Artificial Fishing Lure with a Damper Bar
20210386044 ยท 2021-12-16
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A multi-segmented, soft-bodied, artificial fishing lure or swim bait with a natural profile includes one or more damper elements in the joint between the first and second body segments to control the relative movement between the first and second body segments. The artificial fishing lure may also include one or more optional control planes.
Claims
1. An artificial fishing lure comprising: a soft lure body having a lifelike profile and longitudinal, vertical and horizontal axes, the lure body comprising: a first body segment; a second body segment secured to the first body segment with a flexible joint; a tail segment secured to the second body segment with a flexible joint; and one or more damper elements in the joint between the first and second body segments and oriented parallel to the horizontal axis.
2. The artificial lure of claim 1 further comprising: a first control plane inserted into the first body segment the first control plane oriented coplanar to the longitudinal axis and the vertical axis of the lure body; a second control plane inserted through the first body segment, the second control plane oriented coplanar to the longitudinal axis and the horizontal axis of the lure body; a third control plane inserted into the second body segment, the third control plane oriented coplanar to the longitudinal axis of the lure body and the vertical axis of the lure body; a fourth control plane inserted through the tail segment, the fourth control plane oriented coplanar to the longitudinal axis of the lure body and parallel to the vertical axis of the lure body; and a fifth control plane inserted through the tail segment of the two or more segments, the fifth control plane oriented coplanar to the longitudinal axis of the lure body and parallel to the horizontal axis of the lure body.
3. The artificial lure of claim 1 wherein the one or more damper elements are pins.
4. The artificial lure of claim 1 wherein the one or more damper elements are bumpers.
5. The artificial lure of claim 1 wherein the one or more damper elements are bars.
6. An artificial fishing lure comprising: a soft lure body having a lifelike profile and longitudinal, vertical and horizontal axes, the lure body comprising: a first body segment; a second body segment secured to the first body segment with a damper joint; and a tail segment secured to the second body segment with a flexible joint.
7. The artificial lure of claim 6 further comprising: one or more damper elements in the joint between the first and second body segments and oriented parallel to the horizontal axis.
8. The artificial lure of claim 7 wherein the one or more damper elements are pins.
9. The artificial lure of claim 7 wherein the one or more damper elements are bumpers.
10. The artificial lure of claim 7 wherein the one or more damper elements are bars.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONS
[0020]
[0021] Lure or swim bait 10 of
[0022] Restriction of lateral/side to side swing movement between the first body segment 13 and second body segment 14 is controlled by the presence of insertion of one or more damper elements in joint 13A between the first body segment 13 and second body segment 14. Damping elements may have any suitable configuration such as a pin, bar, plane or a molded in bumper such as bumper 8A and 8B, illustrated in
[0023] Alternatively, two or more damper elements such as flexible damper bars 9A and 9B of
[0024] In general, the placement of the one or more damper elements determines movement restriction: more forward damper elements restrict motion to a greater degree than more rearward placements. The forward placement limit is up to actual contact with the edges of the body of the swim baits leading segment. This placement restricts the swing/arc of the following segment to a higher degree than placements farther toward the rear.
[0025] Damper elements placement flush with the edge of the leading segment body such as damper bar 11 in
[0026] Since there is some flex in the actual damper elements and some flex in the body sides of the leading segment of the artificial fishing lure where the damper elements are contacting it; and some flex in the plastic in the area around the insertion point of the damper elements in the taper of the following segment near the leading joint. The total lateral swing movement is a function to the combination of the above listed flexibilities. The listed flexibilities work together, creating a spring action thru the one or more damper elements that returns energy to both the leading and following segments returning them to a neutral or rest position. This return to center propensity is also desirable because it creates more glide or coast in that it returns the swimbait to a more streamlined configuration instead of folding up upon itself as it would with more flex in the segment joint. Stiffer damper elements with less flex or springiness deceases tail arc greater relative to a damper elements that are less stiff placed in an identical insertion position. A rigid bar or plane still produces desirable results due to the flexibilities within the lure body in and around the bar's insertion point and where it contacts the sides of the body on the leading segment as illustrated in
[0027] The benefits of incorporating one or more damping elements into an artificial fishing lure is dependent on the material that comprises the fishing lure. The use of Thermoplastic elastomers (TPE) are suitable for artificial fishing lures with damping elements due to the greater elasticity, tensile strength and shore hardness of TPE. Conventional plastics may also be used but with varying degrees of success.
