Background of the Invention
[0001] This invention relates generally to the structure of footwear. More specifically,
this invention relates to the structure of athletic shoe soles that copy the underlying
support, stability and cushioning structures of the human foot. Still more particularly,
this invention relates to the use of relatively inelastic and flexible fiber within
the material of the shoe sole to provide both flexibility and firmness under load-bearing
pressure. It also relates to the use of sipes, particularly those that roughly parallel
the foot sole of the wearer in frontal plane cross sections, contained within the
shoe sole under the load-bearing structures of the wearer's foot to provide the firmness
and flexibility to deform to flatten under weight-bearing loads in parallel with the
wearer's foot sole. Finally, it relates to providing additional shoe sole width to
support Those areas identified as mandatory to maintaining the naturally firm lateral
and medial support of the wearer's foot sole during extreme sideways motion while
load-bearing.
[0002] This application is built upon the applicant's earlier U.S. Applications, especially
including No. 07/463,302, filed January 10, 1990. That earlier application showed
that natural stability is provided by attaching a completely flexible but relatively
inelastic shoe sole upper directly to the bottom sole, enveloping the sides of the
midsole, instead of attaching it to the top surface of the shoe sole. Doing so puts
the flexible side of the shoe upper under tension in reaction to destabilizing sideways
forces on the shoe causing it to tilt. That tension force is balanced and in equilibrium
because the bottom sole is firmly anchored by body weight, so the destabilizing sideways
motion is neutralized by the tension in the flexible sides of the shoe upper. Still
more particularly, this invention relates to support and cushioning which is provided
by shoe sole compartments filled with a pressure-transmitting medium like liquid,
gas, or gel. Unlike similar existing systems, direct physical contact occurs between
the upper surface and the lower surface of the compartments, providing firm, stable
support. Cushioning is provided by the transmitting medium progressively causing tension
in the flexible and relatively inelastic sides of the shoe sole. The compartments
providing support and cushioning are similar in structure to the fat pads of the foot,
which simultaneously provide both firm support and progressive cushioning.
[0003] Existing cushioning systems cannot provide both firm support and progressive cushioning
without also obstructing the natural pronation and supination motion of the foot,
because the overall conception on which they are based is inherently flawed. The two
most commercially successful proprietary systems are Nike Air, based on U.S. patents
Nos. 4,219,945 issued September 2, 1980, 4,183,156 issued September 15, 1980, 4,271,606
issued June 9, 1981, and 4,340,626 issued July 20, 1982; and Asics Gel, based on U.S.
patent No. 4,768,295 issued September 6, 1988. Both of these cushioning systems and
all of the other less popular ones have two essential flaws.
[0004] First, all such systems suspend the upper surface of the shoe sole directly under
the important structural elements of the foot, particularly the critical the heel
bone, known as the calcaneus, in order to cushion it. That is, to provide good cushioning
and energy return, all such systems support the foot's bone structures in buoyant
manner, as if floating on a water bed or bouncing on a trampoline. None provide firm,
direct structural support to those foot support structures; the shoe sole surface
above the cushioning system never comes in contact with the lower shoe sole surface
under routine loads, like normal weight-bearing. In existing cushioning systems, firm
structural support directly under the calcaneus and progressive cushioning are mutually
incompatible. In marked contrast, it is obvious with the simplest tests that the barefoot
is provided by very firm direct structural support by the fat pads underneath the
bones contacting the sole, while at the same time it is effectively cushioned, though
this property is underdeveloped in habitually shoe shod feet.
[0005] Second, because such existing proprietary cushioning systems do not provide adequate
control of foot motion or stability, they are generally augmented with rigid structures
on the sides of the shoe uppers and the shoe soles, like heel counters and motion
control devices, in order to provide control and stability. Unfortunately, these rigid
structures seriously obstruct natural pronation and supination motion and actually
increase lateral instability, as noted in the applicant's pending U.S. applications
Nos. 07/219,387, filed on July 15, 1988; 07/239,667, filed on September 2, 1988; 07/400,714,
filed on August 30, 1989; 07/416,478, filed on October 3, 1989; 07/424,509, filed
on October 20, 1989; 07/463,302, filed on January 10, 1990; 07/469,312, filed on January
24, 1990; 07/478,579, filed February 8, 1990; 07/539,870, filed June 18, 1990; 07/608,748,
filed November 5, 1990; 07/680,134, filed April 3, 1991; 07/686,598, filed April 17,
1991; and 07/783,145, filed October 28, 1991, as well as in PCT and foreign national
applications based on the preceding applications. The purpose of the inventions disclosed
in These applications was primarily to provide a neutral design that allows for natural
foot and ankle biomechanics as close as possible to that between the foot and the
ground, and to avoid the serious interference with natural foot and ankle biomechanics
inherent in existing shoes.
[0006] In marked contrast to the rigid-sided proprietary designs discussed above, the barefoot
provides stability at it sides by putting those sides, which are flexible and relatively
inelastic, under extreme tension caused by the pressure of the compressed fat pads;
they thereby become temporarily rigid when outside forces make that rigidity appropriate,
producing none of the destabilizing lever arm torque problems of the permanently rigid
sides of existing designs.
[0007] The applicant's new invention simply attempts, as closely as possible, to replicate
the naturally effective structures of the foot that provide stability, support, and
cushioning.
[0008] This application is also built on the applicant's earlier U.S. Application No. 07/539,870,
filed June 18, 1990. That earlier application related to the use of deformation sipes
such as slits or channels in the shoe sole to provide it with sufficient flexibility
to parallel the frontal plane deformation of the foot sole, which creates a stable
base that is wide and flat even when tilted sideways in natural pronation and supination
motion.
[0009] The applicant has introduced into the art the use of sipes to provide natural detonation
paralleling the human foot in pending U.S. application No. 07/424,509, filed October
20, 1989, and No. 07/478,579, filed February 8, 1990. It is the object of this invention
to elaborate upon those earlier applications to apply their general principles to
other shoe sole structures, including those introduced in other earlier applications.
[0010] By way of introduction, the prior two applications elaborated almost exclusively
on the use of sipes such as slits or channels that are preferably about perpendicular
to the horizontal plane and about parallel to the sagittal plane, which coincides
roughly with the long axis of the shoe; in addition, the sipes originated generally
from the bottom of the shoe sole. The '870 application elaborated on use of sipes
that instead originate generally from either or both sides of the shoe sole and are
preferably about perpendicular to the sagittal plane and about parallel to the horizontal
plane; that approach was introduced in the '509 application. The '870 application
focused on sipes originating generally from either or both sides of the shoe sole,
rather than from the bottom or top (or both) of the shoe sole, or contained entirely
within the shoe sole.
[0011] The applicant's prior application on the sipe invention and the elaborations in this
application are modifications of the inventions disclosed and claimed in the earlier
applications and develop the application of the concept of the theoretically ideal
stability plane to other shoe structures. Accordingly, it is a general object of the
new invention to elaborate upon the application of the principle of the theoretically
ideal stability plane to other shoe structures.
[0012] Accordingly, it is a general object of this invention to elaborate upon the application
of the principle of the natural basis for the support, stability and cushioning of
the barefoot to shoe structures.
[0013] It is still another object of this invention to provide a footwear using relatively
inelastic and flexible fiber within the material of the shoe sole to provide both
flexibility and firmness under load-bearing pressure.
[0014] It is still another object of this invention to provide footwear that uses sipes,
particularly those that roughly parallel the foot sole of the wearer in frontal plane
cross sections, contained within the shoe sole under load-bearing foot structures
to provide the firmness and flexibility to deform to flatten under weight-bearing
loads in parallel with the wearer's foot sole.
[0015] It is another object of this invention to provide additional shoe sole width to support
those areas identified as most critical to maintaining the naturally firm lateral
and medial support of the wearer's foot sole during extreme sideways motion while
load-bearing.
[0016] These and other objects of the invention will become apparent from a detailed description
of the invention which follows taken with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017]
Figs. 1-10 are from the applicant's pending U.S. Application No. 07/463,302, filed
10 January 1990, with several minor technical corrections.
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a typical athletic shoe for running known to the prior
art to which the invention is applicable.
Fig. 2 illustrates in a close-up frontal plane cross section of the heel at the ankle
joint the typical shoe of existing art, undeformed by body weight, when tilted sideways
on the bottom edge.
Fig. 3 shows, in the same close-up cross section as Fig. 2, the applicant's prior
invention of a naturally contoured shoe sole design, also tilted out.
Fig. 4 shows a rear view of a barefoot heel tilted laterally 20 degrees.
Fig. 5 shows, in a frontal plane cross section at the ankle joint area of the heel,
the applicant's new invention of tension stabilized sides applied to his prior naturally
contoured shoe sole.
Fig. 6 shows, in a frontal plane cross section close-up, the Fig. 5 design when tilted
to its edge, but undeformed by load.
Fig. 7 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the ankle joint area of the heel,
the Fig. 5 design when tilted to its edge and naturally deformed by body weight, though
constant shoe sole thickness is maintained undeformed.
Fig. 8 is a sequential series of frontal plane cross sections of the barefoot heel
at the ankle joint area. Fig. 8A is unloaded and upright; Fig. 8B is moderately loaded
by full body weight and upright; Fig. 8C is heavily loaded at peak landing force while
running and upright; and Fig. 8D is heavily loaded and tilted out laterally to its
about 20 degree maximum.
Fig. 9 is the applicant's new shoe sole design in a sequential series of frontal plane
cross sections of the heel at the ankle joint area that corresponds exactly to the
Fig. 8 series above.
Fig. 10 is two perspective views and a close-up view of the structure of fibrous connective
tissue of the groups of fat cells of the human heel. Fig. 10A shows a quartered section
of the calcaneus and the fat pad chambers below it; Fig. 10B shows a horizontal plane
close-up of the inner structures of an individual chamber; and Fig. 10D shows a horizontal
section of the whorl arrangement of fat pad underneath the calcaneus.
Figures 11A-C show a preferred embodiment in the use of fiber strands in previous
Figs. 10A-C.
Figures 12A-D shows the use of flexible and relatively inelastic fiber in the form
of strands, woven or unwoven (such as pressed sheets), embedded in midsole and bottom
sole material. Fig. 12A is a modification of Fig. 5A, Fig. 12B is Fig. 6 modified,
Fig. 12C is Fig. 7 modified, and Fig. 12D is entirely new.
Figures 13A-D are Figs. 9A-D modified to show the use of flexible inelastic fiber
or fiber strands, woven or unwoven (such as pressed) to make an embedded capsule shell
that surrounds the cushioning compartment 161 containing a pressure-transmitting medium
like gas, gel, or liquid.
Figures 14A-D are Figs. 9A-D of the '870 application similarly modified to show the
use of embedded flexible inelastic fiber or fiber strands, woven or unwoven, in various
embodiments similar those shown in Figs. 12A-D. Fig. 14E is a new figure showing a
frontal plane cross section of a fibrous capsule shell 191 that directly envelopes
the surface of the midsole section 188.
Figures 15A&B show, in frontal plane cross section at the heel area, shoe sole structures
like Figs. 5A&B, but in more detail and with the bottom sole 149 extending relatively
farther up the side of the midsole.
Figure 16 shows a perspective view (the outside of a right shoe) of a conventional
flat shoe 20 with the Fig. 15A design for attachment of the shoe sole bottom to the
shoe upper.
Figs. 17A-D are Figs. 9A-D of the applicant's U.S. Application No. 07/539,870 filed
18 June 1990, with several minor technical corrections, and show a series of conventional
shoe sole cross sections in the frontal plane at the heel utilizing both sagittal
plane and horizontal plane sipes, and in which some or all of the sipes do not originate
from any outer shoe sole surface, but rather are entirely internal; Fig. 17D shows
a similar approach applied to the applicant's fully contoured design.
Fig. 18 is Fig. 6C of the '870 Application showing a frontal plane cross section at
the heel of a conventional shoe with a sole that utilizes both horizontal and sagittal
plane slits; Fig. 18 show other conventional shoe soles with other variations of horizontal
plane detonation slits.
Fig. 19 show the upper surface of the bottom sole 149 (unattached) of the right shoe
shown in perspective in Figure 16.
Figure 20 shows the Fig. 19 bottom sole structure 149 with forefoot support area 126,
the heel support area 125, and the base of the fifth metatarsal support area 97. Those
areas would be unglued or not firmly attached as indicated in the Fig. 15 design shown
preceding, while the sides and the other areas of the bottom sole upper surface would
be glued or firmly attached to the midsole and shoe upper.
Figure 21 shows a similar bottom sole structure 149, but with only the forefoot section
126 unglued or not firmly attached, with all (or at least most) the other portions
glued or firmly attached.
Figure 22 shows a similar bottom sole structure 149, but with both the fore foot section
126 and the base of the fifth metatarsal section 97 unglued or not firmly attached,
with all other portions (or at least most) glued or firmly attached.
