Golf Club Head With Binder Jet Printed Lattice Support Structures
20220401799 · 2022-12-22
Inventors
- Brandon D. DeMille (Carlsbad, CA, US)
- Brian Hoffarth (vista, CA, US)
- Dominic LeBlanc (Carlsbad, CA, US)
- William C. Watson (Menifee, CA, US)
- Irina Ivanova (Poway, CA, US)
Cpc classification
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A63B53/0416
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
Golf club components with complex structures such as lattice structures, beam structures, and complex surface-based structures, are described herein. A binder jet machine is used create complex structures within these golf club components to optimize weighting, sound, and performance of golf club heads. These components may be manufactured using a method that includes the steps of designing a golf club head component in CAD using optimization software, printing the component from a powdered material, and then removing excess powder from the component via port holes that extend into an external surface of the component and communicate with interior voids within the component.
Claims
1. A golf club head comprising: a face component; a body component comprising a sole; a crown; an insert with a lattice structure; and a weight, wherein the face component is affixed to the body component and to the crown, wherein the sole comprises a recess, and wherein the lattice structure is compressed within the recess between the sole and the weight.
2. The golf club head of claim 1, wherein the lattice structure comprises a series of interconnected beams, wherein each beam has a circular cross-section, wherein each beam connects to another beam in a repeating pattern, and wherein each end of each beam is connected to at least one other beam.
3. The golf club head of claim 2, wherein the lattice structure comprises a plurality of geometric cells, and wherein at least 25% of the cells of the plurality of cells have identical dimensions.
4. The golf club head of claim 2, wherein the lattice structure comprises a plurality of geometric cells, and wherein at least 25% of the cells of the plurality of cells have a characteristic different from all other cells of the plurality of cells, and wherein the characteristic is selected from the group consisting of size, aspect ratio, skew, and beam diameter.
5. The golf club head of claim 1, wherein the recess extends into an external surface of the sole, and wherein the insert is sized to fit within the recess.
6. The golf club head of claim 5, wherein an external surface of the weight is flush with the external surface of the sole when the insert is compressed within the recess between the weight and the sole.
7. The golf club head of claim 5, further comprising a mechanical fastener, wherein the sole comprises at least one threaded opening sized to receive at least a portion of the mechanical fastener, and wherein the mechanical fastener affixes the weight to the sole.
8. The golf club head of claim 7, wherein the recess is divided by at least one strut, and wherein the at least one threaded opening is disposed within the at least one strut.
9. The golf club head of claim 1, wherein the weight comprises a plurality of through-openings.
10. The golf club head of claim 9, wherein at least a portion of the insert is visible through the through-openings.
11. The golf club head of claim 1, wherein the insert comprises at least one curved surface, and wherein the at least one curved surface contacts the weight.
12. The golf club head of claim 1, wherein the weight does not contact any portion of the body component.
13. The golf club head of claim 1, wherein each of the sole and the crown is composed of a non-metal material selected from the group consisting of plastic and composite, and wherein the face component is composed of a metal material.
14. The golf club head of claim 1, wherein the insert is binder jet printed from a non-metal material, and wherein the lattice structure comprises a plurality of geometric cells selected from the group consisting of simple cubic, body centered cubic, face centered cubic, diamond, Fluorite, octet, truncated cube, truncated octahedron, kelvin cell, isotruss, and Weaire-Phelan.
15. The golf club head of claim 14, wherein the weight comprises a tungsten alloy.
16. A driver-type golf club head comprising: a sole comprising a recess proximate an aft edge; a non-metal crown; a metal face component affixed to the crown and to the sole opposite the aft edge; a binder jet printed insert with a lattice structure; a metal weight comprising a plurality of through-openings; and at least one mechanical fastener, wherein the sole comprises at least one support strut that divides the recess, wherein the at least one support strut comprises at least one threaded opening, wherein the insert comprises at least one curved surface, wherein a portion of the at least one mechanical fastener extends through the weight to engage with at least one threaded opening and affix the weight to the sole, wherein the lattice structure comprises a plurality of non-ordered beams, each of which has a cross-sectional shape selected from the group consisting of circular and elliptical, wherein the lattice structure comprises a plurality of geometric cells comprising voids, a majority of which do not include any material, wherein the insert is compressed within the recess between the sole and the weight, wherein a portion of the insert is visible through at least one of the through-openings in the weight, wherein the at least one curved surface contacts the weight, and wherein no portion of the weight contacts the sole.
