Gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement

A unique throwable implement provides packaging and distribution of a recorded medium and opportunity for promotional dissemination. A CD is disposed with a Frisbee™-like implement for distribution of the CD. The gyroscopic stability of the implement is not unnecessarily compromised while physical protection of the CD is maintained.

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Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

[0001] The present invention generally relates to throwing implements and more particularly relates to gyroscopically stabilized throwing implements that include a recordable disk medium such as a CD.

[0002] Most people are familiar with a throwable gyroscopically stabilized aerodynamically favorable implement as a toy generally known as a Frisbee™. Historically, the Frisbie Pie Company of Connecticut offered pies in a pie-tin that, once the pie was eaten, was used by Ivy-league college students as an implement to be tossed between throwers for Frisbie-ing entertainment. Others also sailed flat disks for entertainment resulting in various improvements in aerodynamics, mass distribution, materials, and additional features culminating in the Frisbee™ toy and its cousins we see today.

[0003] It has become commonplace for large volumes of information to be stored in digital form on a recordable disk storage medium generically called a CD. A CD, however, is more accurately described as a discoidal laminate of plastic, metallic, and/or dye having discontinuities in an optically readable (and writable) layer or layers that encode digital information according to predetermined standards. Different standards (and materials) are used to define a Compact Disk (CD) for digital audio recordings, a Video CD for digital video recordings, a Digital Video Disk (DVD) for high quality video recordings (sometimes called a Digital Versatile Disk), and CD-ROM (CD-R and CD-RW for writable storage) for storage of data.

[0004] Toys and information storage media are not inherently or conceptually linked so the bringing of the two together may offer unique possibilities heretofore unheard of.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

[0005] A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement and recordable medium includes a disk-shaped body having at least a first surface and a second surface configured to provide aerodynamic lift when thrown and gyroscopic stability when rotated about an axis of rotation. The implement includes a feature that removably attaches the recordable disk medium to the disk-shaped body. The recordable medium is held parallel to one of the first surface and the second surface, and disposed with the mass of the recordable medium essentially balanced about the axis of rotation.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0006] FIG. 1 is a cross section of a recordable medium such as a discoidal CD which may be employed in the present invention.

[0007] FIG. 2 is a top plan view of a recordable medium such as a CD that has been formed into a credit card size and shape.

[0008] FIG. 3 is a top plan view of a throwable gyroscopically stabilized aerodynamic implement which may be employed in the present invention.

[0009] FIG. 4 is a cross section of the implement of FIG. 3 taken along section line 4-4.

[0010] FIGS. 5A, 5B, and 5C are magnified cross sections of spring finger and recordable medium capture embodiments which may be employed in the present invention.

[0011] FIG. 6 is a cross section of an alternative embodiment of a throwable gyroscopically stabilized aerodynamic implement which may be employed in the present invention.

[0012] FIG. 7 is a cross section of an alternative embodiment of a throwable gyroscopically stabilized aerodynamic implement which may be employed in the present invention.

[0013] FIG. 8 is a cross section of an alternative embodiment of a throwable gyroscopically stabilized aerodynamic implement which may be employed in the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

[0014] A novel combination of a Frisbee™-like toy and a CD offers those who wish to distribute a CD in a surprising way just such an opportunity. It can be envisioned that a popular concert would include, as a stimulus for the concert-goers to purchase an audio CD or a DVD by the performers, a distribution from the stage of a limited number of CD-including Frisbee™s by launching the implements from the stage. The advent of rapid recording of CDs makes it possible for a recording of that very concert to be impressed upon the CD being sailed out among the audience immediately following the conclusion of the concert. Other advertising and promotional uses easily fall within the purview of the implement.

[0015] A mere flat disk does not have the aerodynamically advantageous shape to provide a reasonable flight experience that a Frisbee™ offers. The curved upper surface coupled with the flat lower surface and the angle of attack into a flowing airstream provide lift to enable flight for the disk. Since the Frisbee™ is launched with a spin imparted by the thrower and since most Frisbee™s are created with a significant proportion of the mass of the disk located in an annular band at the circumferential edge of the disk, a substantial amount of angular momentum is created around the axis of rotation of the disk. This angular momentum gyroscopically resists changes in the direction of the angular momentum vector along the axis of rotation and results in a long and interesting flight for the Frisbee™.

