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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A disc protector ring for protecting disc-like recording media from
physical damage as from dust particles, each of said recording media
having a predetermined recordable region on at least one side thereof, a
predetermined thickness, a predetermined medium diameter, and a circular
periphery, wherein said predetermined recordable region extends outwardly
in the direction of said medium diameter to a distance less than said
medium diameter, thereby to define about said periphery of said recording
medium an annular non-recordable band having a predetermined band width in
the direction of said medium diameter, consisting of:
a planar, flexible annular ring having a predetermined inner diameter and a
predetermined outer diameter substantially greater than said inner
diameter;
an elongate slot coplanar with said ring disposed around said inner
diameter, said slot having a predetermined thickness; and
in a direction normal to said plane of said annular ring, upper and lower
extensions on opposite sides of said elongate slot, whereby upon placing a
recording medium within said protector ring and placing said recording
medium and said protector ring onto a flat surface that is coplanar
therewith such that said recordable region faces said flat surface, said
recordable region will be raised above said flat surface.
2. The protector ring of claim 1 further including:
an annular slot having predetermined dimensions on an upper surface of said
upper extension of said protector ring; and
an annular tip on a lower surface of said lower extension disposed
oppositely to said annular slot and having predetermined dimensions that
mate to said predetermined dimensions of said slot, whereby placing a
first medium to be protected as installed within a first protector ring
downwardly onto a second medium to be protected as installed within a
second protector ring, said annular tip of said first protector ring will
engage said annular slot of said second protector ring.
3. A recording medium comprising:
a recording disc having a predetermined recordable region on at least one
side thereof, a predetermined thickness, a predetermined disc diameter,
and a circular periphery, wherein said recordable region extends outwardly
in the direction of said disc diameter to a distance less than said disc
diameter, thereby to define about said periphery of said recording medium
an annular non-recordable band having a predetermined band width in the
direction of said disc diameter; and
a protector ring removably attached around said circular periphery, said
protector ring further comprising:
a planar, flexible annular ring having a predetermined inner diameter
nearly equal to said diameter of said recording media and a predetermined
outer diameter substantially greater than said diameter of said recording
media;
an elongate slot coplanar with said ring disposed around said inner
diameter, said slot having a thickness nearly equal to said predetermined
thickness of said recording media and a depth in the direction from said
inner diameter towards said outer diameter less than said band width; and
in a direction normal to said plane of said circular ring, upper and lower
extensions on opposite sides of said elongate slot.
4. The recording medium of claim 3 further comprising:
an annular slot having predetermined dimensions on an upper surface of said
upper extension of said protector ring; and
an annular tip on a lower surface of said lower extension disposed
oppositely to said annular slot and having predetermined dimensions that
mate to said predetermined dimensions of said slot, whereby placing a
first said recording medium downwardly onto a second said recording medium
said annular tip of said first recording medium will engage said annular
ring of said second recording medium. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to methods and apparatus for protecting the
recording surface of compact disks (CDs) from damage, and particularly to
such methods and apparatus that do not require removal of the apparatus
from a CD in order for that CD to be read or written upon in a CD reader
and/or writer.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The compact disk (CD) has provided means for the digital recording of
quantities of digital data that would have been thought to be quite
impossible not too many years previously. Such recording technology is
makes a major contribution to the entertainment industry in the form of
very high quality audio recordings, and also in the computer and computer
games industries in the form of digital text, video, and graphics data. In
particular, computer programs and related data files that once required
dozens of the 3.5 inch, 1.44M (or even 2.88M) data disks to be recorded
can now be placed on a single CD to the extent of 680M or more, as can
whole encyclopedias and other large collections of books, Broadway shows,
operas, and the like. In view of this great utility of CDs, it is not
surprising that effort has also been made to develop means for protecting
those CDs from accidental damage once they have been recorded.
The CD itself comprises a thin (1.2 mm) circular plastic plate or disk, 12
cm in diameter, that generally has a label side and a recording side on
which the data are recorded. Recording is done by burning or otherwise
forming pits typically 0.12 micrometers deep and 0.6 micrometers in
diameter in circular tracks that are only 1.6 micrometers apart, and the
data can then be read by a sharply focused laser beam, wherein transitions
between pits and non-pitted locations constitute a logical 1, and the pits
and non-pitted locations themselves constitute a logical 0. Any event that
would scratch out or fill in those surface pits could destroy the recorded
data, perhaps to an extent that the error-correction routines (that are
likewise recorded on the disk) could not overcome.
