Noise Making Device
In one embodiment, an apparatus for use with a tube structure (e.g., a bottle) includes a wall which extends between first and second ends. A first rod member has first and second ends with a mass attached to the first end and a support member pivotally attached to the second end for attachment about a tube opening. When the first rod member end and the mass are positioned within the tube, the support member is positioned in or about the opening, and the rod member and the mass are pivotally positioned and supported by the support member. The mass can be swung from the support member within the tube structure to strike opposing first and second parts of the wall.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application 62/061,314, filed 8 Oct. 2014. This application is a continuation in part of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/018,565 filed Sep. 5, 2013.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to noise making devices of the type used for attendees of events and celebrations and, more particularly, to an apparatus manually operable in conjunction with a container or other tubular structure to generate sound.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONDuring competitive games and other types of events held in large venues, groups of people often make efforts to generate loud expressions of enthusiasm or to cheer for a sports team, or to audibly affirm a person or a cause. However, persons desiring to generate such expressions often find themselves limited to generating vocal expressions of limited duration and volume. While various devices are available to otherwise generate expressive sounds, these are often large or cumbersome to carry and are normally not available for purchase at the venue. It is desirable to provide an apparatus which can easily be made available at such events for a nominal cost.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONAccording to one embodiment of the invention, there is provided an apparatus for use with a tube structure having first and second opposing ends. At least one of the ends of the tube structure includes an opening. The tube structure includes a wall which extends from the first end to the second end. The apparatus includes at least a first rod member having first and second opposing ends. The apparatus includes at least a first mass which is attached to the second end of the rod member and a support member pivotally attached to the first end of the rod member, sized and shaped for attachment about the opening. When the second rod member end and the mass are positioned within the tube, the support member is positioned in or about the opening, and the rod member and the mass are pivotally positioned and supported by the support member. The mass can be swung from the support member within the tube, between opposing first and second portions of the wall and about a pivot point located between the support member and the rod, this causing the mass to collide with the wall of the tube structure.
According to another embodiment, an apparatus is provided for use with a hand-held tube structure, of the type used to contain and dispense liquid (e.g., a bottle) with a wall having a length extending a first distance along a first axis, between first and second opposing ends. The wall has a variable width along a second axis transverse to the first axis. The length of the structure is elongate with respect to a maximum width. When the tube structure occupies an erect orientation: the first end is directly over the second end, and a first portion of the wall defines a relatively narrow, low volume neck region positioned above a second portion of the wall. This defines a relatively wide, higher volume container region relative to the neck region. The neck region includes an opening for dispensing liquid from the container region. The apparatus includes at least a first rod member having first and second opposing ends; a first mass attached to the first end of the rod member; and a support member pivotally attached to the second end of the rod member. The support member is sized and shaped for attachment about the tube opening so that, when the first rod member end and the mass are positioned within the container region of the tube structure, the support member is positioned in or about the opening, and the rod member and the mass are pivotally positioned and supported by the support member so that the mass can be swung (i) from the support member within the container region and (ii) through the first axis to strike opposing parts of the wall. The rod member is of sufficient stiffness that, when the first mass swings from the rod, the rod stiffness prevents the first mass from travelling from the container region into the neck region.
The present invention and uses thereof will be more readily understood when the following detailed description of the present invention is read in conjunction with the figures wherein:
Features of the described embodiments are not necessarily drawn to scale in the figures The figures facilitate illustration of specific features relevant to the invention. Like reference characters denote like elements throughout the figures and text.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONBefore describing in detail exemplary systems and methods relating to the invention, it should be observed that the present invention resides in a novel and non-obvious combination of elements and method steps. So as not to obscure the disclosure with details that will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, certain conventional elements and steps may be presented with lesser detail, while the drawings and the specification describe in greater detail other elements and steps pertinent to understanding the intended scope and embodiments of the invention. Also, the following embodiments are exemplary constructions which do not define limits as to structural arrangements or methods according to the invention. The now described embodiments are exemplary and permissive rather than mandatory and are illustrative rather than exhaustive.
