WO2011006236A1 - Shuffler for playing cards - Google Patents

Shuffler for playing cards Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2011006236A1
WO2011006236A1 PCT/CA2010/001062 CA2010001062W WO2011006236A1 WO 2011006236 A1 WO2011006236 A1 WO 2011006236A1 CA 2010001062 W CA2010001062 W CA 2010001062W WO 2011006236 A1 WO2011006236 A1 WO 2011006236A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
cards
chute
shuffler
longitudinal wall
deck
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/CA2010/001062
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
John Tsiambouris
Konstantinos Trichas
Michael Kourgiantakis
Original Assignee
Fairplay Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Fairplay Inc. filed Critical Fairplay Inc.
Publication of WO2011006236A1 publication Critical patent/WO2011006236A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63FCARD, BOARD, OR ROULETTE GAMES; INDOOR GAMES USING SMALL MOVING PLAYING BODIES; VIDEO GAMES; GAMES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • A63F1/00Card games
    • A63F1/06Card games appurtenances
    • A63F1/12Card shufflers

Abstract

A shuffler for playing cards has a chute having a first longitudinal wall and a second longitudinal wall, a card receiving end and a distal end. A means is provided for biasing the cards toward the first longitudinal wall in the chute. A preliminary urging means is positioned adjacent the card receiving end of the chute for urging the playing cards to travel toward the distal end of the chute. A cut restrictor removably extends into the chute to stop the travel of a portion of the cards. A means is provided for advancing the remaining cards toward the distal end of the chute where they will come to rest along the first longitudinal wall of the chute. A means is provided for returning the remaining cards toward the card receiving end of the chute to intermingle with the stopped portion of the cards.

Description

SHUFFLER FOR PLAYING CARDS
Description
[1] The present invention relates generally to a shuffler
for playing cards, and more particularly to a shuffler for providing a complete and random shuffle
[2] Many card shufflers are known for shuffling packs of
playing cards Many of the common shufflers employ a technique of separating the cards into two stacks, each in a separate magazine, and then simultaneously ejecting them into a receptacle at a pre-determined rate There is a
possibility that if ejection of cards occurs at a constant and pre-determined rate, that the order of the shuffled cards might be predictable or determinable if the positions of the cards in the deck are known before the shuffle In such instance it is not certain that a shuffle executed by such a shuffler could be taily random, in that the exact placement of the cards is subject purely to chance and cannot be predicted Card players traditionally look upon cutting the deck in the shuffling process as a reliable way to ensure that cards have not been sequentially placed in order to cause a predetermined shuffle and a dishonest deal of the cards
[3] The technology in card shufflers is becoming
increasingly complex as improvements are made to ensure the integrity and completeness of a shuffle With such increasing complexity there comes increasing manufacturing and development costs The increasing costs put the purchase of a shuffler beyond what a recreational card player would consider reasonable There is a need for a reliable, random and inexpensive card shuffler The shuffler should also be capable of completing a thorough shuffle of the cards quickly In order avoid unduly delaying a card game, it is desirable that a shuffling session to completely randomize the cards ready for another round of play should take no longer than about one minute
[4] It is an object of the present invention to provide
card shuffler that produces a random shuffle
[5] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a card shuffler that has a shuffling motion which is analogous to a manual shuffle
[6] It is yet another object of the present invention to
provide a card shuffler which will complete multiple shuffle cycles to result in a thorough shuffle
[7] It is yet another object of the present invention to
provide a card shuffler which will complete completely randomize the cards in a very short time
[8] There is disclosed a shuffler for playing cards
