Device for securing rope in multiple configurations and process of using the same
09750308 ยท 2017-09-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16G11/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T24/3916
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F16G11/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16G11/103
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16G11/046
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16G11/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16G11/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An apparatus for securing a rope includes a device body having a first width, a first length, and a first height, the first width substantially greater than each of the first height and the first length, the device body having a first end and a second end, the first and second ends at opposing ends of the first width of the device body. The apparatus includes a first rope notch, the first rope notch located at the first end of the device body, the first rope notch extending in a first direction parallel to the first height away from the central body. The apparatus includes a second rope notch, the second rope notch located at the second end of the device body, the second rope notch extending in a second direction parallel to the first height away from the device body, wherein the second direction is opposite the first direction.
Claims
1. A device for tensioning shoe laces, comprising: a rope device, the rope device including: a first raised surface and a second raised surface, the first raised surface located at a first end of the rope device and the second raised surface located at a second end of the rope device, the second end distal from the first end; a wrapping area located between the first raised surface and the second raised surface, the first raised surface and the second raised surface raised in relation to the wrapping area; a third surface located on a back side of the second raised surface; a first opening, the first opening approximately perpendicular to the second raised surface and the third raised surface, the first opening being wider toward a first end of the rope device and narrower toward a second end of the rope device; a fourth surface located on a back side of the first raised surface; a second opening at the second end of the rope device, the second opening approximately perpendicular to the first raised surface and the fourth surface, the second opening including a side gap, the side gap located along a side of the device; and a raised sidewall, the raised sidewall located in the side gap, the raised sidewall approximately perpendicular to the first raised surface, the fourth surface and the second opening, the raised sidewall forming a narrowed entrance to the side gap.
2. The device of claim 1, further comprising: a protrusion on a back side of the wrapping area, the protrusion located between the first opening and the second opening.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein the protrusion is angled towards the first opening, forming an acute angle with the back side of the wrapping area.
4. The device of claim 3, wherein a depression is formed in the back side of the wrapping area proximate to a vertex of the acute angle.
5. The device of claim 4, wherein the wrapping area includes side edges, and the side edges are narrowed in comparison to the side edges of the first raised surface and the second raised surface, such that a width of the wrapping is less than that of the first raised surface and the second raised surface.
6. A lace and device tensioning system, the system comprising: a rope device, the rope device including: a first raised surface and a second raised surface, the first raised surface located at a first end of the rope device and the second raised surface located at a second end of the rope device, the second end distal from the first end; a wrapping area located between the first raised surface and the second raised surface, the first raised surface and the second raised surface raised in relation to the wrapping area; a third surface located on a back side of the second raised surface; a first opening, the first opening approximately perpendicular to the second raised surface and the third raised surface, the first opening being wider toward a first end of the rope device and narrower toward a second end of the rope device; a fourth surface located on a back side of the first raised surface; a second opening at the second end of the rope device, the second opening approximately perpendicular to the first raised surface and the fourth surface, the second opening including a side gap, the side gap located along a side of the device; a raised sidewall, the raised sidewall located in the side gap, the raised sidewall approximately perpendicular to the first raised surface, the fourth surface and the second opening, the raised sidewall forming a narrowed entrance to the side gap; and laces, the laces located such that they are passed through the first opening from the first end of the rope device toward the second end of the rope device, the laces further located such that they are wrapped from a back side of the wrapping area, around the wrapping area, back to the back side of the wrapping area, and through the side gap, such that they are located in the second opening.
7. The lace and device tensioning system of claim 6, further comprising: a protrusion on the back side of the wrapping area, the protrusion located between the first opening and the second opening.
8. The lace and device tensioning system of claim 7, wherein the protrusion is angled toward the first opening, forming an acute angle with the back side of the wrapping area.
9. The lace and device tensioning system of claim 8, wherein a depression is formed in the back side of the wrapping area proximate to a vertex of the acute angle.
10. The lace and device tensioning system of claim 9, wherein the wrapping area includes side edges, and the side edges are narrowed in comparison to the side edges of the first raised surface and the second raised surface, such that a width of the wrapping is less than that of the first raised surface and the second raised surface.
