This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/775,334, filed 2013 Mar. 8 by the present inventor, which is incorporated by reference.
The following is a tabulation of prior art that seems relevant:
This relates to wind chimes having vertical tubes that are struck by a central clapper or striker connected by string to a sail urged by the wind. Wind chimes are usually pleasant and enjoyable, but users might want to make them quiet and secure while leaving them in place. Wind chimes can be noisy and, if they hang near a window, they might prevent persons from sleeping or concentrating. Strong winds can cause the chimes to ring severely, and the tubes can damage the other chime tubes or nearby property. Heavy wind chimes can be difficult to take down and put back up, and doing so can be dangerous. Jewell, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,967,633 (1990), proposes a wind chime clapper support that allows the striker to be moved out of contact with the tubes; however, the tubes can still contact each other and nearby objects, especially in strong winds.
Anecdotally, the present inventor has heard of placing a rubber band around the perimeter of the collection of all the chime tubes—a string could also be tied—and pulling them inward so that they are in constant contact with the striker and each other and cannot swing freely. Doing so forces the tubes to rub the other tubes, possibly damaging them or abrading them over time with the motion of the chime. It also causes the tubes to hang at an angle and may be unsightly. It also is somewhat hard to coordinate the many moving parts so as to place a rubber band around them.
Accordingly, several advantages of one or more aspects are as follows: to provide an item for wind chimes that holds the wind chime's striker and tubes in place so they cannot contact the striker, the other tubes, or nearby property; that can be used if the chime was not manufactured with a silencing feature; that is easy to install on and remove from the chime; that allows heavy chimes to remain hanging in their present location, thus increasing the user's safety; and that retains the chime's aesthetic appeal with the tubes hanging in their original vertical position.
In accordance with one embodiment, a wind chime silencer and protector comprises a flat body or base, a slit that holds the striker in place and secures the base on the chime, and vertical holes in which to insert the wind chime tubes that are then held in place.
The first embodiment of the wind chime silencer and protector is shown in
The base is cut or stamped out of a soft yet somewhat rigid material, such as a thickness of foam or rubber. The wind chime silencer could also be molded using foam or rubber by blow or compression molding. The material is compressible and is flexible so that the wind chime tubes 20 can be pushed past the gripping points 12, which serve as a detent, and into the V-shaped holes 14. The gripping points resume their shape, thus holding the tubes in place. The wind chime silencer material is, thus, soft enough that it does not damage the chime's center string or tubes. The base's material is rigid or thick enough that the portions of it that extend horizontally beyond the edge of the chime's striker 18 do not sag or droop. Viewed from the top, the wind chime silencer's shape could be round or it could correspond to the number of tubes in the wind chime. That is, for a wind chime with eight tubes, the shape could be substantially octagonal; for a chime with six tubes, it could be substantially hexagonal; and so on.
The slit 8 is cut through the base 7 at an angle or tilt from the apex of one of the V-shaped holes 14 toward the center of the base. However, when cutting the slit, a short distance from the terminus of the slit at the center of the base, the base or the cutting device is rotated or twisted such that the slit is perpendicular to or roughly vertical through the base at the terminus of the slit in the center of the base where the chime's middle string 22 rests. This tilted slit allows the user to easily begin to fit the base between two tubes of the wind chime when installing it on the chime. The twisted portion near the terminus of the slit keeps the striker 18 in the center of the chime because the middle string cannot move horizontally, thus preventing the striker from contacting the tubes 20 and keeping the base securely on the chime's middle string. A purely horizontal movement of the base is not sufficient to tilt the base as is required to remove the base from the center of the chime. As such, the tilted slit and the twist near its terminus serve as a means for keeping the striker in place and for securing the base on the wind chime.
To install the chime silencer and protector on the wind chime, the user tilts the base 7 at an angle between two of the wind chime's tubes 20 at a level above the striker 18, aligning the tilted slit 8 with the chime's middle string 22. The user then holds the string 22 and pushes the base toward the middle of the chime sliding the string into the slit 8 as far as it will go, and as the string approaches the terminus of the slit, the user rotates the base 7 to horizontal and rests the base on the top of the striker 18. The user then positions a chime tube 20 at a lead-in gap 10 and pushes the tube past the gripping points 12 and into the V-shaped hole 14. The gripping points grip and secure the tube. For each of the remaining tubes, the user then repeats this step of pushing the tubes past the gripping points into its corresponding hole. The striker 18 and tubes 20 are now held in place. The striker cannot hit any of the tubes; nor can the tubes hit other tubes or nearby property. The chime is now silenced, or greatly quieted, and protected.
