SWIMMER'S TRAINING BUOY WITH VARIABLE BALLAST
Aspects of disclosed implementations include a training and teaching aid for swimmers and coaches in the form of a buoy incorporating removable ballasting devices in the form of refillable vessels, or alternatively, weights. The buoy is provided with means for securing the buoy to the body or clothing of the swimmer utilizing the device. Aspects include an optional warning device utilizing a flag or other three-dimensional device that extends from the buoy above the surface of the water while a swimmer is swimming with the buoy in place. Observers such as coaches can use the optional warning device to observe, document and quantify the extent and symmetry of a swimmer's hip and body rotation during swimming to perform stroke analysis and assist in teaching.
The present application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/556,306, filed Jul. 24, 2012 which claims priority based on U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/511,462, filed Jul. 25, 2011.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe invention relates generally to flotation devices for use by swimmers and swim coaches for teaching and training. More particularly, the invention pertains to flotation device designed to be secured to swimmers' clothing or the swimmers' bodies, and provided with ballasting containers for adjusting the amount of flotation afforded by the device.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ARTFor competition swimmers, in particular, effective teaching and training can be facilitated by the use of flotation devices for supporting the swimmer's hips and legs so that an appropriately level position is maintained during training. It is known that improved performance by competitive swimmers can be achieved by training which conditions the swimmer to appropriately position the torso, hips and legs in relation to the surface of the water. To effectively teach the swimmer to recognize appropriate swimming posture, with particular attention to raising the position of the hips and legs in relation to the swimmer's upper body, it is known to utilize flotation devices which are held between the swimmer's legs during training sessions.
One such design is taught by Rademacher in U.S. Pat. No. 4,379,704, which discloses an appropriately formed unitary foam buoy adapted for engagement with and selective retention by the legs of the swimmer. The resiliency of the foam provides the necessary comfort to the swimmer, and the composition of the foam itself provides the necessary flotation. However, this device must be formed of a particular dimension, volume and density to accommodate swimmers of varying weights, body shapes and natural buoyancy. Accordingly, the '704 leg buoy must be manufactured in a variety of different dimensions, to accommodate a large population of swimmers. Further, these buoys can be quickly outgrown by youthful swimmers as they age and develop. Even the same swimmer may benefit from flotation devices which provide variable degrees of buoyancy depending on their stage of training, the strokes being taught and practiced, the anatomy and weight of the swimmer and even the bodies of water in which training is taking place (i.e. salt or fresh water).
A similar device is taught by Hernandez and Lang, U.S. Pat. No. 7,169,000. This device, too, suffers from many of the same limitations of Rademacher. An additional shortcoming of the prior art is the reliance by prior art devices on frictional engagement between the devices and the swimmer's body in order to keep the flotation device in proper position. The lack of securement means on the prior art devices renders them susceptible to becoming dislodged during training, and inconvenience for the swimmer and coach.
There are further limitations in prior art devices. Because swimmers' training is physically demanding, and because swimmers, especially open water swimmers, frequently carry with them personal articles such as identification cards, wallets, spectacles, cell phones and the like, current swimmers' training aids provide no facility for carrying and protecting such personal items, which often must be left poolside, in a locker or changing room, on the beach or in a car where they may be subject to loss or theft. Further, swimmers frequently seek refreshments including hydration and nutrition in the form of food or drink to be used before, during or after the training session. Current flotation training devices are not equipped with the capability of storing and carrying such items.
Another prior art device, Speedo's “Swimmer's Training Buoy With Variable Ballast,” is a training device comprising a unitary buoy adapted for engagement with a swimmer's legs and having a fillable ballast cavity. However, the swimmer is unable to put personal belongings inside the ballast cavity because of the device's small ballast filling aperture. Further, swimmers are unlikely to fill the ballast with refreshments because the ballast's small filling aperture makes access to the ballast compartment difficult. And lastly, similar to the shortcomings of other prior art devices, the device relies on frictional engagement between the device and the swimmer's body to keep the device in proper position. The lack of securement means the device is susceptible to becoming dislodged during training, and an inconvenience for the swimmer and coach.