Figure 23 shows a similar view of a bottom sole structure 149, but with no side sections,
so that the design would be like that of Fig. 18.
Figure 24 shows a similar structure to Fig. 23, but with only the section under the
forefoot 126 unglued or not firmly attached; the rest of the bottom sole 149 (or most
of it) would be glued or firmly attached.
Figure 25 shows a similar structure to Fig. 24, but with the forefoot area 126 subdivided
into an area under the heads of the metatarsals and another area roughly under the
heads of the phalanges.
Figure 26 shows a similar structure to Fig. 25, but with each of the two major forefoot
areas further subdivided into individual metatarsal and individual phalange.
Figure 27 shows a similar structure to Fig. 21, but with the forefoot area 126 enlarged
beyond the border 15 of the flat section of the bottom sole. This structure corresponds
to that shown in Figs. 15 A&B.
Figure 28 shows a similar structure to Fig. 27, but with an additional section 127
in the heel area where outer sole wear is typically excessive.
Figures 29A&B show the full range of sideways motion of the foot. Fig. 29A shows the
range in the calcaneal or heel area, where the range is determined by the subtalar
ankle joint. Fig. 29B shows the much greater range of sideways motion in the forefoot.
Figure 29C compares the footprint made by a conventional shoe 35 with the relative
positions of the wearer's right foot sole in the maximum supination position 37a and
the maximum pronation position 37b. Figure 29D shows an overhead perspective of the
actual bone structures of the foot that are indicated in Fig. 29C.
Figure 30A-E shows the implications of relative difference in range of motions between
forefoot, midfoot, and heel areas on the applicant's naturally contoured sides invention
introduced in his '667 application filed 2 September 1988. Fig. 30A-D is a modification
of Fig. 7 of the '667 application, with the left side of the figures showing the required
range of motion for each area. Fig. 30E is Fig. 21 of the '667 application.
Figure 31 is similar to Fig. 8 of the applicant's U.S. Application No. 07/ 608,748,
filed November 5, 1990, in that it shows a new invention for a shoe sole that covers
the full range of motion of the wearer's right foot sole.
Figure 32 shows an electronic image of the relative forces present at the different
areas of the bare foot sole when at the maximum supination position shown as 37a in
Figs.29A & 31; the forces were measured during a standing simulation of the most common
ankle spraining position.
Figures 33A-K show shoe soles with only one or more of the essential stability elements
defined in the '667 application (The use of all of which is still preferred) but which,
based on Fig. 32, still represent major stability improvements over existing footwear.
All omit changes in the heel area.
Figure 33A shows a shoe sole with an otherwise conventional periphery 35 to which
has been added the single most critical stability correction 96a to support the head
of the fifth metatarsal.
Figure 33B shows a shoe sole similar to Fig. 33A, but with the only additional shoe
sole portion being a stability correction 97 to support the base of the fifth metatarsal
16.
Figure 33C shows a shoe sole similar to Figs. 33A&B, but combining both stability
corrections 96a and 97, with the dashed line surrounding the fifth distal phalange
14 representing an optional additional support.
Figure 33D shows a shoe sole similar to Figs. 33A-C, but with a single stability correction
96a that supports both the head of the fifth metatarsal 15 and the fifth distal phalange
14.
Figure 33E show the single most important correction on the medial side (or inside)
of the shoe sole: a stability correction 96b at the head of the first metatarsal 10;
Figs. 33A-D have shown lateral corrections.
Figure 33F shows a show sole similar to Fig. 33E, but with an additional stability
correction 98 at the head of the first distal phalange 13.
Figure 33G shows a shoe sole combining the additional stability corrections 96a, 96b,
and 98 shown in Figs. 33D&F, supporting the first and fifth metatarsal heads and distal
phalange heads.
Figure 33H shows a shoe sole with symmetrical stability additions 96a and 96b.
Figures 33I&J show perspective views of typical examples of the extreme case, women's
high heel pumps. Fig. 33I shows a conventional high heel pump without modification.
Fig. 33J shows the same shoe with an additional stability correction 96a.
Figure 33K shows a shoe sole similar to that in Fig. 33H, but with the head of the
fifth distal phalange 14 unsupported by the additional stability correction 96a.
Figure 33L shows a shoe sole with an additional stability correction in a single continuous
band extending all the way around the forefoot area.
Figure 33M shows a shoe sole similar to the Figs. 33A-G and 33K&L, but showing additional
stability correction 97, 96a and 96b, but retaining a conventional heel area.
Figures 34 through 44 are from the applicant's earlier pending U.S. Application No.
07/539,870 filed 18 June 1990.
Figure 34 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel portion of a shoe, a conventional
athletic shoe with rigid heel counter and reinforcing motion control device and a
conventional shoe sole. Fig. 34 shows that shoe when tilted 20 degrees outward, at
the normal limit of ankle inversion.
Figure 35 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel, the human foot when tilted
20 degrees outward, at the normal limit of ankle inversion.
Figure 36 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel portion, the applicant's
prior invention in pending U.S. application No. 07/424,509, filed October 20, 1989,
of a conventional shoe sole with sipes in the form of deformation slits aligned in
the vertical plane along the long axis of the shoe sole.
Figure 37 is a view similar to Fig. 36, but with the shoe tilted 20 degrees outward,
at the normal limit of ankle inversion, showing that the conventional shoe sole, as
modified according to pending U.S. Application No. 07/424,509, filed October 20, 1989,
can deform in a manner paralleling the wearer's foot, providing a wide and stable
base of support in the frontal plane.
Figure 38 is a view repeating Fig. 9B of pending Application No. '509 showing deformation
slits applied to the applicant's prior naturally contoured sides invention, with additional
slits on roughly the horizontal plane to aid natural deformation of the contoured
side.
Figure 39A is a frontal plane cross section at the heel of a conventional shoe with
a sole that utilizes both horizontal and sagittal plane slits; Fig. 39B show other
conventional shoe soles with other variations of horizontal plane deformation slit
originating from the sides of the shoe sole.
Figure 40 is a frontal plane cross section at the heel of a conventional shoe of the
right foot utilizing horizontal plane deformation slits and tilted outward about 20
degrees to the normal limit of ankle motion.
Figure 41 is a frontal plane cross section at the heel of a conventional shoe with
horizontal plane sipes in the form of slits that have been enlarged to channels, which
contain an elastic supportive material.
Figure 42 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel portion of a shoe, the
applicant's prior invention of a shoe sole with naturally contoured sides based on
a theoretically ideal stability plane.
Figure 43 shows, again in frontal plane cross section, the most general case of the
applicant's prior invention, a fully contoured shoe sole that follows the natural
contour of the bottom of the foot as well as its sides, also based on the theoretically
ideal stability plane.
Figure 44 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel, the use of a high density
(d') midsole material on the naturally contoured sides and a low density (d) midsole
material everywhere else to reduce side width.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0018] Fig. 1 shows a perspective view of a shoe, such as a typical athletic shoe specifically
for running, according to the prior art, wherein the running shoe 20 includes an upper
portion 21 and a sole 22.
[0019] Fig. 2 illustrates, in a close-up cross section of a typical shoe of existing art
(undeformed by body weight) on the ground 43 when tilted on the bottom outside edge
23 of the shoe sole 22, that an inherent stability problem remains in existing designs,
even when the abnormal torque producing rigid heel counter and other motion devices
are removed, as illustrated in Fig. 5 of pending U.S. application No. 07/400,714,
filed on August 30, 1989. The problem is that the remaining shoe upper 21 (shown in
the thickened and darkened line), while providing no lever arm extension, since it
is flexible instead of rigid, nonetheless creates unnatural destabilizing torque on
the shoe sole. The torque is due to the tension force 155a along the top surface of
the shoe sole 22 caused by a compression force 150 (a composite of the force of gravity
on the body and a sideways motion force) to the side by the foot 27, due simply to
the shoe being tilted to the side, for example. The resulting destabilizing force
acts to pull the shoe sole in rotation around a lever arm 23a that is the width of
the shoe sole at the edge. Roughly speaking, the force of the foot on the shoe upper
pulls the shoe over on its side when the shoe is tilted sideways. The compression
force 150 also creates a tension force 155b, which is the mirror image of tension
force 155a
[0020] Fig. 3 shows, in a close-up cross section of a naturally contoured design shoe sole
28, described in pending U.S. application No. 07/239,667, filed on September 2, 1988,
(also shown undeformed by body weight) when tilted on the bottom edge, that the same
inherent stability problem remains in the naturally contoured shoe sole design, though
to a reduced degree. The problem is less since the direction of the force vector 155
along the lower surface of the shoe upper 21 is parallel to the ground 43 at the outer
sole edge 32 edge, instead of angled toward the ground as in a conventional design
like that shown in Fig. 2, so the resulting torque produced by lever arm created by
the outer sole edge 32 would be less, and the contoured shoe sole 28 provides direct
structural support when tilted, unlike conventional designs.
[0021] Fig. 4 shows (in a rear view) that, in contrast, the barefoot is naturally stable
because, when deformed by body weight and tilted to its natural lateral limit of about
20 degrees, it does not create any destabilizing torque due to tension force. Even
though tension paralleling that on the shoe upper is created on the outer surface
29, both bottom and sides, of the bare foot by the compression force of weight-bearing,
no destabilizing torque is created because the lower surface under tension (ie the
foot's bottom sole, shown in the darkened line) is resting directly in contact with
the ground. Consequently, there is no unnatural lever arm artificially created against
which to pull. The weight of the body firmly anchors the outer surface of the foot
underneath the foot so that even considerable pressure against the outer surface 29
of the side of the foot results in no destabilizing motion. When the foot is tilted,
the supporting structures of the foot, like the calcaneus, slide against the side
of the strong but flexible outer surface of the foot and create very substantial pressure
on that outer surface at the sides of the foot. But that pressure is precisely resisted
and balanced by tension along the outer surface of the foot, resulting in a stable
equilibrium.
[0022] Fig. 5 shows, in cross section of the upright heel deformed by body weight, the principle
of the tension stabilized sides of the barefoot applied to the naturally contoured
shoe sole design; the same principle can be applied to conventional shoes, but is
not shown. The key change from the existing art of shoes is that the sides of the
shoe upper 21 (shown as darkened lines) must wrap around the outside edges 32 of the
shoe sole 28, instead of attaching underneath the foot to the upper surface 30 of
the shoe sole, as done conventionally. The shoe upper sides can overlap and be attached
to either the inner (shown on the left) or outer surface (shown on the right) of the
bottom sole, since those sides are not unusually load-bearing, as shown; or the bottom
sole, optimally thin and tapering as shown, can extend upward around the outside edges
32 of the shoe sole to overlap and attach to the shoe upper sides (shown Fig. 5B);
their optimal position coincides with the Theoretically Ideal Stability Plane, so
that the tension force on the shoe sides is transmitted directly all the way down
to the bottom shoe, which anchors it on the ground with virtually no intervening artificial
lever arm. For shoes with only one sole layer, the attachment of the shoe upper sides
should be at or near the lower or bottom surface of the shoe sole.
[0023] The design shown in Fig. 5 is based on a fundamentally different conception: that
the shoe upper is integrated into the shoe sole, instead of attached on top of it,
and the shoe sole is treated as a natural extension of the foot sole, not attached
to it separately.
[0024] The fabric (or other flexible material, like leather) of the shoe uppers would preferably
be non-stretch or relatively so, so as not to be deformed excessively by the tension
place upon its sides when compressed as the foot and shoe tilt. The fabric can be
reinforced in areas of particularly high tension, like the essential structural support
and propulsion elements defined in the applicant's earlier applications (the base
and lateral tuberosity of the calcaneus, the base of the fifth metatarsal, the heads
of the metatarsals, and the first distal phalange; the reinforcement can take many
forms, such as like that of corners of the jib sail of a racing sailboat or more simple
straps. As closely as possible, it should have the same performance characteristics
as the heavily calloused skin of the sole of an habitually bare foot. The relative
density of the shoe sole is preferred as indicated in Fig. 9 of pending U.S. application
No. 07/400,714, filed on August 30, 1989, with the softest density nearest the foot
sole, so that the conforming sides of the shoe sole do not provide a rigid destabilizing
lever arm.
[0025] The change from existing art of the tension stabilized sides shown in Fig. 5 is that
the shoe upper is directly integrated functionally with the shoe sole, instead of
simply being attached on top of it. The advantage of the tension stabilized sides
design is that it provides natural stability as close to that of the barefoot as possible,
and does so economically, with the minimum shoe sole side width possible.
[0026] The result is a shoe sole that is naturally stabilized in the same way that the barefoot
is stabilized, as seen in Fig. 6, which shows a close-up cross section of a naturally
contoured design shoe sole 28 (undeformed by body weight) when tilted to the edge.
