Flexible printed circuit board and method for manufacturing same
US-9949379-B2 · Apr 17, 2018 · US
US10139205B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10139205-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715631004-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jun 23, 2017 |
| Priority date | Feb 15, 2017 |
| Publication date | Nov 27, 2018 |
| Grant date | Nov 27, 2018 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A high impact strength nock assembly that couples with, and decouples from, a bushing mounted in an arrow. The forces applied to the nock during launch are translated to the arrow through the bushing, greatly extending arrow life. For lighted nock applications, the nock translates within the bushing during launch to activate the light. A battery stop is coupled to the battery and releasably coupled within the center opening of the bushing that resists longitudinal translation of the battery relative to the bushing. Consequently, the light can be deactivated without removing the lighted nock assembly from the bushing. The entire lighted nock assembly is removable from the bushing for maintenance and replacement.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A high impact strength lighted nock assembly that couples with, and decouples from, an arrow, the lighted nock assembly comprising: a light assembly comprising a light emitting device that is mechanically coupled to a battery, wherein displacing the light emitting device toward the battery activates the light emitting device and displacing the light emitting device away from the battery deactivates the light emitting device; a nock comprising a head configured to engage with a bowstring and a shank with a recess, wherein the light emitting device is located in the recess and the light assembly is attached to the nock; a bushing sized for insertion into a shaft of the arrow, the bushing having a shoulder that engages with a rear end of the shaft, a distal portion extending from the shoulder portion into the shaft, and a center opening extending into the distal portion that is sized to frictionally engage with the shank of the nock, such that the shank extends into the shaft; and a battery stop attached to the battery at a location offset from the nock, the battery stop is releasably coupled within the center opening of the bushing and resists longitudinal translation of the battery relative to the bushing, wherein the nock translates within the center opening between an activated configuration that activates the light emitting device and a deactivated configuration that deactivates the light emitting device without removing the light assembly from the bushing. 2. The lighted nock assembly of claim 1 comprising a friction member located between the battery stop and the bushing that releasably secures the battery to the bushing. 3. The lighted nock assembly of claim 1 comprising an O-ring located in opposing recesses in battery stop and the center opening of the bushing that releasably secures the battery to the bushing. 4. The lighted nock assembly of claim 1 wherein the light assembly, nock, and battery stop are removable from the bushing as a single assembly. 5. The lighted nock assembly of claim 1 comprising a removable tab stop located in a gap between the head of the nock and the shoulder of the bushing that prevents the nock from translating to the activated configuration, the tab stop comprising a handle portion large enough to prevent the nock from being engaged with a crossbow trigger housing. 6. The lighted nock assembly of claim 5 wherein the handle portion has at least one major dimension that is at least about two times greater than an outside diameter of the shaft. 7. The lighted nock assembly of claim 1 wherein radial outward forces applied to the battery stop during translation from the deactivated configuration and the activated configuration are contained within the bushing. 8. The lighted nock assembly of claim 1 wherein the nock is molded from a transparent, high impact strength polymeric material containing at least 10% by weight reinforcing material. 9. The lighted nock assembly of claim 8 wherein the reinforcing material comprise about 20% by weight glass fibers or filamentous glass. 10. A plurality of matched weight arrows comprising: a first arrow having the bushing and the lighted nock assembly of claim 1 , wherein the first arrow has a first weight; and a second arrow having a bushing and a nock without a light assembly located in the bushing, the second arrow have a second weight substantially the same as the first weight. 11. A high impact strength lighted nock assembly that couples with, and decouples from, a bushing mounted in a rear end of an arrow, the lighted nock assembly comprising: a light assembly comprising a light emitting device, that is mechanically coupled to a battery, wherein displacing the light emitting device toward the battery activates the light emitting device and displacing the light emitting device away from the battery deactivates the light emitting device; a nock comprising a head configured to engage with a bowstring and a shank with a recess, wherein the light emitting device is located in the recess and the light assembly is attached to the nock; a bushing sized for insertion into a shaft of the arrow, the bushing having a shoulder that engages with a rear end of the shaft, a distal portion extending from the shoulder portion into the shaft, and a center opening extending into the distal portion that is sized to frictionally engage with the shank of the nock, such that the shank extends into the shaft; and a battery stop coupled to the battery at a location offset from the nock, the battery stop is releasably coupled within the center opening of the bushing and resists longitudinal translation of the battery relative to the bushing, wherein the nock translates within the center opening between an activated configuration that activates the light emitting device and a deactivated configuration that deactivates the light emitting device without removing the light assembly from the bushing, wherein radial outward forces applied to the battery stop during translation from the deactivated configuration and the activated configuration are contained within the bushing. 12. The lighted nock assembly of claim 11 wherein the light assembly, nock, and battery stop are removable from the bushing as a single assembly. 13. The lighted nook assembly of claim 11 comprising an O-ring located in opposing recesses in battery stop and the center opening of the bushing that releasably secures the battery to the bushing. 14. The lighted nock assembly of claim 11 wherein forces applied to the nook during translation from the deactivated configuration and the activated configuration are transmitted to the shaft entirely through the bushing. 15. The lighted nook assembly of claim 11 wherein the nock is molded from a transparent, high impact strength polymeric material containing at least 10% by weight reinforcing material. 16. A kit comprising a plurality of interchangeable lighted nock assemblies of claim 11 that are compatible with the bushing. 17. A high impact strength lighted nock assembly that couples with, and decouples from, a bushing mounted in a rear end of an arrow, the lighted nock assembly comprising: a light assembly comprising a light emitting device that is mechanically coupled to a battery, wherein displacing the light emitting device toward the battery activates the light emitting, device and displacing the light emitting device away from the battery deactivates the light emitting device; a nock comprising a head configured to engage with a bowstring and a shank with a recess, wherein the light emitting device is located in the recess and the light assembly is attached to the nock; a bushing sized for insertion into, a shaft of the arrow, the bushing having a shoulder that engages with a rear end of the shaft, a distal portion extending from the shoulder portion into the shaft, and a center opening extending into the distal portion that is sized to frictionally engage with the shank of the nock, such that the shank extends into the shaft; and a battery stop attached to the battery at a location offset from the nock, the battery stop including a feature that releasably couples to the bushing in the center opening to resist longitudinal translation of the battery relative to the bushing, wherein the nock translates within the center opening between an activated configuration that activates the light emitting device and a deactivated configuration that deactivates the light emitting device without removing the light assembly from the bushing, wherein the light assembly, nock, and battery stop are r
Arrow or dart carrying a radio transmitter for signalling · CPC title
emitting an electromagnetic radiation, e.g. laser beam or infrared emission · CPC title
Archery arrows (F42B6/08, F41B5/06, {F42B12/362} take precedence) · CPC title
of tracer type · CPC title
Arrows or darts (F42B12/38 takes precedence, having means for implantation, e.g. hypodermic projectiles F42B12/54; arrows or darts in general F42B6/00) · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.