In another example of the shortcomings of the prior art, the Kiefer Corporation's Safer Swimming Buoy teaches a device used for swimmers to store personal items while in the water, which comprises a floatable waterproof bag, a strap, and a waist belt for connecting the device to the swimmer. However, the device does not teach the support of the swimmer's legs and hips. Rather, the waterproof bag floats behind the swimmer's legs, and is towed by a swimmer by a strap connected between a waist belt and floatable bag.
Lastly, another limitation of the prior art devices is the lack of a warning element substantially above the surface of the water, which is needed to increase the visibility of the swimmer to observers, coaches and even watercraft.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention overcomes the problems found in the prior art and provides an improved buoy which is readily adjustable for use by different swimmers, and whereby the buoyancy of the device can be adjusted by the user, where a warning device that oscillates with hip rotation of a swimmer indicates to observers or nearby watercraft that a swimmer is nearby, where the device is capable of carrying refreshments or other materials, and where the device is removably secured to the swimmer to avoid dislodgment during use.
In an embodiment, the buoy is formed with a foam member adapted for engagement with and retention by the legs of the swimmer. The buoy is in the form of a pair of spaced apart cylindrical elements having generally circular cross-section. The generally circular cross-section elements are interconnected by a connecting piece, and the entire buoy is of unitary construction, formed either by molding, extrusion, heat melt process or die cutting. The buoy includes an attachment device for securing the buoy to the swimmer's body or clothing. The buoy contains one or more compartments to accommodate one or more corresponding vessels which can be inserted in and removed from the compartments, and which vessels can be selectively filled with material which may be used to vary the buoyancy of the buoy, as well as maintaining a water-tight storage compartment, or utilized as a storage vessel for consumable liquids, such as water or sports drinks. The shape of the buoy accommodates the legs of the swimmer, providing flotation to the hips and legs of the swimmer. Ideally, the foam material is of sufficient resilience to be comfortably carried between the swimmer's legs without causing discomfort or irritation.
Aspects of disclosed embodiments include forming the buoy in a non-unitary fashion, where the generally circular cross-section elements are separated and interconnected using straps or other means to interconnect the elements. In an aspect of disclosed embodiments, the buoy can be formed from two asymmetric elements, where one element includes a compartment to accommodate one or more corresponding vessels and an attachment device for securing the buoy to a swimmer's body or clothing. The second element can include a compartment to accommodate a corresponding vessel as described above and attach to the first element using straps, which can be adjustable, or other means to connect the two elements. By adjusting the two elements that form the buoy, the buoy can be made to frictionally fit between a swimmer's legs, thereby assisting the attachment device in holding the buoy in position with respect to the swimmer's body.
Other aspects of disclosed embodiments include forming the buoy in three parts, where two of the parts include generally circular cross-section elements including compartments to accommodate two or more corresponding vessels and a third element that includes an attachment device for securing the buoy to a swimmer's body or clothing. The three elements can be held together using a strap, which can be adjustable or other means to connect the three elements. By adjusting the three elements that form the buoy, as discussed above, the buoy can be made to frictionally fit between a swimmer's legs, thereby assisting the attachment device in holding the buoy in position with respect to the swimmer's body.
Another aspect of disclosed embodiments includes the ability to interconnect an elastic loop with an existing swimming buoy to permit the swimming buoy to interconnect with a swimmer's legs to hold the swimming buoy in proximity to a swimmer in an improved fashion. The loop can also be used in conjunction with an ad hoc swimming buoy, which can be fashioned from any generally buoyant material that can comfortably be carried between a swimmer's legs as they swim.
By utilizing one or more removable vessels in combination with the buoy, a single sized buoy can provide a wide range of buoyancies to accommodate the needs of an equally wide range of swimmers.
