Skate Blade and Method of Manufacturing

A method of manufacturing an ice skate blade includes the steps of stamping out a sole plate portion and a heel plate portion from a flat sheet of metal; fastening the sole plate portion and heel plate portion to a blade body by fasteners; and attaching a blade runner to the blade body. The blade runner can be made by stamping the blade runner from a sheet stock. Pillar portions of the blade body are drilled and tapped and providing corresponding plain holes are provided in the sole plate portion and heel plate portion, and the fasteners are inserted though the plain holes and threaded tightly into the threaded holes.

Skip to: Description  ·  Claims  · Patent History  ·  Patent History
Description

This application claims the benefit of Provisional Application U.S. Ser. No. 60/898,003, filed Jan. 29, 2007.

TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to ice skates and the manufacture thereof. The invention particularly relates to figure skates and the manufacture thereof.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

To cover the potential market, figure skates must be in all the various sizes and types. Figure skates are conventionally provided in ¼ size increments instead of ½ size increments provided for shoes. Producing skate blades from size 7 to 12 will require the production of 20 different sizes of blades. Providing blades for a left and right skate adds up to 40 different blades that have to be produced in order to cover the market.

There are also dance blades which are made much shorter and with different teeth and as many as 70 different blades. For manufacturing standpoint this is very difficult and not cost efficient.

Some ice skates incorporate a blade runner holder fastened to the shoe portion of the ice skate, and a blade runner mounted to the blade holder, and intended to be in contact with the ice. For some ice skates blade runners, the runner includes a thickened blade portion that is formed with a thinner base portion. The thinner base portion is typically cut from a piece of stock that forms the thickened blade portion. Once cut, the base portion is adhesively secured into a groove of the blade runner holder.

The base portion can be cut with one tool but it is very time consuming and difficult to align one side exactly with the other. The skate blade runner is typically made from stainless steel which is a very difficult metal to machine. A great amount of pressure has to be applied to cut and remove material while the piece of stock is held in a fixture. When cutting with a regular tool, such as a milling bit, machining is done on one side at a time. Problems are presented, associated with such a small thin part as the base portion. The thin base portion can bend and can break under excess pressure. Many passes with the tool are needed, back and forth, to remove the desired amount of material from the piece of stock. The piece of stock also has to be taken out of the fixture and reinstalled to machine on the opposite side. This is a costly procedure.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides two embodiment skate blade holders for mounting a blade runner for an ice skate. The first described embodiment is a high end blade holder and the second described embodiment is a more economical blade holder. Either skate blade holder is economically manufactured using the methods of the invention. Either blade holder which results from the inventive manufacturing methods has style and performance advantages over conventionally manufactured skate blades.

According to a first method of manufacturing a blade of an ice skate, the steps include:

providing a T-shaped stock piece of material having a plate and a leg extending from a center of the plate;

machining the plate to form at least one mounting platform for connecting the blade to a skate shoe;

machining the leg to form a skate body section that extends from the platform to a position adjacent the ice when in use.

Preferably, the method can include the further step of machining an end of the leg to form a slot, and providing a separate blade runner for contacting the ice when in use, and fixing the blade runner into the slot.

Preferably, the method step of machining the skate body section is further defined in that the skate body section is machined to have a blade runner holder portion having a diamond cross-sectional shape that carries the slot and a plurality of pillar portions extending from the blade runner holder portion to the platform.

Preferably, the method step of machining the skate body section is further defined in that three pillar portions are formed, and the step of machining the plate is further defined in that the at least one platform comprises a sole plate and a heel plate formed with a gap therebetween, wherein two pillar portions are connected to the sole plate and one pillar portion is connected to the heel plate.

Preferably, the method step of machining the skate body section is further defined in that the pillar portions are tapered in both of forward and rearward direction.

Preferably, the method step of providing a separate blade runner is further defined by the steps of providing a blade runner-shaped workpiece having a substantially constant thickness; and

machining both lateral sides of an upper edge region of the blade runner-shaped workpiece simultaneously to form a thinner base region, the base region sized to fit within the slot.

Preferably, the method step of machining both lateral sides of the blade runner-shaped workpiece is undertaken using a vein cutting tool.

Preferably, the method can include providing a flat sheet of stock material and laser cutting a plurality of the work pieces from the sheet.