17. The driver-type golf club head of claim 16, wherein each of the sole and the crown is composed of a composite material, and wherein the face component is composed of a metal material selected from the group consisting of steel and titanium alloy.
18. The driver-type golf club head of claim 16, wherein the insert is composed of a non-metal material, and wherein the lattice structure comprises a uniform final material density of at least 90%.
19. The driver-type golf club head of claim 16, wherein the weight is composed of a tungsten alloy.
20. The driver-type golf club head of claim 16, wherein the weight is composed of a material selected from the group consisting of titanium alloy, steel, and aluminum alloy.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0061] The present invention is directed to improved methods of printing golf club components and golf club heads, and particularly the use of a binder jet machine to create complicated support structures from various materials that improve the support, mass distribution, and acoustics of the golf club heads, while allowing for the easy removal of unused powder. The present invention is also directed to golf club heads with components that are printed using the methods disclosed herein.
Binder Jet Process
[0062] As illustrated in
[0063] In an optional fifth step 15, a portion of the binder 35 is removed using a debinding process, which may be via a liquid bath or by heating the green part to melt or vaporize the binder. In a sixth step 16, the green part 40 is sintered in a furnace, where, at the elevated temperature, the metal particles repack, diffuse, and flow into voids, causing a contraction of the overall part. As this sintering step 16 continues, adjacent particles eventually fuse together, forming a final part, examples of which (reference characters 140, 250, 350, and 400) are shown in
[0064] Though binder jetting is a powder-based process for additive manufacturing, it differs in key respects from other directed energy powder based systems like DMLS, DMLM, and EBAM. The binder jet process 10 provides key efficiency and cost saving improvements over DMLM, DMLS, and EBAM that makes it uniquely suitable for use in golf club component manufacturing. For example, binder jetting is more energy efficient because it is not performed at extremely elevated temperatures and is a much less time consuming process, with speeds up to one hundred times faster than DMLS. The secondary debinding step 15 and sintering step 16 are batch processes which help keep overall cycle times low, and green parts 40 can be stacked in a binder jet machine 20 in three dimensions because the powder is generally self-supporting during the build process, obviating the requirement for supports or direct connections to a build plate. Therefore, because there is no need to remove beams, members, or ligaments because of length, aspect ratio, or overhang angle requirements, lattice structures can take any form and have a much wider range of geometries than are possible when provided by prior art printing methods.
[0065] The binder jet process 10 also allows for printing with different powdered materials, including metals and non-metals like plastic. It works with standard metal powders common in the metal injection molding (MIM) industry, which has well-established and readily available powder supply chains in place, so the metal powder used in the binder jet process 10 is generally much less expensive than the powders used in the DMLS, DMLM, and EBAM directed energy modalities. The improved design freedom, lower cost and faster throughput of binder jet makes it suitable for individually customized club heads, prototypes, and larger scale mass-produced designs for the general public.
Lattice Structures
[0066] The binder jet process described above allows for the creation of lattice structures, including those with beams that would otherwise violate the standard overhang angle limitation set by DMLM, DMLS, and EBAM. It can also be used to create triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS) and non-periodic or non-ordered collections of beams.
[0067] Compressing or otherwise reducing the size of cells in a section of the lattice increases the effective density and stiffness in those regions. Conversely, expanding the size of the cells is an effective way to intentionally design in a reduction of effective density and stiffness. Effective density is defined as the density of a unit of volume in which a fully dense material may be combined with geometrically designed-in voids, which can be filled with air or another material, and/or with another or other fully dense materials. The unit volume can be defined using a geometrically functional space, such as the lattice cell shown in
[0068] Examples of lattice structures 60 that can be created using the process 10 described above are shown in
[0069] Cell 70 type can change abruptly if different regions of a component need different effective material properties, but size, aspect ratio, skew, beam diameter can then change continuously as distance from the cell type boundary increases. The diameter of the beams 80 may be constant or tapered, and while their cross sections are typically circular, they can also be elliptical like the structural members disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 10,835,789, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety herein. Such structures may take the form of a series of connected tetrahedral cells 70, as shown in
Lattice Applications in Golf Club Heads
[0070] The binder jet process 10 permits manufacturers to take full advantage of generative design and topology optimization results, examples of which are shown in the context of putter heads 100 in
[0071] A first embodiment of the present invention is shown in
[0072] The puck 140 is printed using the binder jet process described above from at least one material with a third density that is lower than the first and second densities, and comprises one or more lattice structures 60 that fill the volume of the sole recess 117, freeing up discretionary mass to be used in high-density weighting at other locations on the putter head 100, preferably at the heel and toe edges and/or the rear edge 115. The materials from which the puck 140 may be printed include plastic, nylon, polycarbonate, polyetherimide, polyetheretherketone, and polyetherketoneketone. These materials can be reinforced with fibers such as carbon, fiberglass, Kevlar®, boron, and/or ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene, which may be continuous or long relative to the size of the part or the putter, or very short.
