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| United States Patent | 4581271 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4581271.html |
| Inventor(s) | Gordon; Richard A. (95 W. 3rd St., Freeport, NY 11520) |
| Abstract | A holder having a chamber that is recessed and has compartments in which
indicia elements having engaging projections are received. The
compartments have access openings in opposed walls of the chamber that are
bendable to increase the size of the compartments for easy insertion of
the indicia elements thereinto and removal of the same therefrom. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4581271 |
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Holder and indicia means for use therewith |
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| Publication Date |
April 8, 1986 |
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| Filing Date |
September 28, 1984 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Market Share |
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Estimate the percentage of the relevant market sector this invention will capture:
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. In a monolithic holder formed of a single layer of material for indicia
means comprising
a chamber defined in part along its length with a base having a
substantially planar surface recessed below and with respect to oppositely
disposed relatively spaced walls bordering opposite sides of said chamber
defining an opening of one size into said chamber and facing said base,
a plurality of side-by-side relatively spaced compartments extending into
said opposed walls with each said compartment having an access opening
into said chamber of one size,
said monolithic single layer chamber walls and base being of a bendable
material, said monolithic holder of a single layer of material being
bendable in the area of said chamber, and said walls flexing in response
to the bending of said holder and increasing their relative spacing and
said chamber opening to another size to enable easy insertion of indicia
means into said compartment access openings and removal of indicia means
therefrom.
2. In a holder for indicia means as in claim 1,
said chamber being elongated and said holder being a strap having means
therealong for cooperation to releasably close the ends of said strap.
3. In a holder for indicia means as in claim 2,
said plurality of relatively spaced compartments each having an opening
extending through said base to each of said compartments.
4. In a holder for indicia means as in claim 2,
a loop shaped element encircling and movable relative to said strap between
the ends thereof,
and means on said strap defining a space therealong along which said
element has limited movement relative to said strap.
5. A holder for indicia means and indicia means therefor, comprising
a chamber defined in said holder having an opening defined by relatively
spaced oppositely disposed bendable walls, a plurality of relatively
spaced side-by-side compartments in said chamber each having an access
opening beneath and covered by said oppositely disposed walls, said holder
being monolithic of a single layer of material selectively bendable in the
area of the access openings of selected compartments, said walls being
bendable with the bending of said holder to uncover said access openings
of said selected compartment,
indicia means for use with said holder,
said indicia means being substantially unbendable with respect to said
holder and having a plurality of relatively spaced engaging projections on
opposite ends thereof,
the relative spacing of the plurality of engaging projections on each of
the opposite ends of said indicia means corresponding to the relative
spacing of said compartments for interfitting projection thereinto through
said access openings thereof without bending said indicia means and
engaging projections relative to each other and for engagement therewith
within the respective wall of each said compartment when said access
openings are uncovered.
6. A holder for indicia means and indicia means therefor, as in claim 5,
each said engaging projection and compartment being of a width to be in
side-by-side engagement with each other to prevent accidental separation
thereof.
7. A holder for indicia means and indicia means therefor, as in claim 5
said engaging projections being substantially bulbous with curved sides for
engagement with said compartments.
8. A holder for indicia means and indicia means therefor, as in claim 5,
said engaging projections and compartments having substantially straight
sides for surface-to-surface contact and engagement with each other.
9. Indicia means and a holder therefor comprising
a plurality of substantially planar indicia members having indicia means
each being of substantially equal width, length and thickness,
at least two engaging means projecting substantially equally from the
opposite ends of each of said members,
said engaging means substantially equally spaced from each other along the
length of each of said members and being substantially in the plane
thereof,
said indicia member being substantially unbendable,
and a single layered flexible holder having an elongated recessed chamber
defined by walls bordering an opening, and compartments in said chamber,
the width of said opening of said walled chamber being smaller than the
width of said indicia means, said walls covering access to said
compartments through said opening, said covering walls being flexible and
increasing the width of said chamber opening to substantially the width of
said indicia means to provide assembling access of said engaging means of
said indicia members into said compartments and disassembly of the same
therefrom without substantially bending said indicia members.
10. Indicia means and a holder therefor as in claim 9,
said holder having opposite side walls each having a plurality of
compartments divided by relatively lengthwise spaced walls in
correspondence with said relative spacing of said engaging means to
receive the same therein with at least a portion of each said side wall
overlying each of said engaging means to retain the same in their
respective compartments against accidental displacement therefrom.