Perhaps the best known device for protecting a CD from damage is the
so-called "jewel case," which is simply a rectangular box, generally made
of transparent plastic, that includes in the interior thereof a "template"
of some soft material that contains an indentation within which the CD may
be placed. Although there are some CD readers that can accommodate both
the CD and its jewel case, most CD players require that the CD be removed
from its case in order to be read. In the latter instance, the CD is
necessarily subjected to physical handling from which some physical damage
in the form of finger prints or scratches and the like may result. In any
case, the types of jewel cases that are typically found in the market
place may present difficulty in being opened to retrieve the CD--one side
of the case may crack, parts may break off, and in some cases a tool such
as a screwdriver must be used in order to open the case, thereby making
the likelihood of damage to the CD even more probable.
Users of CDs will generally adapt to the usual requirements for CD care
such as avoiding touching the recording surface, typically by handling
such CDs by the edges only. However, such users are also likely to place
such CDs down upon hard surfaces that may bear a quantity of dust, dirt,
and the like. CDs are also likely to be stacked one on the other, and
since the admonitions about touching the surface are not generally applied
to the label side of the CD, that surface may indeed bear fingerprints and
the like that will then come into contact with the recording surface of
any CD that is placed thereon with that recording surface down. Dust and
dirt that may collect in a fingerprint may be of just the right
sub-micrometer size to enter into the pits that constitute the digital
data, and subsequent abrasion caused by the one CD sliding over the other
may render those data elements ("datels") unreadable.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,736,840 issued Apr. 12, 1988 to Deigimeier describes a
protective holder for CDs and the like essentially comprising a circular
envelope into which the CD may be inserted, and the CD together with that
envelope are then placed within a jewel case. For protection of a CD
outside of a jewel case, U.S. Pat. No. 5,299,186 issued Mar. 29, 1994 to
Tsurushima describes a cover having a central projecting member that is
inserted into the center hole of the CD, which brings into contact with
the data recording side of the CD a plate having either a soft material
disposed thereon, or alternatively a pair of annular ridges that are
disposed to contact the non-recording portions of that recording side
while leaving the recording portion untouched but covered over. This
device must likewise be removed from the CD in order to read the same,
since the device indeed covers the over recording surface of the CD when
the latter is placed thereon.
For purposes of protecting the surface of 33 1/3 RPM "LPs" that are stacked
one on the other, U.S. Pat. No. 4,589,104 issued May 13, 1986 to Brockley
describes a spacer in the form of a thin, circular plate having a center
hole; an annular, upwardly-elevated contour that is coaxial with that
center hole; a similarly coaxial, annular, downwardly-extending band; and
a circular ridge extending both upwardly and downwardly at the periphery
of the plate. A first LP rests atop the elevated contour and the upwardly
extending portion of the circular ridge of a first spacer, and a second
spacer placed thereabove rests thereon such that the downwardly-extending
band rests on the LP itself (inwardly from the recording surface) and the
downwardly-extending ridge of the second spacer rests on the
upwardly-extending ridge of the first spacer.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,316,281 issued Feb. 16, 1982 to Prusak, a spacer for
video discs and the like is described that includes a flat, circular,
relatively rigid plate having opposed major surfaces and a central hole
therethrough. The plate has portions around both its peripheral edge and
the edge of the hole that are thicker than the rest of the plate and
project beyond the major surfaces of the plate. The thicker portions of
the spacer engage unrecorded surface portions of adjacent recorded discs
so as to provide spacing therebetween.
It has occurred to the present inventor, however, that there remains a need
for a devices that would provide adequate protection of the recording
surface of a CD of much simpler construction and, more importantly, could
be installed on a CD on a semi-permanent basis, by which is meant that
such a protective device could be left associated with the CD as the same
is either played within a CD player or removed therefrom for storage or,
as will frequently be the case, is placed down on desk or table surfaces
that may be dirty or is left lying about with other CDs or jewel cases
being placed thereon. The present specification and drawings disclose such
a protective device in the form of a CD protector ring.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The invention comprises a device for protecting the recorded surface of CDs
consisting essentially of an annular ring made of material that is
sufficiently flexible to be "snapped" over the peripheral edge of a CD.