[0073] Other putter head 100 embodiments are shown in
[0074] In each of these embodiments, the weights 130, 135 preferably are made of a higher density material than the body 110, though in other embodiments, they may have an equivalent density or lower density. Moving weight away from the center improves the mass properties of the putter head 100, increasing MOI and locating the CG at a point on the putter head 100 that reduces twist at impact, reduces offline misses, and improves ball speed robustness on mishits.
[0075] As shown in the iron club head 200 of
[0076] Alternatively, as shown in the driver-type golf club heads 300 of
[0077] In other embodiments, such as the preferred embodiment shown in
[0078] A lattice structure 350 composed of a material having strain rate sensitive mechanical properties is sized to fit within and substantially fill the recess 360. A weight structure 390 having one or more threaded openings 392, 294 is then placed over the lattice structure 350 and affixed to the sole 330 with the mechanical fasteners 380. As shown in
[0079] The weight 390 preferably is composed of a higher density material than that of the sole 330 or other parts of the golf club head 300, such as a tungsten alloy, though in an alternative embodiment the weight 390 may composed of lower density material such as titanium alloy, steel, or aluminum alloy, and can be used predominantly for compressing the lattice structure 350 within the recess 360. In such embodiments, the heads of the mechanical fasteners 380 may be composed of higher density material to provide a desired mass.
[0080] The material from which the lattice structure 350 is manufactured makes it soft enough to conform to spacing between the weight structure 390 and the sole 330 during installation, but also rigid enough when the club head 300 impacts a ball to prevent the golf club head 300 lattice structure 350—weight structure 390 assembly from coming apart. This configuration may be used in other golf club heads, such as fairway woods, hybrids, and irons. The configuration of the preferred embodiment allows the lattice structure to act as a gasket that fills in the recess 360 and separates the weighting structure 400 from the sole 330 or other surfaces of the golf club head 300. This improves the moment of inertia and center of gravity position of the golf club head 300 while bringing acoustics to an acceptable level.
Excess Powder Removal
[0081] The increased design freedom provided by binder jetting allows for the creation of fully enclosed void volumes with a few, small vent holes for powder removal, which can later be plugged (if needed) via spot weld, threaded fastener, cap, cover, medallion, adhesive, or other means known to a person skilled in the art. The absence of metal support structures allows hollow structures like a typical driver head or fairway wood to be printed with only small vent holes for powder removal. Removal of powder reduces the overall mass of printed golf club head components and improves their structural integrity.
[0082] Each of the designs disclosed herein have a plurality of openings that permit removal of excess printing material. Another example of a golf club component with such holes is shown in
[0083] Once excess powder 30 is removed from the face insert 400, preferably via shaking and polishing steps, the insert 400 can be welded into a golf club head 300 to ensure that the resulting final product does not violate any USGA rules against open holes. The port holes 402 preferably are placed in strategic locations on the face insert 400 or other parts of the golf club heads such that they fall within a weld zone, a bonding zone, under a medallion, and/or in a brazing zone. In other words, the port holes 402 are located in a region on the part where a secondary process will cover them up. This allows for the excess powder 30 to be evacuated in the raw state, and then for the port hole 402 to be covered once the raw part is made into a golf club head 300.
[0084] Entire heads, or head components, can be printed and assembled using the methods disclosed herein from materials such as steel, titanium, carbon fiber composites, and other structural materials. If golf club components are printed as disclosed herein, they can be attached to traditionally manufactured components via welding, bonding, brazing, soldering, and/or other techniques known in the art. The methods of the present invention are applicable to any type of club head, including putters, wedges, irons, hybrids, fairway woods, and drivers.
[0085] From the foregoing it is believed that those skilled in the pertinent art will recognize the meritorious advancement of this invention and will readily understand that while the present invention has been described in association with a preferred embodiment thereof, and other embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings, numerous changes, modifications and substitutions of equivalents may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention which is intended to be unlimited by the foregoing except as may appear in the following appended claims. Therefore, the embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined in the following appended claims.