[0016] A conventionally manufactured flat disk (without aerodynamic shaping) 101 is used as an information storage medium (a CD) is shown in a cross section of the disk in FIG. 1. Generally, information in excess of 650 Mbytes of data (740 Mbytes of audio) can be stored on the CD. The most common physical implementation of a CD has a diameter, d1, of 120 mm and a thickness, t, of 1.2 mm and a mounting hole 103 having a diameter, d2, of 15 mm. The top surface 105 is generally available for message and image printing while the bottom surface 107 is typically optically transparent and allows laser reading (and writing) of information from an internal lamina via this surface. Also widely available is a MiniCD, which is often encoded with digital audio—and often in MP3 format. Such a MiniCD is physically smaller (a disk diameter, d1, of 70 mm) with a correspondingly smaller information storage capacity (160 Mbytes of audio or 140 Mbytes of data). Non-discoidal CD shapes have been introduced, for example the credit card size and shape depicted in the plan view of FIG. 2, but the information stored is typically limited to the complete data tracks 201 between the lead in track 203 and the card edge 205.

[0017] A top plan view of a preferred embodiment of a gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement employing the present invention is shown in FIG. 3. The implement 301 of the preferred embodiment, casually referred to as a Frisbee™, employs a plastic body shaped in the form of a disk. Of course, other shapes offering a stable angular momentum vector through the body may also be used provided that the angular momentum and the lift of the implement are arranged for stable flight. In addition to the aerodynamic turbulence ridges 303 circumferentially molded into the convex top surface 305, a depression 307 is molded into the crown of the body. Many, if not all, of the turbulence ridges 303 and the depression 307 are concentric among themselves and with the center of rotation (the center of the angular momentum vector) of the body. In a preferred embodiment where the CD 101 is a standard size discoid, the depression 307 is circular. When other shapes for the CD are to be specially accommodated, the shape of the depression can be molded to match. Also centered on the axis of rotation is a securing mechanism for the CD. In a preferred embodiment, twelve flexible fingers 309 are arranged in a circle about the axis of rotation and protrude away from the bottom of the depression. The circle defined by the outer surface of the flexible fingers is slightly larger than the diameter of the mounting hole 103 of the CD 101 such that an interference fit with the CD mounting hole is realized. The arrangement between the components can be appreciated from FIG. 4, a cross section of the implement taken at 4-4.

[0018] The concave under surface 401 and the circumferential distribution of mass 403 of the body can be apprehended from the cross section illustrated in FIG. 4. In order to provide compliance in the spring fingers 307, the protruding portion of the fingers are mounted on cantilevers that are attached to the flat bottom 405 of the depression in a circle 311 centered on the axis of rotation 407 and concentric with the fingers' circle but having a larger radius. Refer to FIG. 5A for a detailed sectional illustration of the spring finger assembly. The diameter of the depression 307 in a preferred embodiment is slightly larger than the diameter of a CD so that the CD 101 can be relatively easily inserted and removed from the body 301. The ease of insertion and removal must be balanced against the forces expected during flight and landing of the implement, which can be violent on a small scale.