The same destabilizing force against the side of the shoe shown in Fig. 2 is now stably
resisted by offsetting tension in the surface of the shoe upper 21 extended down the
side of the shoe sole so that it is anchored by the weight of the body when the shoe
and foot are tilted.
[0027] In order to avoid creating unnatural torque on the shoe sole, the shoe uppers may
be joined or bonded only to the bottom sole, not the midsole, so that pressure shown
on the side of the shoe upper produces side tension only and not the destabilizing
torque from pulling similar to that described in Fig. 2. However, to avoid unnatural
torque, the upper areas 147 of the shoe midsole, which forms a sharp corner, should
be composed of relatively soft midsole material; in this case, bonding the shoe uppers
to the midsole would not create very much destabilizing torque. The bottom sole is
preferably thin, at least on the stability sides, so that its attachment overlap with
the shoe upper sides coincide as close as possible to the Theoretically Ideal Stability
Plane, so that force is transmitted on the outer shoe sole surface to the ground.
[0028] In summary, the Fig. 5 design is for a shoe construction, including: a shoe upper
that is composed of material that is flexible and relatively inelastic at least where
the shoe upper contacts the areas of the structural bone elements of the human foot,
and a shoe sole that has relatively flexible sides; and at least a portion of the
sides of the shoe upper being attached directly to the bottom sole, while enveloping
on the outside the other sole portions of said shoe sole. This construction can either
be applied to convention shoe sole structures or to the applicant's prior shoe sole
inventions, such as the naturally contoured shoe sole conforming to the theoretically
ideal stability plane.
[0029] Fig. 7 shows, in cross section at the heel, the tension stabilized sides concept
applied to naturally contoured design shoe sole when the shoe and foot are tilted
out fully and naturally deformed by body weight (although constant shoe sole thickness
is shown undeformed). The figure shows that the shape and stability function of the
shoe sole and shoe uppers mirror almost exactly that of the human foot.
[0030] Figs. 8A-8D show the natural cushioning of the human barefoot, in cross sections
at the heel. Fig. 8A shows the bare heel upright and unloaded, with little pressure
on the subcalcaneal fat pad 158, which is evenly distributed between the calcaneus
159, which is the heel bone, and the bottom sole 160 of the foot.
[0031] Fig. 8B shows the bare heel upright but under the moderate pressure of full body
weight. The compression of the calcaneus against the subcalcaneal fat pad produces
evenly balanced pressure within the subcalcaneal fat pad because it is contained and
surrounded by a relatively unstretchable fibrous capsule, the bottom sole of the foot.
Underneath the foot, where the bottom sole is in direct contact with the ground, the
pressure caused by the calcaneus on the compressed subcalcaneal fat pad is transmitted
directly to the ground. Simultaneously, substantial tension is created on the sides
of the bottom sole of the foot because of the surrounding relatively tough fibrous
capsule. That combination of bottom pressure and side tension is the foot's natural
shock absorption system for support structures like the calcaneus and the other bones
of the foot that come in contact with the ground.
[0032] Of equal functional importance is that lower surface 167 of those support structures
of the foot like the calcaneus and other bones make firm contact with the upper surface
168 of the foot's bottom sole underneath, with relatively little uncompressed fat
pad intervening. In effect, the support structures of the foot land on the ground
and are
firmly supported; they are not suspended on top of springy material in a buoyant manner
analogous to a water bed or pneumatic tire, like the existing proprietary shoe sole
cushioning systems like Nike Air or Asics Gel. This simultaneously firm and yet cushioned
support provided by the foot sole must have a significantly beneficial impact on energy
efficiency, also called energy return, and is not paralleled by existing shoe designs
to provide cushioning, all of which provide shock absorption cushioning during the
landing and support phases of locomotion at the expense of firm support during the
take-off phase.
[0033] The incredible and unique feature of the foot's natural system is that, once the
calcaneus is in fairly direct contact with the bottom sole and therefore providing
firm support and stability, increased pressure produces a more rigid fibrous capsule
that protects the calcaneus and greater tension at the sides to absorb shock. So,
in a sense, even when the foot's suspension system would seem in a conventional way
to have bottomed out under normal body weight pressure, it continues to react with
a mechanism to protect and cushion the foot even under very much more extreme pressure.
This is seen in Fig. 8C, which shows the human heel under the heavy pressure of roughly
three times body weight force of landing during routine running. This can be easily
verified: when one stands barefoot on a hard floor, the heel feels very firmly supported
and yet can be lifted and virtually slammed onto the floor with little increase in
the feeling of firmness; the heel simply becomes harder as the pressure increases.
[0034] In addition, it should be noted that this system allows the relatively narrow base
of the calcaneus to pivot from side to side freely in normal pronation/supination
motion, without any obstructing torsion on it, despite the very much greater width
of compressed foot sole providing protection and cushioning; this is crucially important
in maintaining natural alignment of joints above the ankle joint suCh as the knee,
hip and back, particularly in the horizontal plane, so that the entire body is properly
adjusted to absorb shock correctly. In contrast, existing shoe sole designs, which
are generally relatively wide to provide stability, produce unnatural frontal plane
torsion on the calcaneus, restricting its natural motion, and causing misalignment
of the joints operating above it, resulting in the overuse injuries unusually common
with such shoes. Instead of flexible sides that harden under tension caused by pressure
like that of the root, existing shoe sole designs are forced by lack of other alternatives
to use relatively rigid sides in an attempt to provide sufficient stability to offset
the otherwise uncontrollable buoyancy and lack of firm support of air or gel cushions.
[0035] Fig. 8D shows the barefoot deformed under full body weight and tilted laterally to
the roughly 20 degree limit of normal range. Again it is clear that the natural system
provides both firm lateral support and stability by providing relatively direct contact
with the ground, while at the same time providing a cushioning mechanism through side
tension and subcalcaneal fat pad pressure.
[0036] Figs. 9A-9D show, also in cross sections at the heel, a naturally contoured shoe
sole design that parallels as closely as possible the overall natural cushioning and
stability system of the barefoot described in Fig. 8, including a cushioning compartment
161 under support structures of the foot containing a pressure-transmitting medium
like gas, gel, or liquid, like the subcalcaneal fat pad under the calcaneus and other
bones of the foot; consequently, Figs. 9A-D directly correspond to Figs. 8A-D. The
optimal pressure-transmitting medium is that which most closely approximates the tat
pads of the foot; silicone gel is probably most optimal of materials currently readily
available, but future improvements are probable; since it transmits pressure indirectly,
in that it compresses in volume under pressure, gas is significantly less optimal.
The gas, gel, or liquid, or any other effective material, can be further encapsulated
itself, in addition to the sides of the shoe sole, to control leakage and maintain
uniformity, as is common conventionally, and can be subdivided into any practical
number of encapsulated areas within a compartment, again as is common conventionally.
The relative thickness of the cushioning compartment 161 can vary, as can the bottom
sole 149 and the upper midsole 147, and can be consistent or differ in various areas
of the shoe sole; the optimal relative sizes should be those that approximate most
closely those of the average human foot, which suggests both smaller upper and lover
soles and a larger cushioning compartment than shown in Fig.9. However, for ease of
manufacturing and other reasons, the cushioning compartment can also be very thin,
including as thin as a simple sipe or horizontal slit, or a single boundary layer,
such as a portion or most of that layer between the bottom sole and the midsole. And
the cushioning compartments or pads 161 can be placed anywhere from directly underneath
the foot, like an insole, to directly above the bottom sole. Optimally, the amount
of compression created by a given load in any cushioning compartment 161 should be
tuned to approximate as closely as possible the compression under the corresponding
fat pad of the foot.
[0037] The function of the subcalcaneal fat pad is not met satisfactorily with existing
proprietary cushioning systems, even those featuring gas, gel or liquid as a pressure
transmitting medium. In contrast to those artificial systems, the new design shown
is Fig. 9 conforms to the natural contour of the foot and to the natural method of
transmitting bottom pressure into side tension in the flexible but relatively non-stretching
(the actual. optimal elasticity will require empirical studies) sides of the shoe
sole.
[0038] Existing cushioning systems like Nike Air or Asics Gel do not bottom out under moderate
loads and rarely if ever do so under extreme loads; the upper surface of the cushioning
device remains suspended above the lower surface. In contrast, the new design in Fig.
9 provides firm support to foot support structures by providing for actual contact
between the lower surface 165 of the upper midsole 147 and the upper surface 166 of
the bottom sole 149 when fully loaded under moderate body weight pressure, as indicated
in Fig. 9B, or under maximum normal peak landing force during running, as indicated
in Fig. 9C, just as the human foot does in Figs. 8B and 8C. The greater the downward
force transmitted through the foot to the shoe, the greater the compression pressure
in the cushioning compartment 161 and the greater the resulting tension of the shoe
sole sides.
[0039] Fig. 9D shows the same shoe sole design when fully loaded and tilted to the natural
20 degree lateral limit, like Fig. 8D. Fig. 9D shows that an added stability benefit
of the natural cushioning system for shoe soles is that the effective thickness of
the shoe sole is reduced by compression on the side so that the potential destabilizing
lever arm represented by the shoe sole thickness is also reduced, so toot and ankle
stability is increased. Another benefit of the Fig. 9 design is that the upper midsole
shoe surface can move in any horizontal direction, either sideways or front to back
in order to absorb shearing forces; that shearing motion is controlled by tension
in the sides. Note that the right side of Figs. 9A-D is modified to provide a natural
crease or upward taper 162, which allows complete side compression without binding
or bunching between the upper and lower shoe sole layers 147, 148, and 149; the shoe
sole crease 162 parallels exactly a similar crease or taper 163 in the human foot.
[0040] Another possible variation of joining shoe upper to shoe bottom sole is on the right
(lateral) side of Figs. 9A-D, which makes use of the fact that it is optimal for the
tension absorbing shoe sole sides, whether shoe upper or bottom sole, to coincide
with the Theoretically Ideal Stability Plane along the side of the shoe sole beyond
that point reached when the shoe is tilted to the foot's natural limit, so that no
destabilizing shoe sole lever arm is created when the shoe is tilted fully, as in
Fig. 9D. The joint may be moved up slightly so that the fabric side does not come
in contact with the ground, or it may be cover with a coating to provide both traction
and fabric protection.
[0041] It should be noted that the Fig. 9 design provides a structural basis for the shoe
sole to conform very easily to the natural shape of the human foot and to parallel
easily the natural deformation flattening of the foot during load-bearing motion on
the ground. This is true even if the shoe sole is made like a conventional sole except
for the Fig. 9 design, although relatively rigid structures such as heel counters
and motion control devices are not preferred, since they would interfere with the
capability of the shoe sole to deform in parallel with the natural deformation under
load of the wearer's foot sole. Though not optimal, such a conventional flat shoe
made like Fig. 9 would provide the essential features of the new invention resulting
in significantly improved cushioning and stability. The Fig. 9 design could also be
applied to intermediate-shaped shoe soles that neither conform to the flat ground
or the naturally contoured foot. In addition, the Fig. 9 design can be applied to
the applicant's other designs, such as those described in his pending U.S. application
No. 07/416,478, filed on October 3, 1989.
[0042] In summary, the Fig. 9 design shows a shoe construction for a shoe, including: a
shoe sole with a compartment or compartments under the structural elements of the
human foot, including at least the heel; the compartment or compartments contains
a pressure-transmitting medium like liquid, gas, or gel; a portion of the upper surface
of the shoe sole compartment firmly contacts the lower surface of said compartment
during normal load-bearing; and pressure from the load-bearing is transmitted progressively
at least in part to the relatively inelastic sides, top and bottom of the shoe sole
compartment or compartments, producing tension.
[0043] While the Fig. 9 design copies in a simplified way the macro structure of the foot,
Figs. 10 A-C focus on a more on the exact detail of the natural structures, including
at the micro level. Figs. 10A and 10C are perspective views of cross sections of the
human heel showing the matrix of elastic fibrous connective tissue arranged into chambers
164 holding closely packed fat cells; the chambers are structured as whorls radiating
out from the calcaneus. These fibrous-tissue strands are firmly attached to the undersurface
of the calcaneus and extend to the subcutaneous tissues. They are usually in the form
of the letter U, with the open end of the U pointing toward the calcaneus.
[0044] As the most natural, an approximation of this specific chamber structure would appear
to be the most optimal as an accurate modal for the structure of the shoe sole cushioning
compartments 161, at least in an ultimate sense, although the complicated nature of
the design will require some time to overcome exact design and construction difficulties;
however, the description of the structure of calcaneal padding provided by Erich Blechschmidt
in Foot and Ankle, March, 1982, (translated from the original 1933 article in German)
is so detailed and comprehensive that copying the same structure as a model in shoe
sole design is not difficult technically, once the crucial connection is made that
such copying of this natural system is necessary to overcome inherent weaknesses in
the design of existing shoes. Other arrangements and orientations of the whorls are
possible, but would probably be less optimal.
