NEW KIND OF FOOTBALL WITH IMPROVED ROUNDNESS
Ball, composed of an inflatable inner ball from a thin rubbery material and of an outer skin from a leathery material, usually a fibre reinforced flexible plastic, composed in balls of the first type of twelve more or less pentagonal parts and twenty more or less hexagonal parts and in balls of the second type of six more or less square parts and eight more or less hexagonal parts, where most of the edges do not have a kinked form but follow a circular course, so that they follow accurately the curvature of the sphere. An even better approximation of the sphere form is obtained, if the dimensions of the parts are changed in such a way that all corners of these parts are lifted towards the sphere surf ace and do not lie slightly under this surface as in the aforementioned patent.
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The invention relates to a proposal for improvements to an existing design for a new kind of football as described in the Dutch Patent Nr. 1021303, dated 20 Aug. 2007, which has been filed by Pieter Huybers, De Lier, who also is the applicant of the present proposal. This new proposal implies two commutations that lead to a closer approximation of the pursued spherical form than is found following the existing patent. Moreover, the dies that are needed to cut the panels, that comprise the outer skin of the football, are easier to make.
The derivation of the original geometry of the spherical surface is amply described in the aforementioned patent; this will hereby be used as the starting point and be assumed as to be generally of common knowledge.
At the present state of art, a soccer ball consists generally of an inflatable bladder from a flexible material and of an exterior skin from a leathery material which is constructed of smaller parts according a certain geometric pattern. In the aforementioned patent two different basic patterns for the construction of the outer skin are discerned that respectively consist of 32 or 14 parts. However, the mathematical figures or polyhedra, from which they are derived, originally consist of 62 and 26 parts respectively and are called in mathematics:
- 1. Rhombicosidodecahedron, composed of twelve equilateral pentagons, twenty equilateral triangles and thirty squares.
- 2. Rhombicuboctahedron, composed of eighteen squares and eight equilateral triangles.
The dimensions of these figures are determined by the fact, that in both cases all vertices lie on a circumscribed sphere. The centres of the parts are at a certain distance from this sphere, which is different for all kinds of polygons that occur in such a mathematical figure. If one however wishes to create a situation where all centres of the parts have the same distance from the sphere, in the first case all squares are transformed into rectangles where the triangles and the pentagons obtain a form of which all corners are chamfered, and in the second case twelve of the eighteen squares convert to rectangles where the remaining six squares and the triangles become chamfered. The thus found figures can respectively be called: Isodistant Rhombicosidodecahedron and Isodistant Rhombicuboctahedron, where the adjective ‘isodistant’ refers to the fact that all panel centres lie at the same distance from the centre of the whole polyhedron, the system centre, and therefore also from the sphere surface. In order to reduce the sewing length so that the skin is more easily to construct, in the formerly mentioned patent the rectangles are subdivided in two isosceles triangles and two isosceles trapezia. These are combined with adjacent parts following a special pattern to form new entities so that in the first case twelve parts are generated that roughly have the form of a pentagon and twenty parts with roughly the form of a hexagon, and so that in the second case six parts roughly obtain the form of a square and eight parts roughly that of a hexagon. In both cases most of the sides have a form with two slight kinks in length direction. The two bending points of these lines lie at the sphere surface so that these kinked sides more or less follow the curvature of the sphere.
This new patent however indicates a way to let the connection lines between the end points and the bending points of these slightly kinked lines follow an exact circular course. The lines in question thus obtain a more smooth curvature than the respective sides in the old patent and hence follow the curvature of the sphere more closely.
Yet another improvement of the original patent can be accomplished, if all corners of the panels, that basically lie in the plane of the rectangles and thus lie below the sphere surface, are lifted to the level of this sphere. This can easily be realized by a small adaptation of these panels.
The invention shall be explained in more detail with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
The describing circles of the sides 10 and 22 are different and their centres N lie at a considerable distance outside the respective planes 8 and 9 or 20 and 21, of which the centre of the circumscribed circles is indicated as M. An extra advantage is, that in a relatively simple way from the centre N of the newly found circle arcs, that replace the kinked sides 10 and 22, the positions of the drilling holes for the punching pins can be destined. This method is considerably simpler than the drilling method that must be followed in the case of the kinked sides.
Claims
1-3. (canceled)
4. Ball (25) characterized in that it is composed of twelve more or less pentagonal parts (8) and twenty more or less hexagonal parts (9), of which the sides (10) follow a circular course.
5. Ball (26) characterized in that it is composed of six more or less square parts (20) and eight more or less hexagonal parts (21), of which the sides (22) follow a circular course.
6. Ball according claim 4, characterized in that the points P and Q, lying in the planes of the originally rectangular parts (3) and that in the end result make out the corners of the parts (8) and (9) are lifted towards the sphere surface.
7. Ball according claim 5, characterized in that the points P and Q, lying in the planes of the originally rectangular parts (15) and that in the end result make out the corners of the parts (20) and (21) are lifted towards the sphere surface.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 17, 2008
Publication Date: May 27, 2010
Applicants: (DE LIER), HYPERBALL COMPANY (DE LIER)
Inventor: Pieter Huybers (De Lier)
Application Number: 12/594,752
International Classification: A63B 41/08 (20060101);