[0019] The easiest insertion and removal is realized by forming the spring fingers and the depression as shown in FIG. 5A. One spring finger 309 is magnified and shown in cross section. The portion of the spring finger that contacts the hole of CD 101 is a portion 501 that protrudes essentially perpendicularly away from the bottom surface 405 of the depression 307 and offers frictional contact with the hole of the CD 101 to maintain the CD in place and clearing the peripheral walls of the depression by a distance, c, of 1.6 mm. The fingers are disposed at the distal end of a cantilever portion 503 that is, in the preferred embodiment, elevated parallel to the bottom surface 405 at a spacing, b, of 1.2 mm and bonded to the bottom surface 405 of the depression 307 by an attachment portion disposed at the proximal end of the cantilever in a circular ring having a larger diameter than the circle formed by the protruding portion of the spring fingers, at 505. The length of the cantilever, from the CD-contacting surface of the protruding portion of the spring finger to the point of bonding in a preferred embodiment is 4.0 mm The thickness, m, of the plastic material forming the spring finger is 0.8 mm. In order to aid the removal of the CD, the spring finger is bent into a crooked portion 507 directed toward the axis of rotation (not illustrated in FIG. 5A), disposed parallel to the bottom surface 405 of the depression 307, and elevated by a distance, h, of 3.2 mm from the bottom surface. Removal of the CD is accomplished by placing a human finger or stylus at the tip of the crooked portion 507 of the spring fingers and pushing toward the bottom surface 405. This pressure causes the cantilever portion 503 to deflect a sufficient amount that the frictional force supplied by the protruding portion of the finger against the CD is released. The CD may then be pulled out of the depression 307.

[0020] When increased protection is needed to prevent the CD from being dislodged from the implement body during a collision of the implement and an object in the flight path, a ridge 509 is added to the spring fingers 309 at the junction of the protruding portion 501 and the crooked portion 507 as illustrated in FIG. 5B. This ridge 509 extends beyond the CD-contacting surface of the spring finger 309 protruding portion 501 by a distance, f, of 0.8 mm. The ridge makes the insertion and removal of the CD more difficult for the human but also makes the inadvertent dislodgement more unlikely. Yet another technique of securing the CD into the body is illustrated in FIG. 5C. The outer edge of the CD is captured by a lip 511 that defines the periphery of the depression. In this embodiment, the depression is formed with a diameter that is only slightly (1.6 mm in the alternative embodiment) larger in diameter than the CD. The lip 511 extends beyond the essentially flat sidewall 513 of the depression 307 by a distance, g, of 1.6 mm, thereby capturing the CD edge. The lip need not be continuous around the periphery but should capture the CD in at least two places. Insertion and removal of the CD is difficult, requiring the body of the implement to be flexed at the same time the spring fingers are depressed. However, the likelihood of the CD being dislodged is diminished considerably.

[0021] An alternative embodiment that replaces the depression with a through-hole 601 in the body 301 from the top surface 305 to the under surface 401 is illustrated in the cross section of FIG. 6. The through-hole has at least two edges, and as much as a complete periphery, that is approximately the same diameter as the CD and has an indented lip pair 603 that has a separation between each lip of 1.0 mm, less than the thickness of the CD and an overlap of the CD, for a full capture of the CD edge, of 1.6 mm.

[0022] An alternative embodiment in which the CD 101 is attached to the under surface 401 of the body 301 is illustrated in the cross section of FIG. 7. The top surface 305 and crown of the body can be maintained without change from a conventional Frisbee™ and include advertisement or other adornment in the discretion of the designer. Spring fingers 309′ protrude away essentially perpendicularly from the under surface 401 to frictionally capture the CD at its through hole, as described above. Also as described above, the spring fingers are affixed to the surface of the body, albeit in this embodiment to the under surface 401, by way of a cantilever portion and are arranged in a circle having a center coincident with the center or rotation 407 of the implement. Although this embodiment offers increased physical protection to the CD, its presence is not as readily observed and any advertisement or promotional material that is present on a surface of the CD is not as prominent. In order to compensate for this hiddenness, the body of the implement can be formed of a transparent plastic, either in whole or just in an area near the crown of the body.

[0023] Another embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in the cross section of FIG. 8. A depression 307 is formed in the top surface 305 of the body 301, having an essentially flat bottom surface 405 and a shape and depth to accommodate the expected CD 101. A pedestal 801 is disposed on the bottom surface 405 and arranged symmetrically about the axis of rotation 407. For those instances where the pedestal is circular, the diameter of the pedestal is approximately 30 mm to contact the CD within the clamping area, and the height of the pedestal is 1.2 mm to prevent the surface of the CD from generally contacting the bottom surface 405 of the body. A paper or plastic tape 803 is disposed over the CD 101 and the depression 307 and extends for an overlap distance 805 on the upper surface 305 of the body. In a preferred embodiment, this paper or plastic tape is selectively coated on its inner side with an adhesive in the overlap distance 805 and in the contact ring area 807 such that the CD is secured and protected within the depression 307. Advertisement and promotional material can be printed or disposed on the outer side of the paper or plastic tape.