11. Indicia means and a holder therefor as in claim 10,
each of said compartments and engaging means being of substantially equal
lengths such that their lengthwise surfaces are engaged against accidental
displacement when said engaging means are in their respective
compartments.
12. Indicia means and a holder therefor as in claim 11,
said holder being bendable to flex said walls in a direction along their
lengths.
13. Indicia means and a holder therefor as in claim 11,
said holder including a base wall on which said indicia members are
supported when retained in said compartments,
and each compartment having an access opening in said base wall to provide
access to said engaging means received in its respective compartment.
14. Indicia means and a holder therefor as in claim 12,
said engaging means being substantially circular to provide line contact
with said divider walls of said compartments.
15. Indicia means and a holder therefor as in claim 12,
said engaging means being straight sided for full surface contact and
engagment with the separating walls of said compartments.
16. The method of assembling substantially unbendable indicia members
having indicia means and engaging means to a belt of bendable material
having bendable walls defining an opening about a recessed chamber that
has compartments covered by the unbent walls and in which the indicia
engaging means are assembled and disassembled by bending the walls to
uncover the compartments comprising
bending the walls to uncover selected ones of the compartments,
assembling a selected indicia member in the selected uncovered compartment
by inserting the engaging means of the selected indicia member into the
selected uncovered compartment without bending the indicia means and
engaging means relative to each other,
and releasing the bent walls to recover the selected compartment to cover
the engaging means therein.
17. The method as in claim 16, wherein the selected indicia means is
disassembled from said selected compartment while the compartment is
uncovered by the bent walls without relatively bending the selected
indicia means and its engaging means.
18. The method as in claim 17, bending the walls to uncover a selected
compartment by bending the belt in the vicinity of the selected
compartment. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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The present invention relates to a holder and to indicia means for use
therewith.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Belts, bracelets, animal collars and the like frequently have been provided
with structural details which enable them to display the initials and/or
even the names and addresses of the wearer or user and perhaps other
pertinent information.
For example, it is the practice in hospitals to immediately assemble beads
and other indicia elements in the form of a bracelet that is applied to
newborn infants to prevent confusion between them. In such instances, the
indicia means are assembled on a string which, if not properly secured,
breaks so that the beads fall off the string and become lost thereby
defeating the purpose of the bracelet.
Hospital identification bracelets are known to contain a typewritten slip
of paper which bears the desired information of the hospital patient. The
need to type the information and subsequently assemble it in a pocket in
the bracelet is time consuming and error prone. When many patients are
being admitted to a hospital within a short period of time, there have
been instances when the typed papers are mixed up and the patients are
sometimes the recipients of the wrong bracelets.
Identification tags are also used for animals to assure their return to
their owners when lost. In the past, such tags have been attached to the
animal collar. Sometimes the tag becomes separated from the collar and
oftentimes the tags are difficult to read because of the small lettering
or because of the nature of the tags.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed to a simplified holder that may be used
for many purposes, but principally in combination with indicia means that
are capable of being assembled to the holder and disassembled from the
same.
An object of the invention is to provide a holder and indicia means for use
in combination in which the indicia means are so simple in detail as to
enable its manufacture and subsequent use so easy that the same can be
assembled on and disassembled from the holder quickly and easily without
any technical knowledge or dexterity.
Another object of the invention is to provide a holder with compartments
that receive, engage with and retain the indicia means assembled thereto
against accidental displacement therefrom.
Still another object of the invention is to provide the holder and indicia
means in such simplified detail that the same may be made inexpensively,
yet ornamentally attractive.
The above description, as well as further objects, features and advantages
of the present invention, will be more fully appreciated by reference to
the following detailed description of a presently preferred, but
nonetheless illustrative, embodiment in accordance with the present
invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing wherein:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is a front elevational view of a strap type holder having indicia
means in accordance with the teaching of the invention;
FIG. 2 is a rear view of the holder shown in FIG. 1 but illustrated with a
different strap;
FIG. 3 is a cross section of FIG. 1 taken along lines 3--3;
FIG. 4 is a cross section of FIG. 1 taken along lines 4--4;
FIG. 5 is an enlarged plan view of an indicia means constructed according
to the invention; and
FIG. 6 is an enlarged plan view of another indicia means constructed
according to the invention.
Referring now to the drawing and more particularly to FIGS. 1 to 4 thereof,
the details show a holder that is generally identified by the numeral 10.