[0045] Pursuing this nearly exact design analogy, the lower surface 165 of the upper midsole
147 would correspond to the outer surface 167 of the calcaneus 159 and would be the
origin of the U shaped whorl chambers 164 noted above.
[0046] Fig. 10B shows a close-up of the interior structure of the large chambers shown in
Fig. 10A and 10C. It is clear from the fine interior structure and compression characteristics
of the mini-chambers 165a that those directly under the calcaneus become very hard
quite easily, due to the high local pressure on them and the limited degree of their
elasticity, so they are able to provide very firm support to the calcaneus or other
bones of the foot sole; by being fairly inelastic, the compression forces on those
compartments are dissipated to other areas of the network of fat pads under any given
support structure of the foot, like the calcaneus. Consequently, if a cushioning compartment
161, such as the compartment under the heel shown in Fig. 9, is subdivided into smaller
chambers, like those shown in Fig. 10, then actual contact between the upper surface
165 and the lower surface 166 would no longer be required to provide firm support,
so long as those compartments and the pressure-transmitting medium contained in them
have material characteristics similar to those of the foot, as described above; the
use of gas may not be satisfactory in this approach, since its compressibility may
not allow adequate firmness.
[0047] In summary, the Fig. 10 design shows a shoe construction including: a shoe sole with
a compartments under the structural elements of the human foot, including at least
the heel; the compartments containing a pressure-transmitting medium like liquid,
gas, or gel; the compartments having a whorled structure likE That of the fat pads
of the human foot sole; load-bearing pressure being transmitted progressively at least
in part to the relatively inelastic sides, top and bottom of the shoe sole compartments,
producing tension therein; the elasticity of the material of the compartments and
the pressure-transmitting medium are such that normal weight-bearing loads produce
sufficient tension within the structure of the compartments to provide adequate structural
rigidity to allow firm natural support to the foot structural elements, like that
provided the barefoot by its fat pads. That shoe sole construction can have shoe sole
compartments that are subdivided into micro chambers like those of the fat pads of
the foot sole.
[0048] Since the bare foot that is never shod is protected by very hard callouses (called
a "seri boot") which the shod foot lacks, it seems reasonable to infer that natural
protection and shock absorption system of the shod foot is adversely affected by its
unnaturally undeveloped fibrous capsules (surrounding the subcalcaneal and other fat
pads under foot bone support structures). A solution would be to produce a shoe intended
for use without socks (ie with smooth surfaces above the foot bottom sole) that uses
insoles that coincide with the foot bottom sole, including its sides. The upper surface
of those insoles, which would be in contact with the bottom sole of the foot (and
its sides), would be coarse enough to stimulate the production of natural barefoot
callouses. The insoles would be removable and available in different uniform grades
of coarseness, as is sandpaper, so that the user can progress from finer grades to
coarser grades as his foot soles toughen with use.
[0049] Similarly, socks could be produced to serve the same function, with the area of the
sock that corresponds to the foot bottom sole (and sides of the bottom sole) made
of a material coarse enough to stimulate the production of callouses on the bottom
sole of the foot, with different grades of coarseness available, from fine to coarse,
corresponding to feet from soft to naturally tough. Using a tube sock design with
uniform coarseness, rather than conventional sock design assumed above, would allow
the user to rotate the sock on his foot to eliminate any "hot spot" irritation points
that might develop. Also, since the toes are most prone to blistering and the heel
is most important in shock absorption, the toe area of the sock could be relatively
less abrasive than the heel area.
[0050] Figures 11A-C show a preferred embodiment of fiber strands in previous Figs. 10A-C.
The use of fibers in existing shoe soles is limited to only the outer surface, such
as the upper surface of insoles, which is typically woven fabric, and such as the
Dellinger Web, which is a net or web of fabric surrounding the outer surface of the
midsole (or portions of it, like the heel wedge, sandwiched into the rest of the shoe
sole). No existing use of fiber in shoe soles includes use of those fibers within
the shoe sole material itself.
[0051] In contrast, the use of fibers in the '302 application copies the use of fibers in
the human foot and therefore would be, like the foot sole, integrally suspended within
the other material of the shoe sole itself; that is, in typical existing athletic
shoes, within the polyurethane (PU) or ethylvinylacetate (EVA). In other words, the
use of fibers in the '302 application is analogous to fiberglass (but highly flexible).
The '302 application was intended to encompass broadly any use of fiber suspended
within shoe sole material to reinforce it, providing strength and flexibility; particularly
the use of such fiber in the midsole and bottom sole, since use there copies the U
shaped use of fiber in the human foot sole. The orientation of the fiber within the
human foot sole structure shown in Fig. 11 is strictly determined by the shape of
that structure, since the the fibers would be lie within the intricate planar structures.
[0052] The '302 application specifies copying the specific structure of the foot sole as
definitively described by Erich Blechschmidt in FOOT AND ANKLE, March, 1982, which
is shown here with fiber explicitly indicated in new Figs. 11A-C (which are Figs.
10A-C modified). Like the human fiber, such shoe sole fiber should preferably be flexible
and relatively inelastic.
[0053] Figures 12A-D shows the use of flexible and relatively inelastic fiber in the form
of strands, woven or unwoven (such as pressed sheets), embedded in midsole and bottom
sole material. Optimally, the fiber strands parallel (at least roughly) the plane
surface of the wearer's foot sole in the naturally contoured design in Figs. 12A-C
and parallel the flat ground in Fig. 12D, which shows a section of conventional, uncontoured
shoe sole. Fiber orientations at an angle to this parallel position will still provide
improvement over conventional soles without fiber reinforcement, particularly if the
angle is relatively small; however, very large angles or omni-directionality of the
fibers will result in increased rigidity or increased softness.
[0054] This preferred orientation of the fiber strands, parallel to the plane of the wearer's
foot sole, allows for the shoe sole to deform to flatten in parallel with the natural
flattening of the foot sole under pressure. At the same time, the tensile strength
of the fibers resist the downward pressure of body weight that would normally squeeze
the shoe sole material to the sides, so that the side walls of the shoe sole will
not bulge out (or will do so less so). The result is a shoe sole material that is
both flexible and firm. This unique combination of functional traits is in marked
contrast to conventional shoe sole materials in which increased flexibility unavoidably
causes increased softness and increased firmness also increases rigidity. Fig. 12A
is a modification of Fig. 5A, Fig. 12B is Fig. 6 modified, Fig. 12C is Fig. 7 modified,
and Fig. 12D is entirely new. The position of the fibers shown would be the same even
if the shoe sole material is made of one uniform material or of other layers than
those shown here.
[0055] The use of the fiber strands, particularly when woven, provides protection against
penetration by sharp objects, much like the fiber in radial automobile tires. The
fiber can be of any size, either individually or in combination to form strands; and
of any material with the properties of relative inelasticity (to resist tension forces)
and flexibility. The strands of fiber can be short or long, continuous or discontinuous.
The fibers facilitate the capability of any shoe sole using them to be flexible but
hard under pressure, like the foot sole.
[0056] It should also be noted that the fibers used in both the cover of insoles and the
Dellinger Web is knit or loosely braided rather than woven, which is not preferred,
since such fiber strands are designed to stretch under tensile pressure so that their
ability to resist sideways deformation would be greatly reduced compared to non-knit
fiber strands that are individually (or in twisted groups of yarn) woven or pressed
into sheets.
[0057] Figures 13A-D are Figs. 9A-D modified to show the use of flexible inelastic fiber
or fiber strands, woven or unwoven (such as pressed) to make an embedded capsule shell
that surrounds the cushioning compartment 161 containing a pressure-transmitting medium
like gas, gel, or liquid. The fibrous capsule shell could also directly envelope the
surface of the cushioning compartment, which is easier to construct, especially during
assembly. Fig. 13E is a new figure showing a fibrous capsule shell 191 that directly
envelopes the surface of a cushioning compartment 161; the shoe sole structure is
not fully contoured, like Fig. 13A, but naturally contoured, like Fig. 10 of the '870
application, which has a flat middle portion corresponding to the flattened portion
of a wearer's load-bearing toot sole.
[0058] Figure 13F shows a unique combination of the Figs. 9 & 10 design of the applicant's
'302 application. The upper surface 165 and lower surface 166 contain the cushioning
compartment 161, which is subdivided into two parts. The lower half of the cushioning
compartment 161 is both structured and functions like the compartment shown in Fig.
9 of the '302 application. The upper half is similar to Fig. 10 of the '302 application
but subdivided into chambers 164 that are more geometrically regular so that construction
is simpler; the structure of the chambers 164 can be of honeycombed in structure.
The advantage of this design is that it copies more closely than the Fig. 9 design
the actual structure of the wearer's foot sole, while being much more simple to construct
than the Fig. 10 design. Like the wearer's foot sole, the Fig. 13F design would be
relative soft and flexible in the lower half of the chamber 161, but firmer and more
protective in the upper half, where the mini-chambers 164 would stiffen quickly under
load-bearing pressure. Other multi-level arrangements are also possible.
[0059] Figures 14A-D are Figs. 9A-D of the '870 application similarly modified to show the
use of embedded flexible inelastic fiber or fiber strands, woven or unwoven, in various
embodiments similar those shown in Figs. 12A-D. Fig. 14E is a new figure showing a
frontal plane cross section of a fibrous capsule shell 191 that directly envelopes
the surface of the midsole section 188.
[0060] Figures 15A&B show, in frontal plane cross section at the heel area, shoe sole structures
like Figs. 5A&B, but in more detail and with the bottom sole 149 extending relatively
farther up the side of the midsole.
[0061] The right side of Figs. 15A&B show the preferred embodiment, which is a relatively
thin and tapering portion of the bottom sole extending up most of the midsole and
is attached to the midsole and to the shoe upper 21, which is also attached preferably
first to the upper midsole 147 where both meet at 3 and then attached to the bottom
sole where both meet at 4. The bottom sole is also attached to the upper midsole 147
where they join at 5 and to the lower midsole 148 at 6.
[0062] The left side of Figs. 15A&B show a more conventional attachment arrangement, where
the shoe sole is attached to a fully lasted shoe upper 21. The bottom sole 149 is
attached to: the lower midsole 148 where their surfaces coincide at 6, the upper midsole
147 at 5, and the shoe upper 21 at 7.
[0063] Fig. 15A shows a shoe sole like Fig. 9D of the '870 application, but with a completely
encapsulated section 188 like Figs. 9A&B of that application; the encapsulated section
188 is shown bounded by the bottom sole 149 at line 8 and by the rest of the midsole
147 and 148 at line 9 . Fig. 15A shows more detail than prior figures, including an
insole (also called sockliner) 2, which is contoured to the shape of the wearer's
foot sole, just like the rest of the shoe sole, so that the foot sole is supported
throughout its entire range of sideways motion, from maximum supination to maximum
pronation.
[0064] The insole 2 overlaps the shoe upper 21 at 14; this approach ensures that the load-bearing
surface of the wearer's foot sole does not come in contact with any seams which could
cause abrasions. Although only the heel section is shown in this figure, the same
insole structure would preferably be used elsewhere, particularly the forefoot; preferably,
the insole would coincide with the entire load-bearing surface of the wearers foot
sole, including the front surface of the toes, to provide support for front-to-back
motion as well as sideways motion.
[0065] The Fig. 15 design, like the Fig. 9 designs of both the '302 and '870 applications,
provides firm flexibility by encapsulating fully or partially, roughly the middle
section of the relatively thick heel of the shoe sole (or of other areas of the sole,
such as any or all of the essential support elements of the foot, including the base
of the fifth metatarsal, the heads of the metatarsals, and the first distal phalange).
The outer surfaces of that encapsulated section or sections are allowed to move relatively
freely by not gluing the, encapsulated section to the surrounding shoe sole.
[0066] Firmness in the Fig. 15 design is provided by the high pressure created under multiples
of body weight loads during locomotion within the encapsulated section or sections,
making it relatively hard under extreme pressure, roughly like the heel of the foot.
Unlike conventional shoe soles, which are relatively inflexible and thereby create
local point pressures, particularly at the outside edge of the shot sole, the Fig.
15 design tends to distribute pressure evenly throughout the encapsulated section,
so the natural biomechanics of the wearer's foot sole are maintained and shearing
forces are more effectively dealt with.
[0067] In the Fig. 15A design, firm flexibility is provided by providing by encapsulating
roughly the middle section of the relatively thick heel of the shoe sole or other
areas of the sole, while allowing the outer surfaces of that section to move relatively
freely by not conventionally gluing the encapsulated section to the surrounding shoe
sole. Firmness is provided by the high pressure created under body weight loads within
the encapsulated section, making it relatively hard under extreme pressure, roughly
like the heel of the foot, because it is surrounded by flexible but relatively inelastic
materials, particularly the bottom sole 149 (and connecting to the shoe sole upper,
which also can be constructed by flexible and relatively inelastic material. The same
U structure is thus formed on a macro level by the shoe sole that is constructed on
a micro level in the human foot sole, as described definitively by Erich Blechschmidt
in Foot and Ankle, March, 1982.