11. A lace and device tensioning system, the system comprising: a rope device, the rope device including: a first raised surface and a second raised surface, the first raised surface located at a first end of the rope device and the second raised surface located at a second end of the rope device, the second end distal from the first end; a wrapping area located between the first raised surface and the second raised surface, the first raised surface and the second raised surface raised in relation to the wrapping area; a third surface located on a back side of the second raised surface; a first opening, the first opening approximately perpendicular to the second raised surface and the third raised surface, the first opening being wider toward a first end of the rope device and narrower toward a second end of the rope device; a fourth surface located on a back side of the first raised surface; a second opening at the second end of the rope device, the second opening approximately perpendicular to the first raised surface and the fourth surface, the second opening including a side gap, the side gap located along a side of the device; a raised sidewall, the raised sidewall located in the side gap, the raised sidewall approximately perpendicular to the first raised surface, the fourth surface and the second opening, the raised sidewall forming a narrowed entrance to the side gap; a protrusion on the back side of the wrapping area, the protrusion located between the first opening and the second opening; and laces, the laces located such that they are passed through the first opening from the first end of the rope device toward the second end of the rope device, the laces further located such that they are passed over the protrusion and through the second opening.
12. The lace and device tensioning system of claim 11, wherein the protrusion is angled toward the first opening, forming an acute angle with the back side of the wrapping area.
13. The lace and device tensioning system of claim 12, wherein a depression is formed in the back side of the wrapping area proximate to a vertex of the acute angle.
14. The lace and device tensioning system of claim 13, wherein the wrapping area includes side edges, and the side edges are narrowed in comparison to the side edges of the first raised surface and the second raised surface, such that a width of the wrapping is less than that of the first raised surface and the second raised surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In the drawings, closely related figures have the same number but different alphabetic suffixes. Figures of the same objects viewed from different angles are indentified by a .
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(46) Generally, embodiments of a rope device include a body portion for wrapping the rope around, one or more notches for locking the rope, and, in many alternatives, one or more bore holes through the device. By providing a device with at least one notch and a body portion for wrapping the rope, numerous rope configurations are available to the user.
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(48) In using the device, two ends of a rope (or ends of separate ropes) can be fixed into a static or immovable state (
(49) To use the device, a rope is first positioned in one of the entry-exit pathways 221. This is accomplished by inserting the rope into the entry-exit pathway 221 directly (end-on, in a manner similar to threading a needle) or indirectly by pulling the rope laterally through a pathway slot 231 adjoining the entry-exit pathway 221. If the rope is under tension or both ends of the rope are secured to other objects, the device can be pressed onto the rope via the pathway slot 231. The beveled surfaces 241-243 on the exterior edges of the pathway slot 231 assist in aligning the rope along the opening of the pathway slot 231. The opening of the pathway slot 231 is smaller than the diameter of the rope causing the rope to deform and/or the flex-arms 251 to deflect as the rope passes through. The diameter of the entry-exit pathway 221 is nominally sized to match the rope diameter, ensuring that the flex-arms 251 are in a non-deflected state once the rope enters the entry-exit pathway 221 (
(50) The entry-exit pathways 221 direct the rope to the center section 212. Upon entering the center section 212 area, the rope is either routed straight through the center section 212 area (to create a cinch knot or movable action; see
(51) As the rope is wound around the center section 212, the rope can be routed over or in between the pathway inhibitor tabs 262. The direction the rope is wound around the center section 212 should be such that, as tension is applied to the rope, it is drawn toward the back surface of the entry-exit pathway 272 rather than back into the pathway slot 231 (
(52) The transverse bores 216 can be employed to serve multiple functions which may include the following: to terminate or secure the loose end of the rope (
(53) The longitudinal bore 214 can be employed to serve multiple functions which may include the following: to terminate or secure the loose end of the rope, to serve as one element of the overall rope path through the device (
(54) To remove a rope from the device, the rope (or ropes) can be withdrawn directly through the entry-exit pathway 221 (similar to the unthreading of a needle) or withdrawn through the adjoining pathway slot 231. If a pathway slot 231 is utilized to disengage a rope, the direction of travel for the rope will generally be perpendicular to the lengthwise axis of the rope and, hence, perpendicular to any externally applied load force in the rope. This minimizes the effect a load force in the rope will have on the force required to extract the rope from the device. Most of the extraction force results from moving the rope through the narrowed pathway slot 231 past the flex-arms 251. When a rope in the device is under load, it is typically easier to remove the device from the rope. When the rope is slack, it is typically easier to remove the rope from the device.
(55) In either case, the process to disengage the rope from the device using the pathway slot 231 is the same; the rope is drawn transversely outward through the pathway slot 231.