Preferably, the method can include the further step of, after the step of machining, heat treating the workpiece while holding the workpiece in a correct curvature.

According to this method of manufacture of the invention, different sizes of blades can easily be produced with no large investment of dies or castings. A specially shaped extrusion is used for the starting stock piece. The extrusion can be cut to the desired length for the particular sized skate blade. The extrusion of the invention includes a pre-selected cross sectional shape which optimally matches the finished blade holder and which minimizes scrap material. The shape of the blade holder formed from the stock piece is easily formed with the process of Computer Numerical Control (“CNC”) machining.

The CNC machine rotates a cutting tool at high speed and moves in 3 directions. The Y movements being forward and backward, X being left and right and Z up and down or in all 3 dimensions. The key to saving money and time on production is by having a special cutting tool made with an angle tip to match the angle of the taper on the skate blade holder. Having this special tool greatly improves the speed of production. One angle tool can make one pass along the top and one along the bottom in one pass producing the entire surface of the tapered-shape skate holder in only one or 2 minutes of machining time.

The blade holder is then flipped over and the other side is machined the same way creating a mirror image of the first side.

The blade holder of the invention will dramatically improve the skater's performance with a significant reduction in weight, while increasing strength and stiffness. The weight reduction is due to using a lighter more modern metal, aluminum, which is about one third the weight of the steel currently used. The weight reduction per pair is over 1 pound. The advantage of the weight reduction is that it will reduce the weight the skater has to lift high into the air and increase the height and distance of the jump. Another advantage is with skating fatigue while skating. Less weight requires less energy reducing fatigue and improving the skater's ability to perform.

Having a stiffer blade increases the power transfer or energy from the skater to the ice. As the skater pushes on the blade the flexing reduces the power like a spring reacts and absorbs energy.

The skate blade holder of the invention increases the strength and modulus or stiffness by changing the material from a flat piece of metal to a diamond shape with the middle being thicker than a normal blade. The blade holders are three-dimensional in shape which greatly adds stiffness and strength to the blade.

Aluminum has about ⅓ the stiffness or modulus of steel and in order to make it stiffer the thickness of the skate blade holder has to be thicker to compensate for the flex in the blade holder. Instead of increasing the thickness of the entire surface, only the center of the blade holder is made thicker creating a diamond shape with the upper and lower ends being relatively thin. This reduces weight while greatly stiffening the structure.

This shape also gives effective support for the blade runner which is fit inside the aluminum blade holder, and prevents failure of the aluminum blade holder from splitting apart.

The T shaped extrusion and machining process used in the aforementioned first embodiment makes a very high quality blade. When top skaters are spending 100 hours a week on the ice and $70,000 a year on coaching and ice time, they are not looking for an economical blade, they want the best quality and strength. The skate design of the aforementioned embodiment machined from a T extrusion, produces very high quality, is strong and made with great precision. Because the blade is made very accurate it is made slowly and this greatly increases the cost to produce. There is also a waste of some material during the machining process which also increases the cost.

However, less than one out of a thousand figure skaters actually stay with the sport of figure skating and actually go on to compete in the skate competitions. Most beginner figure skaters do not want to make a large investment in a high end blade until they at least try out the sport. High end blades can range from $350 to almost $700. Many of the young skaters would like to purchase the light weight blade of the preferred embodiment but they are just too expensive. They are looking for a blade in the cost range of around $50-$100. Since few of the beginner skaters are doing big jumps they do not need the strength or the high precession of the aforementioned first embodiment.

Therefore, the present inventor has recognized that a need exists for a high quality, strong and precise blade at a reduced cost. The market demand for such a blade is larger than the market demand for a high end blade.

According to the second embodiment, a light weight, strong and relatively inexpensive figure skate blade is manufactured by a combination of manufacturing processes, with an assembly of the completed parts.

The inventive method includes the steps of:

stamping out of the sole and heel plates from a flat sheet of metal;

machining or forging the blade body from a substantially flat stock; and

attaching the sole and heel plates to the blade body.

Preferably, the heel and sole plates are attached to the blade body by fasteners.

As an additional cost reduction, the blade runner could be stamped out of sheet instead of laser cutting from sheet. The blade runner is a little thinner and no machining is needed to the runner.

