US1782569A - Athletic shoe and cleat therefor - Google Patents

Athletic shoe and cleat therefor Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1782569A
US1782569A US343688A US34368829A US1782569A US 1782569 A US1782569 A US 1782569A US 343688 A US343688 A US 343688A US 34368829 A US34368829 A US 34368829A US 1782569 A US1782569 A US 1782569A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
cleat
shoe
disk
therefor
leather
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US343688A
Inventor
Howard Emory Guy
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Koehler Manufacturing Co
Original Assignee
Koehler Manufacturing Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Koehler Manufacturing Co filed Critical Koehler Manufacturing Co
Priority to US343688A priority Critical patent/US1782569A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1782569A publication Critical patent/US1782569A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A43FOOTWEAR
    • A43CFASTENINGS OR ATTACHMENTS OF FOOTWEAR; LACES IN GENERAL
    • A43C15/00Non-skid devices or attachments
    • A43C15/16Studs or cleats for football or like boots
    • A43C15/161Studs or cleats for football or like boots characterised by the attachment to the sole

Definitions

  • This invention relates to shoes intended for use in athletics, more especially in football, and to cleats for use in such shoes.
  • detachable cleats usually comprise a body which is molded around a metal stud or a socket member and a fixture of some kind designed to be secured permanently to the shoe bottom and provided with parts for operatively engaging the stud or socket member and de tachably holding the cleat on the shoe.
  • the molded bodies are very liable to crack and break off, thus leaving the metal stud or socket member exposed, and projecting from the bottom. of the shoe. This obviously is highly objectionable.
  • Figure 1 is a perspective view of a portion of the lower part of a football shoe equipped With cleats embodying this invention
  • F ig Zisa perspective view of a small part i of the shoe shown in Fig. 1, and shows a cleat. detached from the shoe;
  • Fig. 3 is a plan View of a part of the shoe superposed one upon the other, the body being of circular sectional form. ;
  • These leather bodies may be made in the manner disclosed in Patent No. 1,689,219 dated Oct. 30, 1928, or they may he made of other shapes.
  • the body 2 is mounted on a circular metal disk or base 3, and is secured permanently to this base by nails or other metal fasteners 4 which extend through the leather body 2 from one end thereof to the other and are headed or clinched upon the end opposite to the base 3.
  • the base with the cleat body I find it preferable to complete the manufacture of the leather body and then to drill or pierce holes substantially through it to receive the metal fasteners 4, and finally to drive these fasteners and clinch. or head them to secure the two parts together.
  • the piercing or drilling of the cleat bodies should be performed in a or fixture which will hold the leather body under compression since this facilitates the production of accurate results and avoids injuring the cleat body. i
  • the edgeof the disk 3 is screw threaded and a metal receptacle or fixture 5 is provided to receive this disk.
  • This recep tacle consists of a cup-shaped member hav ing an internally threaded socket in itsupp'er side, the bottom of the receptacle being drilled to receive nails or other fasteners 6 to drive the nails entirely through the shoe bottom and clinch them on its inner surface.
  • Fig. 1 shows a typical arrangement of cleats on the bottom of a shoe.
  • the cleat bodies can be removed from their respective socket member simply by unscrewing their bases from the sockets, and longer or shorter cleats can then be substituted for them.
  • the base of the cleat body 2 slightly greater in diameter than the external diameter of the base or disk 3 so that the tapered edge surface of the cleat will be substantially flush with the outer surface of the socket member or receptacle 5, as clearly shown in Fig. 4e.
  • a special wrench may be provided to thread the cleat bases into, or unscrew them from, their sockets, such a wrench having a tapered socket to receive the leather body 2 and the surface of the socket being roughened so that it will grip the body better.
  • the cleat provided by this invention has abundant strength, there is practically no danger of it or its attaching means breaking while in use, and cleat bodies of different shapes and dimensions can be substituted one for the other whenever desired.
  • a detachable football cleat comprising a tapered cleat body of approximately circular sectional form and composed essentially of superposed lifts of leather, a circular metal disk on which said body is mounted, said disk having a screw threaded edge and metal fastening means extending through said disk and body from one end of the body to the other and securing said body rigidly to said disk.
  • a detachable football cleat comprising a tapered cleat body of approximately circular sectional form and composed essentially of superposed lifts of leather, a circular metal disk on which said body is mounted, metal. fastening means extending through said disk and body from one end of the body to the other and securing said body rigidly to said disk, the edge of said disk being screw threaded, and a metal receptacle constructed to be secured to the bottom of a shoe and having an internally screw threaded socket to receive the edge of said threaded disk.