comprising a chute having a first longitudinal wall and a second longitudinal wall, a card receiving end and a distal end A means is provided for biasing the cards toward the first longitudinal wall in the chute A preliminary urging means is positioned adjacent the card receiving end of the chute for urging the playing cards to travel toward the distal end of the chute A cut restrictor removably extends into the chute to stop the travel of a portion of the cards A means for advancing the remaining cards toward the distal end of the chute where they will come to rest along the first longitudinal wall of the chute A means is provided for returning the remaining cards toward the card receiving end of the chute to intermingle with the stopped portion of the cards
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[9] Fig l is a perspective view of a card shuffler
according to the present invention holding a deck of cards
[10] Fig 2 is a perspective view of a card shuffler of
Fig 1 shown from above, without a deck of cards, and having a portion of a wall cut away
[11] Fig 3 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 3-3
of the shuffler of Fig 1
[12] Fig 4 is a longitudinal sectional view taken along
line 4-4 of the shuffler of Fig 1 [13] Fig 5 is a top view of the shuffler of Fig 1
showing a deck of cards shown at the receiving end of the chute
[14] Fig 6 is a top view of the shuffler of Fig 1
showing the deck of cards split at the cut restrictor and the remaining advanced toward the distal end of the chute
[15] Fig 7 is a top view of the shuffler of Fig 4
showing the deck of cards split at the cut restrictor and the remaining cards positioned at the distal end of the chute
[16] Fig 8 is a top view of the shuffler of Fig 4
showing the deck of cards interleaving at the receiving end of the chute
[17] Referring now Figs 1-8 of the drawings a shuffler
for playing cards is shown generally by reference numeral 10 A chute 12 may be mounted on a base 22, which also provides a platform for supporting an electric motor or motors, a gearing system, a transmission, a power source, and a switch, all of which are conventional
[18] The chute 12 has a first longitudinal wall 14, a
second longitudinal wall 16, a card receiving end 18 and a distal end 20 The chute 12 is preferably slightly wider than the deck 15 of cards which is to be shuffled The width of the chute must be sufficient to allow the cards to agitate and spread apart from one another to permit cutting of the deck and interleaving of cards, but not so wide as to allow single cards to slide laterally apart from the deck, fall flat, or angle over so as to block the progress of neighboring cards The chute 12 should be about two and one half standard card lengths long, in order to permit a portion of the deck to cut completely away from the remaining deck and become lined up end to end in register with the remainder of the deck Preferably the chute has a height which is somewhat greater than the height of the cards when at rest on their side edges therein A loading notch 17 can be provided in the longitudinal walls 14, 16 to allow a user to reach into the chute 12 and grasp the deck 15 of cards before and after shuffling A colored masking card can also be slid into the chute 12 along the loading notch 17 in order to cover the bottom card in the shuffled deck to hide the bottom card in the deck to prevent exposure upon removal of the shuffled deck from the shuffler [19] The present invention can be adapted to shuffle
multiple decks by providing multiple chutes side by side in series It may be possible to increase the width of the chute somewhat to accommodate two decks, but there are limitations upon the functional width of a single chute, as discussed above
[20] A deck of playing cards is shown by reference number
15 At times during the shuffling process, the deck of cards 15 will be shown split into a stopped portion of the deck 15A and a mobile portion of the deck 15B
[21] The shuffler 10 has a preliminary urging means 24
adjacent the card receiving end 18 of the chute 12 This preliminary urging means 24 urges the deck 15 of cards to commence travelling toward the distal end 20 of the chute 12 The preliminary urging means 24 may take many forms, including a roller, a rotating dαim, rotating shaft or spindle, a powered belt or conveyor which frictionally engages the deck of cards and carries it along in the desired direction In any event, the preliminary urging means requires sufficient surface area to frictionally engage and move the deck 15 of cards The preliminary urging means may operate from above, below or on either side of the deck 15, as routine variations of the present invention In the preferred embodiment shown in Figs 1-8, the preliminary urging means is a unidirectional rotating roller that is positioned below the deck 15 in supporting relation to edges of the cards for frictional rolling engagement with the cards to move the cards in the direction of the distal end 20 of the chute The shuffler 10 could be adapted to permit the cards to stand so that the shuffle is an end to end shuffle, but with the cards standing vertically A cut restrictor 26 is
