Machine skates with “Sole”
A unitary machine skate sole plate is provided with downwardly open recesses for receiving the strut arms of attached wheel trucks. The recesses include shaped, resilient cushions having sockets for holding the strut arms ends while allowing generally universal motion thereof.
A machine skate comprising a unitary sole plate having toe and heel portions joined by an instep portion, a top surface for receiving a shoe and a bottom surface for receiving truckassemblies; a front wheel truck assembly at the toe portion of the sole plate bottom surface and a rear wheel truck assembly at the heel portion of the sole plate bottom surface, each truck assembly including a cushioned action screw connected to thesole plate and extending through a platform from which a strut arm inclines upwardly toward the adjacent end of the sole plate; said sole plate bottom surface having a pair of downwardly open recesses, one adjacent the front of the toe portion and theother adjacent the rear of the heel portion, with each recess having an upper closed end and a lower end opening defined by downwardly relatively diverging internal wall surfaces of the recess which are substantially free of any undercutting relative tothe upper closed end and with a portion of the internal wall surface of each recess toward the adjacent end of the sole plate extending downwardly below the remaining diverging internal wall surface and in continued divergence relative thereto and moreremotely spaced from the associated strut arm; and a cushion element mounted in each recess and conforming to the shaping of the internal wall surfaces thereof and having a socket therein similarly inclined with respect to the associated strut arm andof complementary shape for receiving the free end of the associated strut arm; and with the socket opening disposed vertically above the terminal end of the downwardly extending internal wall surface of the recess leaving therebetween additionalthickness of the cushion material which is inclined downwardly from the socket opening and away from confining engagement with the associated strut for permissive expansion and recovery of the inclined and unconfined cushion material under activemovements of the strut arm.
A machine skate, wherein the internal wall surface of each recess toward the adjacent end of the sole plate is generally vertical with respect to the horizontal plane of the sole plate to present the increased thicknessof the cushion element intermediate the socket and the vertical wall surface of the recess.
A machine skate, wherein the recess is elongate along the axis of the sole plate.
A machine skate, wherein the upper surface of the sole plate is provided with upwardly open hexagonal recesses receiving cushion-fastener elements, as a nut or fastener head, for securing the action screws againstrotation.
A sole plate for a machine skate of the type including front and rear wheel truck assemblies at the heel and toe portions and each with a cushioned action screw and an upwardly inclined strut arm; said sole plate comprising: a molded unitaryplate portion with depending heel and toe embossments, each embossment having a downwardly open recess having a closed upper end and a lower end opening defined by downwardly relatively diverging internal wall surfaces without undercutting thereofrelative to the upper closed end, the wall surface of each recess nearest the adjacent end of the sole plate being at least generally vertical with respect to the horizontal plane of the sole plate and an opposite wall surface of each recess beinginclined generally symmetrically with respect to the central axis of an associated inclined strut arm; and a cushion element mounted in each recess and conforming to the internal shaping of the wall surfaces and having a socket therein for receiving aninclined free end of an associated strut arm and resiliently reacting to movements of the strut arm during skating operations; each said cushion element socket having generally parallel internal surface portions inclined for mating with said inclinedfree end of an associated strut arm, and providing space for additional thickness of the included cushion element between the strut arm socket and the vertical wall surface of the associated recess; a portion of the internal wall surface of each recesstoward the adjacent end of the sole plate extending downwardly with respect to the remaining recess internal wall with the additional thickness of the included cushion element exposed to the open end of the recess to extend downwardly from the adjacentsurface of the strut arm socket to the downwardly wall surface portion of the cushion-receiving recess.
A sole plate, wherein the upper surface of the sole plate is provided with upwardly open out-of-round recesses at the heel and toe portions for fixedly receiving similarly shaped fastener elements, as a nut or fastenerhead, securing the action screws against rotation.
A sole plate and further including a recessed upper surface defined by an upstanding peripheral wall and a plurality of generally diagonally disposed reinforcing ribs extending between inner surfaces of the upstandingperipheral wall.
A sole plate as claimed in claim 7 wherein the upstanding peripheral wall is contoured to define heel, instep and toe portions for attachment of a shoe to the sole plate and further including fastener accommodating apertures extending throughthe sole plate recessed upper surface for accommodating fasteners for attachment of a shoe to said sole plate upper surface.
BACKGROUND
This invention relates to machine skates and a wheel support assembly therefor, particularly for rink type machine skates, and to an improved sole plate of relatively low cost, light weight and enhanced durability.
machine skates of this general type are shown in U.S. Pat. No. 1,294,984 with an action screw cushion and ball and socket strut arm mounting and U.S. Pat. No. 2,719,725 for a double action screw cushion and spring strut arm; in U.S. Pat. No.2,719,723 with double action screw cushion and ball and socket connection for the strut arm, nd toe stop; in U.S. Pat. No. 3,180,651 for a sole plate included a threaded member for mounting a toe stop; in U.S. Pat. No. 3,862,763 for a cup-likecushion for the end of the strut arm. The above patents include a sole plate to which a heeled shoe is to be mounted. U.S. Pat. No. 4,058,323 shows a somewhat skeletal form of sole plate design for low cost, light weight and good durability. In askatboard truck, another form of cushion mounting for the end of a strut arm is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,103,917.
