Method and apparatus to prevent diver injury from hitting the springboard after commencement of the dive
20170144049 ยท 2017-05-25
Inventors
- Alexander Povzner (Vaughan, CA)
- Ilia Masliev (East Gwillimbury, CA)
- Olexandr Ryumshyn (Mississauga, CA)
Cpc classification
G06F2203/04102
PHYSICS
A63B71/0054
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B24/0087
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G06F2203/04103
PHYSICS
G06F3/04164
PHYSICS
G06F3/04166
PHYSICS
International classification
A63B71/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B24/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
The invention's innovation in the field of safety of aquatic sport of springboard diving is a method and apparatus to diminish the risk of the athlete's injury caused by an accidental collision with the springboard after the take-off by timely activating a device that places a protective padding covering the top of the springboard.
Claims
1. We claim an invention that serves the purpose of reducing the risk of injury to the body of the springboard diver as a result of an accidental collision with the springboard after commencement of the dive.
2. We claim that the invention of claim 1 fulfills its purpose by deploying a protective padding that fully or partially covers the springboard after commencement of the dive.
3. We claim that the protective padding of claim 2 is to have characteristics as to reduce the peak accelerations suffered by the body parts of the springboard diver arising from a potential accidental collision with the springboard.
4. We claim that in the invention of claim 1, the deployment of the protective padding of claim 2 occurs via application of mechanical force to the protective padding, which force is provided by means other than human muscle power.
5. We claim that the deployment of the padding of claim 2 by the invention of claim 1 must occur after the diver's take off and before the possible accidental collision.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0019] The injury prevention apparatus (the invention) has two distinct states, being loaded and being deployed.
[0020] In the loaded state (
[0021] In the deployed or activated state (
[0022] To minimize the disturbance to the athlete during the diving procedure prior to the take-off, the embodiment of the invention keeps the padding underneath the springboard in the loaded state and then guides the padding around the side edge of the springboard during deployment by a set of guide rails situated across the board underneath (
[0023] Even though this embodiment of the invention has stationary semicircular guiding rails situated to the side of the springboard, other variants may raise the semicircular portion above the springboard surface only after the diver takes off. This effect can be produced by the padding itself as it is pushed onto the springboard or in other variants of the invention embodiments the raising of the guide rails can be caused by a separate force applied at the moment of deployment, powered by the same source as the force deploying the padding or by another source. This additional element is not considered as a major part of the invention.
[0024] The apparatus has the following material parts, given in the following list together with their respected embodiments as constructed by the inventors:
[0025] (1) Padding
[0026] The soft protective padding made of material having thickness and indentation load deflection (ILD) that is sufficient to absorb and cushion mechanical forces arising from the possible contact of the athlete with the springboard and reduce the peak accelerations of the diver's body parts caused by such contact.
[0027] In the concrete embodiment of the invention the padding is composed of segmented links flexibly joined together into a caterpillar track (
[0028] To facilitate easy movement of the padding against the rails and on the springboard surface, the embodiment of the invention has a pair of small roller wheels installed on each of the rods connecting the caterpillar track links. The roller wheels allow the track to roll on the rails and on the springboard surface rather than slide. The additional roller wheels are not claimed as the major feature of the invention.
[0029] To ensure the padding does not separate from the springboard during and after deployment, the embodiment of the invention uses a loop (or band) of elastic material passing through the holes in each of the track links (as shown in
[0030] (2) Force Source
[0031] The force source is the component that generates the mechanical force that causes the padding to move onto the springboard surface during deployment. In the embodiment of the invention the force source is an electric motor controlled by a microprocessor schematic.
[0032] The embodiment of the apparatus uses rotational motor (
[0033] (3) Actuator
[0034] The actuator is the part of apparatus that transmits the mechanical force generated by the force source to the padding to cause it to be deployed. The embodiment uses a pair of teethed wheels as the actuator (
[0035] (4) Frame
[0036] The frame is the part that holds together the major components of the apparatus, providing the means of mechanical stability to the assembly and allowing the apparatus to be firmly connected to the springboard. The embodiment of the invention uses an aluminum frame made of several aluminum square tubes (
[0037] The particular frame construction is not considered to be a major feature of the invention.
[0038] (5) Control Device
[0039] The control device (not shown in the drawings) is the element of the apparatus that initiates the deployment. The embodiment of the invention is controlled remotely via a radio transmitter manually operated by the person supervising the dive (a diving coach or diving instructor). The corresponding receiver is installed on the frame and upon receiving the signal emitted by the transmitter causes the motor to be connected to the electrical power main and the mechanical force generated by the connected motor is transmitted to the padding via the actuator, causing the apparatus to be deployed.
[0040] By observing the dive the coach can make a judgement call that the diver has taken off, at which time the coach will activate the described apparatus by pushing corresponding button on the transmitter. In other embodiments the deployment can be triggered mechanically with a piece of string, electrically via attached wires, or by any other means suitable to transmit the signal to the apparatus.
[0041] In addition to the triggering the deployment manually, the deployment can be triggered by an automatic sensor including, but not exclusively, by an accelerometer device placed on the body of the diver, by a photoelectric or laser sensor, by a video camera fitted with image recognition, or by other automatic means without invalidating the claim. We claim that particular means of timely triggering the deployment of the device to be a minor feature of the invention.