[0068] In summary, the Fig 15A design shows a shoe construction for a shoe, comprising:
a shoe sole with at least one compartment under the structural elements of the human
foot; the compartment containing a pressure-transmitting medium composed of an independent
section of midsole material that is not firmly attached to the shoe sole surrounding
it; pressure from normal load-bearing is transmitted progressively at least in part
to the relatively inelastic sides, top and bottom of said shoe sole compartment, producing
tension. The Fig. 15A design can be combined with those of Figs. 11-14 so that the
compartment is surrounded by a reinforcing layer of relatively flexible and inelastic
fiber.
[0069] Figs. 15A&B shows constant shoe sole thickness in frontal plane cross sections, but
that thickness can vary somewhat (up to roughly 25% in some cases) in frontal plane
cross sections, as previously specified in the '478 application.
[0070] Fig. 15B shows a design just like Fig. 15A, except that the encapsulated section
is reduced to only the load-bearing boundary layer between the lower midsole 148 and
the bottom sole 149. In simple tens, then, most or all of the upper surface of the
bottom sole and the lower surface of the midsole are not attached, or at least not
firmly attached, where they coincide at line 8; the bottom sole and midsole are firmly
attached only along the non-load-bearing sides of the midsole. This approach is simple
and easy. The load-bearing boundary layer 8 like the internal horizontal sipe described
in the applicant's U.S. Application No. 07/539,870, filed 18 June 1990.
[0071] The sipe area 8 can be unglued, so that relative motion between the two surfaces
is controlled only by their structural attachment together at the sides. In addition,
the sipe area can be lubricated to facilitate relative motion between surfaces or
lubricated a viscous liquid that restricts motion, or the sipe area 8 can be glued
with a semi-elastic or semi-adhesive glue that controls relative motion but still
permits some; the semi-elastic or semi-adhesive glue would then serve a shock absorption
function as well. Using The broad definition of shoe sole sipes established in earlier
applications, the sipe can be a channel filled with flexible material like that shown
in Fig. 5 of the applicant's '579 application or can be simply a thinner chamber than
that shown in Fig. 9 of the '302 application.
[0072] In summary, the Fig 15B design shows a shoe construction for a shoe, comprising:
a shoe upper and a shoe sole that has a bottom portion with sides that are relatively
flexible and inelastic; at least a portion of the bottom sole sides firmly attach
directly to the shoe upper; shoe upper that is composed of material that is flexible
and relatively inelastic at least where the shoe upper is attached to the bottom sole;
the attached portions enveloping the other sole portions of the shoe sole; and The
shoe sole having at least one horizontal sips that is contained internally within
the shoe sole. The Fig 15B design can be combined with Figs. 11-14 to include a shoe
sole bottom portion composed of material reinforced with at least one fiber layer
that is relatively flexible and inelastic and that is oriented in the horizontal plane;
[0073] The design shown in Fig. 16 is flat, conforming to the shape of the ground like a
more conventional shoe sole, but otherwise retains the side structures described in
Figs. 15 A&B and retains the unattached boundary layer between the bottom sole 149
and midsole 148. Figure 16 shows a perspective view (the outside of a right shoe)
of a flat shoe 20 incorporating the Fig. 15A design for the attachment of the bottom
sole to the shoe upper. Outwardly the shoe appears to be conventional, with portions
of the bottom sole 149 wrapped up around and attached to the sides of the lower midsole
148 and upper midsole 147; the bottom sole 149 also wraps around and is attached to
the shoe upper 21, like the structure of Fig. 5B, but applied to a flat conventional
shoe sole. The bottom sole 149 is shown wrapping around the shoe midsole and upper
at the calcaneus 95, the base of the fifth metatarsal 97, the head of the fifth metatarsal
96, and the toe area. The same bottom sole wrapping approach can of course be used
with the applicant's Fig. 5 design and his other contoured shoe sole designs.
[0074] Figs. 17A-D are Figs. 9A-D from the applicant's U. S. Application No. 07/539,870
filed 18 June 1990 and show a series of conventional shoe sole cross sections in the
frontal plane at the heel utilizing both sagittal plane and horizontal plane sipes,
and in which some or all of the sipes do not originate from any outer shoe sole surface,
but rather are entirely internal. Relative motion between internal surfaces is thereby
made possible to facilitate the natural deformation of the shoe sole. The intent of
the general invention shown in Fig. 17 is to create a similar but simplified and more
conventional version of the some of the basic principles used in the unconventional
and highly anthropomorphic invention shown in Figs. 9 and 10 of the prior application
No. '302, so that the resulting functioning is similar.
[0075] Fig. 17A shows a group of three lamination layers, but unlike Fig. 18 (Fig. 6C of
the '870 application) the central layer 188 is not glued to the other surfaces in
contact with it; those surfaces are internal deformation slits in the sagittal plane
181 and in the horizontal plane 182, which encapsulate the central layer 188, either
completely or partially. The relative motion between lamination layers at the deformation
slits 181 and 182 can be enhanced with lubricating agents, either wet like silicone
or dry like teflon, of any degree of viscosity; shoe sole materials can be closed
cell if necessary to contain the lubricating agent or a non-porous surface coating
or layer can be applied. The deformation slits can be enlarged to channels or any
other practical geometric shape as sipes defined in the broadest possible tens.
[0076] The relative motion can be diminished by the use of toughened surfaces or other conventional
methods of increasing the coefficient of friction between lamination layers. If even
greater control of the relative motion of the central layer 188 is desired, as few
as one or many more points can be glued together anywhere on the internal deformation
slits 181 and 182, making them discontinuous; and the glue can be any degree of elastic
or inelastic.
[0077] In Fig. 17A, the outside structure of the sagittal plane deformation sipes 181 is
the shoe upper 21, which is typically flexible and relatively inelastic fabric or
leather. In the absence of any connective outer material like the shoe upper shown
in Fig. 17A or the elastic edge material 180 of Fig. 18, just the outer edges of the
horizontal plane detonation sipes 182 can be glued together.
[0078] Fig. 17B shows another conventional shoe sole in frontal plane cross section at the
heel with a combination similar to Fig. 17A of both horizontal and sagittal plane
deformation sipes that encapsulate a central section 188. Like Fig. 17A, the Fig.
17B structure allows the relative motion of the central section 188 with its encapsulating
outer midsole section 184, which encompasses its sides as well as the top surface,
and bottom sole 128, both of which are attached at their common boundaries 183.
[0079] This Fig. 17B approach is analogous to that in Fig. 9 of the prior application No.
'302 and this application, which is the applicant's fully contoured shoe sole invention
with an encapsulated midsole chamber of a pressure-transmitting medium like silicone;
in this conventional shoe sole case, however, the pressure-transmitting medium is
a more conventional section of typical shoe cushioning material like PV or EVA, which
also provides cushioning.
[0080] Fig. 17C is also another conventional shoe sole in frontal plane cross section at
the heel with a combination similar to Figs. 17A and 17B of both horizontal and sagittal
plane deformation sipes. However, instead of encapsulating a central section 188,
in Fig. 17C an upper section 187 is partially encapsulated by deformation sipes so
that it acts much like the central section 188, but is more stable and more closely
analogous to the actual structure of the human foot.
[0081] That structure was applied to shoe sole structure in Fig. 10 of prior application
No. '302 and this application; the upper section 187 would be analogous to the integrated
mass of fatty pads, which are U shaped and attached to the calcaneus or heel bone;
similarly, the shape of the deformation sipes is U shaped in Fig. 17C and the upper
section 187 is attached to the heel by the shoe upper, so it should function in a
similar fashion to the aggregate action of the fatty pads. The major benefit of the
Fig. 17C invention is that the approach is so much simpler and therefore easier and
faster to implement than the highly complicated anthropomorphic design shown Fig.
10 of '302 and this application.
[0082] An additional note on Fig. 17C: the midsole sides 185 are like the side portion of
the encapsulating midsole 184 in Fig. 17B.
[0083] Fig. 17D shows in a frontal plane cross section at the heel a similar approach applied
to the applicant's fully contoured design. Fig. 17D is like Fig. 9A of prior application
No. '302 and this application, with the exception of the encapsulating chamber and
a different variation of the attachment of the shoe upper to the bottom sole.
[0084] The left side of Fig. 17D shows a variation of the encapsulation of a central section
188 shown in Fig. 17B, but the encapsulation is only partial, with a center upper
section of the central section 188 either attached or continuous with the upper midsole
equivalent of 184 in Fig. 17B.
[0085] The right side of Fig. 17D shows a structure of deformation sipes like that of Fig.
17C, with the upper midsole section 187 provided with the capability of moving relative
to both the bottom sole and the side of the midsole. The Fig. 17D structure varies
from that of Fig. 17C also in that the deformation sipe 181 in roughly the sagittal
plane is partial only and does not extend to the upper surface 30 of the midsole 127,
as does Fig. 17C.
[0086] Fig. 18 is Fig. 6C of the '870 application and shows, in frontal plane cross section
at the heel, a similar conventional shoe sole structure horizontal plane deformation
sipes 152 extending all the way from one side of the shoe sole to the other side,
either coinciding with lamination layers -- heel wedge 38, midsole 127, and bottom
sole 128 -- in older methods of athletic shoe sole construction or molded in during
the more modern injection molding process. The point of the Fig. 18 design is that,
if the laminated layers which are conventionally glued together in a rigidly fixed
position can instead undergo sliding motion relative to each other, then they become
flexible enough to conform to the ever changing shape of the foot sole in motion while
at the same time continuing to provide about the same degree of necessary direct structural
support.
[0087] Such separated lamination layers would be held together only at the outside edge
by a layer of elastic material or fabric 180 bonded to the lamination layers 38, 127
and 128, as shown on the left side of Fig. 18. The elasticity of the edge layer 180
should be sufficient to avoid inhibiting significantly the sliding motion between
the lamination layers. The elastic edge layer 180 can also be used with horizontal
deformation slits 152 that do not extend completely across the shoe sole, like those
of Figs. 6A and 6B of the '870 application, and would be useful in keeping the outer
edge together, keeping it from flapping down and catching on objects, thus avoiding
tripping. The elastic layer 180 can be connected directly to the shoe upper, preferably
overlapping it.
[0088] The deformation slit structures shown in conventional shoe soles in Fig. 18 can also
be applied to the applicant's quadrant sides, naturally contoured sides and fully
contoured sides inventions, including those with greater or lesser side thickness,
as well as to other shoe sole structures in his other prior applications already cited.
[0089] If the elastic edge layer 180 is not used, or in conjunction with its use, the lamination
layers can be attached with a glue or other connecting material of sufficient elasticity
to allow the shoe sole to deformation naturally like the foot.
[0090] Fig. 19 show the upper surface of the bottom sole 149 (unattached) of the right shoe
shown in perspective in Figure 16. The bottom sole can be conventional, with a flat
section surrounded by the border 17 and with sides that attach to the sides of the
midsole in the calcaneus (heel) area 95, the base of the fifth metatarsal 97, the
heads of the first and fifth metatarsal 96, and the toe area 98. The outer periphery
of the bottom sole 148 is indicated by line 19. As stated before, the material of
the bottom sole can be fabric reinforced. The sides can be continuous, as shown by
the dashed lines 99, or with other areas enlarged or decreased, or merged; preferably,
the sides will be as shown, to support the essential structural support and propulsion
elements, which were defined in the applicants '667 application as the base and lateral
tuberosity of the calcaneus 95, the heads of the metatarsals 96, and the base of the
fifth metatarsal 97, and the head of the first distal phalange 98.
[0091] The bottom sole 149 of Fig. 19 can also be part of the applicant's naturally contoured
shoe sole 28, wherein the border of the flat section would be the peripheral extent
36 of the load-bearing portion of the upright foot sole of the wearer and the sides
of the shoe sole are contoured as defined in the applicant's '667 and '478 applications.
The bottom sole 149 of Fig. 19 can also be used in the fully contoured versions described
in Fig. 15 of the '667 application.
[0092] Figure 20 shows the Fig. 19 bottom sole structure 149 with forefoot support area
126, the heel support area 125, and the base of the fifth metatarsal support area
97. Those areas would be unglued or not firmly attached as indicated in the Fig. 15
design shown preceding which uses sipes while the sides and the other areas of the
bottom sole upper surface would be glued or firmly attached to the midsole and shoe
upper. Note that the general area indicated by 18, where metatarsal pads are typically
positioned to support the second metatarsal, would be glued or firmly attached to
provided extra support in that area similar to well supported conventional shoe soles
and that the whole glued or firmly attached instep area functions much like a semi-rigid
shank in a well supported conventional shoe sole. Note also that sipes can be slits
or channels filled with flexible material and have been broadly defined in prior applications.