As used herein, the term tube refers to a structure having one or more wall portions extending around or enclosing a volume. Exemplary tube structures include conventional bottles used to dispense liquids, e.g., bottled refreshments. Many beverage bottles are suitably designed for a consumer to drink the refreshment directly from the bottle, i.e., without first pouring the beverage into a cup or glass. Generally, one class of beverage bottles has a neck opening, for dispensing or drinking the contents, positioned along a relatively narrow, low volume neck formed in an upper portion of the bottle. The neck merges into a lower container portion which typically defines a sufficiently large volume that holds the majority of liquid stored in the bottle. The typical beverage bottle or container has first and second closed tube ends. The first closed end often includes a removable cap or other closure device positioned around or in the neck opening. Typically, the second closed end is integrally formed as part of the lower container portion. The shape of the second integrally formed end often facilitates standing the container on the second end to achieve a stable orientation so the neck portion extends above the second end. This renders a stable erect position when the bottle is placed on a flat, level surface.
Typically a consumer beverage bottle, of the type that a person drinks from directly, is designed to be hand-held. With placement of a hand about the lower container portion the bottle can be securely held while drinking. On the other hand, a feature of the typical consumer beverage bottle is that a person can hold the container by the neck with one hand. The hand can be positioned on the neck of the container to provide a degree of leverage that facilitates swinging or waiving the bottle in an inverted or non-erect orientation. Embodiments of the invention are hand-held structures which include bottles and other tube-shaped constructs. The volume subtended by such structures may be less than a half liter but can range up to two or more liters.
The term rod member as used herein refers to an elongate member having opposing ends defining a length of relatively large dimension and a thickness having a relatively small dimension where, for example, the ratio of length to thickness may range from 30:1 to 80:1. A rod member may be flexible, or have resilience such as is characteristic of a spring-like member. A rod member may be formed of wire, fiberglass, plastic metal, fiber or a resin composite material.
With reference to
The neck region terminates at an opening 22 while the bottle also includes a closed end 24 bounding the container portion along a bottom portion or underside of the bottle. The opening, through which a beverage contained in the bottle may pass, is positioned at a first end 26 of the bottle which is opposite the closed end 24 of the bottle.
For the bottle 12 as shown in
For embodiments which utilize a bottle having contained a beverage, it is to be understood that the first end 26 of the bottle may be designed to be closed with any of a variety of well-known container closures (not shown), referred to as cover pieces, such as bottle caps, stoppers and the like. In the illustrated example, the first end 26 includes screw-on bottle threads 28 along an exterior surface 32 of the end 26 for receiving mating threads formed along an inner wall of a cap so the cap may be screwed on to the first end 26 and thereby seal the contents stored within the bottle 12. In other embodiments, including bottles formed of a more rigid material than plastic, e.g., glass, the first end 26 may be contoured about the opening 22 to receive a malleable metal cap which stays affixed to the bottle when the bottle contains contents under pressure. In still other embodiments, the bottle is designed to receive a flexible (e.g., rubber-like) stopper, or a cork, insertable within the opening 22 to prevent movement of fluid out of the bottle.
As shown in
It is to be understood that, although the cap 40 may close or seal the opening 22 of the bottle 12, this is an optional, incidental feature which is not essential to embodiments of the invention. The combination of the threaded first end 26 of the bottle 12 and the threaded cap 40 provides a secure mounting arrangement of the noise-making assembly when portions of the assembly 14 are inserted within the bottle 12 as shown in
The noise-making assembly 14 further includes one or more masses 60, e.g., knockers, each connected to a rod member 64 which, in turn, is connected to the cap 40. The rod members 64 are attached to the cap 40 along the interior surface 58 of the circular shaped cap top 44. In the example embodiment 10, the assembly 14 comprises two rod members 64, each having first and second opposing ends 72, 74 by which the rod member connects a mass 60 to the cap 40. The first end 72 of each rod member is connected to a different one of the two masses 60 and the second end 74 of each rod member is connected to the cap 40. Other arrangements of the assembly 14 may include more than two masses 60 or more than one mass 60 attached to each rod member 64.