provided to removably extend into the chute 12 to stop the travel of a portion 15A of the deck of the cards The cut restrictor 26 can be oriented to extend into the chute from either side, to project up from the bottom of the chute 12, or to descend into the chute 12 from above The cut restrictor 26 could take the form of a guillotine, a pop-up barricade, a spring-loaded divider etc
[22] The cut restrictor 26 could be electrically powered
and switched for timed operation with the other motorized elements of the device More than one cut restrictor could be used together in order to effect multiple smaller cuts of the cards and permit multiple smaller portions of cards to advance, while stopping multiple smaller portions of cards
[23] The cut restrictor may also have a contact switch
attached to it so that when the rollers on are moving the cards in the direction towards the receiving end, they would be pushing the cut restrictors flap up so they can pass through underneath As this flap is being pushed up, it would activate a switch that would keep the rollers spinning in that direction and then once the cards have all made it past, the flap would then swing back down deactivating the switch, which would change the direction of the rollers once more to move the cards to the distal end
[24] In the preferred embodiment of the present invention,
the cut restrictor, shown generally by reference 26, takes the form of a hinged flap mounted from above the chute 12 to alternate between a lowered position extending into the chute 12 to stop the travel of a portion 15A and a raised position clear of the chute The cut restrictor 26 is mounted to a support arm 28 attached to at least one of the longitudinal walls 14, 16 The support arm 28 may be attached to both walls 14 and 16 to provide additional stability It has been found to be particularly preferable to constaict the cut restrictor 26 in a 'T' shape having a hinged mounting above the joint of the arms of the 'T' Gravity will force first arm 32 of the 'T' to extend down into the chute 12, leaving the shorter arm 30 to rest below the underside of the support arm 28 When the deck 15 of cards is urged forward by the preliminary urging means 24 and comes into contact with the first arm 32 it will hold fast against the onslaught of playing cards, cutting the deck in to a stopped portion 15A in physical contact with the cut restrictor 26, and a mobile portion 15B which pass by beyond the extent of the cut restrictor 26
[25] A means 34 is provided for advancing the remaining
cards in the deck 15B toward the distal end 20 of the chute 12 A means 36 also is provided for returning the remaining cards 15B to the card receiving end 18 of the chute 12 As with the preliminary urging means 24, the means for advancing 34 and the means for returning 36 could take many take forms, including a roller, a rotating dαim, rotating shaft or spindle, a powered belt or conveyor which frictionally engages the deck of cards from any desired orientation and carries it along in the desired direction
[26] In accordance with the preferred embodiment of the
present invention, the means for advancing 34 and the means for returning 36 are positioned below the deck 15 in supporting relation to edges of the cards It is preferred for both means 34 and 36 to comprise rollers for frictional rolling engagement with the cards Separate unidirectional rollers could be used to fulfill each of the advancing and returning functions They could be independently mounted, and operated systems whose control is synchronized to engage and disengage from the cards at the appropriate time to perform the advancing and returning functions It is preferred, however, for the means for advancing 34 and the means for returning 36 the deck of the cards to comprise bidirectional rollers rotated in a first direction to advance the cards and rotated in a second direction to return the cards While it may be possible to use a single bidirectional roller to complete the advancing and the returning functions, it is preferred to use a plurality of bidirectional rollers in