The holder 10 is provided with a chamber 12 which can be seen more clearly
in FIG. 4. The chamber 12 is elongated in length with respect to the width
thereof and is defined in part along its length by a base 14 having a
substantially planar surface 16 as can be seen more clearly in FIGS. 3 and
4 that is recessed below and with respect to oppositely disposed
relatively spaced side walls 18 and 20 that border along and define the
opposite elongated sides of the chamber 12. If desired, although
necessary, the outer surface of the base member 14 may also be
substantially planar in the same manner as is the surface 16.
Before proceeding further with the description of the holder 10, it will be
clear from a review of FIGS. 1 and 2 that the structural details of the
holder 10 may be applied to any type of device. Thus, for example, in FIG.
1 the device thereshown is in the form of a strap which has a buckle 22 at
one end and a tongue extension 24 at its other end which is provided with
a plurality of holes 26 into which the locking tab 28 of the buckle 22 may
extend. Thus, when the tongue 24 is extended through the buckle 22 about
either the waist of a wearer or about the wrist of a wearer, or even about
the collar or neck of an animal, the holder 10 may function as an
identification belt or bracelet or collar, as the case may be.
It will be clear to one who is skilled in the art that there is no limit
upon the end uses with which the present inventive teaching may be used
and to which it may be applied. In this regard, the reader's attention is
directed to the structural details of the strap shown in FIG. 2 wherein
the same may have an elasticized or expandible lengthwise portion 30 which
permits the strap to which the holder is applied to function in any
desired manner without affecting the integrity and structural details of
the holder 10.
Provided in the holder structure 10 are a plurality of side by side
relatively spaced engagement compartments 32 which extend laterally or in
the widthwise direction into the opposed side walls 18 and 20. Each
compartment 32 has an access opening 34 that opens into the interior of
the recessed chamber 12. Each compartment 32 also has an access opening 36
which extends in the direction of and through the base 14.
Each of the engagement compartments 32 is equally spaced from the other in
the lengthwise direction of the recessed chamber 12 by separating walls 38
as can be seen more clearly in FIGS. 1 and 2. The bordering walls 38 which
define the sides of each of the engagement compartments 32 function in the
manner to maintain the compartments in equally spaced relationship and
also to subsequently engage with the indicia means that are assembled in
the engagement compartments 32 in the manner to be described.
In practice, it has been found that the holder 10 and its attendant strap
or belt or collar-like structure of which it forms a part may be molded in
a single molding operation with the compartments 32 being formed during
the molding operation. The material of which the holder 10 is made may be
of a plastic which, if properly contoured such as at the curves 40
illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 4, may permit predetermined controlled flexing
movement of the walls 18 and 20 when the chamber 12 is bent in the
direction of its length. Thus, it has been found that by properly
dimensioning the thickness and curvature of the walls 18 and 20, it is
possible to make the walls more or less flexible.
Hence, when the holder 10 is bent in the direction of its length, depending
upon the flexibility of the walls 18 and 20, the same will tend to bow
laterally outward in a direction away from each other thereby increasing
the widthwise relative space between the walls 18 and 20 so as to cause
the access openings 34 of the compartments 32 to become partially
uncovered and more visible when viewed in the direction of the front or
plan view of FIG. 1. This widthwise or lateral increase of the relative
space between the walls 18 and 20 now makes it easier to apply the indicia
means illustrated in FIGS. 5 and 6 into the compartments 32 of the holder
10 or to disassemble the same from their compartments in the manner to be
described.
Referring now to the indicia means generally identified by the numeral 42
in FIG. 5, the same is shown in the form of the letter "N." The letter N
has merely been selected because of ease of illustration and description
of the details of the indicia means. The mere illustration of the letter N
should not, however, be considered as a limitation upon the scope of the
invention, since it should be apparent from a description of the invention
how the inventive details of the same may be applied to all other letters
and numerals or any other form of indicia that may be intended to be used
in combination with the holder 10.
The indicia means 42 is provided with a plurality of two or more relatively
spaced engaging projections 44 formed unitary therewith on opposite sides
thereof. It will be noted that the widthwise extent from the shoulders 46
and 48 is substantially equal to but slightly less in expense than the
lateral spacing or width between the walls 18 and 20 from each other. This
is illustrated more clearly in FIG. 3 wherein the indicia means 42 has
already been positioned within the compartment 12 of the holder 10 and it
will be seen that there is a slight space between the adjacent surfaces of
the walls 18 and 20 and the shoulders 46 and 48, so that there is a slight
play between the indicia means 42 in the lateral or widthwise direction of
the chamber 12 of the holder 10 so as not to prevent the holder from
flexure that enables it to conform to the contour to which it is applied.