As illustrated in
To be distinguished from the embodiment shown in
The noise-making assembly 14″ is similar to the embodiment of
The stopper 90 may comprise a size-adjustable rubber-like mass or a cork body to accommodate variations in size of the bottle opening 22 among bottles of differing designs. As shown in the view of
In addition to providing masses 60 and rod members 64 suspended from a cap 40 or a stopper 90, a noise-making assembly 14b according to a fourth embodiment of the invention includes a handle 104. The handle 104 may extend from the upper surface 44/92 of a cap or a stopper and may be integrally formed with the cap or stopper, e.g., in a molding process.
Like the embodiment 10, the rod members 64 of the noise-making assembly 14b are attached to and extend away from fixation points 80a, 80b to suspend the masses 60 from the cap 106. The handle 104 extends in a direction away from the rod members 64 and masses 60. In one implementation, the handle 104 may be integrally formed with the cylindrically shaped wall of the cap 106, e.g., as an extension of the cap wall 46. When the handle 104 and cap 40 are integrally formed, e.g., in a molding process, the portion corresponding to the cap wall 46 shown in
With the handle 104 extending away from the bottle opening 22, the hand position shown in
To impart strength and stiffness to the handle 104, and thereby minimize deformation due to bending moments about the opening 22, the portion of the wall 108 which extends from the upper surface 44/92 of the cap 40 may be a solid structure while the portion of the wall 108 which forms the cap wall 46 is hollow in order to position the cap about the bottle opening 22.
Any of numerous means may provide an arrangement by which each rod member can be attached to a cap or stopper to permit a swinging motion by which the suspended masses 60 can strike the wall 11 of a bottle. According to a fifth embodiment of the invention,
According to a sixth embodiment 14d of the noise-making assembly, the perspective view of
The rod members 64, 64′ shown in
The rod first end 72 comprises a ring 242 to which the string 218 is engaged to effect attachment of the support member to the rod 64. Although not shown in the figures, the string 218 may be tied about the ring 242, e.g., with a knot. The string 218 may be a woven member, a single plastic filament, multiple plastic filaments, a number of fiber-like filaments (e.g., a thread or a cord) or any of a variety of other elongate members which can be tied to the ring, e.g., looped around the ring, by well-known means. In addition, as shown in
In this example, the media member 220 is shown interposed between the ring 242 and other portions of the rod member 64 near the rod second end 74 to provide additional surface area for placement of an image, a shape (e.g., a mascot), lettering or one or more symbols. With the first end 72 of the rod member 64 and the mass 60 positioned within the tube 12, the string 218 extends out of the tube 12, along the exterior surface 32 of the tube wall 11 at the first end 26 of the bottle 12, and crosses over the screw-on threads 28. The string 218 is captured as the cap 40 is threaded on to or about the bottle opening 22.
As described for embodiments comprising the fixation points 80a, 80b shown in
As described for the assembly 14e, by continuously swinging the tube 12, the rod members 64 of the assembly 14f can undergo pivotal movement about the string 218 or about multiple fixation points. This movement causes the masses 60 to swing and repeatedly strike the wall 11 and to thereby generate a series of impulsive sounds. In the assembly 14f, the rod member 64 may include a media member 220 (not shown) to provide additional surface area for placement of an image, a shape (e.g., a mascot), lettering or one or more symbols.
