PEBBLE COVER FOR A SPORTS BALL
20170106251 ยท 2017-04-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B32B37/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T156/1039
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
International classification
B32B37/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B9/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A leather-based cover material for an inflatable sports ball that consists of a composite of a thin external layer, a filler, and an internal liner. The thin external layer is dimpled by using positive/negative embossing plates to create pebble projections on an exterior side and voids on the other or interior side. The interior side is coated with a filler material that fills the voids. The cover material is completed by attaching a liner layer to the cured filler material.
Claims
1. A method for making a thin leather based cover for a ball, including the following steps: dimpling a thin sheet of a leather based material using positive and negative embossing plates on opposite sides of the leather based material, to create an exterior pebble pattern on one side and an interior pattern of voids on the opposite side; coating the voids with a filler material that fills the voids and is curable into an elastically solid filler layer; and applying an interior liner layer to the filler layer, to create the cover for the ball.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] In the drawings, like reference numerals and letters refer to like parts throughout the various views, and wherein:
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0018] Referring now to the drawings, and first to
[0019] The external layer 12 is a leather-based material that is sufficiently thin that it can be embossed on both sides at the same time. Natural leather is a preferred material for some top quality footballs. Synthetic leather is often used as well. The present disclosure is intended to be used with other equivalent materials. Referring now to
[0020] The external layer 12 is placed between positive and negative embossing plates 18, 20. These plates, 18, 20 are pressed together as indicated by arrows 22, 24 in the lower left-hand portion of
[0021] It is to be appreciated that
[0022] Referring again to
[0023] It is possible that the external and filler material layers 12, 14 may need to be coated more than one time, in order to create the desired thickness or to provide an adhesive surface for the other layer of liner material 16.
[0024] The liner material 16 can be made of different kinds of material that are commonly available. In preferred form, the materials selected for liner 16 should be stretch resistant and impervious to water absorption, which is common to the liner materials already in use for traditional leather football construction.
[0025] After the cover is constructed in the above-described manner, it may then be applied to a ball carcass. Ball carcasses take different forms, depending on the ball or the internal construction of the ball. The term carcass is sometimes a variable, although it is generally understood to mean those parts of the ball that underlie the external skin cover. In a basketball, as an example, the carcass is generally considered to be everything but the orange skin panels. That is to say, a basketball carcass might consist of an internal rubber bladder, covered by windings, covered by another layer of rubber that is used to form seams, with the seams defining the boundaries for placement of the orange skin panels. A finished carcass typically comes out of a mold with everything but the orange skin panels. In some cases, carcasses are made with a layer of foam rubber over the bladder and windings, but underlying strips of seam material. There are also other ways of making carcasses for basketballs.
[0026] Football carcasses might include a bladder covered by either windings or one or more layers of liner material. The exterior leather cover is then applied to the carcass arrangement. The specific way football carcasses are made is not material to the present disclosure.
[0027] Bearing in mind the foregoing,
[0028]
[0029]
[0030] A person skilled in the art would understand that the cover material described above is intended to be applied to a ball that is manufactured typically carcass first, regardless of the ball type, and regardless of the specific type of carcass construction.
[0031] The cover material described above can be made to approximate the same weight as traditional pebbled leather covers (natural or synthetic leather), which allows the cover materials described herein to be used as a substitute for traditional leather in football manufacturing, without any significant alterations to the manufacturing process. In other words, it is possible to produce the cover material 10 independently of where the football is manufactured and then deliver the cover material to the manufacturing location.
[0032] Referring to
[0033] There may be other kinds of filler material that could be used that perform the function described above. Neoprene rubber is one selection. There are changes that could be made to the machinery that provides the embossing plate function described above, so long as the embossing plates are performing the positive/negative embossing effect as described.
[0034] The scope of the patent right is not intended to be limited to the foregoing description. Instead, the patent right is limited to the patent claim or patent claims that follow, the interpretation of which is to be made in accordance with the standard doctrines of patent claim interpretation.