series, so as to provide smoother and more effective transportation of the deck 15B The chute 12 may be provided with a floor, through which the upper surfaces of the rollers project Alternatively, if the rollers are spaced sufficiently close together to permit the cards to glide freely above the rollers without binding, it is not necessary to have a floor, per se,
and instead the cards can simply be supported on the rollers Alternatively, partial sections of floor may be provided between the rollers to bridge any gaps
[27] Although the advancing 34 and returning 36 rollers
may rest under a portion of the entire deck 15 of cards, movement of cards resulting from the frictional engagement with the rollers will only occur in respect of cards which have not been stopped by contact with the cut restrictor 26 The effect of the contact between the advancing means 34 and returning means 36 on the stopped portion 15A of the deck of cards causes the stopped portion 15A to be agitated or 'dance' in place
[28] There are provided means for biasing the deck 15
toward the first longitudinal wall 14 The means for biasing could be provided in several different ways, alone or in combination Examples of biasing means which could be employed in the present invention are described briefly in the following paragraphs
[29] In a first example, the longitudinal walls 14, 16 of
the chute 12 could be oriented at an oblique angle The effect of angling the chute 12 would be to cause the cards to lean toward the longitudinal wall 14, and as they move through the chute would cause the cards to bias toward the longitudinal wall 14
[30] A second example of a means for biasing would be to
orient the chute 12 on its base 22 at a slight transverse downward slope toward the first longitudinal wall 14 of the chute 12 Such a downward slope could be providing a thickened area causing the base of the shuffler to tilt on a slight downward slope toward the first longitudinal wall 14 Alternatively, one or more adjustable feet could be provided on the base 22 to provide an adjustable tilt, capable of biasing the cards toward the first longitudinal wall 14 [31] A third example of means for biasing the cards could
be accomplished by positioning the urging means, the advancing means and the returning means on a slight transverse downward slope toward the first longitudinal wall 14 If the chute 12 has a floor 38, then the floor
cold also be tilted on a slight transverse downward slope toward the first longitudinal wall
[32] In the preferred embodiment of the present invention,
the means for biasing the cards toward the first longitudinal wall 14 is
provided the orientation of the preliminary urging means 24 toward the first longitudinal wall 14 The preliminary urging means 24 remains in the same vertical plane as the rollers which comprise the advancing means and the returning means 34, 36 The preliminary urging means 24 does not need a downward slope or tilt Instead, the preliminary urging means is oriented at an angle transverse to the first longitudinal wall 14 The angle of orientation is preferably less than 30° In most instances an orientation of between 1° and 10° is sufficient to achieve the desired biasing It is most preferred that the angle of orientation be 2° - 3° degrees The shuffler can be provided with an mechanism for adjusting the angle of orientation, in order to optimize the strength of the biasing force to operate with playing cards of weights and sizes The transverse orientation of the preliminary urging means 24 is
illustrated in Fig 2 Each of the rollers 34, 36, 37 and 24 are shown having a plurality of parallel hatch marks suggesting the surface and orientation of the rollers It will be noted that the hatch marks on the roller which functions as the preliminary urging means 24 are oriented transversely toward the first longitudinal wall 14 to illustrate the transverse orientation of the urging means 24 The angle of the hatch marks shown in Fig 2 is for illustrative purposes only, and is not intended to be shown to scale As the
preliminary urging means 24 spins, in frictional engagement with the deck 15, it will bias the deck toward the first longitudinal wall 14 as they move toward the distal end of the chute The impact of the biasing means is applicable to the portion of the deck 15A which is stopped against the cut restrictor and the mobile portion 15B of the deck as it travel through the chute 12 This
