Single-arm workout body conditioning machine
11065501 · 2021-07-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
A63B2220/833
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B21/078
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B2071/009
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B21/00061
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B21/4037
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B2071/065
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B2220/58
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B23/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B21/153
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B24/0062
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B71/0622
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A63B21/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B21/078
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B24/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B23/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
An exercise machine allows a user to perform a variety of resistance exercises with adjustable resistance levels. The machine is made up of an arm, a user platform, a horizontal base, an adjustable counterweight arrangement, a pull rod, a drive chain system, sprockets, shafts, adjustable fan, a slip bearing, a recoiler, a plurality of wheels, a drive chain system housing, a user back support, a user cable grip, and a circuit-breaking sensitive rubber mat. When the arm is moved upwards (by a user) the pull rod attached to a drive chain initiates the drive chain system rotation. The drive chain system rotation includes an adjustable weight fan that creates resistance to the arm's upper movement through inertia. The adjustable counterweight arrangement determines the arm drop speed and the arrangement has multiple positions. Other variants include a plurality of electronic encoders.
Claims
1. A single-arm workout body conditioning machine comprising: a padded arm connected to an adjustable counterweight system; a pull rod attached to the padded arm and to a drive train system having an adjustable weighted resistance fan; a recoiler connected to both the padded arm and a drive chain system housing; a horizontal base connected to the drive chain system housing and to a user platform; a plurality of wheels attached to the drive chain system housing; a user back support attached to the drive chain system housing; a user cable grip attached to the user platform; and a rubber mat mounted on top of the user platform.
2. The machine of claim 1, wherein the drive chain system includes a plurality of sprockets, and a plurality of shafts.
3. The machine of claim 2, wherein the adjustable weighted resistance fan is configured to accept different sprocket sizes and fan masses.
4. The machine of claim 2, wherein the adjustable weighted resistance fan includes a slip bearing configured to disengage a fan shaft to cease the adjustable weighted resistance fan rotation.
5. The machine of claim 1, wherein the recoiler consists of: a cable attachment; and a housed spring.
6. The machine of claim 1, wherein the rubber mat has an integrated circuit configured to break when compressed and decompressed.
7. The machine of claim 1, wherein the machine further comprises: a plurality of electronic encoders; and an electronic user monitor; wherein the electronic user monitor is configured to receive data from the electronic encoders.
8. The machine of claim 7, wherein the data from the plurality of electronic encoders includes force in watts recorded from an encoder on an axel from the adjustable weighted resistance fan.
9. The machine of claim 7, wherein one electronic encoder from the plurality of electronic encoders is at an arm pivot point is a rotary linear sensor magnetic motion encoder.
10. The machine of claim 7, wherein an electronic encoder at a fan axel is an encoder-sensor base unit.
11. The machine of claim 10, wherein the electronic encoder is configured to collect one-way rotational data.
12. The machine of claim 1, wherein the adjustable counterweight system includes a plurality of positional slots configured to adjust the resistance of the padded arm to being raised.
13. The machine of claim 12, wherein the plurality of positional slots includes a first positional selector configured to reduce the downward force of the padded arm.
14. The machine of claim 12, wherein the plurality of positional slots includes a second positional selector configured to allow fine adjustment of the downward force of the padded arm.
15. The machine of claim 12, wherein the plurality of positional slots includes a third positional selector configured to increase the downward force of the padded arm.
16. A single-arm workout body conditioning machine, comprising: a horizontal base; a user platform at an angle greater than zero to the horizontal base; a single arm above the user platform; an adjustable counterweight arrangement attached to the single arm; a drive chain system having an adjustable weight fan; a pull rod having a first end attached to the single arm and a second end attached to the drive chain system; a recoiler attached to the single arm; and an on-off function, wherein the recoiler is configured to automatically return the single arm to a rest position of the single arm, wherein the adjustable weight fan is configured to create resistance to upward movement of the arm, and wherein the on-off function is configured to switch the single-arm workout body conditioning machine between a first configuration for plyometric exercise and a second configuration for isometric exercise.
17. The single-arm workout body conditioning machine of claim 16, wherein the adjustable counterweight arrangement comprises at least three selectable positions.