A buoy according to the present invention is generally indicated by the numeral 10 in
Also depicted in
As shown in
As shown in
Further as depicted in
With reference now to
In use, the buoy is employed by swimmers by positioning the buoy in between the legs of the swimmer 12, and is secured to the swimmer's body or clothing by a fastener 38 which can be attached to clothing 32, or to the swimmer's body 12 utilizing other attachment means, such as a belt or strap. The swimmer's legs 14 engage the outer surface of the buoy, and hold the buoy 10 in position between the swimmer's legs 14, so that the first cylindrical portion 16 is anterior to the swimmer's body and the second cylindrical portion 18 is posterior to the swimmer's body. Because of the hour glass cross-sectional shape of the buoy 10, the buoy 10 is restricted from movement upwardly or downwardly in relation to the swimmer's legs 14, thereby providing a comfortable yet secure positioning of the buoy between the swimmer's legs 14.
In a second embodiment shown in
Loops 54 permit the buoy 10 to be attached to a swimmer by inserting one or more of a swimmer's legs 14 into the loops 54. The loops 54 can be made of a stretchable material such a rubber or elastic tubing, for example, with one loop 54 provided for each of the swimmer's two legs 14. Other materials can also be used to form the loops including plastic or elastic bands. In embodiments of this disclosure the loops 54 can also be made of non-stretchable material such as nylon webbing with adjustments or adjustable closures to permit the loops to be arranged about the swimmers' legs 14 to attach the buoy 10. The loops 54 can be made of a continuous loop of stretchable material and designed to be each stretched into place about a swimmer's leg 14 as shown in
The amount of buoyancy created by the buoy 10 is dependent on the buoyancy of the foam material constituting the first cylindrical portion 16, second cylindrical portion 18 and connecting portion 20, together with the buoyancy of the contents of the vessels 46. For maximum buoyancy, vessels 46 contain only air at atmospheric pressure and provide buoyancy corresponding to the weight of the water displaced by the empty vessel 46.
At the other end of the buoyancy spectrum, vessels 46 may be filled with a heavy dense material, such as iron or stone, which will result in a completed assembly of buoy 10 and vessels 46 providing only negative buoyancy. Alternatively, vessels 46 can be replaced with fixed weights (not shown) of a physical configuration complimentary in shape and dimension to the interior shape and dimension of cavity 42.
Between these two extremes, vessels 46 may be completely or partially filled with fluid, such as water which provide greater amount of buoyancy than that accomplished by the use of weights, but a lesser amount of buoyancy accomplished by the use of empty vessels 46 alone. Accordingly, it will be appreciated that by selection of the weights, vessels and contents utilized with the buoy 10, the amount of buoyancy available to the swimmer 12 can be precisely adjusted.
It will also be appreciated that vessels 46 may be utilized as a container for refreshments, such as potable water or other beverage, or personal belongings like identification cards, wallets, spectacles, GPS devices, and cell phones.
In another embodiment, cavities 42 will be formed of a complimentary size to a standard drink container, such as an aluminum soft drink can or plastic sports drink bottle. Aspects of disclosed implementation can also envision using a sleeve or other close-fitting cover for a container that might be smaller than the cavity to permit the container to be securely held by the cavity 42 in spite of being undersized.
Aspects of disclosed embodiments permits a loop 54 to be applied to existing swimming buoys, for example, thereby improving the ability of the existing swimming buoy, which may be designed to be held mainly by a frictional fit between the swimmer's legs 14, to be held in proximity to a swimmer's legs 14 in an improved manner. This aspect of disclosed embodiments also permits the use of a generally buoyant object as an ad hoc swimming buoy. For example, a life vest can be employed as a swimming buoy according to disclosed embodiments by adding a loop 54 to hold the life vest in proximity to a swimmer's body by interconnecting the loop 54 with the swimmer's legs and the life vest used as an ad hoc swimming buoy.