[0028] Alternatively, a damper element such as damper bar 11A may be inserted into joint space 13A as illustrated in
[0029] In another alternative, artificial fishing lure 10 may be configured with a damping joint 13D as illustrated in
[0030] One or more optional control planes may be frictionally secured in each body segment such as segments 13, 14 or 15 with all the control planes generally coplanar with horizontal axis 23C. For example, first body segment 13 includes front vertical control plane 16 and front horizontal control plane 17. Control planes such as control planes 16 and 17 are generally stiff, clear plastic and may extend from one surface of body 12 or they may extend completely through the body as shown. Any suitable plastic may be selected for control planes, however they should be selected of a material that is generally invisible to fish in the water. Any suitable tool such as a narrow blade knife, razor blade or sharpened piece of plastic may be used to create a slot or opening to accommodate a control plane. The control planes are not sized, shaped or located to simulate the appearance of any natural appendages of any water creature.
[0031] Second or middle body segment 14 includes a middle, dorsal control plane 18 which generally extends from top or dorsal surface 12D of the body although any other suitable orientation may be used. Third or tail segment 15 includes first and second control planes 19 and 20. between vertical and horizontal may be used to generate swimming motions of a crippled baitfish.
[0032] Properly placed and aligned control planes such as planes 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20 function to change the dynamic forces exerted on a swim bait by the water and the fishing line 1 enabling the lure to achieve desirable, natural swimming motions. To generate natural swimming motions at a range of retrieve speeds as well as when sinking, a segmented, straight tailed, soft polymer or plastic swim bait needs one or more control surfaces to limit unnatural movement in its front and middle segment/sections(s) and one or more control surfaces to enhance and control the movement in its tail segment/section(s). The generally stiff and clear control planes such as planes 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20 provide controlled force to the lure body whether the control plane ends are rounded, squared, diamond, rhombus shaped or even forked as illustrated. Rounded control planes such as control planes 19 and 20 are preferred because there is not a corner or sharp edge to cut or nick the line during the cast or retrieve and rounded control planes shed weeds best. Positioning of a hook such as hooks 4, 5 or 5A and any suitable weight such as weight 2 in front segment 13 stabilizes the lure. Any suitable placement location may be used for hooks 4, 5 or 5A. Two alternate configurations are illustrated in
[0033] Generally, control planes 16, 17, 18 limit back and forth, lateral head wobble, limit vertical roll, twist and rocking, and provide overall stability. Tail control surfaces 19 and 20 control movement to the tail segment/section and add stability. Often, additional tail movement stimulation is required due to the limiting of forces/movements by control planes 16, 17, 18 in the front and middle sections which tend to reduce desired tail movements. Tail control surfaces 19 and 20 may oriented at about 45 degrees from vertical and horizontal axes 23A and 23B respectively. Control planes such as control planes 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20 may be oriented at any suitable angle relative to body axes 23A, 23B and 23C.
[0034] An angler may adjust or tune the performance of an individual lure or swim bait at the time of use to optimize the desired motions according to the existing water conditions. For example, small changes can be made to the positions of the control planes as well as the size and location of weights and hook placement and orientation that will enable the angler to fine-tune the lure to achieve the desired swimming motions. These fine adjustments can easily be made by adjusting the length of the control planes by pulling them out or pushing them in further into the body, or pushing them through farther to the opposite side of the bait.
[0035] While the preferred embodiments of the devices and methods have been described in reference to the environment in which they were developed, they are merely illustrative of the principles of the inventions. The elements of the various embodiments may be incorporated into each of the other species to obtain the benefits of those elements in combination with such other species, and the various beneficial features may be employed in embodiments alone or in combination with each other. Other embodiments and configurations may be devised without departing from the spirit of the inventions and the scope of the appended claims.