A major advantage of the Fig. 20 design, and those of subsequent Figs. 21-28, is that
the shock-absorbing cushioning effect of the sole is significantly enhanced, so that
less thickness and therefore weight is required,
[0093] Figure 21 shows a similar bottom sole structure 149, but with only the forefoot section
126 unglued or not firmly attached, with all (or at least most) the other portions
glued or firmly attached.
[0094] Figure 22 shows a similar bottom sole structure 149, but with both the fore foot
section 126 and the base of the fifth metatarsal section 97 unglued or not firmly
attached, with all other portions (or at least most) glued or firmly attached.
[0095] Figure 23 shows a similar view of a bottom sole structure 149, but with no side sections,
so that the design would be like that of Fig. 18. The areas under the forefoot 126',
heel 125', and base of the fifth metatarsal 97' would not be glued or attached firmly,
while the other area (or most of it) would be glued or firmly attached. Fig. 23 also
shows a modification of the outer periphery of the convention shoe sole 17: the typical
indentation at the base of the fifth metatarsal is removed, replaced by a fairly straight
line 100.
[0096] Figure 24 shows a similar structure to Fig. 23, but with only the section under the
forefoot 126 unglued or not firmly attached; the rest of the bottom sole 149 (or most
of it) would be glued or firmly attached.
[0097] Figure 25 shows a similar structure to Fig. 24, but with the forefoot area 126 subdivided
into an area under the heads of the metatarsals and another area roughly under the
heads of the phalanges.
[0098] Figure 26 shows a similar structure to Fig. 25, but with each of the two major forefoot
areas further subdivided into individual metatarsal and individual phalange. Both
this structure and that of Fig. 25 could be used with the Fig. 21 design.
[0099] Figure 27 shows a similar structure to Fig. 21, but with the forefoot area 126 enlarged
beyond the border 17 of the flat section of the bottom sole. This structure corresponds
to that shown in Figs. 15 A&B, which show the unattached section 8 extending out through
most of the contoured side. That structure has an important function, which is to
facilitate the natural deformation of the shoe sole under weight bearing loads, so
that it can flatten in parallel to the flattening of the wearer's foot sole under
the same loads. The designs shown in Figs. 20 and 22 could be modified according to
the Fig. 27 structure.
[0100] Figure 28 shows a similar structure to Fig. 27, but with an additional section 127
in the heel area where outer sole wear is typically excessive. It should be noted
that many other configurations of glued and unglued areas (or firmly and not firmly
attached) are possible that would be improvements over existing shoe sole structures,
but are not shown due to their number.
[0101] Figures 29A&B show the full range of sideways motion of the foot. Fig. 29A shows
the range in the calcaneal or heel area, where the range is determined by the subtalar
ankle joint. The typical average range is from about 10 degrees of eversion during
load-bearing pronation motion to about 20 degrees of inversion during load-bearing
supination motion.
[0102] Fig. 29B shows the much greater range of sideways motion in the forefoot, where the
range is from about 30 degrees eversion during pronation to about 45 degrees inversion
during supination.
[0103] This large increase in the range of motion from the heel area to the forefoot area
indicates that not only does the supporting shoe sole need generally to be relatively
wider than is conventional, but that the increase is relatively greater in instep
and forefoot area than in the heel area.
[0104] Figure 29C compares the footprint made by a conventional shoe 35 with the relative
positions of the wearer's right foot sole in the maximum supination position 37a and
the maximum pronation position 37b. Figure 29C reinforces the Fig. 29A&B indication
that more relative sideways motion occurs in the forefoot and midfoot, than in the
heel area.
[0105] As shown in Fig. 29C, at the extreme limit of supination and pronation foot motion,
the calcaneus 19 and the lateral calcaneal tuberosity 9 roll slightly off the sides
of the shoe sole outer boundary 35. However, at the same extreme limit of supination,
the base of the fifth metatarsal 16 and the head of the fifth metatarsal 15 and the
fifth distal phalange all have rolled completely off the outer boundary 35 of the
shoe sole.
[0106] Figure 29D shows an overhead perspective of the actual bone structures of the foot
that are indicated in Fig. 29A.
[0107] Figure 30A-D shows the implications of relative difference in range of motions between
forefoot, midfoot, and heel areas on the applicant's naturally contoured sides invention
introduced in his '667 application filed 2 September 1988. Fig. 30A-D is a modification
of Fig. 7 of the '667 application, with the left side of the figures showing the required
range of motion for each area.
[0108] Fig. 30A shows a cross section of the forefoot area and therefore on the left side
shows the highest contoured sides (compared to the thickness of the shoe sole in the
forefoot area) to accommodate the greater forefoot range of motion. The contoured
side is sufficiently high to support the entire range of motion of the wearer's foot
sole. Note that the sockliner or insole 2 is shown.
[0109] Fig. 30B shows a cross section of the midfoot area at about the base of the fifth
metatarsal, which has somewhat less range of motion and therefore the contoured sides
are not as high (compared to the thickness of the shoe sole at the midfoot). Fig.
30c shows a cross section of the heel area, where the range of motion is the least,
so the height of the contoured sides is relatively least of the three general areas
(when compared to the thickness of the shoe sole in the heel area).
[0110] Each of the three general areas, forefoot, midfoot and heel, have contoured sides
that differ relative to the high of those sides compared to the thickness of the shoe
sole in the same area. At the same time, note that the absolute height of the contoured
sides is about the same for all three areas and the contours have a similar outward
appearance, even though the actual structure differences are quite significant as
shown in cross section.
[0111] In addition, the contoured sides shown in Fig. 30A-D can be abbreviated to support
only those essential structural support and propulsion elements identified in Fig.
21 of the applicant's '667 application, shown here as Fig. 30E. The essential structural
support elements are the base and lateral tuberosity of the calcaneus 95, the heads
of the metatarsals 96, and the base of the fifth metatarsal. The essential propulsion
element is the head of the first distal phalange 98.
[0112] Figure 31 is similar to Fig. 8 of the applicant's U.S. Application No. 07/ 608,748,
filed November 5, 1990, in that it shows a new invention for a shoe sole that covers
the full range of motion of the wearer's right foot sole. However, while covering
that full range of motion, it is possible to abbreviate the contoured sides of the
shoe sole to only the essential structural and propulsion elements of the foot sole,
as previously discussed here, and as originally defined in the applicant's '667 Application
in the textual specification describing Fig. 21 of that application.
[0113] Figure 32 shows an electronic image of the relative forces present at the different
areas of the bare foot sole when at the maximum supination position shown as 37a in
Figs. 29A & 31; the forces were measured during a standing simulation of the most
common ankle spraining position. The maximum force was focused at the head of the
fifth metatarsal and the second highest force was focused at the base of the fifth
metatarsal. Forces in the heel area were substantially less overall and less focused
at any specific point.
[0114] Fig. 32 indicates that, among the essential structural support and propulsion elements
previously defined in the '667 application, there are relative degrees of importance.
In terms of preventing ankle sprains, the most common athletic injury (about two-thirds
occur in the extreme supination position 37a shown in Figs. 29a and 31), Fig. 32 indicates
that the head of the fifth metatarsal 15 is the most critical single area that must
be supported by a shoe sole in order to maintain barefoot-like lateral stability.
Fig. 32 indicates that the base of the fifth metatarsal 16 is very close to being
as important. Fig. 29A indicates that both the base and the head of the fifth metatarsal
are completely unsupported by a conventional shoe sole.
[0115] Figures 33A-K show shoe soles with only one or more, but not all, of the essential
stability elements defined in the '667 application (the use of all of which is still
preferred) but which, based on Fig. 32, still represent major stability improvements
over existing footwear. This approach of abbreviating structural support to a few
elements has the economic advantage of being capable of construction using conventional
flat sheets of shoe sole material, since the individual elements can be bent up to
the contour of the wearer's foot with reasonable accuracy and without difficulty.
Whereas a continuous naturally contoured side that extends all of, or even a significant
portion of, the way around the wearer's foot sole would buckle partially since a flat
surface cannot be accurately fitted to a contoured surface; hence, injection molding
is required for accuracy.
[0116] The Fig. 33A-K designs can be used in combination with the designs shown earlier,
particularly in Figs. 19-22 and Figs. 27 & 28.
[0117] Figure 33A shows a shoe sole with an otherwise conventional periphery 35 to which
has been added the single most critical stability correction 96a to support the head
of the fifth metatarsal 15. Indeed, as indicated in Fig. 32, the use of this support
96a to the head of the fifth metatarsal is mandatory to provide lateral stability
similar to that of the barefoot; without support at this point the foot will be unstable
in lateral or inversion motion. This additional shoe sole portion, even if used alone,
should substantially reduce lateral ankle sprains and greatly improve stability compared
to existing shoes. Preferably, the additional shoe sole portion 96a would take the
form a naturally contoured side according to the applicant's '667 and '478 applications;
briefly, conforming to the shape of the wearer's foot sole, deforming in parallel
with it, and maintaining a thickness in frontal plane cross sections that is either
constant or varying within a range of about 25 percent.
[0118] The degree to which the Fig. 33A design, and the subsequent Fig. 33 designs, preserves
the naturally firm stability of the wearer's barefoot can be tested in a manner similar
to the standing sprain simulation test first introduced in the applicant' U.S. Patent
Number 4,989,349, filed July 15, 1988 and issued February 5, 1991, page 1, lines 31-68,
and discussed in more detail in subsequent applications. For the Fig. 33 designs that
include only forefoot stability supports (all except Figs. 33B & 33M), the comparative
ankle sprain simulation test can be performed with only the forefoot in load-bearing
contact with the ground. For example, the Fig. 33A design maintains stability like
the barefoot when tilted out sideways to the extreme limit of its range of motion
[0119] In summary, the Fig. 33A design shows a shoe construction for a shoe, comprising:
a shoe sole including a side that conforms to the shape of the load-bearing portion
of the wearer's foot sole, including its sides, at the head of the fifth metatarsal,
whether under a load or unloaded; the shoe sole maintaining constant thickness in
frontal plane cross sections; the shoe sole deforming under load and flattening just
as does the wearer's foot sole under the same load.
[0120] Figure 33B shows a shoe sole similar to Fig; 33A, but with the only additional shoe
sole portion being a stability correction 97 to support the base of the fifth metatarsal
16. Given the existing practice of indenting the shoe sole in the area of the fifth
metatarsal base, adding this correction by itself can have a very substantial impact
in improving lateral stability compared to existing shoes, since Fig. 32 shows that
the base of the fifth metatarsal is critical in extreme inversion motion.
[0121] However, the importance of the base of the fifth metatarsal is limited somewhat by
the fact that in some phases of locomotion, such as the toe-off phase during walking
and running, the foot is partially plantar-flexed and supinated with only the forefoot
in contact with the ground (a situation that would exist even if the foot were bare),
so that the base of the fifth metatarsal would not be naturally supported then even
by the ground. As the foot becomes more plantar-flexed, its instep area becomes rigid
through the functional locking of the subtalar and midtarsal joints; in contrast,
those joints are unlocked when the foot is in a neutral load-bearing position on the
ground. Consequently, when the foot is artificially plantar-flexed by the conventional
shoe heel or lift, especially in the case of women's high heeled shoes, support for
the base of the fifth metatarsal becomes less important relatively, so long as the
head of the fifth metatarsal is fully supported during lateral motion, as shown in
the Fig. 33A design.
[0122] Figure 33C shows a shoe sole similar to Figs. 33A&B, but combining both stability
corrections 96a and 97, with the dashed line surrounding the fifth distal phalange
14 representing an optional additional support.
[0123] Figure 33D shows a shoe sole similar to Figs. 33A-C, but with a single stability
correction 96a that supports both the head of the fifth metatarsal 15 and the fifth
distal phalange 14.
[0124] Figure 33E show the single most important correction on the medial side (or inside)
of the shoe sole: a stability correction 96b at the head of the first metatarsal 10;
Figs. 33A-D have shown lateral corrections. Just as the Fig. 33A design is mandatory
to providing lateral support like that of the barefoot, the Fig. 33E design is mandatory
to provide medial support like that of the barefoot: without support at this point
the foot will be unstable in medial or eversion motion. Eversion or medial ankle sprains
where the foot turns to the inside account for about one third of all that occur,
and therefore this single correction will substantially improve the medial stability
of the shoe sole.
[0125] Figure 33F shows a show sole similar to Fig. 33E, but with an additional stability
correction 98 at the head of the first distal phalange 13.
[0126] Figure 33G shows a shoe sole combining the additional stability corrections 96a,
96b, and 98 shown in Figs. 33D&F, supporting the first and fifth metatarsal heads
and distal phalange heads. The dashed line 98' represents a symmetrical optional stability
addition on the lateral side for the heads of the second through fifth distal phalanges,
which are less important for stability.