It will be appreciated then that the above-described invention provides a swimmer's training and coach's teaching aid which provides a selectable, variable degree of buoyancy, while at the same time providing means for securing the training aid to the body of the swimmer, and provides storage for weights, variable ballast, refreshments or personal items, and provides a single component which can be customizable for use by swimmers of different sizes and density.
Having thus described my invention, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous modifications and variations may be made of the inventive concept of the invention, without departing from the invention herein claimed.
Claims
1. A buoy for supplementing buoyance of a swimmer's legs and hips comprising:
- a foam member adapted for engagement with and selective retention by the legs of the swimmer; and
- at least one cavity formed in said buoy adapted to engage at least one vessel, whereby said vessel may be selectively filled with ballast.
2. The buoy of claim 1, which further comprises a fastener for interconnecting said buoy with a garment worn by a user.
3. The buoy of claim 2, wherein said fastener comprises a fabric loop.
4. The buoy of claim 2, wherein said fastener comprises a hook and loop fastener.
5. The buoy of claim 2, wherein said fastener comprises a snap hook.
6. The buoy of claim 2, wherein said fastener comprises a strap.
7. A buoy for supplementing buoyancy of a swimmers' legs and hips comprising:
- a foam member adaptive for engagement with and selective retention by the legs of the swimmer; and
- at least one cavity formed in said buoy adapted to engage at least one removable weight.
8. The buoy of claim 1, wherein said at least one cavity is sized to accommodate a vessel of a size of a commercially available beverage container.
9. The buoy of claim 1, further comprising:
- a warning device removably attached to the buoy.
10. The buoy of claim 9, wherein said warning device comprises a flag and flag support oscillates with the swimmer's hip rotation.
11. The buoy of claim 9, wherein said warning device comprises three-dimensional objects attached to the flag support of claim 10.
12. The buoy of claim 9, wherein said warning device is removably attached to said buoy with a grommeted hole.
13. The buoy of claim 9, wherein said warning device is used to document a swimmer's hip and body rotation while swimming.
14. The buoy of claim 1 further comprising:
- one or more loops of stretchable material for interconnecting said buoy with one or more legs of a user.
15. The buoy of claim 14 wherein the one or more loops of stretchable material engage the buoy with grommeted through-holes.
16. The buoy of claim 14 wherein the loops of stretchable material include rubber tubing.
17. The buoy of claim 1 further comprising:
- one or more straps for interconnecting said buoy with one or more legs of a user.
18. The buoy of claim 17 wherein the one or more straps include clasps for adjusting the one or more straps.
19. The buoy of claim 1 wherein the foam member is formed of two portions, and wherein the two portions each have at least one cavity.
20. The buoy of claim 1 wherein the foam member is formed of three portions, and wherein two of the three portions each have at least one cavity.
21. An apparatus for selective retention of a buoy for supplementing buoyance of a swimmer's legs and hips comprising:
- a loop of material operative to interconnect the buoy with the swimmer's legs;
22. The apparatus of claim 21 wherein the loop comprises elastic material.
23. The apparatus of claim 22 further comprising:
- a hole in the buoy for interconnecting the loop with the buoy; and
- a grommet for reinforcing the hole.
24. The apparatus of claim 21 which further comprises a fastener for interconnecting said buoy with a garment worn by a user.
25. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said fastener comprises a fabric loop.
26. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said fastener comprises a hook and loop fastener.
27. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said fastener comprises a snap hook.
28. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said fastener comprises a strap.
29. The apparatus of claim 21, further comprising:
- a warning device removably attached to the buoy.
30. The apparatus of claim 28, wherein said warning device comprises a flag and flag support.
31. The apparatus of claim 28, wherein said warning device comprises one or more three-dimensional objects.
32. The apparatus of claim 28, wherein said warning device is removably attached to said buoy with a grommeted hole.
33. The apparatus of claim 28, wherein said warning device is used to document a swimmer's hip and body rotation while swimming.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 22, 2013
Publication Date: Dec 26, 2013
Inventor: LAWRENCE JAMES DAY (GRAND BLANC, MI)
Application Number: 13/973,302