None.
This invention relates to a wearable absorbent material, referred to herein as a wipe. More specifically to a wipe which can be repeatedly removed from where worn, used, and replaced for future use. Another embodiment encompasses the wearing of more than one wipe, each of which are individually removable, useable, and then discardable.
The dawn of health consciousness has brought a wave of physical-fitness related products to aid the health-conscious individual. Exercise devices, exercise clothing, and exercise accessories have saturated the market and have been a boon to all who are interested in exercise to maintain good health. Many exercisers have found aerobics to suit their circulatory, respiratory, muscular, and general health needs. A variety of exercise garments are used for aerobics ranging from home-created cut-off pants and jersey, to custom-made and fitted tights.
Heavy aerobic exercise, heavy lifting, and routine cardio-exercise, however, leads to heavy perspiration. Equipment and facilities used by such exercisers, when touched, leaves residue or traces of the user's perspiration. Most gym and exercise facilities requires all patrons to wipe all equipment after use of touching to prevent contamination or cross-contamination.
Many other sporting and hobby activities would benefit from a wearable wipe unit, such as, but not limited to, hiking, fishing, boating, skiing, jogging, walking, aerobics, basketball, baseball, football, in-line skating, biking, rock climbing, soccer, tennis, bowling, and golf.
Many times perspiration falls into the eyes of joggers while they are running and having no available means of wiping the perspiration from their brow they use their shirts (if they have them on). A wearable wiper unit conveniently located on their shorts would let them remove the annoying perspiration from their eyes without even having to stop. Fishermen constantly have to bate their hooks, handle wet fish, and remove slime that accumulates on their line. A common practice is to wear jeans and wipe their hands off on their pants. Fishermen would welcome a readily available towel to wipe their poles and hands.
Miss hits and bad shots occur in tennis because the participant loses their grip on account of perspiration getting on their hands. In between points, tennis players often wipe their racquet hand on their shorts to get a better grip. At the end of the game, their shorts are dirty and stained with the racquet grip residue from wiping their hands on their shorts. Having a removable towel to clean their hands would help them play better and save their wardrobe.
It is very important for rock climbers to have both hands free while having quick and easy access to a towel to wipe the moisture from their hands and face. This allows them to have a firmer grip and better vision while performing their dangerous climbs. The wearable wiper unit will fulfill this necessity.
Many professions also have a need for a readily available wiping towel or rag, be it made of cloth, synthetic material, paper, or any combinations thereof, so that the user may wipe equipment or tools or one's hands. Such professions in need of a readily available wiping towel, rag, or wipe include, but are not limited to, waitresses, mechanics, maids, chefs, nurses, manufacturing machine-operators, dental assistants, and bartenders.
For example when clearing off tables waitresses complain of not having enough hands to do their job. Having to carry, dishes, silverware, and menus, along with other items forces them to have to return to the table several times to clean it. A handy wearable wipe unit would help them clean a table and by reattaching their wiper they could carry needed items.
Mechanics are often wiping grease and grime off their hands or equipment with rags. Looking for a rag is a daily occurrence and at times they put one in their pocket for convenience. This becomes a problem because the grease and grime then gets on their pants and pocket causing further sanitary problems. The versatility of having a wearable wiper unit would alleviate their complaints.
Hotel maids must clean a number of rooms in the course of a day. Using a wearable wiper unit with multiple layers would enable them to sanitize larger areas of the room without having to return to their cart as often to get more wipers.
My co-pending nonprovisional application, application Ser. No. 11/097,573, filed on Apr. 1, 2005, has solved these problems but I have found that the back side of the retaining member, when worn by a user and the user is engaged in physical activity and movement, the bottom end of the back side routinely presses into their bodies and causes discomfort. This problem has been solved with this improved unit and retaining member as set forth in this disclosure.
A wearable wipe unit having a retaining member with a front side, a top side, and a back side defining a mouth below the top side between the front side and back side; an adhesive component on the front side below the top side; and one or absorbent members with a base member removably attachable to and from the retaining member and one or more secondary units removably attachable from each other. The retaining member is wearable on a person's belt, waist band, or similar external object. One or more absorbent members may have a storage unit or pocket thereon adapted to hold one or more personal effects. The storage unit has a securing component adapted to secure the personal effects placed into the storage unit.
Accordingly, several objects and advantages of my wearable wipe unit are to:
a. establish an easy-to-use and readily-available wiping absorbent component for user's to wipe facilities, equipment, or themselves;
b. eliminate spread of contaminates on facilities or equipment;
c. provide a wiping absorbent component for repeated use as necessary, to be worn by a user, removed for use, and returned after use, readied for next use;
d. provide more than one wiping absorbent component for single use after which the used component may be discarded;
e. provide a convenient storage unit for personal items; and
f. eliminate any discomfort to a user while wearing this unit and retaining member.