Preferably, holes are drilled and tapped into the blade pillars or “stanchions” and then inserted through plain holes in the sole and heel plate and threaded into the pillars.

The preferred method of making the blade body is forging since the main body is thick enough to forge and different shapes can be made with this process.

The present invention also provides a unique manufacturing process used to make a blade runner, which creates a high quality product at a lower cost. This method can produce a blade runner for either of the above embodiments.

According to the inventive process a vein cutter is utilized to cut the base portion from a piece of stock. The inventive method speeds the process of producing by removing the desired material from the piece of stock in one pass, machining two surfaces at one time.

A vein cutter is actually two tools combined. A spacer is put between two rotary cutting tools, wherein the thickness of the spacer determines the thickness of the vein or the base portion to be cut. The vein cutter cuts two separate surfaces at one time leaving the center section uncut.

Each surface of the base portion cut is an exact duplicate of the other which provides a better, even fit inside the blade holder. When using a vein cutter, maximum pressure can be applied because there is no unbalanced pressure applied to the thin base portion. The pressure is applied is to the material to be removed and not the base portion itself. The base portion is also cut in one pass with both sides being cut at the same time. Time is saved by eliminating the process of taking the runner out of the fixture, flipping it over and reinstalling into a second fixture.

Once completed, the blade runner can be installed into a blade holder, using adhesive or other means.

Numerous other advantages and features of the present invention will be become readily apparent from the following detailed description of the invention and the embodiments thereof, and from the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a perspective view showing a T-shaped extrusion portion;

FIG. 2 is a side view of the T-shaped extrusion portion showing the skate blade holder of the invention superimposed thereon;

FIG. 3 is a cross-section of the extrusion portion shown in FIG. 1;

FIG. 4 is a cross-section showing the skate blade holder superimposed on the cross-section of FIG. 3;

FIG. 5 is a perspective view of the extrusion portion of FIG. 1, showing a first step of a machining process illustrating how material is removed;

FIG. 6 is a front end view showing how the angle tipped tool cutting the bottom angle of the skate blade holder;

FIG. 7 is a cross-section of the skate blade holder showing a larger, angled tipped tool used to cut the top angle of the skate blade holder, the cross section is taken generally along 8-8 of FIG. 9;

FIG. 7A is a cross-section of the skate blade holder showing a larger, angled tipped tool used to cut the top angle of the skate blade holder, the cross section is taken along 7A-7A of FIG. 9;

FIG. 8 is a cross-section showing how the tool of FIG. 6 cuts the bottom angle, creating a tapered shape, the cross section is taken generally along 8-8 of FIG. 9;

FIG. 9 is a rear perspective view showing the skate blade holder being thicker in the middle section and thinner at either end;

FIG. 10 is a side, perspective, exploded view showing a skate blade runner separated from the skate blade holder;

FIG. 11 is a side perspective view showing a completed skate blade holder with the skate blade runner attached;

FIG. 12 is a fragmentary side view of the skate blade holder, illustrating the tooling areas and typical tool sizes for a 10.5 inch skate;

FIG. 12A is a fragmentary top view taken generally along line 12A-12A of FIG. 12;

FIG. 13A is a sectional view taken generally along line 13-13 of FIG. 9 for a skate between 8.25 and 9 inches long;

FIG. 13B is a sectional view taken generally along line 13-13 of FIG. 9 for a skate between 9.25 and 10 inches long;

FIG. 13C is a sectional view taken generally along line 13-13 of FIG. 9 for a skate between 10.25 and 11 inches long;

FIG. 14 is a plan view of a sheet of steel showing blade runners to be cut from the sheet of steel;

FIG. 15 is a sectional view of a fixture used to hold the blade runner during machining;

FIG. 16 is a side view of a vein cutter with blade runner in cross section

FIG. 17 is a side view of the vein cutter with blade runner in cross section with the blade runner being cut;

FIG. 18 is an exploded view of a first style vein cutter;

FIG. 19 is an end view, partially in section of a second style vein cutter cutting a blade runner held by the fixture;

FIG. 20 is a cross of the blade runner;

FIG. 21 is an elevation view of a blade runner that has been warped by the heat treating process;

