Golf club head comprising glass bubble fill material
09808685 · 2017-11-07
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A golf club head with at least one cavity including a fill material comprising a polymer and a plurality of microscopic glass bubbles, and methods of manufacturing such golf club heads, are disclosed herein. In particular, the golf club head is an iron having a striking face, a rear portion, and an internal cavity disposed behind the striking face, which is at least partially filled with the fill material. The plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes at 5-70% of the volume of the fill material, and more preferably approximately 20-30% of the volume of the fill material. The polymer material preferably is a polyurethane having a Poisson's ratio of 0.40-0.50. In some embodiments, the fill material takes the form a medallion affixed to a rear surface of the striking face, while in others, the fill material is injected into the internal cavity.
Claims
1. An iron-type golf club head comprising: a body comprising a striking face, sole portion, top portion, rear portion, and cavity; and a fill material at least partially filling the cavity, wherein the fill material comprises a polymer material and a plurality of microscopic glass bubbles, and wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes 5% to 70% of a volume of the fill material.
2. The iron-type golf club head of claim 1, wherein the polymer material is selected from the group consisting of polyurethane and silicone.
3. The iron-type golf club head of claim 2, wherein the polymer material is polyurethane.
4. The iron-type golf club head of claim 1, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes at least 20% of the volume of the fill material.
5. The iron-type golf club head of claim 4, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes 25-30% of the volume of the fill material.
6. The iron-type golf club head of claim 1, wherein the polymer material has a Poisson's ratio 0.00-0.50.
7. The iron-type golf club head of claim 6, wherein the polymer material has a Poisson's ratio of 0.40-0.50.
8. The iron-type golf club head of claim 1, wherein when a central area of the striking face impacts a golf ball, the golf club head has a pitch of 3000-6000 Hz, an amplitude of 90-100 dB, a duration of 1-2.5 ms, and a ball speed of at least 112.5 mph.
9. The iron-type golf club head of claim 1, wherein the fill material is a medallion affixed to a rear surface of the striking face.
10. A method comprising the steps of: providing a golf club head comprising a body having at least one cavity; providing a polymer material; providing a plurality of microscopic glass bubbles; combining the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles with the polymer material to create a fill material; and injecting the fill material into the at least one cavity of the golf club head, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes 5-70% of a volume of the fill material.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes approximately 25-30% of the volume of the fill material.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the polymer material is selected from the group consisting of polyurethane and silicone, and wherein the polymer material comprises a Poisson's ratio of 0.40-0.50.
13. A method comprising the steps of: providing a golf club head comprising a body having at least one cavity; providing a polymer material; providing an agent material selected from the group consisting of a curative and a catalyst; providing a plurality of microscopic glass bubbles; combining the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles with the agent material to create an intermediary material; combining the intermediary material with the polymer material to create a fill material; and injecting the fill material into the at least one cavity of the golf club head, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes 5-70% of a volume of the intermediary material.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles is combined with the agent material at a 5:3 ratio, and wherein the fill material comprises a 1:1 ratio of polymer material and intermediary material.
15. The method of claim 13, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes approximately 20-30% of the volume of the intermediary material.
16. The method of claim 13, wherein the polymer material has a Poisson's ratio of 0.40-0.50 and is selected from the group consisting of polyurethane and silicone.
17. The method of claim 13, wherein the golf club head is an iron-type golf club head comprising a body having a striking face, a sole portion, a top portion, and a rear portion, wherein the at least one cavity is disposed between the striking face and the rear portion, and wherein the fill material completely fills the at least one cavity.
18. The method of claim 13, further comprising the step of curing the iron-type golf club head in an oven after the step of injecting the fill material into the at least one cavity of the golf club head.
