Apparatus For Dispensing Playing Cards
This invention provides a playing card apparatus for holding and dispensing a plurality of playing cards. The apparatus may be a card shoe or an automated shuffler. It has a delivery aperture at a dispensing end for dispensing playing cards individually, the dispensing end having a platform that extends from the delivery aperture for supporting cards being manually removed, the platform being shaped and being of sufficient height to allow a card dealer to insert their thumb or finger below a corner of the card as the card is dispensed. This allows the dealer to grip and pull the card away substantially without flexing the card at all and thereby avoiding risk of disclosing the front face of the card while dispensing the card for dealing it. The cards are held and dispensed in portrait orientation, with a short edge of the card leading. The apparatus enables the storage and delivery of playing cards in a highly efficient continuous and secret manner.
The present invention relates to apparatus for holding and dispensing playing cards for dealing out the playing cards. The dealing devices may be such as are commonly known as card shoes or dealer's shoes, or occasionally as card sabots. The apparatus may also be a playing card shuffler.
BACKGROUND TO THE INVENTIONCard shoes, or dealer's shoes or sabots, are used, primarily in casino establishments, for the delivery of playing cards in cards games such as Blackjack and Punto Banco. The conventional card shoe is normally a container that can hold multiple decks of cards and which allows the cards to be dispensed one by one through a delivery aperture (or tongue) at the front end from where the cards can be pulled for use in casino card games used daily in casinos across the globe. The design and material used in construction hardly vary. The standard version is normally black in colour, made from a Perspex resin which offers a fair degree of durability and a smooth frictionless surface. The playing cards are placed within the shoe as a block substantially on edge but in a landscape orientation. The shoe has a dispensing aperture that enables each card to be pulled from the shoe by one or more fingers. An example of a prior art manual card shoe is shown in US patent application US2010/0013152.
The generic features of the conventional manual card shoe and its use are illustrated in
Commonly a wedge 4 is provided in the chamber 2 to acts as an adjustable backstop/rest for the rearmost card of the decks in the shoe and which can be re-positioned forwardly as the stored decks are dealt and diminish in size. The cards are held in the shoe resting on one of their long edges L so that they are dispensed from the shoe in a ‘landscape’ orientation, ie where the long edge L of each card emerges first and they must be flexed upwardly at one end/short edge S to be gripped to deal them. The conventional manual card shoe 1 does not facilitate secure covert dealing since the cards are necessarily flexed upwardly as they are dealt.
The conventional manual card shoes are generally used for card games in which the cards are dealt face up and visible immediately to the player/s such as in Blackjack or Punto Banco (modern casino version of Baccarat) and despite claims made by applicants in earlier patent applications, casinos do not generally use manual card shoes for cards games such as Poker or Texas Hold'em. Poker and its variations such as Texas Hold'em are only played using a single deck of cards which can be easily handled by a human hand whereas Blackjack and Punto Banco (the two most popular casino card games) use multiple decks of cards, in most cases four decks or more which cannot be practicably held in a human hand or be distributed from such a configuration to the player/s in a secure and covert/secret manner.
The more recent prior art relating to card shoes focuses predominately on assisting the operator, using the aid of modern electronics, to read the card/s whilst in the shoe or when a card exits the shoe or relates to use in devices that automatically shuffle the playing cards or both. Mostly these are aimed at translating the information about the card/s to a remote display screen or for use in automatic card shuffling machines. Like manual card shoes these automatic card shuffling machines are largely used in Blackjack or variations of Blackjack to ensure a constant game without the need to pause the game for the dealer to shuffle the cards. Automatic shuffling machine's attraction to the casino industry is the elimination of the pause every time the dealer has to shuffle the cards. Far more hands of the game can be dealt without the need to reshuffle every twenty minutes or so.
Automatic shuffling machines require high maintenance as dust and fibres from the table cloth interfere with their workings rendering them inoperable on a regular basis. Casinos that use automatic shuffling machines retain manual card shoes in the event of these breakdowns. Automatic shuffling machines primary function and key selling point concerns their ability to mimic the actions of a conventional manual card shoe in every way, without the need to shuffle the cards. Automatic shuffling machines are not commercially viable when dealing with games that require only one deck of playing cards, like Poker and its variants, which is why they are not used on these games; the dealer can easily shuffle one deck of cards.
There is a variation of Blackjack offered in casinos known as “Double Deck Blackjack” that uses two decks of playing cards. This game is the only variation of Blackjack (21) offered in casinos where the cards are dealt face down to the player. This game is aimed at players who prefer a pontoon style variation of blackjack. In this game no card shoe is used because the conventional “landscape” playing card shoe is designed for games that require the cards to be laid face up; and a conventional card shoe is thus of no use in this variation. This results in the dealer having to continually hold the deck of cards in their left hand throughout the game, producing a slower, less secure game, because the dealer has only one hand free to for chips manipulation, to make payouts and to collect lost bets.