FIG. 22 is an elevation view of a blade runner prior to heat treating showing the correct curvature;

FIG. 23 is an elevation view of a blade runner and correcting apparatus including pins that would hold blade at the correct curve while it is being reheated;

FIG. 24 is an exploded perspective view of a second embodiment skate blade according to another aspect of the invention;

FIG. 25 is an elevation view of a method step to produce the blade of FIG. 24;

FIG. 26 is a sectional view taken along line 26-26 of FIG. 25 with a tool driven down to the full extent;

FIG. 27 is a plan view of the toe and heel plates of the blade of FIG. 24;

FIG. 28 is an exploded elevation view of the blade of FIG. 24;

FIG. 29 is an exploded sectional view taken along lines 29-29 of FIG. 28;

FIG. 30 is an elevation view of the blade of FIG. 24;

FIG. 31 is a sectional view taken along line 31-31 of FIG. 30;

FIG. 32 is a transparent perspective view of another embodiment blade;

FIG. 33 is an elevation view of a T-shaped extrusion stock piece with outlines of blade runner holders of the first embodiment shown thereon;

FIG. 34 is an elevation view of a bar-shaped stock piece with outlines of blade runner holders of the second embodiment shown thereon according to a first pattern; and

FIG. 35 is an elevation view of a bar-shaped stock piece with outlines of blade runner holders of the second embodiment shown thereon according to a second pattern.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

While this invention is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms, there are shown in the drawings, and will be described herein in detail, specific embodiments thereof with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to the specific embodiments illustrated.

The present invention relates to ice skates and a method of manufacture thereof. Particularly, the invention relates to the blade portion of the ice skates. Heretofore known ice skate blades are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,036,840 and 2,096,781, herein incorporated by reference.

For purposes of the following description, “blade” typically refers to the structure between the ice skate shoe and the ice. According to some embodiments described herein, the blade includes a blade runner holder and a blade runner mounted to the holder. The blade runner makes sliding contact with the ice during skating.

FIG. 1 shows a portion of a T-shaped extrusion 10 formed to match the largest size figure skate blade and used to form a blade runner holder. The extrusion material is made in long lengths and cut in smaller lengths to match the size of a blade runner to be assembled thereto. The extrusion is shown on its side for better viewing. The extrusion can be composed of 6061 aluminum material.

The one piece T extrusion has two different sections. A flat rectangular leg 12 is in a horizontal plane in the drawing. A vertical plate 14 is centered and attached to the one end of the leg 12. The leg 12 is joined at 15 during the extrusion process to the center of the plate 14 creating a T shape. The leg includes a tapered edge region 13 having opposite angled surfaces 13a, 13b.

FIG. 2 is a side view of the T-shaped extrusion showing how the entire skate blade runner holder 17 fits inside the extrusion portion 10. A curved sole plate 18 attaches to the sole of the skate boot (not shown) and a heel plate 22 attaches to the heel of the skate boot which all fit inside the plate 14. A vertical section 19 of the blade holder 17 fits within the leg 12. The vertical section includes front pillar portions 19a, 19b, rear pillar portion 19c and blade runner holder portion 19d. The pillar portions 19a, 19b connect the sole plate 18 to the blade runner holder portion 19d. The pillar portion 19c connects the heel plate 22 to the blade runner holder portion 19d.

FIG. 3 shows a cross section of the T extrusion where the plate 14 is horizontal and the leg 12 is vertical. A curved section is used at 15 to increase strength where the plate 14 and the leg 12 join together.

FIG. 4 is a cross section of the extrusion portion 10 and shows a forward view and how the heel 22 and sole plate 18 fit inside the plate 14. FIG. 4 also illustrates how the vertical section 19 of the blade holder body 17 fits inside the vertical leg 12 of the extrusion portion 10. The lowest portion of the section 19 substantially matches the tapered edge 13 of the extrusion portion 10.

FIGS. 2 and 4 both show how the skate tightly fits inside the extrusion and how the extrusion saves material and machining time, especially when comparing the extrusion to a solid block.

FIG. 5 illustrates the step of the machining process where material is removed from leg 12 of with an endmill 24 forming the rough profile of the section 19.