adjustment of the angle of tilt will permit selective adjustment of the biasing force which urges the cards toward the first longitudinal wall 14, thereby allowing the shuffler to be adjusted for use with cards that may have different weights and densities The result of this biasing is that the cards will rest against the first longitudinal wall 14 when the entire deck 15 is at the
receiving end 18 of the chute 12 When the deck 15 is moved by the urging means 24, it will tend to move forward along the first longitudinal wall 14 As the remaining cards in the mobile portion of deck 15B move past the cut restrictor 26 will also they will experience a further biasing toward the first
longitudinal wall 14 even as they are advanced toward the distal end 20 of the chute 12 A guide 40 is positioned on the second longitudinal wall 16 to direct the remaining cards toward the first longitudinal wall The guide 40 projects into the chute 12 The cards in the mobile portion 15B of the deck will contact the guide 40 and be further biased toward the first longitudinal wall 14
[33] Both the receiving end 18 and the distal end 20 of
the chute 12 may be provided with bumpers 42 The bumpers 42 can be constructed from any suitable sound and motion absorbing material Felt and rubber have been found to be suitable materials from which to construct the bumpers The bumpers serve cushion the motion of the moving cards, enabling them to decelerate more gently, thereby reducing wear and tear on the cards The sound absorbing quality of the bumpers 42 also acts to baffle the noise of the cards impacting upon the ends of the chute 12
[34] The shuffler can be fitted with a removable cover
that will fit over the longitudinal walls of the chute The cover will restrain any cards which may kick up during the shuffling process and dampen the overall sound of the shuffler in operation If the cover is made of opaque material, it will hide the motion of the cards during the shuffle process This will insure that users and other card players cannot observe the positioning of any
particular card during the shuffle
[35] In use the shuffler functions to shuffle a deck of
cards as follows The deck 15 of cards are placed into the shuffler 10,
adjacent the receiving end 18 of the chute 12 resting against the first
longitudinal wall 14 of the chute 12 The shuffler is switched on, activating preliminary urging means, which by frictional rolling engagement with the deck, cause the deck to move toward the distal end 20 of the chute When the deck 15 of cards is urged forward by the preliminary urging means 24 and a portion of the deck 15A comes into contact with the cut restrictor 26 and is stopped in physical contact with the cut restrictor 26, and the remaining cards in the mobile portion 15B of the deck pass by beyond the extent of the cut restrictor 26
[36] The advancing means 34 is activated, being the
rollers rotating in a first direction, and, by frictional rolling engagement
advancing the cards remaining mobile portion 15B of the deck toward the distal end 20 of the chute 12 The stopped portion 15A of the deck of cards remain blocked from forward motion by the cut restrictor 26 and are agitated or
'dance' in place The mobile portion 15B contact the guide40 and are biased while in motion, coming to rest against the bumper 42 at the distal end of the chute 12, resting against the first longitudinal wall 14
[37] The rotation of the rollers is then reversed
providing the returning means 36 which, by factional rolling engagement with the mobile portion 15B of the deck, brings same toward the receiving end 18 of the chute 12 The cut restrictor is only capable of swiveling in one direction The mobile portion 15B of the deck pushes against the flap 32 of the cut restrictor, swiveling it out of the way and allowing the mobile portion 15B of the deck to pass under the flap and travel to rejoin the stopped portion 15A of the deck The reversal in direction of the rollers to cause returning means 36 also somewhat effects the stopped portion of the cards at the receiving end of the chute so that they do not crowd the cut restrictor 26 In essence, the stopped portion 15A of the cards are in a state of equilibrium As can be seen in Figure 3, the cut restrictor 26 is positioned ahead of the first roller 37 of the rollers which serve as the advancing means 34 and returning means 36 The first roller 37, when it rotates as the returning means 36, will counter the motion of the preliminary urging means 24 preventing the stopped portion 15A of the deck from moving towards the cut restrictor 26 The counter motion also causes the cards to agitate or 'dance' at this point
