US2625946A - Inflatable umbrella - Google Patents

Inflatable umbrella Download PDF

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US2625946A
US2625946A US62524A US6252448A US2625946A US 2625946 A US2625946 A US 2625946A US 62524 A US62524 A US 62524A US 6252448 A US6252448 A US 6252448A US 2625946 A US2625946 A US 2625946A
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umbrella
sheets
sheet
canopy
air
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US62524A
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Kaston Henryk
Thomas L Fawick
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A45HAND OR TRAVELLING ARTICLES
    • A45BWALKING STICKS; UMBRELLAS; LADIES' OR LIKE FANS
    • A45B19/00Special folding or telescoping of umbrellas
    • A45B19/02Inflatable umbrellas; Umbrellas without ribs

Definitions

  • Fig. 1 is a vertical section, on line I-I of Fig. 6, showing an umbrella embodying our invention in its preferred form, in condition for use.
  • Fig. 2 is a section on line 2-2 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 is a section on line 3-'3 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 4 is a section on line 44 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 5 is a vertical middle section, on a larger scale, of a check valve shown in Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 6 is a top plan view of the umbrella shown in Fig. 1. f
  • Fig. '7 is a top plan view of a modification.
  • Fig. 3 is a top plan view of another modification.
  • the sheets I and II are of a heatplastic material, adapted to be inexpensively heat-seamed to each other.
  • desirable materials are polymerized and plasticized vinyl chloride or vinyl acetate or copolymers of the two; polyvinyl butyrol; cyclized chlorinated rubber (Pliofllm); plasticized polyethylene; and polyvinylidene.
  • Water-proofed and air-impervious woven fabric, preferably having a coating adapting it to be seamed by simple application of heat and pressure, can be employed.
  • Both sheets preferably are left intact in the areas I5, I between the air pockets and preferably the sheets are heat-seamed to each other throughout the circle of their outer peripheries, along the line I6, Figs. 1 an'd'fi, so that a failure of any part of the seam I2 will not result in escape of air to the atmosphere, the air escaping only into one of the inter-pocket areas.
  • the two sheets are associated with a molded rubber mushroom-shaped member I I having a head portion and a socketed neck portion, as shown in Fig. 1.
  • the central area of the upper sheet I0 is secured, as by means of an adhesive, to the entire area of the upper face of the head of the member IT.
  • the lower sheet II has the neck portion of the member I 1 occupying its central hole and air-tightly bonded, as by means of an adhesive, to an annular flange portion IIa of the sheet, preferably formed by heat-shaping of the sheet around the hole.
  • the head member II preferably is mounted between the sheets III and II before they are seamed to each other, so that the central opening in the lower sheet does not have to be temporarily enlarged to admit it.
  • the umbrella preferably is provided with a telescoping handle or shaft comprising a plurality of sections of thin-walled metal tubing such as the sections I 8, I9 and 20.
  • the upper section I8 has its upper end fitting tightly in and gripped by, and preferably adhered to, the wall of the socketed neck of the member I1, and for passage of inflating air the metal tube section is formed, as by spinning, with an annular groove 2
  • a suitable check-valve 23 which can be a rubber flutter-valve as shown, cemented in place and preferably provided with a metal reinforcing ring 24 in its base.
  • a spider 25 is secured, as by a press fit, in the lower end of the middle tube section I9, and is formed with a central, upwardly projecting, valve-opening pin 28 adapted to open the valve 23 as shown in Fig. 2 as the tube section I9 approaches the limit of its upward movement on the section I8.
  • the tube sections I8 and I9 are formed at their lower ends with respective outwardly bent flanges I8a and I9a, adapted to act as stops, in the extending of the handle, by abutting respective bushings I9b and 20b press-fitted in the upper ends of the tube sections I9 and 20.