To remove the base from the chime, the user reverses the above procedure: pulling the tubes 20 outward and free from the V-shaped holes 14, holding the chime's middle string 22 and pulling the base 7 outward from the middle portion of the chime and rotating the base from horizontal to tilt following the contour of the slit 8.
Operation of the second embodiment is just as for the first embodiment, but the cavity 16 fits around or roughly encompasses the striker 18 to hold it in place.
Operation of the third embodiment is just as for the first embodiment, but the pegs 24 fit around or roughly encompass the striker 18 to hold it in place.
The user installs the base 7 into the middle portion of the chime sliding the chime's middle string 22 through the slit 8 into the large void 26 and fits the base around the circumference of the chime's striker 18 so that the groove 28 fits along the striker's edge. The user then fastens the two ends of the base to each other by attaching the matching hook-and-loop fasteners 30 so that the base grips the striker. The user then positions a tube 20 at a lead-in gap 10 and pushes the tube past the gripping points 12 and into the hole 14, which grips and secures the tube. The user then repeats this step for the remaining tubes. The striker 18 and tubes 20 are now held in place and cannot hit any of the other pieces or nearby property.
The user slides the base 7 into the middle portion of the chime between the tubes, slipping the chime's middle string 22 into the slit 8, and resting the base onto the striker 18. The user places each chime tube 20 in its respective partial V-shaped hole 32, then takes the long strand 34, wraps it around the outside portion of all the tubes, and attaches the end of the strand 38 to the strand itself with the hook-and-loop pair of fasteners 36. As the strand is made snug, it pulls all the tubes inward. When the strand is attached, the tubes are held secure in their respective partial V-shaped holes 32 and cannot touch other tubes or the chime's striker.
The user slides the base 7 into the middle portion of the chime between the tubes, slipping the chime's middle string 22 into the slit 8, and resting the base onto the striker 18. The user places each chime tube 20 in its respective partial hole 32, then takes a stretchy cord 40, leads it around the outside portion of a chime tube, then slips the cord over a peg 44 on the base on the opposite side of the partial hole, thus securing the tube in the partial hole by pulling it inward. The user then repeats the attachment of the stretchy cord around each remaining tube.
Accordingly, the reader will see that at least one embodiment of the wind chime silencer and protector provides more protection and that it is easily installed on and removed from the wind chime.
Although the description above contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the embodiments but as merely providing illustrations of some of several embodiments. For example, the base could have other shapes such as circular or polygonal; the base profile could be rounded or have shapes other than flat; the lead-in gaps and gripping points could have other shapes; the V-shaped holes could have other shapes, such as to fit wind chime tubes that are square rather than round; the slit could have other angles or it could be cut to have a zig-zag, curl, or detent near its terminus to further impede the striker from sliding out of place from the center; the hook-and-loop patches could be longer than pictured or be replaced by snaps, plastic side-release clips, or other attaching devices; the strand could be a string with a loop at its terminus that would slide onto a hook or peg; the strand and pegs or hooks could be attached to the top or bottom of the base; the size of the base could be much smaller such that the partial vertical holes are not very pronounced and the perimeter has merely a small undulating wave shape; the base could have a small hole drilled through it that allows the user to hang it on a nail or peg when it is not in place on a chime; the base could have instructions, identification, or other text printed, engraved, molded, or embossed on its flat surfaces, and so on.
Thus, the scope of the embodiments should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
864461 | Gibbs | Aug 1907 | A |
D250455 | Mohrhauser | Dec 1978 | S |
D279873 | Neely | Jul 1985 | S |
D285669 | Brockmann | Sep 1986 | S |
4854214 | Lowe | Aug 1989 | A |
4967633 | Jewell, Jr. | Nov 1990 | A |
D324000 | Kvistad | Feb 1992 | S |
D332924 | Schutze | Feb 1993 | S |
5450779 | Yancy | Sep 1995 | A |
5648624 | Smith | Jul 1997 | A |
5744736 | Chang | Apr 1998 | A |
5980056 | West | Nov 1999 | A |
D420613 | Williams | Feb 2000 | S |
6604691 | Thomas et al. | Aug 2003 | B1 |
7485788 | Fennell et al. | Feb 2009 | B2 |
20040083876 | Maegli et al. | May 2004 | A1 |
20070019404 | Chen | Jan 2007 | A1 |
20140352519 | Schmidt | Dec 2014 | A1 |