Tennis ball having a thermoplastic core

US11192001B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-11192001-B2
Application numberUS-202016787448-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateFeb 11, 2020
Priority dateFeb 11, 2020
Publication dateDec 7, 2021
Grant dateDec 7, 2021

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

    Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.

  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A tennis ball including a non-foamed thermoplastic core defining an internal volume. The core includes a thermoplastic material having a specific gravity of 0.86 to 1.38, a flexural modulus of 2.0 to 50.0 MPa, and a Shore D hardness of 10 to 70. A thickness of the thermoplastic material is between 3.0 and 8.0 mm. The thickness of the thermoplastic material is configured to maintain dimensional stability at internal pressures of between zero and 15 psi.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. A tennis ball comprising: a non-foamed thermoplastic core defining an internal volume, the core being entirely formed from a composition or compositions omitting rubber, the composition comprising: a thermoplastic material having a specific gravity of 0.86 to 1.38, a flexural modulus of 2.0 to 50.0 MPa, and a Shore D hardness of 10 to 70, a thickness of the thermoplastic material of between 3.0 and 8.0 mm, the thickness of the thermoplastic material configured to maintain dimensional stability at internal pressures of between zero and 15 psi, wherein the tennis ball has a rebound within the range of 54.0 to 60.0 inches when dropped from a height of 100 inches onto a concrete floor. 2. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the tennis ball comprising the thermoplastic core conforms to ITF and USTA size, weight, deformation and rebound requirements. 3. The tennis ball of claim 1 wherein the core is non-inflatable. 4. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the core is valveless. 5. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the non-foamed thermoplastic core comprises one or more ethylene-alkene copolymers. 6. The tennis ball of claim 5 , wherein the one or more ethylene-alkene copolymers comprises at least one ethylene-butene copolymer. 7. The tennis ball of claim 5 , wherein the one or more ethylene-alkene copolymers comprises at least one ethylene-octene copolymer. 8. The tennis ball of claim 5 , wherein the one or more ethylene-alkene copolymers comprises at least one ethylene-butene copolymer and at least one ethylene-octene copolymer. 9. The tennis ball of claim 6 , wherein the thermoplastic core has a specific gravity of 0.862 to 0.880 and a flexural modulus of 4.0 to 22.1 MPa. 10. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the non-foamed thermoplastic core has a diameter within the range of 2.36 to 2.45 inches, and a weight within the range of 43.5 to 45.0 grams. 11. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the non-foamed thermoplastic core has a deformation of 0.24 to 0.28 inch, and wherein the non-foamed thermoplastic core has a rebound within the range of 67.0 to 71.0 inches. 12. A tennis ball comprising: a non-foamed thermoplastic core defining an internal volume, the core being entirely formed from a composition or compositions omitting rubber, the composition comprising: a thermoplastic material having a specific gravity of 0.86 to 1.38, a flexural modulus of 2.0 to 50.0 MPa, and a Shore D hardness of 10 to 70, a thickness of the thermoplastic material of between 3.0 and 8.0 mm, the thickness of the thermoplastic material configured to maintain dimensional stability at internal pressures of between zero and 15 psi, wherein the tennis ball has a diameter within the range of 2.670 to 2.70 inches, a weight of 56.0 to 59.4 grams, and a deformation of 0.220 to 0.290 inch pursuant to ITF and USTA specifications. 13. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the non-foamed thermoplastic core is pressurized to a non-zero internal pressure of up to 15 psi. 14. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the non-foamed thermoplastic core is not pressurized. 15. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the surface of the thermoplastic core is smooth across an entire outer spherical surface of the core. 16. A tennis ball comprising: a non-foamed thermoplastic core defining an internal volume, the core comprising: a thermoplastic material having a specific gravity of 0.86 to 1.38, a flexural modulus of 2.0 to 50.0 MPa, and a Shore D hardness of 10 to 70, a thickness of the thermoplastic material of between 3.0 and 8.0 mm, the thickness of the thermoplastic material configured to maintain dimensional stability at internal pressures of between zero and 15 psi; a raised wall molded as part of the core, wherein the raised wall is integrally formed with an outer layer of the core, wherein the core comprises a homogenous layer having an inner surface adjacent a hollow interior of the tennis ball, the homogeneous layer and the raised wall both being concurrently molded from a same homogenous thermoplastic material that omits rubber and wherein the raised wall is integrally molded and formed as part of a single unitary body with the homogeneous layer. 