  • each rin can be formed of an initially straight length of a circular section strip of rubber, which is bent to of the fact that the air pockets I3, I3, as shown clearly in Fig. 6, progressively from their inner ends toward their outer ends, occupy a progressively increasing percentage of the successive circles of the assembly, so that their upward and downward bulging in being inflated causes a progressively increasing shortening of the circles.
  • the canopy instead of having flat or. merely conical form, is held tothe downwardly curved shape.
  • ancethe sheets II ⁇ and II can be seamed to each other as shown in Fig. 7, in which they are joined only by. generally radial but whorl-like seams 30,. 3.0 and a peripheral seam 3
  • the umbrella takes, upon being inflated, a somewhat dished or conical shape by reason of a balancing of forces in the central regions of the two sheets, which is a-factor also in the shaping of the Fig. 1 embodiment by the inflation,
  • the sheets I0 and I I can be iven either conical or curved-canopy form. either by seaming or heat-shaping or both, before or after they are seamed to each other as described.
  • An advantage of the umbrella. as described is that it can be turned inside out by wind without damage to it, and can readily be turned rightside out again by simply holding it against the wind.
  • the umbrella can readily be provided with flexible stay cords 34, 34 to resist its being blown inside out, by mounting the cords as connections between a metal ring 35, press fitted on the tube section I8, and respective tabs such as the tab 36, of suitable material heatwelded'to the lower face of the sheet II at the positions of the radial seams.
  • the umbrella As the peripheral portion of the canopy consists only of thin and highly flexible sheets, the umbrella has ahigh degree of safety against the eye injuries that sometimes occur in the use of ordinary umbrellas.
  • heat-plastic material is intended to mean a material that becomes plastic upon merely being heated, to less than a destructive temperature, as distinguished from vulcanized rubber, for example, the heat-plastic character of the material adapting it to be seamed to itself by the simple application of heat and pressure.
  • An inflatable umbrella comprising an inflatable, flexible canopy, a telescoping handle having one of its sections hollow and in direct sealed communication with the canopy, a checkvalve in that section, and mean-s on an adjacent telescopic handle section for automatically opening the check-valve as an incident of the collapsing relative movement of the two sections.
  • An inflatable umbrella comprising as its canopy two thin and flexible pieces of sheet material so seamed. to each other, with pronounced-1y non-radial seam-margins, as to define a set of outwardly flared air pockets spaced apart and connected, circumferentially of the assembly, by non-inflating tie reaches of at least one of the said pieces of sheet material, the set of seams being so disposed and so spaced apart, circumferentially of the assembly, that, in circular zones of-theassemb-ly succeeding one another at progressively reater distances from the center of the assembly, there is a progressively increasing ratio of the part of the circle represented by the pockets to the part of the circle represented by the tie reaches, such that upon inflation. the canvrpy is urged, by the inflation, toward a pronouncedly dished shape, by reason of baying out of the walls ofthe pockets by the inflation.
  • An inflatable umbrella comprising as its canopy two thin and flexible pieces of sheet ma- 2,625,946 5 6 terial so joined to each other as to define a set REFERENCES CITED of air pockets extending outwardly from the
  • the following references are of record in the tral region of the assembly, and central rigid file of this patent: means which with the central portions of the said pieces defines a central air chamber having an 5 UNITED STATES PATENTS upper flexible wail attached to said means at Number Name Date such position and of such radial extent, and a 1,397,789 Stonestreet Nov. 22, 1921 lower flexible wall attached to said means at 1,411,560 Beaty Apr.

