MOBILE DEVICE CONNECTION APPARATUS
20230223978 · 2023-07-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
A45C2011/002
HUMAN NECESSITIES
H04M1/0202
ELECTRICITY
A45C11/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A45C11/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A mobile device connection apparatus, method and system is disclosed which allows a user to physically connect or tether, without the use of adhesive, a mobile device with a case to a user, surface, or structure. The mobile device connection apparatus comprises multiple layers of materials to create a connection point for mobile devices, such as mobile phones, which is compatible with devices with a case, reusable, and robust and prevents mobile devices from being damaged, lost, and stolen. Further the mobile device connection apparatus allows a user to interact with their phone in new ways.
Claims
1. A mobile device connection apparatus comprising: a body piece folded on itself to form a first layer of material and a second layer of material; a connector attached to the body piece; wherein the connector comprises a loop of material.
2. The mobile device connection apparatus of claim 1, wherein the connector is sandwiched at least partially between the first and second layers of material.
3. The mobile connection device of claim 1, further comprising: a third layer of material comprising a temporary adhesion property to removably adhere the mobile device connection apparatus to a mobile electronic device and/or a case for the mobile electronic device.
4. The mobile connection device of claim 1, wherein the loop between the opposing ends, the opposing ends secured between the first layer of material and the second layer of material, the loop external to the body piece and extending from the body piece parallel to the length of the base and having a width less than the width of the base, the body piece positionable at least partially between a mobile electronic device and a case for the mobile electronic device with the loop extending through an aperture of the case for a charging port of the mobile electronic device.
5. A mobile device connection apparatus comprising: a body piece folded on itself to form a loop, the body piece comprising a base having a length and a width, the loop extending from the base parallel to the length of the base and having a width less than the width of the base, wherein the body piece is positionable at least partially between a mobile electronic device and a case for the mobile electronic device, with the loop extending through an aperture of the case for a charging port of the mobile electronic device, and wherein the width of the base is greater than a diameter of the aperture to limit removal of the body piece through the aperture of the case; wherein the connector comprises a loop of material.
6. The mobile device connection apparatus of claim 5, wherein the connector is sandwiched at least partially between the first and second layers of material.
7. A mobile device connection apparatus comprising: a body piece folded on itself to form a first layer of material and a second layer of material, the body piece comprising a base having a length and a width; a strengthening material comprising opposing ends and folded to define a loop between the opposing ends, the opposing ends secured between the first layer of material and the second layer of material, the loop external to the body piece and extending from the body piece parallel to the length of the base and having a width less than the width of the base, the body piece positionable at least partially between a mobile electronic device and a case for the mobile electronic device with the loop extending through an aperture of the case for a charging port of the mobile electronic device, wherein the width of the base is greater than a diameter of the aperture to limit removal of the body piece through the aperture of the case.
8. The mobile connection apparatus of claim 7, further comprising: a third layer of material disposed or formed on the base, the third layer of material comprising an electrostatic cling property to removably adhere the base to the mobile electronic device and/or the case for the mobile electronic device.
9. The mobile device connection apparatus of claim 7, further comprising an attachment device connected to the connector.
10. The mobile device connection apparatus of claim 9, wherein the attachment device comprises a carabiner and/or a lanyard.
11. The mobile device connection apparatus of claim 7, further comprising an adhesive holding the body piece in the folded configuration.
12. The mobile device connection apparatus of claim 7, wherein the third layer of material resists lateral movement of the body piece in relation to the mobile electronic device while being held to the mobile electronic device by the case.