In machine skate patents as above exemplified, the truck assemblies permit a degree of relative movement between the wheel axles and the sole plate for the skater to gracefully perform certain motions or steps but without a feeling of loosenessbetween the parts as skating pressures are varied in a controlled manner.
SUMMARY
According to the present invention, the action, or flexibility without looseness, as provided by the action screw cushions, is improved by the resilient mounting of the end of the strut arm in a cushion shaped with objective of permittinggenerally universal action therebetween with a reduced tendency of wear or pinching of the cushion during such action, and of providing for ready assembly of the cushion in a generally symmetrically shaped recess with an enlarged downwardly open end.
The invention further provides a somewhat skeletal form of unitary sole plate with an upwardly open recess defined by a peripheral wall with diagonal arrays of reinforcing ribs arranged for strengthening the sole plate particularly in the regionsof upwardly open recesses mounting the securing devices for the action screws and the stop against rotation, and with the upper edges of the peripheral wall and ribs contoured along the length of the sole plate to provide heel, instep and toe portionsfor attachment of a shoe without the usual heel.
The front and rear wheel or roller trucks for the machine skate are substantially identical but in reversed positioning of parts and the front truck assembly will be described with lettered suffix numerals applied to the rear truck assembly. Thefront truck wheels 60 are carried by an axle 62 which also carries an integral platform 64 and action strut arm 66 angularly disposed relative to one another. The front action screw 68 is illustrated as a headed bolt with the hexagonal drive headthereof press fitted or otherwise secured in the complementary shaped recess 28 and with the threaded shank thereof passing through upper and lower cushioning washer blocks 70, 72, respectively, of rubber or similar cushioning material. These cushioningblocks are disposed on opposite sides of the platform 64 through which the action screw 68 extends and is secured by a self-locking nut 74 operating against a washer 76. The upper surface of the upper cushion block 70 is seated in the recess 48 of theembossment 34. With this arrangement, the headed bolt may be assembled with the sole plate prior to attachment of the shoe. On the other hand, it is contemplated that a nut alone may be so assembled with the sole plate and the headed bolt then passedupwardly through the platform and cushion blocks for attachment to the previously press fitted or otherwise assembled nut.
As shown more in detail in FIG. 4, the recess 40 (the recess 38 is similar but reversed) opens downwardly with a larger opening than the upper closed end thereof. The configuration is such that there are no “undercut” surfaces so as tofacilitate molding. As illustrated, this enlargement of the open end of the recess is elongated along the sole plate axis and includes opposite side walls and a rear wall 40a which is inclined symmetrically with respect to the longitudinal axis of theassociated strut arm 66 in normal assembly. The forward wall 40b of the recess is generally vertical with respect to the horizontal plane of the sole plate and extends downwardly below the recess rear wall. This recess has mounted therein a cushioningsocket member 80 of rubber or similar resilient material for complemental snug fit and mounting by a press fit, or augmented by adhesive bond, within the inner surface confines of the recess and with itself internally recessed for snug complemental fitwith the rounded end of the strut arm 66 to provide a cushioned substantially universal connection in the nature of a ball and socket connection. The forward remnant portion of the cushion extends forwardly and downwardly, as at 82, to the bottom of therecess wall 40b, thus leaving a rather substantial thickness of cushion material in this area to enhance the “feel” of the skate during use and particularly under energetic action by the skater as in rink skating for indoor and dance or figure skating. In such use, it is particularly desirable to provide a limited degree of flexibility or so-called “action” between the wheel and axle assembly but without a feeling of looseness between the parts, or undue wear between the assembled parts, thus to afforda controlled degree of motion, and skaters may adjust the sensitivity by adjusting the action screw and nut relative the included cushioning blocks.
The resilient socket for the end of the action strut arms greatly increases this “feel” of the skate but in the past such sockets have been subject excessive wear under constant energetic skating action as by pinching the edges of a normalcup-like cushion against the edges of its mounting recess. It is desirable to reduce such wear in both the front and rear truck assemblies but, generally speaking, the front truck assembly is subject to more vigorous “action”. In gracefully performingcertain motions or steps, the flexibility should be accomplished without a loose feeling and without undue wear or strain on the assembly. The cushion blocks on the action screw and platform accomplish much of this confined flexibility but the actionstrut arm is subjected to resultant movements not only laterally but fore and aft. The principal resultant action of the strut arm occurs as the front truck assembly is rearwardly and upwardly urged under certain energetic movement, the strut arm of thefront truck assembly will tend toward clockwise movement and with some upward movement. In doing so, the forward enlarged portion of the cushion socket member 80 will resiliently yield and reduce pinching action on the rear portion of the cushion. Thisis permitted by the unconfined inclined portion 82 being free to “give” under the movement of the action strut and then recover as the truck assembly reverts to or toward normal skating position. While wear of the cushion member is greatly reduced,replacement thereof is simplified since it is trapped in position by the strut arm which may be removed with the truck assembly for this purpose, and the downwardly enlarging internal shaping of the recess 38 or 40 permits ready removal of the cushionand equally ready assembly of a replacement.