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Description

1953 H. KASTON ET AL INFLATABLE UMBRELLA Filed NOV. 29, 1948 INVEN TOR. HENRY K KHSTON Patented Jan. 20, 1953 INFLATABLE UMBRELLA Henryk Kaston, New York, N. Y., and Thomas L. Fawick, Cleveland, Ohio Application November 29, 1948, Serial No. 62,524
3 Claims. (Cl. 135-20) This invention relates to inflated umbrellas. Its chief objects are economy of manufacture,
attractiveness and durability of the product, and
convenience in the matter of inflation and defiation of the umbrella. v
Of the accompanying drawings:
Fig. 1 is a vertical section, on line I-I of Fig. 6, showing an umbrella embodying our invention in its preferred form, in condition for use.
Fig. 2 is a section on line 2-2 of Fig. 1.
Fig. 3 is a section on line 3-'3 of Fig. 1.
Fig. 4 is a section on line 44 of Fig. 1.
Fig. 5 is a vertical middle section, on a larger scale, of a check valve shown in Fig. 1.
Fig. 6 is a top plan view of the umbrella shown in Fig. 1. f
Fig. '7 is a top plan view of a modification.
Fig. 3 is a top plan view of another modification.
In making the umbrella shown in Figs. 1 to 6, two initially flat pieces In and H of flexible and preferably slightly elastic sheet material, cut to circular shape, and with a central hole cut in the sheet H, are seamed to each other, while they are in generally flat condition, preferably by means of a die, alon the continuous line I2 having the configuration that is clearly shown in Fig. 6, so that they define a set of radially extending air-pockets I3, I3 each opening at its inner end into space I4 between the central portions of the two sheets.
Preferably the sheets I and II are of a heatplastic material, adapted to be inexpensively heat-seamed to each other. Examples of desirable materials are polymerized and plasticized vinyl chloride or vinyl acetate or copolymers of the two; polyvinyl butyrol; cyclized chlorinated rubber (Pliofllm); plasticized polyethylene; and polyvinylidene. Water-proofed and air-impervious woven fabric, preferably having a coating adapting it to be seamed by simple application of heat and pressure, can be employed.
Both sheets preferably are left intact in the areas I5, I between the air pockets and preferably the sheets are heat-seamed to each other throughout the circle of their outer peripheries, along the line I6, Figs. 1 an'd'fi, so that a failure of any part of the seam I2 will not result in escape of air to the atmosphere, the air escaping only into one of the inter-pocket areas.
The two sheets are associated with a molded rubber mushroom-shaped member I I having a head portion and a socketed neck portion, as shown in Fig. 1. The central area of the upper sheet I0 is secured, as by means of an adhesive, to the entire area of the upper face of the head of the member IT. The lower sheet II, has the neck portion of the member I 1 occupying its central hole and air-tightly bonded, as by means of an adhesive, to an annular flange portion IIa of the sheet, preferably formed by heat-shaping of the sheet around the hole.
The head member II preferably is mounted between the sheets III and II before they are seamed to each other, so that the central opening in the lower sheet does not have to be temporarily enlarged to admit it.
The umbrella preferably is provided with a telescoping handle or shaft comprising a plurality of sections of thin-walled metal tubing such as the sections I 8, I9 and 20.
The upper section I8, has its upper end fitting tightly in and gripped by, and preferably adhered to, the wall of the socketed neck of the member I1, and for passage of inflating air the metal tube section is formed, as by spinning, with an annular groove 2| in its outer face, This groove is in communication with a pair of holes 22, 22 extending through the wall of the neck of the mem ber I1, and a hole 23 through the wall of the metal tube, at the position of the groove 2|, completes the communication between the interior of the tube section I8 and the central space I4, which is in communication with the air pockets I3 defined by the seamed sheets III and I I.
Mounted in the lower end portion of the metal tube I8 is a suitable check-valve 23, which can be a rubber flutter-valve as shown, cemented in place and preferably provided with a metal reinforcing ring 24 in its base.
For automatically opening the valve 23 when the telescopic handle is collapsed, a spider 25 is secured, as by a press fit, in the lower end of the middle tube section I9, and is formed with a central, upwardly projecting, valve-opening pin 28 adapted to open the valve 23 as shown in Fig. 2 as the tube section I9 approaches the limit of its upward movement on the section I8.
The tube sections I8 and I9 are formed at their lower ends with respective outwardly bent flanges I8a and I9a, adapted to act as stops, in the extending of the handle, by abutting respective bushings I9b and 20b press-fitted in the upper ends of the tube sections I9 and 20.
To provide against excessive escape of air in the inflation of the umbrella respective rubber rings I and 200 can be set in annular grooves formed in the inner faces of the respective bushings I91) and 20b, the rings sealing against the respective tube sections that they surround and also providing sufficient friction against them to provide adequate resistance against unintended collapsing of the telescopic handle. Each rin can be formed of an initially straight length of a circular section strip of rubber, which is bent to of the fact that the air pockets I3, I3, as shown clearly in Fig. 6, progressively from their inner ends toward their outer ends, occupy a progressively increasing percentage of the successive circles of the assembly, so that their upward and downward bulging in being inflated causes a progressively increasing shortening of the circles. Thus the canopy, instead of having flat or. merely conical form, is held tothe downwardly curved shape.
Alternatively, however, for pleasing appear,- ancethe sheets II} and II, can be seamed to each other as shown in Fig. 7, in which they are joined only by. generally radial but whorl-like seams 30,. 3.0 and a peripheral seam 3|, or they can be seamed to each other, as shown in Fig. 8, where they are joined by a set, of generally V-shaped, whorl-like seams, 3.2., 32. and a peripheralseam 33.