Landscapes

  • Footwear And Its Accessory, Manufacturing Method And Apparatuses (AREA)

Description

Nov. 25, 1930. E. G. HOWARD 1,782,569
ATHLETIC SHOE AND'CLEAT THEREFOR Filed March 1.- 1929 Patented Nov. 25, 1930 UNITED s'raras EMORY GUY HOWARD, OF DUDLEY, MASSACHUSETTS, ASSIGNOR T0 KOEHLER MA N U o -Fic racrunme ooMrAnY, or emansono, iviessae insnr'rs, A CORPORATION or MASSA- CHUSETTS ATHLETIC SHOE AND THEREFOR 7 Application filed March 1,
This invention relates to shoes intended for use in athletics, more especially in football, and to cleats for use in such shoes.
It is customary in playing football to use a considerably longer cleat When playing on a Wet field than on a dry field. For this reason the players of the better equipped teams usually are provided with at least two pairs of shoes, one having short cleats for use on a dry field, and the other provided wvith long cleats for playing on a wet field.
Many players, however, cannot afford such equipment, and in order to enable them to use both long and short cleats a detachable mounting for the cleats has been proposed so that either a short cleat or a mud cleat could be used, as desired. These detachable cleats usually comprise a body which is molded around a metal stud or a socket member and a fixture of some kind designed to be secured permanently to the shoe bottom and provided with parts for operatively engaging the stud or socket member and de tachably holding the cleat on the shoe. The molded bodies, however, are very liable to crack and break off, thus leaving the metal stud or socket member exposed, and projecting from the bottom. of the shoe. This obviously is highly objectionable.
With a view to overcoming this objection it has been proposed heretofore to make a leather cleat of the demountable or interchangeable type since it is generally recognized that a sole leather cleat is superior to a molded cleat, but so far as I have been devise a thoroughly practical solution for this problem.
7 The nature of the invention will be readily understood fromthe following description when read in connection with the accompanying drawings, and the novel features will be particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
In the drawings, Figure 1 is a perspective view of a portion of the lower part of a football shoe equipped With cleats embodying this invention;
1929. Serial. No. 343,688;
F ig, Zisa perspective view of a small part i of the shoe shown in Fig. 1, and shows a cleat. detached from the shoe;
Fig. 3 is a plan View of a part of the shoe superposed one upon the other, the body being of circular sectional form. ;These leather bodies may be made in the manner disclosed in Patent No. 1,689,219 dated Oct. 30, 1928, or they may he made of other shapes. The body 2 is mounted on a circular metal disk or base 3, and is secured permanently to this base by nails or other metal fasteners 4 which extend through the leather body 2 from one end thereof to the other and are headed or clinched upon the end opposite to the base 3. In assemblingthe base with the cleat body I find it preferable to complete the manufacture of the leather body and then to drill or pierce holes substantially through it to receive the metal fasteners 4, and finally to drive these fasteners and clinch. or head them to secure the two parts together. The piercing or drilling of the cleat bodies should be performed in a or fixture which will hold the leather body under compression since this facilitates the production of accurate results and avoids injuring the cleat body. i
In order to detachably fasten this cleat body to a shoe, the edgeof the disk 3 is screw threaded and a metal receptacle or fixture 5 is provided to receive this disk. This recep tacle consists of a cup-shaped member hav ing an internally threaded socket in itsupp'er side, the bottom of the receptacle being drilled to receive nails or other fasteners 6 to drive the nails entirely through the shoe bottom and clinch them on its inner surface.
Fig. 1 shows a typical arrangement of cleats on the bottom of a shoe. The cleat bodies can be removed from their respective socket member simply by unscrewing their bases from the sockets, and longer or shorter cleats can then be substituted for them. Usually it is preferable to make the base of the cleat body 2 slightly greater in diameter than the external diameter of the base or disk 3 so that the tapered edge surface of the cleat will be substantially flush with the outer surface of the socket member or receptacle 5, as clearly shown in Fig. 4e. This is preferable both from the standpoint of appearance and also because the compression of the leather when the base 3 is threaded into the socket performs somewhat the functions of a locknut and prevents the accidental unscrewing of the cleat bases from their sockets. A special wrench may be provided to thread the cleat bases into, or unscrew them from, their sockets, such a wrench having a tapered socket to receive the leather body 2 and the surface of the socket being roughened so that it will grip the body better.
The cleat provided by this invention has abundant strength, there is practically no danger of it or its attaching means breaking while in use, and cleat bodies of different shapes and dimensions can be substituted one for the other whenever desired.
lVhile I have herein shown and described a preferred embodiment of my invention, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied in other forms without departing from the spirit or scope thereof.
Iaving thus described my invention, what I desire to claim as new is:
1. A detachable football cleat comprising a tapered cleat body of approximately circular sectional form and composed essentially of superposed lifts of leather, a circular metal disk on which said body is mounted, said disk having a screw threaded edge and metal fastening means extending through said disk and body from one end of the body to the other and securing said body rigidly to said disk.
2. A detachable football cleat comprising a tapered cleat body of approximately circular sectional form and composed essentially of superposed lifts of leather, a circular metal disk on which said body is mounted, metal. fastening means extending through said disk and body from one end of the body to the other and securing said body rigidly to said disk, the edge of said disk being screw threaded, and a metal receptacle constructed to be secured to the bottom of a shoe and having an internally screw threaded socket to receive the edge of said threaded disk.
EMORY GUY HOWVARD.
US343688A 1929-03-01 1929-03-01 Athletic shoe and cleat therefor Expired - Lifetime US1782569A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US343688A US1782569A (en) 1929-03-01 1929-03-01 Athletic shoe and cleat therefor