[0024] Thus, a CD is disposed with a Frisbee™-like implement for packaging and distribution of the CD. The gyroscopic stability of the implement is not unnecessarily compromised with the mountings described while the protection of the CD is maintained.

Claims

1. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement comprising:

a disk-shaped body having an essentially convex first surface and an essentially concave second surface;
a depression disposed in said first surface, having an essentially flat bottom, and centered on an axis of rotation of the implement; and
a plurality of flexible fingers disposed in a first circle on a bottom of said depression and protruding for a predetermined distance away from said bottom, said first circle having a center essentially concentric with said axis of rotation.

2. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement in accordance with claim 1 wherein said body further comprises a lip edge forming a peripheral boundary of said depression at said first surface.

3. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement in accordance with claim 1 wherein said plurality of fingers further comprise an attachment portion affixed to said bottom in a second circle concentric with said first circle and having a radius greater than said first circle and a cantilever portion, elevated and parallel to said essentially flat bottom, and disposed between said attachment portion and said first circle.

4. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement in accordance with claim 3 wherein said plurality of fingers further comprise a crooked portion directed toward the axis of rotation, disposed parallel to said essentially flat bottom, and elevated by a predetermined distance from said essentially flat bottom.

5. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement in accordance with claim 1 wherein said plurality of fingers further comprise a ridge portion disposed at an end of each said fingers spaced away from said essentially flat bottom surface, at said first circle, and projecting away from said axis of rotation.

6. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement comprising:

a disk-shaped body having at least a first surface and a second surface configured to provide aerodynamic lift when thrown and gyroscopic stability when rotated about an axis of rotation;
a plurality of flexible fingers attached to one of said first surface and said second surface, disposed in a first circle concentric with said axis of rotation, and protruding for a predetermined distance away from said one of said first surface and said second surface, whereby a recordable disk medium may be releasably coupled to said body.

7. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement in accordance with claim 6 wherein said disk-shaped body further comprises a depression disposed in one of said first surface and said second surface and centered about said axis of rotation.

8. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement in accordance with claim 7 wherein said disk-shaped body further comprises a lip edge forming a peripheral boundary of said depression.

9. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement in accordance with claim 6 wherein said plurality of fingers further comprise a crooked portion directed toward said axis of rotation, disposed parallel to said one of said first surface and said second surface, and elevated by a predetermined distance from said one of said first surface and said second surface.

10. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement in accordance with claim 6 wherein said plurality of fingers further comprise a ridge portion disposed at an end of each said fingers spaced away from said one of said first surface and said second surface at said first circle, and projecting away from said axis of rotation.

11. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement adapted to include a recordable medium comprising: a disk-shaped body having at least a first surface and a second surface configured to provide aerodynamic lift when thrown and gyroscopic stability when rotated about an axis of rotation, said disk-shaped body having an aperture extending through said disk-shaped body from said first surface to said second surface, said aperture having an areal shape congruent with and essentially equal to that of the recordable medium, centered about said axis of rotation, and bounded along at least a portion of its periphery by an indented lip pair having a spacing dimension between each lip of said lip pair equal to or less than the thickness dimension of the recordable medium, whereby said body removably encompasses the recordable medium.

12. A gyroscopically stabilized throwable implement and recordable medium comprising:

a disk-shaped body having at least a first surface and a second surface configured to provide aerodynamic lift when thrown and gyroscopic stability when rotated about an axis of rotation; and
means for removably attaching the recordable medium to said disk-shaped body, parallel to one of said first surface and said second surface, and disposed with recordable medium mass essentially balanced about said axis of rotation.
Patent History
Publication number: 20030022586
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 25, 2001
Publication Date: Jan 30, 2003
Inventor: Gabriel Beged-Dov (Corvallis, OR)
Application Number: 09915978
Classifications