In Fig. 7 thereare no flats between the air pockets 30a, 30a, other than the seamsv themselves, whereas in Fig. 8 there are flats 32a, 32a, between the air pockets 32b, 321). In the structures of both of those figures, straightening of the curved pockets by inflation is prevented by chordal zones or reaches of the sheets, in somewhat the way that the string of an archers bow holds the bow to curved shape.
When the canopy is formed by seaming the sheets as in Fig. '7 or Fig. 8, the umbrella takes, upon being inflated, a somewhat dished or conical shape by reason of a balancing of forces in the central regions of the two sheets, which is a-factor also in the shaping of the Fig. 1 embodiment by the inflation,
Referring to Fig. l, the upper sheet I0, being adhered to the upper face of the member I! throughout its extent, and the seam I2, like the seams 3G, 3!! in Fig. '7 or 32, 32 in Fig. 8, coming close but not quite to the member I'I, inflation of the-canopy can produce an upward annular bulge I 02:, of the sheet I0, of only short radius of curvature.
In contrast to this, there is a much greater reach of the lower sheet H, from the low and near-center position of its central flange Ila to the nearest parts of the radial seams, because of which the inflation produces an annular downward bulge IIrc, of the sheet II', of relatively long radius of' curvature.
As the strains in the bulges IM and I Ix are of course proportional to their radii of curvature, a downward dishing of the canopy is an incident of the balancing of all of the strains resulting from the inflation, inclusive of those in the bulges Illa and II a: and those in the walls of the air pockets. Where the downwardly bulged wall I Ira merges with the downwardly bulged wall of each air pocket the balancing of strains apparently involves a downward and inward pull on the last mentioned wall at positions farther out than the It. takes this shape, upon beingv inflated, by reason.
inner limits of the seams and this apparently is a factor in the assuming of cone shape by the canopy.
If desired, the sheets I0 and I I can be iven either conical or curved-canopy form. either by seaming or heat-shaping or both, before or after they are seamed to each other as described.
An advantage of the umbrella. as described is that it can be turned inside out by wind without damage to it, and can readily be turned rightside out again by simply holding it against the wind.
If desired, the umbrella can readily be provided with flexible stay cords 34, 34 to resist its being blown inside out, by mounting the cords as connections between a metal ring 35, press fitted on the tube section I8, and respective tabs such as the tab 36, of suitable material heatwelded'to the lower face of the sheet II at the positions of the radial seams.
As the check-valve 23 is in the uppermost tube section 18 of the handle, it is not essential that the telescopic joints be perfectly air tight.
As the peripheral portion of the canopy consists only of thin and highly flexible sheets, the umbrella has ahigh degree of safety against the eye injuries that sometimes occur in the use of ordinary umbrellas.
The manner of assembling, inflating, using, collapsing, and storing of the umbrella will be manifest from the foregoing description.
In the foregoing description and in the appended claims, the expression heat-plastic material is intended to mean a material that becomes plastic upon merely being heated, to less than a destructive temperature, as distinguished from vulcanized rubber, for example, the heat-plastic character of the material adapting it to be seamed to itself by the simple application of heat and pressure.
In the appended claims the word dished is intended to be inclusive of both curved and conical canopies.
Further modifications are possible within the scope of the appended claims.
We claim:
1. An inflatable umbrella comprising an inflatable, flexible canopy, a telescoping handle having one of its sections hollow and in direct sealed communication with the canopy, a checkvalve in that section, and mean-s on an adjacent telescopic handle section for automatically opening the check-valve as an incident of the collapsing relative movement of the two sections.
2. An inflatable umbrella comprising as its canopy two thin and flexible pieces of sheet material so seamed. to each other, with pronounced-1y non-radial seam-margins, as to define a set of outwardly flared air pockets spaced apart and connected, circumferentially of the assembly, by non-inflating tie reaches of at least one of the said pieces of sheet material, the set of seams being so disposed and so spaced apart, circumferentially of the assembly, that, in circular zones of-theassemb-ly succeeding one another at progressively reater distances from the center of the assembly, there is a progressively increasing ratio of the part of the circle represented by the pockets to the part of the circle represented by the tie reaches, such that upon inflation. the canvrpy is urged, by the inflation, toward a pronouncedly dished shape, by reason of baying out of the walls ofthe pockets by the inflation.
3. An inflatable umbrella comprising as its canopy two thin and flexible pieces of sheet ma- 2,625,946 5 6 terial so joined to each other as to define a set REFERENCES CITED of air pockets extending outwardly from the The following references are of record in the tral region of the assembly, and central rigid file of this patent: means which with the central portions of the said pieces defines a central air chamber having an 5 UNITED STATES PATENTS upper flexible wail attached to said means at Number Name Date such position and of such radial extent, and a 1,397,789 Stonestreet Nov. 22, 1921 lower flexible wall attached to said means at 1,411,560 Beaty Apr. 4, 1922 such position and of such radial extent, that, in 2,049,380 Huber June 28, 1936 inflated condition, the said lower wall constitutes 10 2,172,549 Solomon Sept. 12, 1939 tie means holding the canopy to dished shape. 2,401,252 Klimashesky May 28, 1946 HENRYK KASTON.
THOMAS L. FAWICK.
US62524A 1948-11-29 1948-11-29 Inflatable umbrella Expired - Lifetime US2625946A (en)