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US343688A US1782569A (en) 1929-03-01 1929-03-01 Athletic shoe and cleat therefor

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1782569A true US1782569A (en) 1930-11-25

Family

ID=23347180

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US343688A Expired - Lifetime US1782569A (en) 1929-03-01 1929-03-01 Athletic shoe and cleat therefor

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1782569A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4984377A (en) * 1989-12-11 1991-01-15 Schneider Gottlieb R All condition fishing waders
USD778556S1 (en) * 2016-02-15 2017-02-14 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole
USD778557S1 (en) * 2016-02-15 2017-02-14 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole
USD779178S1 (en) * 2016-02-15 2017-02-21 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole
USD783248S1 (en) * 2016-02-05 2017-04-11 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole
USD846852S1 (en) * 2017-06-29 2019-04-30 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4984377A (en) * 1989-12-11 1991-01-15 Schneider Gottlieb R All condition fishing waders
USD783248S1 (en) * 2016-02-05 2017-04-11 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole
USD778556S1 (en) * 2016-02-15 2017-02-14 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole
USD778557S1 (en) * 2016-02-15 2017-02-14 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole
USD779178S1 (en) * 2016-02-15 2017-02-21 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole
USD846852S1 (en) * 2017-06-29 2019-04-30 Nike, Inc. Shoe outsole

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1827514A (en) Athletic shoe
US1768426A (en) Calk for football shoes
US1782569A (en) Athletic shoe and cleat therefor
US2412788A (en) Cleat assembly for athletic shoes
US1760084A (en) Shoe cleat
US1493856A (en) Sporting shoes
US1899300A (en) Detachable cleat
US4443956A (en) Shoe replaceable heel kit
US2268992A (en) Athletic shoe cleat
US1797059A (en) Shoe-cleat attachment
US1786374A (en) Boot and shoe construction
US1515330A (en) Socket plate for shoes
US2301327A (en) Heel fastener
US1492406A (en) Fastening means for heel cushions
US2867919A (en) Heels for footwear
US2277078A (en) Athletic shoe
US1970254A (en) Tread member for shoes
US3073042A (en) Detachable shoe sole
US1506519A (en) Shoe-tree
US1557977A (en) Manufacture of boots and shoes
US1559086A (en) Athletic shoe
US1803641A (en) Fastener for rubber heels
US1901340A (en) Heel for ladies' shoes
US1867915A (en) Cleated athletic shoe and cleat therefor
US1920170A (en) Heel attachment device for shoes