FIG. 6 is a front view showing how an endmill 27 has an angled tip 28 which cuts the bottom angle 26 which forms the tapered section on the bottom of the skate body section 19. Because the extrusion portion 10 had tapered edge region 13, the bottom angle 26 when cut removes only material that is needed to create the angle 26 along the bottom curved length of the section 19. The presence of the tapered edge region 13 in the extrusion portion thus reduces scrap material during the machine step.

FIG. 7 is a cross section of the skate blade body section 19. A slightly larger endmill 30 with an angled tip 32 cuts the top angle 34 on the section 19, particularly on the blade runner holder portion 19d.

FIG. 8 illustrates how a smaller endmill 27 is used to cut the lower half of the skate body section 19. Also shown is the slot 40 used to hold a blade runner 43. The slot 40 is machined into the section 19 using an endmill (not shown). The parts match in size and shape but with the slot 40 being slightly larger to allow room for adhesive between the runner 43 and the sidewalls of the slot 40. Preferably, there is a 0.005 in. clearance between each side of the runner 43 and the sidewalls of the slot 40. The blade runner is slid inside and the adhesive holds the runner 43 tightly in place. Ice speed skates are glued together in a similar fashion. Preferably, the blade runner is 420 or 440C stainless steel. Preferably, the adhesive is PERMABOND 310 heat cured at 225 degrees F. for 2.5 hours.

FIG. 9 illustrates a completed skate blade holder shown from a back angle showing how the different skate blade holder thicknesses are formed using the angled tools. The areas 54, 56 and 58 on each side of the section 19 are tapered by the tool 30. The areas 62 on each side of the section 19 are tapered by the tool 27, as necessary. The areas 70, 72, 74, 76, 78, 80 are cut by the tool 24. The shapes of the portions 18, 22, particularly the areas 80, 82, 84, are cut by a similar operation. Mounting holes 88 through the portions 18, 22 for mounting the blade holder 17 to a boot are formed by cutting or drilling in a conventional manner.

FIG. 10 is a completed skate blade holder 17 shown with the blade runner 43, before the attaching step. The blade runner has a machined insert portion 44 that is sized to fit within the slot 40. The blade runner has teeth 45 used in figure skating. The blade runner is curved, as is the holder section 19 at its bottom. The slot 40 has a curve along its length to match the curve of the blade runner 43 and insert portion 44.

FIG. 11 is a completely assembled skate blade holder and blade runner.

FIG. 12 illustrates the tooling path for the two tools 27, 30 wherein the tool 27 is an 18 mm diameter tool and the tool 30 is a 32 mm diameter tool, for a 10.5 inch skate. This length measurement is indicated as “L” in FIG. 12A, and is measured between the front tip of the sole plate 18 and the back tip of the heel plate 22.

FIG. 13A gives exemplary dimensions of the section 13-13 from FIG. 9 for a skate having L between 8.25 and 9 inches. FIG. 13B gives exemplary dimensions of the section 13-13 from FIG. 9 for a skate having L between 9.25 and 10 inches. FIG. 13C gives exemplary dimensions of the section 13-13 from FIG. 9 for a skate having L between 10.25 and 11 inches.

It should be noted that the skate blade holders illustrated in FIGS. 2, 6, 9, 10 and 11 are substantially drawn to a proportional scale.

Referring to FIG. 14, the first step in the inventive process is to select a steel sheet 102 having a preferred thickness, which is approximately 4 mm thick. It is preferable to use a large piece or sheet because it fits on the machine better, is more efficient and is a more cost effective use of material. The next step is to laser cut as many blade stocks 103 as will fit on the sheet of steel 101 as laid out on the sheet 102 in FIG. 14

As illustrated in FIG. 15, a custom fixture 108, matching the curve of the blade stock, holds the blade stock 103 securely along the entire length of the blade stock 103 while the machining process is being performed. An extra heavy duty fixture 108 is advantageous to hold the small part 103 securely when a great amount of pressure is applied to such a very small part. The fixture 108 includes a first clamp part 109a and a second clamp part 109b that are drawn together by the threaded engagement of a handle-screw 109c that is engaged to the second clamp part 109b.

FIG. 16 illustrates a first style vein cutting tool 111 with two identical but separate cutting discs 113a and 113b, having generally circular shapes with radially extending teeth 113c (FIG. 18). The blade stock 103 cross section, with the vein 110 to be cut shown dashed, is shown.

