TIRE BAR AND METHOD OF USING THE TIRE BAR TO UNSTICK A VEHICLE
20210178810 ยท 2021-06-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60B15/266
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60B2900/721
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60B2900/551
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A tire bar having an elongated body 11. A traction section 12 is disposed at a first end of the elongated body 11. The traction section 12 is configured to be mounted over a tire tread on a vehicle wheel. The traction section 12 has an inner surface 14 configured to contact the treads of a wheel and an outer traction surface 2 configured to contact a driving surface. The inner surface 14 opposes the outer traction surface 2. A lug contact section 16 has a lug connector 1 configured to contact at least one lug nut on a wheel. The lug contact section 16 is configured to be movable along a length of the elongated body 11 to vary a distance between the lug section 16 and the traction section 12. A locking structure 4 is configured to lock the lug contact section 16 at a position on the elongated body 11. A method of unsticking a vehicle by rotating a wheel having the tire bar connected to the wheel.
Claims
1. A tire bar comprising: an elongated body; a traction section at a first end of the elongated body and extending from a surface of the elongated body, the traction section is configured to be mounted over a tire tread on a vehicle wheel, the traction section has an inner surface configured to contact the treads of a wheel and an outer traction surface configured to contact a driving surface, the inner surface opposing the outer traction surface; and a lug contact section comprising at least one lug connector configured to contact at least one lug nut on a wheel, the lug contact section is configured to be movable along a length of the elongated body to vary a distance between the lug contact section and the traction section.
2. The tire bar according to claim 1, further comprising a locking structure configured to lock the lug contact section at a position on the elongated body.
3. The tire bar according to claim 1, wherein the traction section has a thickness between the inner surface and the outer traction surface to lift the vehicle.
4. The tire bar according to claim 1, wherein the elongated body defines a cavity along the length of the elongated body.
5. The tire bar according to claim 1, wherein the inner surface is a concave, curved shape.
6. The tire bar according to claim 1, wherein the traction section is biased towards the lug contact section, and as the tire compresses the traction section moves towards the lug contact section and when the tire decompresses the traction section moves away from the lug section.
7. The tire bar according to claim 1, wherein the traction section extends from the elongated body substantially 90 degrees for a length of 1 to 16 inches and has a thickness of 1 to six inches.
8. The tire bar according to claim 1, further comprising a movable joint mounting the traction section to the elongated body, and the traction section being foldable into a storage position and an extended position.
9. The tire bar according to claim 7, further comprising a stop configured to stop the traction section in an extended position about 90 degrees from the elongated body.
10. The tire bar according to claim 1, wherein the lug contact section comprises two lug connectors.
11. The tire bar according to claim 10, wherein the lug contact section comprises two parts that can be locked together in different positions to provide different distances between the two lug connectors.
12. The tire bar according to claim 1, wherein the tie bar is configured to solely mount on the wheel by contact with the lug by the lug contact section and the inner surface of the traction section contacting the tire tread of the vehicle wheel so that the tire bar can be simply slipped on and off the vehicle wheel.
13. A method of unsticking a vehicle comprising: providing a tire bar comprising an elongated body, a traction section at a first end of the elongated body and extending from a surface of the elongated body, the traction section is configured to be mounted over a tire tread on a vehicle wheel, the traction section has an inner surface configured to contact the treads of a wheel and an outer traction surface configured to contact a driving surface, the inner surface opposing the outer traction surface, a lug contact section comprising at least one lug connector configured to contact at least one lug nut on a wheel, the lug contact section is configured to be movable along a length of the elongated body to vary a distance between the lug section and the traction section; adjusting a distance between the lug contact section and the traction section; attaching the lug contact section to at least one lug nut on a vehicle wheel and attaching the inner surface of the traction section to a tire tread on the wheel; and rotating the wheel so that the traction section contacts a driving surface and moves the vehicle.
14. The method according to claim 13, further comprising locking the lug contact section in a location on the elongated body using a locking structure.
15. The method according to claim 13, further comprising rotating the wheel to lift the vehicle by a distance between the inner surface and the outer traction surface.
16. The method according to claim 13, further comprising a movable joint mounting the traction section to the elongated body, and the traction section being foldable into a storage position and an extended position, the method further comprising extending the traction from a storage position to the extended position before mounting the tire bar on the vehicle wheel.
17. The method according to claim 13, wherein the lug contact section comprising first and second lug connectors, and the method further comprising contacting the first lug connector to a first lug nut on the wheel and contacting the second lug connector to a second lug nut on the wheel.
18. The method according to claim 17, wherein the lug contact section comprises two parts and the method comprises adjusting a distance between the two lug connectors and then locked together the two parts of the lug contact section.
19. The method according to claim 13, wherein the traction section extends from the elongated body substantially 90 degrees for a length of 1 to 16 inches and has a thickness of 1 to six inches.
