Plaque It!
Sponsored by: Flash of Genius |
| 0955435 | April, 1910 | Reed | 446/273 | |
| 2351762 | Toy | June, 1944 | Hoover | 446/269 |
| 2519248 | Toy ball with rotatably mounted figure therein | August, 1950 | Hulbert | 446/273 |
| 4116439 | Pool ball | September, 1978 | Chavarria et al. | 473/52 |
| 4203251 | Toy ball with gear-driven figure | May, 1980 | Malek et al. | 446/289 |
| 4214753 | Transparent article | July, 1980 | Haber et al. | 473/52 |
| 6217806 | Method of producing a transparent spherical article with an object embedded therein | April, 2001 | Baxley | 264/273 |
| 20050143204 | Elastic ball | June, 2005 | Lin | 473/594 |
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method of making a toy ball, which is a hollow ball having a figure fixed therein, such as a toy figurine, a plaything and an animal figure, and is manufactured using spin-molding and specific fixation of the figure to an inside of the toy ball so that the figure inside the toy ball can sway when the ball is shaken or hit.
2. The Prior Arts
A conventional toy ball is embedded with a figure and/or a circuit board therein so as to create a specific visual effect and/or give out sound and light. A method of making a toy ball in accordance with the prior art comprises steps of: first, fixing a figure or a circuit board to a round ball mold; and then, injecting foamed plastic material or rubber into the ball mold to completely enclose the figure or the circuit board and thus form a round solid ball. Hence, the figure inside the solid ball cannot sway relative to the ball when the ball is shaken or hit. In addition, the bounce of the conventional solid ball cannot be adjusted by injecting different amount of liquid into the ball to form different pressure inside; and the solid ball cannot also be filled with flowable liquid doping with glitter powder or fluorescent powder for creating a specific visual effect.
Thus, it is desired to provide a method of making a toy ball having a figure fixed therein and able to sway at random to solve the above-mentioned problems.
Since a toy figurine is embedded in a solid toy ball in prior designs and thus cannot sway at random, the objective of the present invention is to provide a method of making a toy ball, which is a hollow ball having a toy figurine fixed therein and able to sway at random when the toy ball is shaken or hit.
To achieve the above-mentioned objectives, a method of making a toy ball in accordance with the present invention, which is manufactured using spin-molding and specific fixation of a toy figure to an inside of the toy ball, comprises the steps of: preparing an upper mold and a lower mold, in which an iron needle is inserted into a needle seat of the lower mold; preparing a toy figurine having a plastic supporting rod integrally formed thereon and an insertion hole for mounting with the iron needle of the lower mold; inserting and fixing the toy figurine through the insertion hole thereof to the iron needle of the lower mold; injecting liquid polyurethane glue into the upper mold, combing the lower mold with the upper mold, and turning the combined mold upside down; placing the combined mold on a rotational molding machine for spin-molding the polyurethane glue to a predetermined thickness, which suitably covers the plastic supporting rod so as to securely fix the toy figurine to the toy ball; cooling the liquid polyurethane glue, and then opening the upper mold and taking out the toy ball from the lower mold; injecting liquid doping with glitter powder or fluorescent powder into the toy ball through a through hole thereof; sealing the through hole of the toy ball using a plastic sealing needle and then cutting a part of the plastic sealing needle that remains outside the toy ball.
The present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art by reading the following detailed description of preferred embodiments thereof, with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a flow chart illustrating a method of making a toy ball in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a sectional view of a lower mold in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a sectional view of the lower mold, into which an iron needle is inserted, in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a sectional view of a toy ball having a toy figurine with a plastic supporting rod fixed to the ball, which are in whole received in a mold, in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 5 is a schematic view showing the iron needle, the plastic supporting rod and a plastic sealing needle of the present invention;
FIG. 6 is a schematic view illustrating that the lower mold is combined with a upper mold of the present invention; and
FIG. 7 illustrates a finished toy ball of the present invention.
With reference to the drawings, and in particular to FIG. 1, a method of making a toy ball in accordance with the present invention comprises the steps of:
The above steps of making a toy ball in accordance with the present invention can be modified or changed. For example, at the step (c) of the present invention, the plastic supporting rod 3 integrally formed on the toy figurine 5 (see FIG. 5) may be separately manufactured and then inserted into a pre-set insertion hole (not shown) on a bottom center of the toy figurine 5 . The plastic supporting rod 3 may be made by changing the material to offer the toy figurine 5 different levels of sway due to different elasticity. Further, at the step (c) of the present invention, the toy figurine in shape or pattern may be different. Next, at the step (i) of the present invention, the liquid 15 doping with glitter powder or fluorescent powder may be pure water, or changed to mineral oils, brine, polymeric transparent liquids or edible oils having a lower freezing point so as to prevent it from being frozen in winter and thus resulting in losing its elasticity; and at the step (e) of the present invention, essences or fluorescent powder may be added to the prepolymer or the chain extender to make the polyurethane ball smell good or give out fluorescence at night.
While we have shown and described the embodiments in accordance with the present invention, it should be clear to those skilled in the art that further embodiments may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.