FIG. 17 shows the blade stock 103, with the base portion 110 being cut by the vein cutter 111, and how the base portion 110 fits between the two circular cutters 113a and 113b as it is being cut.

Once the blade stock 103 is properly fixed into the fixture 108, a computer numerically controlled (CNC) machine holding the tool 111 closely follows the curve of the blade stock 103 and cuts the vein or base portion 110 down the entire length of the blade stock 103.

The vein tool 111 is illustrated in FIG. 18 as an exploded view. A male spindle part 115 fits inside the female part on the CNC machine (not shown). The cutting discs 113a and 113b are both circular saw tooth cutting tools made from carbide. A spacer 117 is sandwiched between the discs 113a and 113b. The thickness of spacer 117 determines the thickness of the vein or base portion 110. Part 119 is a washer that helps secure and support the assembly. A bolt 120 passes through all the holes 128 and hold the entire assembly together.

FIG. 19 illustrates a different type of vein cutting tool 122, which replaces the circular cutting discs 113a and 113b with radially extending square cutting bits 125. The cutting bits include a cutting edge 125a. The bits 125 are attached by screws 124a to tabs 124, formed with or otherwise attached to a hub 126 of the tool 122. Each tab 124 has a threaded bore for engagement by a screw 124a. The bits have plain bores. The hub 126 can be a single part or can be two parts separated by a spacer such as shown in FIG. 18. From four to about twenty bits can be used on the one tool 122. The square bits 125 are replaceable, which is both easier and more cost effective to use. Clamping fixture 108 is shown holding the blade stock 103.

FIG. 20 is an enlarged view of the cross section of a blade runner 132 after the blade stock 103 has been machined. After the base portion 110 has been cut, the next step in the process is to machine a hollow 129 in the blade portion 130 which is the surface the skater skates on. This could also be done before the base portion 110 is cut.

After all the machining is done the blade runner 132 can then be heat treated. Heat treating before the blade is machined would be more difficult where diamond tools would be needed.

FIG. 21 is a drawing showing a typical blade runner 132 after heat treating where the blade runner 132 tends to straighten out or have less of a curvature after the process. The blade measures 0.1115 inches maximum deviation from straight.

FIG. 22 shows the correct curvature, 0.1496 inches maximum deviation from straight, compared with FIG. 21 at 0.1115 inches.

Some warping or straightening can also be caused by the stress of the machining process.

FIG. 23 illustrates how blade runners 132 that are warped can be re-curved. This is done by a reheating process. The blade runners 132 are held in a fixture with pins 128 in the correct curve. They are then reheated to 1000 Fahrenheit for about 10 hours. This process both straightens the blade and reduces stress.

FIGS. 24-31 illustrate alternate embodiments of the aforementioned blade which constitute more economically manufactured skate blades. According to FIGS. 24-31, a blade 200 is made in three parts, a blade body 204, a sole plate 206 and a heel plate 208. The blade body 204 comprises pillar portions 204a, 204b, 204c, and the blade runner holder portion 204d connecting the pillar portions. The blade body 204 has substantially the same shape and contours as the corresponding portions of the first embodiment.

The blade body 204 is relatively thick and can be manufactured such as by forging or machining. Forging is shaping metal by heating it and then hammering or rolling it. The forging can be done with a power-driven hammer. Steel blocks hollowed out or having raised portions in the shape of the desired part forms dies. One die can be a stationary die while the other can be attached to a hammer or press ram. The stock piece can then be hammered or pressed until it takes on the shape of the die cavity.

Machining is described above with respect to the manufacture of the blade runner holder 17.

Forging is a strong and low cost type of production for the blade runner pillars 204a, 204b, 204c and runner holder portion 204d, but is not preferred for manufacturing the sole plate 206 and heel plate 208 because of the relatively thin thickness of these parts.

The preferred method of producing the sole and heel plates is by stamping the sole and heel plates from sheet stock.

Preferably the heel and sole plates are composed of aluminum having a thickness T of about 0.1 inches and the blade body is composed of aluminum having identical dimensions to the corresponding body portions of the first embodiment. Other materials of construction are encompassed by the invention.