20. The method according to claim 13, wherein the tie bar is solely mounted on the wheel by contact with the lug by the lug contact section and the inner surface of the traction section contacting the tire tread of the vehicle wheel so that the tire bar can be simply slipped on and off the vehicle wheel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0041] The invention will now be explained with reference to the attached non-limiting drawings.
[0042]
[0043]
[0044] The traction section 12 can be foldable for easier storage of the tire bar. As shown in
[0045] The outer traction surface 2 preferably contains a surface that enhances traction to the driving surface 30, such as grooves, ridges, spikes, studs, paddles, treads, or any other desired traction enhancing structure. The driving surface 30 can be a road, dirt, mud, gravel, sand or any other surface that vehicle can drive on.
[0046] The traction section 12, elongated body 11 and lug contact section 16 can be any desired size. The elongated body 11 should be a length to provide the lug connector 1 to connect to a lug 5 and the inner surface 14 to contact the treads of the wheel 24. Examples of suitable lengths for the elongated body 11 are from about 6 inches to about 4 feet, preferably about 6 inches to about 2 feet for passenger vehicles and about 10 inches to about 3 feet for trucks and busses. Preferably, a length 20 of the traction section 12 is about the same thickness (width) of the wheel 24 or less, as shown in
[0047] The tire bar can be formed from any suitable materials, such as metals, rubbers, plastics, composites, and polymers.
[0048] As shown in the Figs., the lug connector 1 can be in the shape of a cylinder having an opening that fits over and around a lug 5. The inside surface of the lug connector 1 can be shaped as desired, such as circular (in the cylinder shown in the drawings), square, triangular, hexagon or any other shape, including a socket. If desired, the lug connector 1 can utilize the quick disconnect tool to connect the tire bar to a lug nut, which is described in my previous U.S. Pat. No. 10,343,452, the completed disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. The lug connector 1 can be formed of a rigid material, such as plastic, polymer, metals, or composites, and have an inner surface formed from a deformable material, such as rubber, to fit snuggly to a lug nut 5 on the wheel 24, i.e. the deformable material conforms at least partially to the shape of the lug nut 5.
[0049] Preferably, the lug contact section comprises two lug connectors 1 as shown in the Figs. so that the tire bar can be mounted to two lug nuts 5. When there are two or more lug connectors 1, different sized lug contact sections 16 having different distances between the lug connectors 1 can be provided to fit different lug nut patterns, such as those shown in
[0050] The tire bar can be used to unstick a vehicle stuck in mud, gravel, sand, snow, ice, loose ground or other driving surfaces. The tire bar can easily be installed on a vehicle wheel 24 as shown in
[0051] Once the tire bar is installed on the wheel 24, the wheel 24 need only be rotated, such as by a vehicle engine, so that when the outer traction surface 12 contacts the driving surface 30 as shown in
[0052] An example of a suitable locking structure 4 is shown
[0053] Another example of a suitable locking structure 4 is shown in
[0054] While a cavity 3 and locking nut 4 is shown and described other types of mechanisms can be used to adjust the distance between the lug contact section 16 and traction section 12. For example, a spring 40 can be used to bias the lug contact section 16 towards the traction section 12 and during installation the lug contact section 16 can be pulled away from the traction section 12 until a desired length is achieved and after installation the spring 40 will provide tension on the luge contact section 16 towards the traction section 12, which is shown in
[0055]
REFERENCE NUMBERS
[0056] 1 Lug connector [0057] 2 Outer traction surface [0058] 4 Locking structure [0059] 5 Lug [0060] 6 4 Lug wheel [0061] 7 6 Lug wheel [0062] 8 5 Lug wheel [0063] 9 Locking bolt threads [0064] 10 Threads inside locking nut 8 [0065] 11 Elongated body [0066] 12 Traction section [0067] 14 Inner surface configured to contact treads [0068] 16 Lug contact section [0069] 16a First part of contact section [0070] 16b Second part of contact section. [0071] 18 Lug contact section locking bolt [0072] 19 Locking bolt nut [0073] 20 Length traction section extends [0074] 21 Lug contact section nut [0075] 24 Vehicle wheel [0076] 25 Treads [0077] 26 No gap [0078] 28 Gap [0079] 30 Driving surface [0080] 40 Spring [0081] 50 Movable joint [0082] 51 Holes in elongated body 11 [0083] 52 Joint bolt for movable joint [0084] 54 Joint nut [0085] 56 Stop [0086] 57 Stop
[0087] While the claimed invention has been described in detail and with reference to specific embodiments thereof, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that various changes and modifications can be made to the claimed invention without departing from the spirit and scope thereof. For example, while a collar 20 is shown in the drawings, other structures to close and open the detents 14 can be used.