The inner circumference of the ring includes a slot adapted to accept the
peripheral edge of the CD, and the ring further includes upwardly- and
downwardly extending portions of a dimension adequate to hold a lower
(recorded) surface of such a CD out of contact with a surface such as a
table top, and also to separate two or more CDs that are so equipped and
are stacked one on the other. The outwardly (i.e., upwardly or downwardly)
directed faces of those upwardly- and downwardly-extending portions of the
device also include respectively a V-shaped groove or the like and a
V-shaped extension or the like, or vice versa, whereby one CD protector
ring having a CD disposed therein may be placed atop another CD protector
ring having a CD disposed therein, the V-shaped extension of the one ring
engaging the V-shaped groove of the other, for convenience in forming an
aligned stack thereof and in preventing one CD with attached ring from
sliding laterally over another CD with attached ring.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described in detail
with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a top plan view of the CD Protector Ring.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of a portion of the CD Protector Ring of
FIG. 1 taken through the line 2-2' thereof.
FIG. 3 is a bottom plan view of the CD Protector Ring of FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a side elevation view of the CD Protector Ring of FIG. 1.
FIG. 5 is a partially oblique side view of a portion of the inner
circumference of the CD Protector Ring of FIG. 1, taken in the direction
of arrow 24 of FIG. 1 over the portion 5-5'.
FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view of a portion of a CD Protector Ring
including a CD onto which has been placed another CD Protector Ring also
including a CD.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 is a top plan view of CD Protector Ring 10 comprising the invention,
which has the basic form of an annular ring 12 as shown in FIG. 1 and is
somewhat akin to a rather wide and thick rubber band. As shown in larger
scale in FIGS. 2 and 5, around the inner circumference of ring 12 is
disposed an elongate slot 14 that is sized to accept the outer periphery
16 of a CD, the latter being shown in FIG. 2 as being disposed therein.
The depth of slot 14 is established such that no portion of CD Protector
Ring 10 extends inwardly relative to an installed CD so as to encroach
upon the recording surface of that CD, i.e., CD Protector Ring 10 is sized
so as to contact only the outer rim region of a CD whereon no recording of
data occurs. Upper and lower edges of annular ring 12 respectively include
on one such edge a V-shaped slot 18 that extends circumferentially all the
way around ring 10 and has outer edges 20, and along the opposite edge of
annular ring 12 is a V-shaped tip 22 that likewise extends
circumferentially around ring 10. Of course, slot 18 and tip 22 may
optionally be U-shaped, rectangular of any similar such form so long as
the forms are "mated," i.e., slot 18 is adapted to accept tip 22 and
thereby prevent lateral movement of one ring 10 relative to another when
the same are placed one atop the other. FIG. 3 is a bottom plan view of CD
Protector Ring 10 of FIG. 1, FIG. 4 is a side elevation view of the CD
Protector Ring 10 of FIG. 1, and FIG. 5 is a partially oblique view of a
portion of the inner circumference of CD Protector Ring 10, taken in the
direction of arrow 24 in FIG. 1 and encompassing the region 5-5' shown
therein.
FIG. 6 shows in larger scale (and with the numerical designations of FIG. 5
deleted for clarity) the rightward end of one instance of CD Protector
Ring 10 onto which a second instance (designated as CD Protector Ring 10')
has been placed, whereby the respective CDs "A" and "B" contained therein
have been separated. The distance "d" shown in FIG. 6 represents the
upward distance that a CD placed within CD Protector Ring 10 will be
raised when placed on a flat surface, and it is advantageous for that
dimension of CD Protector Ring 10 to be established such that the distance
"d" will be larger than the anticipated dimensions of dust and dirt
particles from which the CD is to be protected, but at the same time that
distance "d" should not be made so large as to remove the CD from a proper
focus of the reading head, as can easily be determined.
Although emphasis in the foregoing discussion has been placed on CDs, it is
contemplated that a like application of the principles of CD Protector
Ring 10 may be applied to the protection of various types of disk-like
recording media such as LP records, video discs, and similar such devices.
A device such as an LP record bears a recording region on the upper
surface thereof, as opposed to the "lower" surface utilized in reading a
CD, but protection of the former recording region is again provided
inasmuch as the upper one of a pair of stacked LPs is precluded from
making contact with the recording region of the lower LP. Also,
illustration of an essentially rectangular slot 18 is not intended to
suggest that such a structure is required, especially in that the inner
surface of a slot 18 may be advantageously rounded so as to better fit the
typically rounded outer periphery of a CD, video disc or the like.
It will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that other
arrangements and disposition of the aforesaid components, the descriptions
of which are intended to be illustrative only and not limiting, may be
made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, which
must be identified and determined only from the following claims and
equivalents thereof.
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Description  |
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