As illustrated for one rod member 64 in
With the disk 226 placed about the tube opening 22 and fixed in place between the neck region 18 of the tube 12 and a threaded cap 40 secured about the opening 22 (see
In like manner to that described for the fixation point 80 shown for the embodiment illustrated in
An upper surface of the bracket 258 includes a recess 260 relative to the upper surface 256u of the plate. The recess 260 includes a spherical-like shape which extends below the plate 256. The spherical-like shape of the recess is complementary to the shape of the hanger ball 250, and is suited to matingly receive the hanger ball 250. Positioning of the ball 250 within the recess 260 permits pivotal support and movement of the rod member 64 as the rod member is swung about the bracket 258. To effect this installation the plate includes a slot 262 of sufficient width to permit insertion of the second end 74 of the rod member into the hanger 254 so that the hanger ball 250 can be dropped into the recess 260.
With a rod member supported from the hanger 254 via the hanger ball 250, when the second end 74 of the rod member 64 and each associated mass 60 are positioned within the tube 12, the hanger 254 is positioned about the tube opening 22 for attachment, e.g., by capture between the tube wall portion 11m which forms the mouth of the opening 22 and a cover piece 222 placed about the opening 22. See
In like manner to that described for the fixation point 80 shown for the embodiments illustrated in
In another series of example rod member designs,
The masses 60 shown in the Figures have been illustrated schematically, without specific design details, to generally illustrate components of a noise-making assembly. The masses 60 may be solid or hollow spherical shapes which may swing in a repetitive pattern by which the masses strike the wall of a bottle to generate an impulsive sound. In other embodiments, the masses 60 may be of a common geometric shape.
According to embodiments of the invention the rod members 64 may range in stiffness, from being relatively stiff members, that do not easily bend under the inertial forces generated when the masses swing, to being relatively flexible members similar to cord or filament. However, if the rod members are too flexible (e.g., like string) the masses 60 may undergo motion different from swinging about a hinge point (e.g., the attachment point of the rod member) and may travel toward the cap when the bottle is inverted. String may be a less desirable means of suspending the masses 60, especially when two or more masses are suspended from the cap by separate means, because multiple strings may become intertwined. The rod members may be formed of a variety of common materials, including plastic, metal and wood, and may have a variety of shapes or profiles (e.g., flat, round, triangular). In illustrated embodiments the rod members are of sufficient stiffness that, when a mass attached to a rod swings from the rod, the rod stiffness prevents the mass from travelling from the container region into the neck region and from reaching the opening 22.
The noise-making assembly has been described in conjunction with a bottle having an opening 22 at the first end 26 near where the neck region 18 terminates and the bottle may include a closed end 24 bounding the container portion 16 or an open end 24′. The noise-making assembly may include the container, but it is not limited to use in containers. More generally, the exemplary bottle 12 is a form of a tube having a closeable first end 26 and an open, closed or closeable second end 24. According to other embodiments of the invention, noise-making assemblies according to the invention may be positioned in tubes of varied shapes but generally having an opening at the first end 26 and, optionally, an opening at an opposing end thereof. As has been shown in
In one series of embodiments of the invention, once the noise-making apparatus is inserted into a tubular structure having two open ends, the combination may include a cap which closes one end and the other end may remain open. In another series of embodiments once the noise-making apparatus is inserted into a tubular structure having one open end, the combination may include a cap which closes the one open end, this resulting in a closed chamber in which the rod members and masses of the noise-making apparatus are enclosed. However, the first end does not have to be closed in order to practice the invention.
Manufacturing of an apparatus according to the invention can be had by a variety of methods and materials used in manufacture may be, but are not limited to rubbers, plastics, metals and hybrid component materials. Specific methods used to manufacture the assembly include, but are not limited to the following:
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- 1. Injection molding (e.g., one step molding manufacturing process).
12. Extrusion molding (which may be used in volume production) for individual components or for a combination of components which have been described as discrete from one another.
If the manufacture involves assembly of discrete components, the assembly process may include separate molding of two or more parts which are assembled together by, for example, one or more of the following processes: ultrasonic or sonic welding; solvent or chemical welding, hot gas welding, heat sealing, freehand welding, speed tip welding, extrusion welding, contact welding, hot plate welding, high frequency welding, injection welding, friction welding, spin welding, laser welding, or plastic welding.