The heel plate 208 and the sole plate 206 are fastened to the stanchions or pillars 204a, 204b and 204c by first drilling and thread-tapping holes 204aa, 204bb, 204cc in the respective pillars 204a, 204b, 204c and then fastening the sole plate 206 and the heel plate 208 using threaded fasteners 205a, 205b, 205c inserted through plain holes 205aa, 205bb, 205cc in the plates and engaged into the tapped holes 204aa, 204bb, 204cc in the pillars.

A blade runner 216 is fit and adhesively secured into a slot 204dd (FIG. 29) formed into a bottom of and along a length of the blade runner holder portion 204d. Preferably the slot 204dd is formed or cut into the bade runner holder portion 204d before the plates 206, 208 are attached.

FIG. 25 illustrates one or more drilling tools 220 in the process of cutting the holes 204aa, 204bb and 204cc into the pillars 204a, 204b, 204c. The holes 204aa, 204bb and 204cc are tapped either during the hole forming or after the hole forming with a tapping tool.

FIG. 32 illustrates a modified embodiment 200A wherein two fasteners 205c engaging two threaded holes 204cc are used to secure the heel plate 208 to the pillar 204c, via two plain holes 205cc in the heel plate. The identical reference numbers indicate likeness in configuration to the features of the previously described embodiment identified by the same reference numbers.

FIG. 33 illustrates a layout of the blade runner holders 17 of the first embodiment within an elongated T-shaped extrusion 300. Due to the T-shape, the holders 17 must be laid out end to end.

FIGS. 34 and 35 illustrate layouts of the second embodiment on an elongated bar-shaped, rectangular cross-section stock piece 302. As can be seen, the blade runner holders 200 can be laid out to waste less material since the need for a T-shaped cross-section is eliminated. The holders 200 can be machined into the stock piece 302 on both sides and then cut out of the stock piece 302.

The method and tooling according to FIGS. 15-23 and the description associated therewith can also be used to manufacture the embodiments described in FIGS. 24-31 and the description associated therewith.

From the foregoing, it will be observed that numerous variations and modifications may be effected without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is to be understood that no limitation with respect to the specific apparatus illustrated herein is intended or should be inferred.

Claims

1. A method of manufacturing an ice skate blade comprising the steps of:

stamping out a sole plate portion and a heel plate portion from a flat sheet of metal;
providing a blade body; and
fastening the sole plate portion and heel plate portion to the blade body by fasteners.

2. The method according to claim 1, comprising the further step of attaching a blade runner to the blade body.

3. The method according to claim 1, wherein said step of attaching a blade runner is further defined in that said blade runner is made by stamping the blade runner from a sheet stock.

4. The method according to claim 1, wherein said step of fastening is further defined by the steps of drilling and tapping threaded holes into pillar portions of the blade body and providing corresponding plain holes in the sole plate portion and heel plate portion, and inserting fasteners though the plain holes and threading the fasteners tightly into the threaded holes.

5. The method according to claim 1, wherein said step of providing the blade body is further defined in that said blade body is forged.

6. The method according to claim 1, comprising the further step of attaching a blade runner to the blade body;

wherein said step of attaching a blade runner is further defined in that said blade runner is made by stamping the blade runner from a sheet stock;
wherein said step of fastening is further defined by the steps of drilling and tapping threaded holes into pillar portions of the blade body and providing corresponding plain holes in the sole plate portion and heel plate portion, and inserting fasteners though the plain holes and threading the fasteners tightly into the threaded holes; and
wherein said step of providing the blade body is further defined in that said blade body is forged.

7. An ice skate blade, comprising:

a sole plate portion and a heel plate portion;
a blade body having front and rear pillar portions; and
a plurality of fasteners arranged to fasten said sole plate portion to said front pillar portion and said heel plate portion to said rear pillar portion.

8. The ice skate blade according to claim 7, wherein said front and rear pillar portions comprise threaded holes and said plurality of fasteners are threadingly engaged into said threaded holes.

Patent History
Publication number: 20080231008
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 29, 2008
Publication Date: Sep 25, 2008
Inventor: Robert K. Rudollph (Gurnee, IL)
Application Number: 12/021,705
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Runners (280/11.18); Assembling Or Joining (29/428)
International Classification: A63C 1/32 (20060101); B21D 39/03 (20060101);