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Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2736329A (en) * 1953-06-22 1956-02-28 Maurice H Cornellier Umbrella
US2753878A (en) * 1953-04-14 1956-07-10 Halberstam Tobias Pneumatic umbrella
US2827066A (en) * 1953-11-25 1958-03-18 Nussbaumer Max Folding umbrella
DE1074234B (en) * 1960-01-28 Plastic Verkaufs Gesellschaft Bern \ertr Dipl Chcm Dr phil E S*urm Pat Anw München 23 Collapsible umbrella
US2946337A (en) * 1958-09-05 1960-07-26 Stanley Axelrod Inflatable shelter device
US3053266A (en) * 1959-09-03 1962-09-11 Thomas H Burns Inflatable and collapsible canopy
US3889700A (en) * 1973-02-20 1975-06-17 Joseph F Kirley Self-inflatable pocket disposable umbrella
US3954117A (en) * 1975-01-23 1976-05-04 Wallace William E Inflatable umbrella
US4135719A (en) * 1977-07-20 1979-01-23 Braunhut Harold N Spring whip
US4370994A (en) * 1981-02-19 1983-02-01 Pittman Benny R Inflatable umbrella and method of fabricating the same
US4766920A (en) * 1983-04-07 1988-08-30 Christianson Manufacturing Corp. Internal action improved gas powered umbrella
US4870983A (en) * 1988-06-27 1989-10-03 Cheng Chung Wang Inflating article with integrally associated pump
US5040555A (en) * 1987-09-15 1991-08-20 Cheng Chung Wang Inflatable umbrella
US5143107A (en) * 1990-11-30 1992-09-01 Kelley Jean M Raining umbrella
EP0913107A1 (en) * 1997-11-03 1999-05-06 Cetoni Umweltechnologie-entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH Umbrella
WO1999038412A2 (en) * 1998-01-30 1999-08-05 U.M.B. Tech Ltd. Inflatable umbrella
US20040099296A1 (en) * 2002-11-27 2004-05-27 Yuan-Fu Chang Inflatable umbrella
US6913030B1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2005-07-05 Chmelik Martinec Andres Eduardo Pneumatic umbrella
WO2007004998A1 (en) * 2005-06-29 2007-01-11 Idea Inc Pneumatic umbrella
US20120287557A1 (en) * 2011-05-12 2012-11-15 Nokia Corporation Flexible electronic apparatus
WO2014152849A2 (en) * 2013-03-14 2014-09-25 Heller Richard M Gonadal shield
WO2016073295A1 (en) 2014-11-04 2016-05-12 The Handwerker Umbrella Company Llc Umbrellas with inflatable portions
US20230211369A1 (en) * 2022-01-03 2023-07-06 United Arab Emirates University Arid Land Sprinkler