(56) A feature and advantage of this device is that the user has significant control over the restraining force the device imparts to the rope. The restraining force of the device is predominately determined by two factors: the manner in which the rope is routed through the device, and the degree in which external loads applied to the rope are transmitted to the center section 212 of the device. In most situations, the user can adjust both while the rope is under load from external forces. These adjustments usually can be made to the rope in the device without requiring user access to either end of the rope. Thus, the configuration of the rope through the device can be altered from a fixed configuration to a cinch/slip configuration and back to a fixed configuration while the device remains connected to the rope (
(57) In principle, the device works by countering or balancing the axially applied external forces in the rope against frictional forces arising from the way the rope is routed through the rope device. When the external load forces are greater than the frictional forces, the rope moves through the rope device. When the load forces are insufficient to overcome the frictional forces, the rope is prevented from moving.
(58) Frictional forces act tangentially between contacting surfaces but are derived from forces acting perpendicular to the contacting surfaces. To configure the rope device in a static or fixed knot configuration, the rope is wound around the center section 212 of the rope device. A rope has near zero resistance to bending which results in the axial or tensile force in the rope being redirected (or vectored) radially inward as the rope is wound around the center section 212. This radially directed inward force is the normal or perpendicular component of the frictional force. Increases in applied load to a rope wound around the center section 212 of the rope device will cause increases in the normal and friction forces as well.
(59) The action of a rope when wound around the center section 212 of the rope device obeys the capstan equation for friction over a drum (T2=T1e where T2 is the friction force, T1 is the load force, is the coefficient of friction, and is the angle of contact force between the rope and the drum). From the equation, it can be determined that the frictional force on the rope depends on only three things: the tension in the rope; the coefficient of friction; and the total angle of contact.
(60) The capstan equation also shows that friction force increases exponentially with increases in the coefficient of friction and increases in the contact angle. Friction force is independent of the contact area, the radius of the bends, and the size of the rope. The coefficient of friction can vary greatly depending on the rope condition: clean/muddy, wet/dry, worn/new, etc. The roughness of rope device surfaces also impacts the coefficient of friction (rougher surfaces typically result in a higher coefficient).
(61) Assuming a typical value of 0.25 for (coefficient of friction), values for the frictional (or holding) force compared to the load force for a rope wound 1.5 revolutions about the center section 212 would be around 10:1, meaning a 60-lb. axial load applied to the rope would only require a 6-lb. frictional force to prevent movement of the rope through the rope device. Because frictional forces increase exponentially, when the rope is wound around the center section 212 2.5 revolutions, the ratio jumps to around 50:1, meaning a 60-lb. load would require only a 1.2-lb. holding force. For 90 bends ( revolution), the ratio is about 1.5:1. This last value indicates that the combined contribution of the 90 transitions from two entry-exit pathways 221into the center section 212 and then outis approximately a 3:1 advantage in itself. From this, one can readily understand the impact the rope configuration through the rope device has on the overall holding power of the rope device. Small changes in the routing of the rope through the rope device can result in large changes in holding power. The positional relationship between the entry-exit pathways 221 and the center section 212 surfaces ensure that, when the rope exits an entry-exit pathway 221 and is wound around the center section 212, the forces in the rope will behave according to the capstan equation.
(62) In cinch knot or movable configurations (
(63) In the slip knot configuration (one rope fixed, one rope movable,
(64) Many embodiments include the entry-exit pathway 221 in combination with the center section 212 and/or the path inhibitor tabs 262 to prevent unwanted binding of the secured portion of the rope. When properly positioned in the entry-exit pathway 221, the rope can be disengaged from the rope device in either favorable or adverse conditions or when the rope is in a loaded or non-loaded state. When wet, a conventional knot can be difficult to near impossible to untie even when all load forces have been removed. Many embodiments of the rope device avoid tying ropes together, thereby minimizing the possibility of that occurring.
(65) For many embodiments of the rope device, the primary means for limiting unwanted disengagement of a rope from the rope device rely on the rope being properly positioned in the entry-exit pathways 221. For fixed roped configurations, the immediate bend the rope undergoes as it exits the entry-exit pathway 221 in its route around the center section 212 also assists in keeping the rope properly positioned (
(66) The rope device in many embodiments is a single part utilizing QBS-generated features. The term QBS refers to quadrant-based-symmetry and is a symmetry in the rope device created by replicating specific part geometries from one quadrant or quarter-section of the rope device to one or more of the remaining quadrants. Quadrant-based-symmetry can either be the result of a mirroring across a quadrant boundary or the result of a rotation of 180 about a quadrant boundary (
(67) The design is scalable to accommodate different rope diameters and different rope materials.