The foregoing has outlined some of the more pertinent objects of the wearable wipe unit. These objects should be construed to be merely illustrative of some of the more prominent features and applications of the intended wearable wipe unit. Many other beneficial results can be attained by applying the disclosed wearable wipe unit in a different manner or by modifying the wearable wipe within the scope of the disclosure. Accordingly, other objects and a fuller understanding of the wearable wipe may be had by referring to the summary of the wearable wipe unit and the detailed description of the preferred embodiment in addition to the scope of the wearable wipe unit defined by the claims taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the drawings in detail and in particular to
The retaining member 20 may be made of any material suited for the intended purpose, including, but not limited to, plastics, polymers, metals, and composites or any combinations thereof. The characteristic of the retaining member 20, for its intended function, is that the front side 26 or the back side 24 or both are biased toward the other or toward each other but are movable away from each other. The feature facilitates its function being inserted over and onto a belt, for example or the waist-band of a pair of pants or skirt and be held and worn thereat. Generally, the retaining member should be substantially rigid but have the biasing features set forth above.
The bottom end of the back side 24 may be a rounded cylindrical end 27 or knob-like. This rounding running across the full or partial width of the bottom as illustrated in
Reference is made to
The purpose of the rounding or tapering is to facilitate insertion of the retaining member 20 onto a belt, waist-band, or other generally planar object. The biasing toward each other of the front side 26 and the back side 24 more securely holds the retaining member 20 onto the object so placed.
At a point distal from the top side 21, the bottom section of the front side 26 may be angled outward; i.e., angled section 23. On the front side 26 is an adhesive component 22 the purpose of which is to accept, retain, and permit removal of an attached absorbent component 30 [hereafter for administrative convenience only, and not by way of limitation, referred to merely as wipe] which has a cooperating adhesive component 32 at or near the top 31 of the wipe 30. The respective adhesive component 22 and cooperating adhesive component 32 may be of the hook-and-loop type [commonly referred to as Velcro® and as illustrated in
The wipe 30, with its cooperating adhesive component 32 thereon, may easily be attached to the adhesive component 22 on the retaining member 20. The wipe typically may be made from and of cotton, polyester, rayon, paper, nylon, wool, silk, or other natural or synthetic materials and any combinations thereof. If the retaining member 20 has been previously placed onto a person's belt or waist-band, the wipe 30 rests at the person's side ready for use. When needed, the person grabs the wipe 30, pulls it away from the retaining member 20 in any direction thereby releasing it from the retaining member 20. The person proceeds to using the wipe 30 as deemed necessary. After completion of use, the wipe 30 may be re-attached to the retaining member 20. With this embodiment of the wipe unit, the wipe 30 may be used repeatedly as necessary.
The angled section 23 of the front side 26 serves to keep the wipe 30 relatively free of, and generally away from, the user thereby making the wipe 30 easier to grab when needed. The adhesive component 22 on the front side 26 may run the full length [height] of the front side 26 or may only run a portion thereof. The cooperating adhesive component 32 on the wipe 30 preferably is at the top 31 of the wipe 30, though it may encompass a greater surface than merely the top 31 or it may be located anywhere on the wipe 30.
The embodiment of the wipe unit described above and illustrated in
As in the retaining component 20 previously described, the back side 323 and the front side 325 each project downward from the top 321 of this most preferred embodiment retaining component 320. A mouth 28 is immediately below the top 321. From the top 321, the front side 325 angles toward the back side 323 and biases thereto. This retaining component 320 is substantially rigid but its front and back sides 325, 323 are biasable toward and away from each other. Except for the forward angled bottom back section 324, the features and structure of this retaining component 320 are the same as described above and, by reference are incorporated herein.
This dual angling of the bottom section 324 of the back side 323 and bottom section 326 of the front side 325 adds a greater comfort level for the wearer. It has been found that the retaining component 20 with a straight back side 24 would routinely press against the user's body during movement. The angled bottom section 324 of the back side 323 alleviated this problem and the cause of discomfort.
The outer side edges 328 of this retaining component 320 are curved as best illustrated in
The various adhesive compounds I have found to be suited for the intended purpose include those found in drying adhesives, reactive adhesives, cyanoacrylates, temporary adhesives, and hot adhesives and are briefly described below.
DRYING ADHESIVES. These are a mixture of ingredients (typically polymers) dissolved in a solvent. Glues and rubber cements are members of the drying adhesive family. As the solvent evaporates, the adhesive hardens. Depending on the chemical composition of the adhesive, they will adhere to different materials to greater or lesser degrees.
Typical brand names of such drying adhesives which I have found to perform this function adequately include, but are not limited to, Silicone II (made by GE Sealants and Adhesive) and E6000® (made by Eclectic Products, Inc.).
REACTIVE ADHESIVES. Epoxy resins are the most common example of this kind of adhesive. Reactive adhesives generally come in two separate containers. The two ingredients of the adhesive must be mixed in certain proportions immediately before application. Generally one ingredient is a monomer, or resin, and the second is a reaction initialiser. When the two are mixed together, a polymerization reaction occurs which solidifies the adhesive.
Reaction adhesives may also react with the surface of the materials to be stuck together. This is bonding, in which the adhesive forms chemical bonds with the material, and is distinct from sticking, the action of common glues. Typical brand names of such reactive adhesives which I have found to perform this function adequately include, but are not limited to, Extra Setting Time Epoxy (made by Super Glue Corp.) and Perfect Glue 3 (made by Macco, a division of ICI Paints).