[0127] Figure 33H shows a shoe sole with symmetrical stability additions 96a and 96b. Besides
being a major improvement in stability over existing footwear, this design is aesthetically
pleasing and could even be used with high heel type shoes, especially those for women,
but also any other form of footwear where there is a desire to retain relatively conventional
looks or where the shear height of the heel or heel lift precludes stability side
corrections at the heel or the base of the fifth metatarsal because of the required
extreme thickness of the sides. This approach can also be used where it is desirable
to leave the heel area conventional, since providing both firmness and flexibility
in the heel is more difficult that in other areas of the shoe sole since the shoe
sole thickness is usually much greater there; consequently, it is easier, less expensive
in terms of change, and less of a risk in departing from well understood prior art
just to provide additional stability corrections to the forefoot and/or base of the
fifth metatarsal area only.
[0128] Since the shoe sole thickness of the forefoot can be kept relatively thin, even with
very high heels, the additional stability corrections can be kept relatively inconspicuous.
They can even be extended beyond the load-bearing range of motion of the wearer's
foot sole, even to wrap all the way around the upper portion of the foot in a strictly
ornamental way (although they can also play a part in the shoe upper's structure),
as a modification of the strap, for example, often seen on conventional loafers.
[0129] Figures 33I&J show perspective views of typical examples of the extreme case, women's
high heel pumps. Fig. 33I shows a conventional high heel pump without modification.
Fig. 33J shows the same shoe with an additional stability correction 96a. It should
be noted that it is preferable for the base of the fifth metatarsal to be structurally
supported by a stiff shank-like structure in the instep area of the shoe sole, as
is common in well-make women's shoes, so that the base of the fifth metatarsal is
well supported even though not in direct structural support of the ground (meaning
supporting shoe sole material between the ground and the base of the fifth metatarsal),
as would be preferred generally.
[0130] The use of additional stability corrections in high heel shoes can be combined with
the designs shown in Figs. 20-27. Thus, even relatively thin forefoot soles can provide
excellent protection and comfort, as well as dramatically improved stability.
[0131] Figure 33K shows a shoe sole similar to that in Fig. 33H, but with the head of the
fifth distal phalange 14 unsupported by the additional stability correction 96a.
[0132] Figure 33L shows a shoe sole with an additional stability correction in a single
continuous band extending all the way around the forefoot area. This is not preferable,
but can be acceptable if the shoe sole is thin in the forefoot area so it can buckle
as necessary when the forefoot flexes naturally, as discussed under Fig. 33M following.
[0133] Figure 33M shows a shoe sole similar to the Figs. 33A-G and 33K&L, but showing additional
stability correction 97, 96a and 96b, but retaining a conventional heel area. The
dashed line around the big toe 13 indicates that a wider last with a bigger toe box
can be used to partially correct the problem solved with the additional stability
correction 98 of Figs. 33F&G.
[0134] The major flex axis indicated between the head of the first metatarsal and the head
of the first distal phalange makes preferable an abbreviation of the stability side
corrections 96b and 98 so that the normal flexibility of the wearer's foot can be
maintained. This is a critical feature: if the naturally contoured stability correction
extends through the indicated major flex axis, the natural motion of the foot will
be obstructed. If any naturally contoured sides extended through the major flex axis,
they would have to buckle for the shoe sole to flex along the indicated major axis.
Natural flexibility is especially important on the medial or inside because the first
metatarsal head and distal phalange are among the most critical load-bearing structures
of the foot.
[0135] Figure 34 shows a conventional athletic shoe in cross section at the heel, with a
conventional shoe sole 22 having essentially flat upper and lower surfaces and having
both a strong heel counter 141 and an additional reinforcement in the form of motion
control device 142. Fig. 34 specifically illustrates when that shoe is tilted outward
laterally in 20 degrees of inversion motion at the normal natural limit of such motion
in the barefoot. Fig. 34 demonstrates that the conventional shoe sole 22 functions
as an essentially rigid structure in the frontal plane, maintaining its essentially
flat, rectangular shape when tilted and supported only by its outside, lower corner
edge 23, about which it moves in rotation on the ground 43 when tilted. Both heel
counter 141 and motion control device 142 significantly enhance and increase the rigidity
of the shoe sole 22 when tilted. All three structures serve to restrict and resist
deformation of the shoe sole 22 under normal loads, including standing, walking and
running. Indeed, the structural rigidity of most conventional street shoe materials
alone, especially in the critical heel area, is usually enough to effectively prevent
deformation.
[0136] Figure 35 shows a similar heel cross section of a barefoot tilted outward laterally
at the normal 20 degree inversion maximum. In marked contrast to Fig. 34, Fig. 35
demonstrates that such normal tilting motion in the barefoot is accompanied by a very
substantial amount of flattening deformation of the human foot sole, which has a pronounced
rounded contour when unloaded, as will be seen ,in foot sole surface 29 later in Fig.
43.
[0137] Fig. 35 shows that in the critical heel area the barefoot maintains almost as great
a flattened area of contact with the ground when tilted at its 20 degree maximum as
when upright, as seen later in Fig 36. In complete contrast, Fig. 34 indicate clearly
that the conventional shoe sole changes in an instant from an area of contact with
the ground 43 substantially greater than that of the barefoot, as much as 100 percent
more when measuring in roughly the frontal plane, to a very narrow edge only in contact
with the ground, an area of contact many times less than the barefoot. The unavoidable
consequence of that difference is that the conventional shoe sole is inherently unstable
and interrupts natural foot and ankle motion, creating a high and unnatural level
of injuries, traumatic ankle sprains in particular and a multitude of chronic overuse
injuries.
[0138] This critical stability difference between a barefoot and a conventional shoe has
been dramatically demonstrated in the applicant's new and original ankle sprain simulation
test described in detail in the applicant's earlier U. S. patent application 07/400,714,
filed on August 30, 1989 and was referred to also in both of his earlier applications
previously noted here.
[0139] Fig. 36 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel, the applicant's prior
invention of pending U.S. application No. 07/424,509, filed October 20, 1989, the
most clearcut benefit of which is to provide inherent stability similar to the barefoot
in the ankle sprain simulation test mentioned above.
[0140] It does so by providing conventional shoe soles with sufficient flexibility to deform
in parallel with the natural deformation of the foot. Fig. 36A indicates a conventional
shoe sole into which have been introduced deformation slits 151, also called sipes,
which are located optimally in the vertical plane and on the long axis of the shoe
sole, or roughly in the sagittal plane, assuming the shoe is oriented straight ahead.
[0141] The deformation slits 151 can vary in number beginning with one, since even a single
deformation slit offers improvement over an unmodified shoe sole, though obviously
the more slits are used, the more closely can the surface of the shoe sole coincide
naturally with the surface of the sole of the foot and deform in parallel with it.
The space between slits can vary, regularly or irregularly or randomly. The deformation
slits 151 can be evenly spaced, as shown, or at uneven intervals or at unsymmetrical
intervals. The optimal orientation of the deformation slits 151 is coinciding with
the vertical plane, but they can also be located at an angle to that plane.
[0142] The depth of the deformation slits 151 can vary. The greater the depth, the more
flexibility is provided. Optimally, the slit depth should be deep enough to penetrate
most but not all of the shoe sole, starting from the bottom surface 31, as shown in
Fig. 36A.
[0143] A key element in the applicant's invention is the absence of either a conventional
rigid heel counter or conventional rigid motion control devices, both of which significantly
reduce flexibility in the frontal plane, as noted earlier in Fig. 34, in direct proportion
to their relative size and rigidity. If not too extensive, the applicant's prior sipe
invention still provide definite improvement.
[0144] Finally, it is another advantage of the invention to provide flexibility to a shoe
sole even when the material of which it is composed is relatively firm to provide
good support; without the invention, both firmness and flexibility would continue
to be mutually exclusive and could not coexist in the same shoe sole.
[0145] Figure 37 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel, the applicant's prior
invention of pending U.S. application No. 07/424,509, filed October 20, 1989, showing
the clearcut advantage of using the detonation slits 151 introduced in Fig 36. With
the substitution of flexibility for rigidity in the frontal plane, the shoe sole can
duplicate virtually identically the natural deformation of the human foot, even when
tilted to the limit of its normal range, as shown before in Fig. 35. The natural deformation
capability of the shoe sole provided by the applicant's prior invention shown in Fig.
37 is in complete contrast to the conventional rigid shoe sole shown in Fig. 34, which
cannot deform naturally and has virtually no flexibility in the frontal plane.
[0146] It should be noted that because the deformation sipes shoe sole invention shown in
Figs. 36 and 37, as well as other structures shown in the '509 application and in
this application, allows the deformation of a modified conventional shoe sole to parallel
closely the natural deformation of the barefoot, it maintains the natural stability
and natural, uninterrupted motion of the barefoot throughout its normal range of sideways
pronation and supination motion.
[0147] Indeed, a key feature of the applicant's prior invention is that it provides a means
to modify existing shoe soles to allow them to deform so easily, with so little physical
resistance, that the natural motion of the foot is not disrupted as it deforms naturally.
This surprising result is possible even though the flat, roughly rectangular shape
of the conventional shoe sole is retained and continues to exist except when it is
deformed, however easily.
[0148] It should be noted that the deformation sipes shoe sole invention shown in Figs.
36 and 37, as well as other structures shown in the '509 application and in this application,
can be incorporated in the shoe sole structures described in the applicant's pending
U.S. application No. 07/469,313, as well as those in the applicant's earlier applications,
except where their use is obviously precluded. Relative specifically to the '313 application,
the deformation sipes can provide a significant benefit on any portion of the shoe
sole that is thick and firm enough to resist natural deformation due to rigidity,
like in the forefoot of a negative heel shoe sole.
[0149] Note also that the principal function of the deformation sipes invention is to provide
the otherwise rigid shoe sole with the capability of deforming easily to parallel,
rather than obstruct, the natural deformation of the human foot when load-bearing
and in motion, especially when in lateral motion and particularly such motion in the
critical heel area occurring in the frontal plane or, alternately, perpendicular to
the subtalar axis, or such lateral motion in the important base of the fifth metatarsal
area occurring in the frontal plane. Other sipes exist in some other shoe sole structures
that are in some ways similar to the deformation sipes invention described here, but
none provides the critical capability to parallel the natural deformation motion of
the foot sole, especially the critical heel and base of the fifth metatarsal, that
is the fundamental process by which the lateral stability of the foot is assured during
pronation and supination motion. The optimal depth and number of the deformation sipes
is that which gives the essential support and propulsion structures of the shoe sole
sufficient flexibility to deform easily in parallel with the natural deformation of
the human foot.
[0150] Finally, note that there is an inherent engineering trade-off between the flexibility
of the shoe sole material or materials and the depth of deformation sipes, as well
as their shape and number; the more rigid the sole material, the more extensive must
be the deformation sipes to provide natural deformation.
[0151] Figure 38 shows, in a portion of a frontal plant cross section at the heel, Fig.
9B of the applicant's prior invention of pending U.S. application No. 07/424,509,
filed October 20, 1989, showing the new deformation slit invention applied to the
applicant's naturally contoured side invention, pending in U.S. application No. 07/239,667.
The applicant's deformation slit design is applied to the sole portion 28b in Fig.
4B, 4C, and 4D of the earlier application, to which are added a portion of a naturally
contoured side 28a, the outer surface of which lies along a theoretically ideal stability
plane 51.
[0152] Fig. 38 also illustrates the use of deformation slits 152 aligned, roughly speaking,
in the horizontal plane, though these planes are bent up, paralleling the sides of
the foot and paralleling the theoretically ideal stability plane 51. The purpose of
the deformation slits 152 is to facilitate the flattening of the naturally contoured
side portion 28b, so that it can more easily follow the natural deformation of the
wearer's foot in natural pronation and supination, no matter how extreme. The deformation
slits 152, as shown in Fig. 38 would, in effect, coincide with the lamination boundaries
of an evenly spaced, three layer shoe sole, even though that point is only conceptual
and they would preferably be of injection molding shoe sole construction in order
to hold the contour better.
[0153] The function of deformation slits 152 is to allow the layers to slide horizontally
relative to each other, to ease deformation, rather than to open up an angular gap
as detonation slits or channels 151 do functionally. Consequently, deformation slits
152 would not be glued together, just as deformation slits 152 are not, though, in
contrast, deformation slits 152 could be glued loosely together with a very elastic,
flexible glue that allows sufficient relative sliding motion, whereas it is not anticipated,
though possible, that a glue or other deforming material of satisfactory consistency
could be used to join deformation slits 151.
[0154] Optimally, deformation slits 152 would parallel the theoretically ideal stability
plane 51, but could be at an angle thereto or irregular rather than a curved plane
or flat to reduce construction difficulty and therefore cost of cutting when the sides
have already been cast.
[0155] The deformation slits 152 approach can be used by themselves or in conjunction with
the shoe sole construction and natural deformation outlined in Fig. 9 of pending U.S.
application No. 07/400,714.