18. The single-arm workout body conditioning machine of claim 17, wherein the adjustable counterweight arrangement comprises five selectable positions.
19. The single-arm workout body conditioning machine of claim 16, further comprising at least one electronic encoder configured to collect force resistance data at a predetermined location.
20. The single-arm workout body conditioning machine of claim 19, wherein the at least one electronic encoder comprises a fan encoder located at an axle of the adjustable weight fan, wherein the fan encoder is configured to measure force initiated on the on the adjustable weight fan.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The novel features of the present invention will be best understood from the accompanying drawings, taken in conjunction with the accompanying description, in which similarly-referenced characters refer to similarly-referenced parts, and in which:
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
(8) Referring now to
(9) When a user applies an upward force to the arm 102 from the rest position of arm 102, the connected pull rod 108 and recoiler 126 move upward. During the same motion, on the opposite side of the arm's pivot point 148, the adjustable counterweight arrangement 106 moves downward.
(10) Upon removal of the upward applied force to the arm 102, the recoiler 126 and pull rod 108 exert an inertial force to return the arm 102 to its rest position. Depending on the desired return speed of arm 102, the user can make adjustments to the position of the adjustable counterweight arrangement 106 using the counterweight positional selectors 107. These selectors 107 can determine if the arm 102 drops fast (heavier) or slow (lighter). The function of the counterweight arrangement 106 is to determine the force of the arm 102 when the arm 102 drops on its downward return to the rest position from its fully extended position. In preferred embodiments, the positional selectors 107 are apertures, such as pinholes, and the counterweight arrangement 106 is held in place by a removable pin 109.
(11) Some embodiments of the counterweight arrangement 106 include at least three optional positional selectors 107. When the adjustable counterweight 106 is positioned toward the back, furthest from the front of the arm 102, the arm 102 is balanced to be lighter in weight at the user pad 103. This position reduces the downward force of the arm 102 so the decline downward is slower and easier for the user to control.
(12) In an embodiment with three positional selectors, a second position for the adjustable counterweight 106 is a middle positional selector. This position makes the downward force of the arm 102 at the user pad 103 or handle end adjustable. In this position, the load and speed of the return drop of the arm 102 can be finely adjusted with a weights or weights 105.
(13) In the last position, the adjustable counterweight 106 can be positioned forward, toward the arm 102. This position makes the downward force of the arm 102 at the user pad 103 or handle end heavier, resulting in a faster return drop of the arm 102.
(14) More particularly, as illustrated in
(15) By placing the counterweight arrangement 106 in a middle position or a forward position, the user is able to create resistance against raising arm 102 from the time the user begins raising the arm 102. This resistance increases as the user pushes arm 102 further upwards, decreasing the horizontal element of the user's force against weight 105 and increasing the vertical element of that force.
(16) Some preferred embodiments contain more than three positional selectors 107. For example,
(17) The outside of the machine 100 has a protective housing 134 that protects the internal machinery systems, including the drive chain system 110 (shown in
(18) Attached to the top of the horizontal base 122 is the user platform 104, and the platform 104 is permanently set at an angle of fifteen degrees with respect to horizontal base 122. Affixed atop the user platform 104 is a circuit breaking sensitive rubber mat 152 further discussed below. At the highest point of the user platform 104, there is an attached user cable grip 138. Above the user cable grip 138, a user back support 136 is attached laterally to the drive chain system 110 (shown in
(19) The arm 102 and platform 104 configuration allows for different exercise combinations for both the upper and lower body. Resistance training exercises on the machine 100 will strengthen muscles and connective tissue, develop speed, quicken reaction time, and improve cardiovascular conditioning.
(20) The machine 100 also enables a user to perform explosive exercises, such as plyometrics, safely against the inertia of the adjustable fan 116 (shown in
(21) Referring now to
(22) The drive chain and sprocket system 110 have a connected adjustable fan 116 with a resistance mass. The fan 116, a preferred embodiment of which has a resistance mass of twelve pounds, has an inertial force that creates resistance to the upper movement of arm 102. The sprocket sizes, sprocket ratio, and adjustable fan 116 resistance mass can be adjusted to suit the particular user and training goals.