It is amongst objects of the present invention to provide a playing card shoe that overcomes the above-described drawbacks of the prior art and enables playing cards to be dealt continuously face down by an operator in a covert (secret) but efficient manner. The playing card shoe may nevertheless be used for face up dealing too if desired.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAccording to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a playing card shoe for holding and dispensing a plurality of playing cards, the shoe having a delivery aperture at a dispensing end for dispensing playing cards individually, the dispensing end having a platform that extends from the delivery aperture for supporting cards being manually removed, the platform as viewed in plan from above being rounded and/or with truncated corners and being of a height sufficient to allow a card dealer to insert their thumb or finger below a corner of the card as the card is dispensed. This allows the dealer to grip and pull the card away substantially without flexing the card at all and thereby avoiding risk of disclosing the front face of the card while dispensing the card for dealing it.
The shoe is suitably mounted in use on the top of a playing surface such as a card table top onto which device dispenses cards and the height of the platform is the height from the table top.
The cards are preferably held and dispensed in portrait orientation, with one of the short edges of the playing card emerging from the delivery aperture first as the card is dispensed. Accordingly the proportions of the shoe's chamber—and most especially the width of the shoe at the delivery aperture—suitably correspond substantially to the width of the playing cards not their length.
The card shoe of the present invention enables the storage and delivery of playing cards in a highly efficient continuous and secret manner. It is ideally suited for card games that require the playing cards to remain unseen by others except the player for whom the cards are intended. Nevertheless the card shoe is versatile and can also be used for card games where the cards are revealed immediately such as Blackjack and Punto Banco, if desired.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be more particularly described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
The manual card shoe 11 comprises an elongate box with a rear wall 2, elongate sidewalls 4, front wall 5 and a floor 6. The box forms a chamber 7 for holding the cards with an open-top for insertion of the decks of cards. The floor 6 of the chamber 7 is overall higher than that in the prior art and slopes downwardly towards the delivery aperture 8 at the front. At the front end of the card shoe 11 the floor 6 of the shoe is extended forwardly to project beyond the side walls 4, front wall 5 and delivery aperture 8 of the shoe and there forms a tall platform 12 over which each card being dispensed slides as it is taken by the dealer.
As in the conventional shoe 1, in this shoe 11 the front wall 5 of the shoe 11 is inclined downwardly in the forward direction and the gap between the lower edge of the front wall 5 and the floor 6 of the shoe defines the delivery aperture 8. An upwards arched cut-out 10 formed in the front wall 5 contiguous with the delivery aperture 8 provides access for the dealers fingers to drag the card out though the delivery aperture 8. A wedge 4 is provided in the chamber 2 to acts as an adjustable backstop/rest for the rearmost card of the decks in the shoe and which can be re-positioned forwardly as the stored decks are dealt and diminish in size. As illustrated in
The playing cards in this shoe 11 are, unlike those in the prior art shoe 1, not held in the shoe 11 resting on one of their long edges L and are not dispensed from the shoe in a ‘landscape’ orientation. The manual card shoe 11 of the
The shape and height of the platform 12 enables cards to be removed in a favourable position for a hand to grasp the card without having to substantially tilt or flex it upwardly, and to be able to directly lay it face down on the card table. The tall, curved shape and radiused edged platform 12 enables the dealer to comfortably insert their thumb or a finger between the table top and the underside of the card being dispensed at a corner of the card in order to grip the card without needing to tilt or flex the card upwardly as will be further described shortly below with respect to
The prior art shoe of
Turning back to the invention,
Turning to
Although described and illustrated herein with respect to two preferred embodiments, numerous alternative variants and embodiments are conceivable within the scope of the present invention as defined by the claims hereinafter.
Claims
1. A playing card apparatus for holding and dispensing a plurality of playing cards, the shoe having a delivery aperture at a dispensing end for dispensing playing cards individually, the dispensing end having a platform that extends from the delivery aperture for supporting cards being manually removed, the platform being shaped and being of sufficient height to allow a card dealer to insert their thumb or finger below a corner of the card as the card is dispensed.
2. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in claim 1, wherein the apparatus is a manual card shoe.
3. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in claim 1, wherein the apparatus is a card shuffler.
4. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the platform is shaped rounded as viewed in plan from above.
5. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in claim 4, wherein the rounded platform is: substantially semi-circular; or a flattened semicircle or substantially a partial ellipse as viewed in plan from above.
6. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the platform has at least one fore-shortened or truncated corner.
7. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the platform has a rim/perimeter that is radiussed/rounded or chamfered in profile.
8. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in any preceding claim housing a plurality of playing cards, the playing cards being held and dispensed in portrait orientation, with one of the short edges of the playing card being oriented to emerge from the delivery aperture first as the card is dispensed.
9. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in claim 8 wherein the width of the shoe at the delivery aperture corresponds substantially to the width of the playing cards not their length.
10. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in any preceding claim in combination with a playing surface onto which the apparatus dispenses cards, wherein the apparatus is mounted in use on the top of the playing surface and the height of the platform is the height of the platform's support surface from the playing surface.
11. A playing card holding and dispensing apparatus as claimed in claim 10, wherein the playing surface is the playing surface of a card gaming table.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 17, 2013
Publication Date: Sep 19, 2013
Inventor: Patrick Thomas McGrath (Luton)
Application Number: 13/844,993
International Classification: A63F 1/14 (20060101);