[0156] The number of deformation slits 152 can vary like deformation slits 151 from one
to any practical number and their depth can vary throughout the contoured side portion
28b. It is also possible, though not shown, for the deformation slits 152 to originate
from an inner gap between shoe sole sections 28a and 28b, and end somewhat before
the outside edge 53a of the contoured side 28b.
[0157] Fig. 39A shows, in a frontal plane cross section at the heel, a shoe sole with a
combination like Fig. 38 of both sagittal plane deformation slits 151 and horizontal
plane deformation slits 152. It shows deformation slits 152 in the horizontal plane
applied to a conventional shoe having a sole structure with moderate side flare and
without either reinforced heel counter or other motion control devices that would
obstruct the natural deformation of the shoe sole. The deformation slits 152 can extend
all the way around the periphery of the shoe sole, or can be limited to one or more
anatomical areas like the heel, where the typically greater thickness of the shoe
sole otherwise would make deformation difficult; for the same reason, a negative heel
shoe sole would need deformation enhancement of the thicker forefoot.
[0158] Also shown in Fig. 39A is a single deformation slit 151 in the sagittal plane extending
only through the bottom sole 128; even as a minimalist structure, such a single deformation
sipe, by itself alone, has considerable effect in facilitating natural deformation,
but it can enlarged or supplemented by other sipes. The lowest horizontal slit 152
is shown located between the bottom sole 128 and the midsole 127.
[0159] Fig. 39B shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel, a similar conventional
shoe sole structure with more and deeper deformation slits 152, which can be used
without any deformation slits 151.
[0160] The advantage of horizontal plane deformation slits 152, compared to sagittal plane
deformation slits 151, is that the normal weight-bearing load of the wearer acts to
force together the sections separated by the horizontal slits so that those sections
are stabilized by the natural compression, as if they were glued together into a single
unit, so that the entire structure of the shoe sole reacts under compression much
like one without deformation slits in terms of providing a roughly equivalent amount
of cushioning and protection. In other words, under compression those localized sections
become relatively rigidly supporting while flattened out directly under the flattened
load-bearing portion of the foot sole, even though the deformation slits 152 allow
flexibility like that of the foot sole, so that the shoe sole does not act as a single
lever as discussed in Fig 34.
[0161] In contrast, deformation sipes 151 are parallel to the force of the load-bearing
weight of the wearer and therefore the shoe sole sections between those sipes 151
are not forced together directly by that weight and stabilized inherently, like slits
152. Compensation for this problem in the form of firmer shoe sole material than are
used conventionally may provide equivalently rigid support, particularly at the sides
of the shoe sole, or deformation slits 152 may be preferable at the sides.
[0162] Fig. 40 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel, a conventional shoe with
horizontal plane deformation slits 152 with the wearers right foot inverted 20 degrees
to the outside at about its normal limit of motion. Fig. 40 shows how the use of horizontal
plane deformation slits 152 allows the natural motion of the foot to occur without
obstruction. The attachments of the shoe upper are shown conventionally, but it should
be noted that such attachments are a major cause of the accordion-like effect of the
inside edge of the shoe sole. If the attachments on both sides were move inward closer
to the center of the shoe sole, then the slit areas would not be pulled up, leaving
the shoe sole with horizontal plane deformation slits laying roughly flat on the ground
with a convention, un-accordion-like appearance.
[0163] Fig. 41 shows, again in frontal plane cross section at the heel, a conventional shoe
sole structure with deformation slits 152 enlarged to horizontal plane channels, broadening
the definition to horizontal plane deformation sipes 152, like the very broad definition
given to sagittal plane deformations sipes 151 in both earlier applications, Nos.
'509 and '579. In contrast to sagittal plane deformation sipes 151, however, the voids
created by horizontal plane deformation sipes 152 must be filled by a material that
is sufficiently elastic to allow the shoe sole to deform naturally like the foot while
at the same time providing structural support.
[0164] Certainly, as defined most simply in terms of horizontal plane channels, the voids
created must be filled to provide direct structural support or the areas with deformation
sipes 152 would sag. However, just as in the case of sagittal plane deformation sipes
151, which were geometrically defined as broadly as possibly in the prior applications,
the horizontal plane deformation sipes 152 are intended to include any conceivable
shape and certainly to include any already conceived in the form of existing sipes
in either shoe soles or automobile tire. For example, deformation sipes in the form
of hollow cylindrical aligned parallel in the horizontal plane and sufficiently closely
spaced would provide a degree of both flexibility and structural support sufficient
to provide shoe sole deformation much closer to that of the foot than conventional
shoe soles. Similarly, such cylinders, whether hollow or filled with elastic material,
could also be used with sagittal plane deformation sipes, as could any other shape.
[0165] It should be emphasized that the broadest possible geometric definition is intended
for detonation sipes in the horizontal plane, as has already been established for
deformation sipes in the sagittal plane. There can be the same very wide variations
with regard to deformation sipe depth, frequency, shape of channels or other structures
(regular or otherwise), orientation within a plane or obliqueness to it, consistency
of pattern or randomness, relative or absolute size, and symmetry or lack thereof..
[0166] The Fig. 41 design applies also to the applicant's earlier naturally contoured sides
and fully contoured inventions, including those with greater or lesser side thickness;
although not shown, the Fig. 41 design, as well as those in Figs. 39 and 40, could
use a shoe sole density variation like that in the applicant's pending U.S. application
No. 07/416,478, filed on October 3, 1989, as shown in Fig. 7 of the No. '579 application.
[0167] Figs. 42 and 43 show frontal plane cross sectional views of a shoe sole according
to the applicant's prior inventions based on the theoretically ideal stability plane,
taken at about the ankle joint to show the heel section of the shoe. In the figures,
a foot 27 is positioned in a naturally contoured shoe having an upper 21 and a sole
28. The shoe sole normally contacts the ground 43 at about the lower central heel
portion thereof. The concept of the theoretically ideal stability plane, as developed
in the prior applications as noted, defines the plane 51 in terms of a locus of points
determined by the thickness (s) of the sole. The reference numerals are like those
used in the prior pending applications of the applicant mentioned above and which
are incorporated by reference for the sake of completeness of disclosure, if necessary.
Fig. 42 shows, in a rear cross sectional view, the application of the prior invention
showing the inner surface of the shoe sole conforming to the natural contour of the
foot and the thickness of the shoe sole remaining constant in the frontal plane, so
that the outer surface coincides with the theoretically ideal stability plane.
[0168] Fig. 43 shows a fully contoured shoe sole design of the applicant's prior invention
that follows the natural contour of all of the foot, the bottom as well as the sides,
while retaining a constant shoe sole thickness in the frontal plane.
[0169] The fully contoured shoe sole assumes that the resulting slightly rounded bottom
when unloaded will deform under load and flatten just as the human foot bottom is
slightly rounded unloaded but flattens under load; therefore, shoe sole material must
be of such composition as to allow the natural deformation following that of the foot.
The design applies particularly to the heel, but to the rest of the shoe sole as well.
By providing the closest match to the natural shape of the foot, the fully contoured
design allows the foot to function as naturally as possible. Under load, Fig. 43 would
deform by flattening to look essentially like Fig. 42. Seen in this light, the naturally
contoured side design in Fig. 42 is a more conventional, conservative design that
is a special case of the more general fully contoured design in Fig. 43, which is
the closest to the natural form of the foot, but the least conventional. The amount
of deformation flattening used in the Fig. 42 design, which obviously varies under
different loads, is not an essential element of the applicant's invention.
[0170] Figs. 42 and 43 both show in frontal plane cross sections the essential concept underlying
this invention, the theoretically ideal stability plane, which is also theoretically
ideal for efficient natural motion of all kinds, including running, jogging or walking.
Fig. 43 shows the most general case of the invention, the fully contoured design,
which conforms to the natural shape of the unloaded foot. For any given individual,
the theoretically ideal stability plane 51 is determined, first, by the desired shoe
sole thickness (s) in a frontal plane cross section, and, second, by the natural shape
of the individual's foot surface 29.
[0171] For the special case shown in Fig. 42, the theoretically ideal stability plane for
any particular individual (or size average of individuals) is determined, first, by
the given frontal plane cross section shoe sole thickness (s); second, by the natural
shape of the individual's foot; and, third, by the frontal plane cross section width
of the individual's load-bearing footprint 30b, which is defined as the upper surface
of the shoe sole that is in physical contact with and supports the human foot sole.
[0172] The theoretically ideal stability plane for the special case is composed conceptually
of two parts. Shown in Fig. 42, the first part is a line segment 31b of equal length
and parallel to line 30b at a constant distance (s) equal to shoe sole thickness.
This corresponds to a conventional shoe sole directly underneath the human foot, and
also corresponds to the flattened portion of the bottom of the load-bearing foot sole
28b. The second part is the naturally contoured stability side outer edge 31a located
at each side of the first part, line segment 31b. Each point on the contoured side
outer edge 31a is located at a distance which is exactly shoe sole thickness (s) from
the closest point on the contoured side inner edge 30a.
[0173] In summary, the theoretically ideal stability plane is the essence of this invention
because it is used to determine a geometrically precise bottom contour of the shoe
sole based on a top contour that conforms to the contour of the foot. This invention
specifically claims the exactly determined geometric relationship just described.
[0174] It can be stated unequivocally that any shoe sole contour, even of similar contour,
that exceeds the theoretically ideal stability plane will restrict natural foot motion,
while any less than that plane will degrade natural stability, in direct proportion
to the amount of the deviation. The theoretical ideal was taken to be that which is
closest to natural.
[0175] Central midsole section 188 and upper section 187 in Fig. 17 must fulfill a cushioning
function which frequently calls for relatively soft midsole material. Unlike the shoe
sole structure shown in Fig. 9 of prior application No. '302, the shoe sole thickness
effectively decreases in the Fig. 17 invention shown in this application when the
soft central section is deformed under weight-bearing pressure to a greater extent
than the relatively firmer sides.
[0176] In order to control this effect, it is necessary to measure it. What is required
is a methodology of measuring a portion of a static shoe sole at rest that will indicate
the resultant thickness under deformation. A simple approach is to take the actual
least distance thickness at any point and multiply it times a factor for deformation
or "give", which is typically measured in durometers (on Shore A scale), to get a
resulting thickness under a standard deformation load. Assuming a linear relationship
(which can be adjusted empirically in practice), this method would mean that a shoe
sole midsection of 1 inch thickness and a fairly soft 30 durometer would be roughly
functionally equivalent under equivalent load-bearing deformation to a shoe midsole
section of 1/2 inch and a relatively hard 60 durometer; they would both equal a factor
of 30 inch-durometers. The exact methodology can be changed or improved empirically,
but the basic point is that static shoe sole thickness needs to have a dynamic equivalent
under equivalent loads, depending on the density of the shoe sole material.
[0177] Since the Theoretically Ideal Stability Plane 51 has already been generally defined
in part as having a constant frontal plane thickness and preferring a uniform material
density to avoid arbitrarily altering natural toot motion, it is logical to develop
a non-static definition that includes compensation for shoe sole material density.
The Theoretically Ideal Stability Plane defined in dynamic terms would alter constant
thickness to a constant multiplication product of thickness times density.
[0178] Using this restated definition of the Theoretically Ideal Stability Plane presents
an interesting design possibility: the somewhat extended width of shoe sole sides
that are required under the static definition of the Theoretically Ideal Stability
Plane could be reduced by using a higher density midsole material in the naturally
contoured sides.
[0179] Fig. 44 shows, in frontal plane cross section at the heel, the use of a high density
(d') midsole material on the naturally contoured sides and a low density (d) midsole
material everywhere else to reduce side width. To illustrate the principle, it was
assumed in Fig. 44 that density (d') is twice that of density (d), so the effect is
somewhat exaggerated, but the basic point is that shoe sole width can be reduced significantly
by using the Theoretically Ideal Stability Plane with a definition of thickness that
compensates for dynamic force loads. In the Fig. 44 example, about one fourth of an
inch in width on each side is saved under the revised definition, for a total width
reduction of one half inch, while rough functional equivalency should be maintained,
as if the frontal plane thickness and density were each unchanging.
[0180] As shown in Fig. 44, the boundary between sections of different density is indicated
by the line 45 and the line 51' parallel 51 at half the distance from the outer surface
of the foot 29.
[0181] Note that the design in Fig. 44 uses low density midsole material, which is effective
for cushioning, throughout that portion of the shoe sole that would be directly load-bearing
from roughly 10 degrees of inversion to roughly 10 degrees, the normal range of maximum
motion during running; the higher density midsole material is tapered in from roughly
10 degrees to 30 degrees on both sides, at which ranges cushioning is less critical
than providing stabilizing support.
[0182] The foregoing shoe designs meet the objectives of this invention as stated above.
However, it will clearly be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing
description has been made in terms of the preferred embodiments and various changes
and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention
which is to be defined by the appended claims.