13. The mobile device connection apparatus of claim 7, wherein the third layer of material is composed of cling vinyl.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0042] A mobile device connection apparatus (also referred to as an attachment device), method, and system will now be described with references in
[0043] Turning to
[0044] The first material 116 of the first layer 110 and the second layer 112 is a material that is flexible, resistant to tearing, resistant to shearing, water resistant, and thin. Synthetic materials are ideal for this use, one such material that is ideal comprises high-density polyethylene fiber material, such as the material Tyvek® or Kevlar® from DuPont™. Another ideal material comprises thermoplastic polymer resins like PETG (Polyethylene terephthalate). The first material 116 thickness should not be more than 0.305 mm, with an ideal material thickness of 0.127 mm. Next, a second material 118 comprises the third layer 114. The third layer 114 and the first layer 110 sandwich, or are located on either side of, the second layer 112. The second material 118 is different than first material 116. Ideally the second material 118 comprises a synthetic plastic polymer such as polyvinyl chloride, which provides a property of temporary adhesion or “cling” (suction) between the second material 118 and the back surface of the mobile device. The cling or suction property provides the second material 118 to ability to removably adhere to an often smooth device back surface without the requirement for adhesion to the mobile device with an adhesive, such as tape or glue, thereby avoiding issues such as leftover adhesive material residue on the device, or marring of the device if apparatus 100 is removed from the device. A common name for this type of material is “window cling material” or “cling vinyl.” The second material 118 will have a thickness of not more than 0.305 mm. Further, although the surface of the second material 118 could continue to extend beyond the square or rectangular shape of apparatus 100 to cover the outside surface of loop 102, the second material 118 will ideally end where loop 102 begins on the back edge of the apparatus 100. First material 116 may be any color or opacity, but ideally it is opaque and colored white or black. Second material 118 can also be any color or opacity but is ideally clear or translucent.
[0045] First layer 110, second layer 112, and third layer 114 are adhered together by the process of lamination, by an adhesive material, or a combination of both methodologies. In the case of an adhesive, the adhesive may be any permanent or semi-permanent adhesive applied in a layer, such as in a tape format that is at least 0.0254 mm thick. An ideal adhesive would be a double sided permanent acrylic adhesive tape or roll with at least a 0.0761 mm thickness and at least 1116 g/cm (100 oz/in) adhesive value to insure adequate adhesion between the layers and provide a durable and robust apparatus. Further it is most efficient for manufacturing if the same adhesive is used to adhere all layers together, however use of different adhesives is contemplated. The first layer 110 and second layer 112 could be adhered together at their adjoining surfaces 120. The second layer 112 and third layer 114 could be adhered together at their adjoining surfaces 122. Strengthening material 200 is enclosed between first layer 110 and second layer 112 by the process of lamination, adhesive material, or a combination as mentioned above. If adhesive material is used, strengthening material 200 is adhered using the adhesive material to adhere first layer 110 and second layer 112 together by their adjoining surfaces 120.
[0046] The first material 116 and strengthening material 200 provides the strength to support the weight and force of a load connected to loop 102 as well as some adhesion properties (friction) while second material 118 provides removable adhesion properties to adhere apparatus 100 to the back surface of the mobile device without the need for adhesive, as will be described shortly. Loop 102 provides a means to connect or tether a physical connection to the mobile device and case. Loop 102 provides the strength to resist failure from at least the weight of a 0.907 kg weight hanging directly from loop 102 for at least five minutes. This lower limit accommodates at least a multiple of the minimum force load likely to be applied to the apparatus, the dead weight of an !phone® which, version (4, 4S, 5, 5S, 5c, 6, 6S, 6 Plus, 6S Plus, SE, 7, or 7 Plus) weighs (without the case) about to 138 grams or less without any directional force applied. The apparatus is designed to be strong and robust, but not so strong as to disallow breakage by a user in an emergency. One example is a situation where a tethered mobile device (tethered by the apparatus) is caught in moving machinery, such as a car, that a user could not forcibly break the apparatus through effort to avoid being pulled into or along with the machinery.
[0047] Referring now to
[0048] Referring now to
[0049] Referring now to
[0050] Further, loop 102 of the apparatus 100 has an ideal width of 10 mm or smaller in order to accommodate the small opening of a mobile device case used to accommodate a cable connected to a cable connection port 126 for recharging or communicating with the device. However the width of loop 102 can be varied to accommodate various connection port 126 widths and likewise a corresponding case opening, thus loop 102 width being smaller or larger than 10 mm. The length of loop 102 can be as short or long as needed to accommodate a user connection means 124 to connect the apparatus 100 to the desired user or surface. An ideal length of loop 102 is between 5 mm and 12 mm to accommodate varying mobile device and case sizes and configurations. Further, the loop length of 10 mm and 12 mm is ideal as it is long enough to be compatible with heavier duty case with thick case walls, such as Otterbox® brand cases, or with waterproof cases, but to also be short enough to avoid inconvenience for the user or extraneous wear on loop 102. It is contemplated loop 102 could be longer, such as to create a way for the user to directly grab or hold their mobile device and case, making it easier to pull the device and case from a pocket, purse, bag, or other similar item.