CYANOACRYLATE. A special case of a reactive adhesive is cyanoacrylate (more commonly known by the brand name Super Glue®) which reacts with moisture in the air and therefore does not need any mixing before application. In its liquid form, cyanoacrylate consists of monomers of cyanoacrylate molecules, (C5H5NO2) CH2=C(CN)COOCH3, and has molecular weight equal to 111.1. Its burning point lies at 79° C. and its density is 1.1 times the density of common water (H2O).
It is an acrylic resin which rapidly polymerizes in the presence of water (specifically hydroxyl ions), forming long, strong chains, joining the bonded surfaces together.
Another important trait is that cyanoacryate sets up fast, often in less than a minute. A normal bond reaches full strength in two hours, and is waterproof. There are also accelerants that can force a set-up as fast as two or three seconds, at some loss of strength.
Reactive adhesives are very strong and are used for high-stress applications such as attaching wings to aircraft. Because the strength of a reactive adhesive is a result of chemical bonding with the surface material, reactive adhesives are applied in thin films. Reactive adhesives are less effective when there is a secondary goal of filling gaps between the surfaces. As a result, these can work well with the wipes for the purpose intended.
Typical brand names of such cyanoacryate adhesives I have found to perform this function adequately include, but are not limited to, Super Glue (made by Super Glue Corp.) and Loctite® Super Glue Gel (made by Henkel Consumer Adhesives, Inc.).
TEMPORARY ADHESIVES. Temporary adhesives are designed to repeatedly or easily stick and unstick. They have low adhesion and generally can not support much weight. They are commonly used on paper. They have common applications as bookmarks, informal notes and office supplies. Brands include Blu-Tack®, a gum-like adhesive, and the adhesive applied to the back of 3M's® Post-It® notes. Typical brand names of such drying adhesives which I have found to perform this function adequately include, but are not limited to, Craft Bond (made by Elmer's Products, Inc.) and Scotch® Craft Stick (made by 3M Corporation).
HOT ADHESIVES. Hot adhesives are adhesives which are applied hot and simply allowed to harden as they cool. These adhesives have become popular for crafts because of their ease of use and the wide range of common materials to which they can adhere and some are suitable for the intended purposes for the wearable wipe unit. Some hot adhesive brands which perform well for the intended purpose include, but are not limited to, Adhesive Tech™ Mini-sticks (made by Adhesive Technologies, Inc.) and Surebonder® All Purpose Stik™ (made by FPC Corp.).
Some brand names of drying adhesives, reactive adhesives, cyanoacryate adhesives, and hot adhesives I have found which are suited for this purpose of adhering a paper or cloth wipe to the retaining component include, but are not limited to, Gorilla Glue (made by Gorilla Glue Company) as a drying adhesive; Metal Epoxy (made by Super Glue Corp.) as a reactive adhesive; Super Glue (made by Super Glue Corp.) as a cyanoacrylate adhesive; Adhesive Tech™ Mini-sticks (made by Adhesive Technologies, Inc.) as a hot adhesive.
Other embodiments include those where the base unit wipe 30A is securely fastened to the retaining member 20 by any suited mechanical fastener, such as, but not limited to, one or more screws 222A, one or more rivets 222C, or one or more staples 222B, as illustrated in
Another feature of the wearable wipe unit 10 is a storage component 34 [herein for administrative convenience only and not by way of limitation referred to as ‘pocket’ ] into which the user may insert personal effects which may be needed by the user and should thereby be readily accessible. This ‘pocket’ 34 can be secured or closed by, but not limited to, hook-and-loop fasteners 22, 32, hook-and-eye fasteners 132, 133, snaps 122, 123, or buttons 522 with a suitable corresponding button hole 523 concealed or visible, or any combination of securing mechanisms herein mentioned [i.e., hook-and-loop, hook-and-eye, snaps, and button-button hole], with either securing mechanism all the way across the opening of the pocket 34 or on any section or portion thereof. The pocket 34 can be located anywhere on the absorbent material. As set forth above, the pocket 34 may be used for carrying small, lightweight items such as money, a car or house key, driver's license, gym card, and a fishing license.
The function of the pocket also is to permit a user to store external objects therein, to secure the pocket 34 in a closed position, to be able to open the pocket 34 to add or remove external objects, and to re-seal the pocket 34; i.e., return it to a sealed and secure or closed position thereby providing the pocket 34 with a releasable and resealable securing means.
Some specific examples of use may include the following:
The wearable wipe unit is not limited to the embodiments described above but all changes and modifications thereto not constituting departures from the spirit and scope of the wearable wipe unit are intended to be included.
While the specific embodiments of the wearable wipe unit have been shown and fully explained above for the purpose of illustration, it should be understood that many other uses will be found for the instant disclosure and many alterations, modifications, and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the wearable wipe unit as defined by the appended claims. Such are intended to be included within the scope of the wearable wipe unit.
This application is a continuation-in-part of nonprovisional application, application Ser. No. 11/097,573, filed on Apr. 1, 2005.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11097573 | Apr 2005 | US |
Child | 12106410 | US |