[38] As the mobile portion 15B passes under the cut
restrictor 26, the cards randomly interleave with the dancing cards of the stopped portion 15A of the deck, and the full deck 15 is reunited in the receiving end 18 of the chute 12, completing a shuffle cycle The entire cycle is repeated a desired number of times to ensure complete randomized mixing of the cards
[39] It will be obvious to those skilled in the art that
modifications of the shuffler of the present invention may be adopted without departing from the spirit of the present invention For example the shuffler according to the present invention could be modified to operate on manually, using hand cranks to turn the various rollers to move and shuffle the cards Changes may be made in the combination and arrangement of the various parts and elements, described herein without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention It will be apparent that the scope of the present invention is
limited only by the claims set out hereinbelow

Claims

SHUFFLER FOR PLAYING CARDS Claims
[1] A shuffler for playing cards comprising a chute having a first longitudinal wall and a second
longitudinal wall, a card receiving end, and a distal
end, means for biasing the cards toward the first longitudinal
wall, a preliminary urging means, adjacent the card receiving end
of the chute, for urging the playing cards to travel toward the distal end of the chute, a cut restrictor removably extending into the chute to stop
the travel of a portion of the cards, a means for advancing the remaining cards toward the distal
end of the chute, and a means for returning the remaining cards toward the card
receiving end of the chute to intermingle with the stopped portion of the cards
[2] The shuffler of claim 1, wherein the urging means, the means
for advancing and the means for returning are positioned below the cards in supporting relation to edges of the cards
[3] The shuffler of claim 2, wherein the preliminary urging means
comprises a unidirectional roller for frictional rolling engagement with the cards
[4] The shuffler of claim 2, wherein the means for advancing the
cards comprises a roller for frictional rolling engagement with the cards
[5] The shuffler of claim 2, wherein the means for returning the
cards comprises a roller for frictional rolling engagement with the cards
[6] The shuffler of claim 5, wherein the means for advancing the
cards and the means for returning the cards comprise a bidirectional roller which is rotated in a first direction to advance the cards and rotated in a second direction to return the cards
[7] The shuffler of claim 1, wherein the cut restrictor is
mounted above the chute
[8] The shuffler of claim 7, wherein the cut restrictor is a flap
hingedly mounted to alternate between lowered position extending into the chute to stop the travel of a portion of the cards and a raised position clear of the chute
[9] The shuffler of claim 8, wherein the cut restrictor is
mounted to a guide supported from one of the longitudinal walls of the chute
[10] The shuffler of claim 1, wherein the means for biasing the
cards toward the first longitudinal wall comprises a guide positioned on the second longitudinal wall to direct the remaining cards toward the first longitudinal wall
[11] The shuffler of claim 1, wherein the means for biasing the
cards toward the first longitudinal wall comprises the orientation of the preliminary urging means at an angle transverse to the first longitudinal wall
[12] The shuffler of claim 11, wherein the angle is less than 30°
[13] The shuffler of claim 12, wherein the angle is between 1
and 10°
[14] The shuffler of claim 13, wherein the angle is between 2
and 3°
PCT/CA2010/001062 2009-07-14 2010-07-12 Shuffler for playing cards WO2011006236A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/502,339 US20110012303A1 (en) 2009-07-14 2009-07-14 Shuffler for playing cards
US12/502,339 2009-07-14

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2011006236A1 true WO2011006236A1 (en) 2011-01-20

Family

ID=43448828

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/CA2010/001062 WO2011006236A1 (en) 2009-07-14 2010-07-12 Shuffler for playing cards

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US20110012303A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2011006236A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (41)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6676127B2 (en) 1997-03-13 2004-01-13 Shuffle Master, Inc. Collating and sorting apparatus
