured in accordance with other embodiments of the disclosure can include other retention features to help retain the studs 110 in the outsole 104.
In other embodiments, however, the ribs 320 can be applied (e.g., adhered, welded, etc.) to the shaft 312 and extend from the exterior surface of the shaft 312. Moreover, in other embodiments, the engagement portion 318 can include threads or other features having shapes different from the illustrated embodiment. For example, the engagement portion can have one or more protrusions extending laterally from the shaft 312. In one embodiment, the ribs 320 can have a saw-tooth or other acute shape that acts substantially like a barb that will dig into the material of the outsole when a force is applied to the stud 310 axially away from the outsole. In other embodiments, the ribs 320 can have rounded surfaces extending radially from the shaft so as to form an annular shoulder projecting from the shaft 312 to securely engage the material of the outsole.
According to another feature of the illustrated embodiment, the diameter of the head 316 is significantly larger than the diameter of the shaft 312. In certain embodiments, for example, the diameter of the head 316 can be at least two to three times larger than the diameter of the shaft 312. In other embodiments, the diameter of the head can be less than or greater than two to three times the diameter off the shaft 312. The larger diameter of the head 316 relative to the diameter of the shaft 312 can provide greater retention of the stud 310 in an outsole of a footwear product. In addition, the stud 310 can be sufficiently long to allow more of the shaft 312 to be embedded in the outsole. Accordingly, these features at least partially help to resist movement of the stud 310 with reference to the outsole as forces are applied at the tip 314 of the stud 310 during use. For example, the engagement portion 318 and the head 316 can at least partially prevent the stud 310 from retracting or compressing into a rubber outsole during use.
According to additional features of the embodiment illustrated in
From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that specific embodiments of the disclosure have been described herein for purposes of illustration, but that various modifications may be made without deviating from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. For example, although many of the Figures described above illustrate the traction devices embedded in an outsole of a footwear product, in other footwear assemblies the traction devices can be embedded in traction enhancing webs that can be removably attached to footwear products. Further, while various advantages associated with certain embodiments of the disclosure have been described above in the context of those embodiments, other embodiments may also exhibit such advantages, and not all embodiments need necessarily exhibit such advantages to fall within the scope of the disclosure. Moreover, features described with reference to certain embodiments may be combined with other embodiments of the disclosure.
The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/267,787, entitled “TRACTION ENHANCING DEVICES FOR FOOTWEAR ASSEMBLIES,” filed Dec. 8, 2009, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61267787 | Dec 2009 | US |