(68) Required rope device size for a given rope diameter would be comparable to that of a large knot of medium complexity tied in the rope. For specific applications, rope retention forces could be optimized by varying individual geometries, particularly those of the center section 212, grip ridges 260, and the path inhibitor tabs 262 (
(69) The rope device is produced from a variety of materials utilizing different manufacturing processes. Alternative materials include thermoplastics (with or without glass fibers), thermoset resins, metals, and metal alloys. Alternative, manufacturing processes include the use of injection molds, die castings, extrusions combined with secondary machining operations, or CNC machining methods. A QBS-featured rope device is suited for injection molds and extrusions. Injection molds are not inexpensive, but they are very durable and can produce accurate detailed parts. In sufficient quantities with tooling costs amortized over the lifespan of the mold, per part costs can be very low. Additionally, interchangeable inserts incorporated into the design of a mold would allow selective expression of specific entry-exit pathways 221 and/or pathway slots 231. This extends the benefits of high-volume tooling across a large selection of embodiments of the rope device. Extrusions require a minimal tooling investment, particularly when compared to the costs required to produce injection molds. Using automated feed, cut-off, and in-line CNC machining, individual part costs can be made competitive to those achieved with injection molds. The embodiments shown in
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(71) The rope securing device 3100 of
(72) The rope securing device further includes grip features or protrusions 3140. These protrusions 3140 provide for additional tension on the rope by virtue of the notches formed on either edge of protrusions 3140. When the rope is pulled against the notches, the rope would have to stretch sufficiently to accommodate the additional length provide by the protrusions 3140. The protrusions having a trapezoidal shape also serve in some embodiments to wedge the rope between the notches 3120 and the protrusions 3140 at the on of the non-parallel sides of the protrusion.
(73) The rope securing device further includes a hole 3130 that passes through the entire device in the width 3110 direction. These may be referred to as bore holes in alternative embodiments. Two additional holes 3135 pass through the device in the height 3145 direction.
(74) The unique arrangement of the holes, grip features, and notches allows for numerous holding configurations of the rope, shown in
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(79) These above configurations shown in
(80) Another configuration allowing for the connection of two ropes (or opposite ends of the same rope) is shown in
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(84) Alternatively, instead of wrapping the laces around the wrapping area 3330, the laces may simply be passed through opening 3430 and out opening 3455. In this case, protrusion 3460 provides some tension to the laces, since the laces must stretch over the protrusion before descending into depression 3415. This is referred to as the cinching configuration.
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(87) As compared to other rope joining and locking techniques, embodiments of the rope device encompass the broad spectrum of features achieved in this design.
(88) Various embodiments of a rope device described herein have at least some the following characteristics: Reliable single part design. Simple and easy to use. Compact size with minimal footprint both as a device and in application. Superior performance in adverse weather conditions. Multiple configurations and functionality. Accommodates add-on accessories to further enhance functionality. Reduced directional dependencies. Adjustable rope retaining force under load conditions. Scalable to different rope diameters. Flexibility in manufacturing and multiple styles for broad market appeal. Device geometries can be optimized for specific applications and/or load requirements.
(89) Two additional aspects are worth noting. In one alternative, the rope device is manufactured from a material that is either reflective or one that glows in the dark; the device can be of great assistance in indicating the presence of an otherwise difficult to see line, which is of particular value when beckoned from one's tent in the middle of night to answer nature's call. In many alternatives to the rope device, numerous configurations of rope are possible. Configurations more complex and varied than those shown in
(90) The device as described herein is a versatile easy-to-use rope device that replicates the behavior and performance of a variety of knots. The device can be used to conveniently and reliably secure ropes or secure other objects using ropes. Among other benefits, the device alleviates the burden of tying (and untying) difficult or complex knots.
(91) While the description above contains specificities, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the embodiments but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments. The scope of the embodiments should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents rather than by the examples given. The foregoing description of the embodiments of the rope device has been presented only for the purpose of illustration and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the rope device to the precise forms disclosed. Numerous modifications and adaptations are apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the embodiments.