19. A method comprising the steps of: providing a golf club head comprising a body having at least one cavity; providing a polymer material having a Poisson's ratio of 0.40-0.50; providing an agent material selected from the group consisting of a curative and a catalyst; providing a plurality of microscopic glass bubbles; combining the polymer material with the agent material to form an intermediary material; combining the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles with the intermediary material to create a fill material; injecting the fill material into the at least one cavity of the golf club head; and curing the fill material within the golf club head, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes 5-70% of a volume of the fill material.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the golf club head is an iron-type golf club head, wherein the plurality of microscopic glass bubbles constitutes approximately 20-30% of the volume of the fill material, and wherein the polymer material is selected from the group consisting of polyurethane and silicone.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(11) The present invention is directed to golf club heads, and particularly iron-type golf club heads, which include a novel fill material comprising a polymeric material and microscopic glass bubbles, also referred to herein as microscopic, hollow glass beads. The glass bubbles serve two purposes when incorporated with a polymeric material: (1) they lighten the overall fill weight by replacing elastomer with air, thus lowering the material's specific gravity; and (2) they increase the porosity of the fill material, allowing for the formation of micro-holes in the polymeric material. The micro-holes are little air pockets that allow the polymer to flex when the club head impacts a golf ball, thus increasing the COR of the head while at the same time maintaining the sound improvement provided by the polymer itself, such as reduction in dB level and duration. The polymeric material preferably is an elastomer such as polyurethane or silicone having a Poisson's ratio of 0.00-0.50, and more preferably 0.40-0.50, and the glass bubbles preferably are measured in D50 micron, which is the median particle size for a measured sample, each glass bubble having a diameter of approximately 18-50 microns.
(12) A preferred embodiment of the golf club head is shown in
(13) There are several methods of manufacturing the glass bubble fill material 50 and incorporating it into the golf club head 10 according to the present invention. The first method 100, shown in
(14) The second, preferred method 200, shown in
(15) The third method of the present invention is shown in
(16) In order to assess the COR performance of the inventive material, test iron-type golf club heads 10 having unfilled (empty) cavities were created and tested, and compared against golf club heads 10 having the same construction and filled with (1) the novel glass bubble fill material 50 comprising polyurethane and made using one of the second 200 and third methods 300 and (2) polyurethane only. As shown in Tables 1 and 2, the polyurethane-only fill significantly lowers the COR of the golf club head 10. In contrast, when a golf club head cavity is filled with the glass bubble fill material 50 of the present invention, the COR decreases, on average, only by 0.04, thereby retaining the performance benefits of an unfilled golf club head 10. This is particularly evident when the glass bubbles or hollow glass beads constitute approximately 25% or 30% of the volume of the fill material 50, as shown in Table 1.
(17) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Test Club No. COR (no fill) COR (polyurethane only) Change in COR 1. 0.827 0.806 −0.021 2. 0.827 0.806 −0.021 3. 0.824 0.812 −0.012 4. 0.818 0.796 −0.022 5. 0.813 0.793 −0.020 Average change in COR −0.019 Test Club No. COR (no fill) COR (30% glass bubble fill) 6. 0.825 0.820 −0.005 7. 0.823 0.818 −0.005 8. 0.826 0.821 −0.005 9. 0.825 0.821 −0.004 10. 0.826 0.823 −0.003 11. 0.825 0.823 −0.002 12. 0.823 0.817 −0.006 13. 0.821 0.817 −0.004 14. 0.818 0.816 −0.002 15. 0.816 0.813 −0.003 16. 0.825 0.821 −0.004 17. 0.825 0.817 −0.008 Test Club No. COR (no fill) COR (25% glass bubble fill) 18. 0.824 0.821 −0.003 21. 0.823 0.817 −0.006 Average change in COR −0.004
(18) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Test COR COR Change Club No. (no fill) (polyurethane only) in COR 1. 0.813 0.793 −0.20 Test COR COR Change Club No. (no fill) (5% glass bubble fill) in COR 2. 0.815 0.804 −0.11
(19) In order to assess sound performance, another group of test golf club heads 10 incorporating the 30% by volume novel glass bubble fill material 50 comprising polyurethane and made using one of the second 200 and third methods 300 were tested and compared with golf club heads 10 having: (1) the same construction and filled with only polyurethane; (2) no polyurethane filler at all; and (3) a small polyurethane snubber insert. As shown in
(20) To assess the effects of the novel fill material on ball speed performance, the performance of a Callaway Golf Apex CF 16 6-iron comprising a small polymeric snubber was compared with the performance of test 6-irons having no fill, test 6-irons with a fill having 30% by volume microscopic glass bubbles, and test 6-irons with a fill having 20% by volume microscopic glass bubbles. As shown in
(21) 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.