The present invention relates to a prior application by the same inventor. Said prior application was filed on Jun. 30, 2005, having application Ser. No. 11/160,621.
The present invention relates generally to an improved design and construction of fitness training equipment wherein users can select the desired amount of weight from a stack of weight plates.
Selectable amount of weight is commonly found on various fitness training equipments. A popular method is by using a central stem going down the center holes of a stack of weight plates, wherein an insertion pin can be inserted through a hole on the side of each weight plate and through the central stem, forming the point of pick-up when users are engaging in exercising, as shown in
This type of popular weight selection system has at least three problems plaguing the industry:
a. The hole on the side of each weight plate has to match (be aligned) with the correspondent hole on the stem. Due to the accumulated thickness error of the weight plates, however, the top one or two holes on the weight plates oftentimes do not match up with the top one or two holes on the central stem. This poses a problem for users when insertion of the insertion pin is taking place at the top portion of the weight stack, unless the weight plates are machined to a very tight tolerance, which requires costlier production to achieve such precision.
b. When the central stem is lifted up, the bottom of the central stem will oftentimes have a lateral offset from the top of the remaining unselected weight stack, interrupting the smooth and successful of restoration of the central stem (insertion back down) into the weight stack, as the bottom tip of the stem will sometimes get suck on the surface of a weight stack, instead of going through the center hole of the weight plates.
c. Insertion pin gets lost easily. Even though insertion pins are tied to a cable, as many gyms customarily do it this way, some cables are cut to take away the insertion pins.
The present invention uses an up-down sliding block as the selection means, plus an additional belt-driven dial, to build on a link-connector system as disclosed in prior application, to solve the above-stated problems.
The present invention provides a link-connector mechanism, instead of a central stem, to work as the weight selection system and completely avoid the issue of accumulated thickness errors that plagued the industry.
Moreover, present invention contains a selection dial that allows the intuitive use of “dialing into” the correct weight as desired by users, resulting in simply and safe use of weight training equipment.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate the preferred embodiments of the invention and together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
A brief description of the drawings is as follows:
In
Within each weight plate, a guide-slot 106 is formed, so that a G-pin 116, attached to select pin 110, can maintain the rotational stability of select pin 110.
It can be seen that said triangular tip 233 of moving block 230 can slide through each T-pin 120 of each select pin 110, so that the pulling spring 115 gets extended, and the T-pin 120 is then “parked” on the park-slot 231, resulting in that select pin 110 to be disengaged from a link-connector 105, as shown in
Wedge pin 151 and safety pin 152 form a bevel-gear type contact with each other, as shown in
Except for the topmost weight plate, all the wedge pins 151 will get push downward, which then cause safety pin 152 to slide inwards, compressing said pushout spring 157, and “unlocking” moving block 230.
When the selected weight plates settled down on top of the engaged plate (when no force is being exerted on the weigh training equipment), the wedge pin 151 is pressed down, causing the safety pin 152 to disengage from the hole of the moving block 230, resulting in the moving block 230 to be free for moving up or down, for purpose of selecting weight.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080305936 A1 | Dec 2008 | US |