Although the holder 10 is made of a soft or relatively flexible or bendable
material, the indicia means 42 may be molded of a much more rigid and less
flexible material so that the indicia means 42 tends not to flex or bend
or yield as freely and easily as the holder 10 along its widthwise expanse
from the shoulders 46 to 48 or its lengthwise expanse from one side 50 to
the other. When the holder 10 is bent and the walls 18 and 20 bow slightly
outward away from each other and the compartments 32 are slightly
uncovered during such bending, the engaging projections 44 may easily be
inserted into the partially uncovered matching and correspondingly spaced
engagement compartments 32 through their respective access openings 34.
Since the compartments 32 and the engaging projections 44 are equally and
correspondingly spaced, their matching relationship is accomplished
readily and easily. One set of the projections 44 are positioned into the
compartments 32 defined within the wall 18. The other set of projections
44 at the opposite widthwise shoulders of the indicia means 42 are
inserted into compartments 32 defined within the wall 20. When so
positioned, the holder is again returned to its normally flat condition
during which the walls 18 and 20 are now positioned straight once again so
that the engagement compartments 32 are no longer uncovered and the
projections 44 of the indicia means are positioned within their respective
engagement compartments.
A review of the embodiment shown in FIG. 5 illustrates the engaging
projections 44 being of substantially bulbous appearance with curved
sides, the relative widthwise spacing of which is substantially equal to
the relative lengthwise extent of the defining walls 38 of the engagement
compartments 32. Because the bulbous projections 44 are substantially the
same in widthwise dimension as is the lengthwise expanse or extent of the
compartment 32, the sides of the bulbous projections make line contact
engagement with the spacing walls 38 forming the compartments 32 so as to
prevent accidental separation of the indicia means and displacement of the
same from their respective compartments even when the holder 10 is
thereafter flexed or bent and the compartments are partially uncovered by
their respective walls 18 and 20. The substantial line engagement between
the projections 44 and the side defining walls 38 of the compartments 32
is sufficient to retain the indicia means locked in position within the
compartments 32 until such time as the indicia means are deliberately
physically removed from such engagement.
The embodiment shown in FIG. 6 is generally identified by the numeral 142
because its details correspond in substantial identity with the details
just described with respect to the embodiment of the indicia means 42. The
only difference between the two embodiments of the indicia means lies in
the shape or configuration of the engaging projections 44 and 144.
In the embodiment 142, the engaging projections are substantially straight
sided to correspond with the substantially straight sides of the
separating walls 38 which separate the compartments 32 from each other.
The indicia means 142 is utilized in the same manner as was described with
respect to the indicia means 42. However, when the indicia means 142 is
applied to and assembled in their respective engaging compartments 32 of
the holder 10, the straight sides of the projections 144 made surface to
surface contact and engagement with the substantially straight sides of
the separating walls 38 of each of the compartments 32.
This straight sided surface-to-surface engagement provides a greater
frictional engagement between them which inhibits and prevents the
possibility of the indicia means 142 from being displaced or disassembled
from their respective compartments 32 until such time as they are
physically removed from engagement therewith by one who desires to change
the indicia elements for others. Although the frictional engagement
between the projections 44 and 144 and the walls 38 permits relative
flexing and bending movement between the indicia means 42 and 142, in the
event the same should render it difficult to remove the indicia means from
their compartments, access to the same for their dislodgement may be had
by way of the openings 36.
From what has been described, it should be clear that the holder 10 may be
made of any desired length and that it may have any number of chambers 32
strung together in alignment with each other or arranged in adjacent rows
with respect to each other. Although the indicia means 42 and 142 have
been shown as letters for explanatory purposes only, it should be apparent
to those skilled in the art that the indicia means may also be numerals
and could possibly be other symbols as well. Hence, the invention must not
be limited by the illustration of the indicia means shown in FIGS. 5 and
6.
The versatility of the present invention is illustrated by the provision of
relatively lengthwise spaced stops 52 molded on opposite sides of the
holder member 10 as is illustrated more clearly in FIGS. 1 and 2. The
stops 52 provide abutments for a substantially D-shaped ring 54 which may
be used to connect the swivel hook on the end of an animal leash to the
holder 10 to transform the holder 10 and its strap type extensions into an
animal collar.
While there have been shown and described and pointed out the fundamental
novel features of the invention as applied to a preferred embodiment
thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions
and changes in the form and details of the device illustrated and in its
operation may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from
the spirit of the invention. It is the intention, therefore, to be limited
only as indicated by the scope of the claims appended hereto.
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Description  |
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