[0051] The loop is also flexible and thin enough to allow a cable to be plugged into cable connection port 126 while apparatus 100 is attached to the device 132 and case 134 as to not interfere with the cable connection. Further, it is contemplated the loop is configured to accommodate various connection means, such as rings, hooks, carabiners, snaps, and lengths of string, cord, wire, or similar.
[0052] The square or rectangular shape with rounded corners of apparatus 100 is ideally the width of the mobile device 132 and a length of ½ the length of the device 132 and located near the bottom of the device as to allow loop 102 to align with the cable connection port 126 of the device 132. For example, an iPhone® 5s device is 6.35 cm wide by 12.4 cm long. Apparatus 100 for this device would be 6.35 cm wide by 6.2 cm long. However the length of the apparatus 100 can have a width as small as ½.sup.th the width of the mobile device and a length of ¼.sup.th the length of the mobile device and can still hold a 0.907 kg load connected to loop 102 for at least five minutes without failing. The size of apparatus 100 could also be larger, possibly as long and wide as the entire mobile device if desired.
[0053] User connection unit 124 is ideally a ring made of a rigid material, such as metal or plastic, connected to loop 102 and accommodates a further connection to the user, surface anchoring, or structure anchoring. The ring could be any desired size, composition, and type that fits around the width of loop 102 and strong enough to support 0.907 kg hanging weight for at least 5 minutes without failing but it is ideal the outer ring diameter is equal to or smaller than the width of the mobile device port 126 to make installation of the apparatus 100 easier for cases with openings just larger enough for a charge cable or charge port plugs (for waterproof cases). Further, a preferred ring would be a split-ring or closed loop metal jump ring that is 10 mm in outer diameter, 8 mm inner diameter, and is 18 gauge. Further, it is contemplated that user connection units 124 need not be a ring but may directly be any connection type or anchoring type to physically connect an object to a user, such as a retractable tether, string, chain, lanyard, bracelet, leash, or similar, and tied, clipped, hooked, or otherwise fastened to the user by their clothing such as a belt loop, purse, bag, wrist, neck, or other connection point as desired by the user. User connection unit 124 could also connect the device 132 to a surface or structure such as by a suction cup, hook, peg, opening, hole, or other appropriate connection method based on the desired connection surface or structure. An example of a structure could be a tent, building, dwelling, automobile, boat, or other structure a user may want to connect a mobile device to. Further, the user connection unit 124 could be fashioned with a quick release mechanism to allow a quick and easy way to release and re-attach the user connection unit 124 to the user, such as with plastic or metal clips or magnets. In addition the user connection unit 124 could be combined to include multiple user connection units connected in series, such as is shown in
[0054] Referring now to
[0055] Referring now to
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[0059] A method is disclosed to physically secure a mobile device with a case to a user, surface, or structure. The method includes the steps of placing a removable mobile device connection apparatus with a connection point on the inside surf ace of mobile device case, centering the apparatus near an opening of the case so the connection point extends through the case opening; placing the mobile device into the case so the removable mobile device connection apparatus is configured securely without adhesive between the inside of the case and the back surface of the mobile device, with the connection point extending away from the mobile device and case, extending through an opening in the case; and attaching a securing material to the connection point.
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[0065] While attachment devices (also discussed as removable mobile device connection apparatuses) have been described above in terms of specific embodiments, it is to be understood that the attachment devices are not limited to these disclosed embodiments. Many modifications and other embodiments of the attachment devices will come to mind of those skilled in the art to which this disclosure pertains in light of this disclosure, and which are intended to be and are covered by both this disclosure and the appended claims. It is indeed intended that the scope of the attachment devices should be determined by proper interpretation and construction of the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
[0066] The term iPhone® is a registered United State trademark of Apple, Inc. of Cupertino, Calif., USA.
[0067] The terms Samsung®, Samsung Galaxy® are registered United States trademarks of Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., Republic of Korea.
[0068] The term Otterbox® is a registered United States trademark of Otter Products, LLC of Fort Collins, Colo., USA.