While several embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes and substitutions may be made without departing from the invention herein. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Claims
1. An apparatus for use with a hand-held tube structure, of the type used to contain and dispense liquid, with a wall having a length extending a first distance along a first axis, between first and second opposing ends, and a variable width along a second axis transverse to the first axis, the length being elongate with respect to a maximum tube width, and when the tube structure occupies an erect orientation: the first end is directly over the second end, and a first portion of the wall defines a relatively narrow, low volume neck region positioned above a second portion of the wall defining a relatively wide, higher volume container region, the neck region including an opening for dispensing liquid from the container region, the apparatus comprising:
- at least a first rod member having first and second opposing ends;
- a first mass attached to the first end of the rod member; and
- a support member pivotally attached to the second end of the rod member, sized and shaped for attachment about the tube opening so that, when the first rod member end and the mass are positioned within the container region of the tube structure, the support member is positioned in or about the opening, and the rod member and the mass are pivotally positioned and supported by the support member so that the mass can be swung from the support member within the container region and through the first axis to strike opposing parts of the wall, wherein the rod member is of sufficient stiffness that, when the first mass swings from the rod, the rod stiffness prevents the first mass from travelling from the container region into the neck region.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the rod member is formed in a shape which provides at least one surface suitable for placement of lettering or a symbol thereon.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein, when placed in the tube structure, the rod member extends a second distance along a first axis, the apparatus further comprising a second rod member extending a third distance along the first axis, wherein the third distance is less than the second distance so that the first rod member extends closer to the second end than does the second rod member.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the support member comprises a string coupled to the first end of the rod member such that when the rod member second end and the mass are positioned within the tube the string can be extended from along an inner side of the tube wall or along an outer side of the tube wall adjacent the opening for securement or capture of the string against the tube wall when a cover piece is attached about the wall and adjacent the opening.
5. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein the rod member includes an aperture along the first rod end and the string extends through the aperture to couple the string to the first rod end of the rod member.
6. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein the rod member includes a ring attached to the first end of the rod member and wherein the string is attached to the ring to effect pivotal attachment of the string to the rod member.
7. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein a media member formed in a shape which provides at least one surface having lettering or a symbol formed thereon is attached between the ring and the first end of the rod member.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a media member attached to the rod member, the media member formed in a shape which provides at least one surface having lettering or a symbol formed thereon.
9. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein a pivot point is located between the support member and the rod member or at an interface between the support member and the rod member, so that when the first rod member end and the mass are positioned within the tube, the mass can be swung about the pivot point from the support member, causing the mass to collide with the wall of the tube structure.
10. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the support member comprises a disk coupled to the second end of the rod member such that when the rod member first end and the mass are positioned within the tube the disk can be positioned in or about the tube opening for capture between the tube wall and a cover piece placed about the opening.
11. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the support member comprises an extended disk coupled to the second end of the rod member such that, when the rod member first end and the mass are positioned within the tube, the extended disk can be attached in or about the tube opening for capture between the outside tube wall and a cover piece placed about the opening, the extended disk comprising a relatively thick central portion coupled to the first end of the rod member, and a relatively thin portion extending outward from the central portion which can extend over the tube opening and which can be captured between the outside tube wall and the cover piece placed about the opening.
12. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the support member comprises a hanger further comprising a slotted plate and a bracket, the hanger receiving and supporting a hanger ball coupled to the second end of the rod member such that when the rod member first end and the mass are positioned within the tube the slotted plate of the hanger can be positioned or attached in or about the tube opening for capture between the tube wall and a cover piece placed about the opening.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 7, 2015
Publication Date: Apr 14, 2016
Inventor: Geoffrey Porter Carroll (Maitland, FL)
Application Number: 14/877,320