17. The tennis ball of claim 16 , further comprising a felt material inset between portions of the raised wall projecting from the surface of the core. 18. The tennis ball of claim 16 further comprising a cover panel between the portions of the raised wall projecting from the surface of the core. 19. The tennis ball of claim 18 , wherein the raised wall overhangs edges of the cover panel. 20. The tennis ball of claim 1 further comprising a felt cover at least partially covering the core. 21. The tennis ball of claim 20 , wherein the felt cover comprises a woven fiber material. 22. The tennis ball of claim 20 , wherein the felt cover comprises a needle-punch fiber material. 23. The tennis ball of claim 1 , further comprising a non-felt material cover over the core. 24. The tennis ball of claim 1 , wherein the core comprises an inner layer of a first material and an outer layer of a second material different than the first material. 25. A tennis ball comprising: a non-foamed thermoplastic core defining an internal volume, the core comprising: a thermoplastic material having a specific gravity of 0.86 to 1.38, a flexural modulus of 2.0 to 50.0 MPa, and a Shore D hardness of 10 to 70, a thickness of the thermoplastic material of between 3.0 and 8.0 mm, the thickness of the thermoplastic material configured to maintain dimensional stability at internal pressures of between zero and 15 psi, wherein the core comprises: an inner layer of a first thermoplastic material having a first melting point; an outer layer of a second thermoplastic material different than the first thermoplastic material and having a second melting point lower than the first melting point, wherein the outer layer is molded about the inner layer; and a raised wall molded as part of the outer layer, wherein the raised wall has a third melting point lower than the second melting point. 26. The tennis ball of claim 25 , wherein the second thermoplastic material omits rubber and wherein the outer layer continuously extends 360 degrees about the inner layer. 27. A tennis ball comprising: a non-foamed thermoplastic core defining an internal volume, the core comprising: a thermoplastic material having a specific gravity of 0.86 to 1.38, a flexural modulus of 2.0 to 50.0 MPa, and a Shore D hardness of 10 to 70, a thickness of the thermoplastic material of between 3.0 and 8.0 mm, the thickness of the thermoplastic material configured to maintain dimensional stability at internal pressures of between zero and 15 psi; and a raised wall molded as part of the core; and a felt material inset between portions of the raised wall projecting from the surface of the core wherein an outer surface of the core is formed from the thermoplastic material, wherein the raised wall is formed from a second thermoplastic material, wherein the thermoplastic material has a first melting point, and wherein the second thermoplastic material has a second melting point lower than the first melting point. 28. The tennis ball of claim 12 , wherein the tennis ball comprising the thermoplastic core conforms to ITF and USTA size, weight, deformation and rebound requirements.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • Short-distance or low-velocity balls for training, or for playing on a reduced area · CPC title

  • Spherical articles, e.g. balls (B29D22/02 takes precedence) · CPC title

  • Characteristics of used materials · CPC title

  • Tennis · CPC title

  • A63B39/00Primary

    Hollow non-inflatable balls {, i.e. having no valves (rigid balls A63B37/00)} · CPC title

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What does patent US11192001B2 cover?
A tennis ball including a non-foamed thermoplastic core defining an internal volume. The core includes a thermoplastic material having a specific gravity of 0.86 to 1.38, a flexural modulus of 2.0 to 50.0 MPa, and a Shore D hardness of 10 to 70. A thickness of the thermoplastic material is between 3.0 and 8.0 mm. The thickness of the thermoplastic material is configured to maintain dimensional …
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Wilson Sporting Goods
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification A63B39/00. Mapped technology areas include Human Necessities.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Dec 07 2021 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 6 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).