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1397789A (en) * 1920-07-02 1921-11-22 Clarence G Stonestreet Umbrella
US1411560A (en) * 1920-09-30 1922-04-04 Beaty Arthur Umbrella
US2049380A (en) * 1936-03-02 1936-07-28 Huber Charlotte Inflatable umbrella
US2172549A (en) * 1939-09-12 Umbrella
US2401252A (en) * 1944-04-21 1946-05-28 Edwin B Klimashesky Rubber balloon umbrella

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2172549A (en) * 1939-09-12 Umbrella
US1397789A (en) * 1920-07-02 1921-11-22 Clarence G Stonestreet Umbrella
US1411560A (en) * 1920-09-30 1922-04-04 Beaty Arthur Umbrella
US2049380A (en) * 1936-03-02 1936-07-28 Huber Charlotte Inflatable umbrella
US2401252A (en) * 1944-04-21 1946-05-28 Edwin B Klimashesky Rubber balloon umbrella

Cited By (33)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1074234B (en) * 1960-01-28 Plastic Verkaufs Gesellschaft Bern \ertr Dipl Chcm Dr phil E S*urm Pat Anw München 23 Collapsible umbrella
US2753878A (en) * 1953-04-14 1956-07-10 Halberstam Tobias Pneumatic umbrella
US2736329A (en) * 1953-06-22 1956-02-28 Maurice H Cornellier Umbrella
US2827066A (en) * 1953-11-25 1958-03-18 Nussbaumer Max Folding umbrella
US2946337A (en) * 1958-09-05 1960-07-26 Stanley Axelrod Inflatable shelter device
US3053266A (en) * 1959-09-03 1962-09-11 Thomas H Burns Inflatable and collapsible canopy
US3889700A (en) * 1973-02-20 1975-06-17 Joseph F Kirley Self-inflatable pocket disposable umbrella
US3954117A (en) * 1975-01-23 1976-05-04 Wallace William E Inflatable umbrella
US4135719A (en) * 1977-07-20 1979-01-23 Braunhut Harold N Spring whip
US4370994A (en) * 1981-02-19 1983-02-01 Pittman Benny R Inflatable umbrella and method of fabricating the same
US4766920A (en) * 1983-04-07 1988-08-30 Christianson Manufacturing Corp. Internal action improved gas powered umbrella
US5040555A (en) * 1987-09-15 1991-08-20 Cheng Chung Wang Inflatable umbrella
US4870983A (en) * 1988-06-27 1989-10-03 Cheng Chung Wang Inflating article with integrally associated pump
US5143107A (en) * 1990-11-30 1992-09-01 Kelley Jean M Raining umbrella
EP0913107A1 (en) * 1997-11-03 1999-05-06 Cetoni Umweltechnologie-entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH Umbrella
WO1999038412A3 (en) * 1998-01-30 1999-09-23 U M B Tech Ltd Inflatable umbrella
WO1999038412A2 (en) * 1998-01-30 1999-08-05 U.M.B. Tech Ltd. Inflatable umbrella
US20040099296A1 (en) * 2002-11-27 2004-05-27 Yuan-Fu Chang Inflatable umbrella
US6913030B1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2005-07-05 Chmelik Martinec Andres Eduardo Pneumatic umbrella
WO2007004998A1 (en) * 2005-06-29 2007-01-11 Idea Inc Pneumatic umbrella
US20090223544A1 (en) * 2005-06-29 2009-09-10 Andres Eduardo Chmelik Martinec Pneumatic Umbrella
US7909048B2 (en) * 2005-06-29 2011-03-22 Andres Eduardo Chmelik Martinec Pneumatic umbrella
US20120287557A1 (en) * 2011-05-12 2012-11-15 Nokia Corporation Flexible electronic apparatus
US9307061B2 (en) * 2011-05-12 2016-04-05 Nokia Technologies Oy Flexible electronic apparatus
WO2014152849A3 (en) * 2013-03-14 2014-12-24 Heller Richard M Gonadal shield
WO2014152849A2 (en) * 2013-03-14 2014-09-25 Heller Richard M Gonadal shield
WO2016073295A1 (en) 2014-11-04 2016-05-12 The Handwerker Umbrella Company Llc Umbrellas with inflatable portions
CN107105841A (en) * 2014-11-04 2017-08-29 汉沃克伞业有限责任公司 Umbrella with inflatable part
EP3214966A4 (en) * 2014-11-04 2017-11-29 The Handwerker Umbrella Company LLC Umbrellas with inflatable portions
US9986798B2 (en) 2014-11-04 2018-06-05 The Handwerker Umbrella Company Llc Umbrellas with inflatable portions
US10244835B2 (en) 2014-11-04 2019-04-02 The Handwerker Umbrella Company Llc Umbrellas with inflatable portions
US10602816B2 (en) 2014-11-04 2020-03-31 The Handwerker Umbrella Company Llc Umbrellas with inflatable portions
US20230211369A1 (en) * 2022-01-03 2023-07-06 United Arab Emirates University Arid Land Sprinkler

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