(23) Further, the drive chain and sprocket system 110 includes a directional slip bearing 124 on the shaft 114 of adjustable fan 114. The directional slip bearing 124 rotates in one direction when the arm 102 is lifted up. When shaft's rotation is reversed (i.e., the arm 102 moves downward towards the rest position), the slip bearing 124 disengages the shaft 114 so that the adjustable fan 116 does not spin. In some alternative embodiments, the drive chain system 110 is replaced with a traditional rubber belt system, as commonly used in art.
(24) In some preferred embodiments, an electronic user monitor 120 is attached to the top of the user back support 136. The electronic user monitor 120 displays readings reflecting performance on fundamental exercise movements performed on the machine 100. Specifically, three exemplary measurements are presented.
(25) The first exemplary measurement is the force in Watts from a fan 116 axle encoder 146. The first measurement reflects the force initiated on the fan 116 when the arm 102 is lifted with the fan 116 engaged. This measurement displays a quantitively dynamic strength force and allows for monitoring of concise strength conditioning.
(26) Another measurement is recorded from an arm 102 pivot point encoder 150 located at the axle of the main pivot point of arm 102. This measurement reflects the force and speed that the user is applying to the arm 102, and the arm 102 applies to the user. In particular, the arm 102 force can be read as the degree of movement per second during the drop of the arm 102. The measurement may also read to show a number representative of the force of the arm 102 dropping. For example, in free fall without the adjustable fan 116, the number representative of the force can be “10.”
(27) This measurement is useful for explosive and jumping exercises when the users free leave the mat 152 surface of the platform 104. Further, the measurement will give a precise indicator of the speed and agility of the user based on the elapsed time on the mat 152 surface.
(28) Referring now to
(29) In preferred embodiments, an encoder location is at the adjustable fan 116 axle 146. When the fan 116 is on, one-way rotational data is collected by the fan axle 146 encoder. In a preferred embodiment, the fan axle encoder is an RLS™ encoder-sensor base unit; the use of a similar device configured for integration on electric motors or other devices known in the art for shaft position and velocity measurements is fully contemplated herein. As previously mentioned, this measurement can be a reading of the fan 116 rotational force in watts.
(30) The final exemplary measurement displayed on the electronic user monitor is from the circuit breaking sensitive rubber mat 152. When a user compresses and decompresses on the mat 152, the circuit inside the mat 152 closes and different measurements can be recorded, such as the user's contact time on the mat 152 surface during an exercise. In a preferred embodiment, this reading is the time of the user on the surface in one-hundredths of a second. An example of a suitable wired pressure mat 150 is United Security Products™ (USP) 900 series pressure mat.
(31) Additional embodiments include similar sensors in the base 122, the cable grip 138, the arm 102, the user pad 103, and the various combinations thereof, measuring the user's contact time and, in some embodiments, the amount of pressure on the various components of the machine 100, and enabling the display of the measurements or data derived from the measurements on monitor 120. Measurement and display of other data by means of sensors and monitor 120, including but not limited to the user's heart rate, is fully contemplated herein.
(32) An isolated drive chain system 110 is displayed in
(33) Referring now to
(34) Moving on to
(35) A shaft 114 in some embodiments of the Freewheel Sprocket Shaft Assembly 156 includes a plurality of pillow blocks. Additionally, the shaft 114 can consist of mild steel angle brackets configured for mounting within the drive chain system 110 housing.
(36) The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and similar references in the context of describing the invention (especially in the context of the following claims) is to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The terms “comprising,” “having,” “including,” and “containing” are to be construed as open-ended terms (i.e., meaning “including, but not limited to,”) unless otherwise noted. Recitation of any ranges of values herein is merely intended to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (e.g., “such as”) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate the invention and does not pose a limitation on the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to the practice of the invention.
(37) Several embodiments of this invention are described herein, including the best mode known to the inventors for carrying out the invention. Variation of those several embodiments may become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading the foregoing description. The inventors expect skilled artisans to employ such variations as appropriate, and the inventors intend for the invention to be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein. Accordingly, this invention includes all modifications and equivalents of the subject matter recited in the claims appended hereto as permitted by applicable law. Moreover, any combination of the above-described elements in all possible variations thereof is encompassed by the invention unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context.
(38) While there have been shown what are presently considered to be preferred embodiments of the present invention, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made herein without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.