US6655684B2 (en) 1998-04-15 2003-12-02 Shuffle Master, Inc. Device and method for forming and delivering hands from randomly arranged decks of playing cards
US6254096B1 (en) 1998-04-15 2001-07-03 Shuffle Master, Inc. Device and method for continuously shuffling cards
US8590896B2 (en) 2000-04-12 2013-11-26 Shuffle Master Gmbh & Co Kg Card-handling devices and systems
US8616552B2 (en) 2001-09-28 2013-12-31 Shfl Entertainment, Inc. Methods and apparatuses for an automatic card handling device and communication networks including same
US8337296B2 (en) 2001-09-28 2012-12-25 SHFL entertaiment, Inc. Method and apparatus for using upstream communication in a card shuffler
US7677565B2 (en) 2001-09-28 2010-03-16 Shuffle Master, Inc Card shuffler with card rank and value reading capability
US8011661B2 (en) 2001-09-28 2011-09-06 Shuffle Master, Inc. Shuffler with shuffling completion indicator
US7753373B2 (en) 2001-09-28 2010-07-13 Shuffle Master, Inc. Multiple mode card shuffler and card reading device
US6886829B2 (en) 2002-02-08 2005-05-03 Vendingdata Corporation Image capturing card shuffler
US20060066048A1 (en) 2004-09-14 2006-03-30 Shuffle Master, Inc. Magnetic jam detection in a card shuffler
US7764836B2 (en) 2005-06-13 2010-07-27 Shuffle Master, Inc. Card shuffler with card rank and value reading capability using CMOS sensor
US7556266B2 (en) 2006-03-24 2009-07-07 Shuffle Master Gmbh & Co Kg Card shuffler with gravity feed system for playing cards
US8579289B2 (en) 2006-05-31 2013-11-12 Shfl Entertainment, Inc. Automatic system and methods for accurate card handling
US8342525B2 (en) 2006-07-05 2013-01-01 Shfl Entertainment, Inc. Card shuffler with adjacent card infeed and card output compartments
US8353513B2 (en) 2006-05-31 2013-01-15 Shfl Entertainment, Inc. Card weight for gravity feed input for playing card shuffler
US8070574B2 (en) 2007-06-06 2011-12-06 Shuffle Master, Inc. Apparatus, system, method, and computer-readable medium for casino card handling with multiple hand recall feature
US8919775B2 (en) 2006-11-10 2014-12-30 Bally Gaming, Inc. System for billing usage of an automatic card handling device
US7988152B2 (en) 2009-04-07 2011-08-02 Shuffle Master, Inc. Playing card shuffler
US8967621B2 (en) 2009-04-07 2015-03-03 Bally Gaming, Inc. Card shuffling apparatuses and related methods
US8800993B2 (en) 2010-10-14 2014-08-12 Shuffle Master Gmbh & Co Kg Card handling systems, devices for use in card handling systems and related methods
DK178441B1 (en) 2011-02-18 2016-02-29 Nissens As Method of producing a heat exchanger and a heat exchanger
US9731190B2 (en) 2011-07-29 2017-08-15 Bally Gaming, Inc. Method and apparatus for shuffling and handling cards
US8485527B2 (en) 2011-07-29 2013-07-16 Savant Shuffler LLC Card shuffler
US8960674B2 (en) 2012-07-27 2015-02-24 Bally Gaming, Inc. Batch card shuffling apparatuses including multi-card storage compartments, and related methods
US9511274B2 (en) 2012-09-28 2016-12-06 Bally Gaming Inc. Methods for automatically generating a card deck library and master images for a deck of cards, and a related card processing apparatus
US9378766B2 (en) 2012-09-28 2016-06-28 Bally Gaming, Inc. Card recognition system, card handling device, and method for tuning a card handling device
SG11201608344WA (en) 2014-04-11 2016-11-29 Bally Gaming Inc Method and apparatus for shuffling and handling cards
US9474957B2 (en) 2014-05-15 2016-10-25 Bally Gaming, Inc. Playing card handling devices, systems, and methods for verifying sets of cards
US9566501B2 (en) 2014-08-01 2017-02-14 Bally Gaming, Inc. Hand-forming card shuffling apparatuses including multi-card storage compartments, and related methods
USD764599S1 (en) 2014-08-01 2016-08-23 Bally Gaming, Inc. Card shuffler device
US9504905B2 (en) 2014-09-19 2016-11-29 Bally Gaming, Inc. Card shuffling device and calibration method
US9993719B2 (en) 2015-12-04 2018-06-12 Shuffle Master Gmbh & Co Kg Card handling devices and related assemblies and components
US10933300B2 (en) 2016-09-26 2021-03-02 Shuffle Master Gmbh & Co Kg Card handling devices and related assemblies and components
US10339765B2 (en) 2016-09-26 2019-07-02 Shuffle Master Gmbh & Co Kg Devices, systems, and related methods for real-time monitoring and display of related data for casino gaming devices
CA2990540C (en) * 2016-12-30 2020-07-07 Norman R. Byrne Drape-over article with electrical outlets
US11376489B2 (en) 2018-09-14 2022-07-05 Sg Gaming, Inc. Card-handling devices and related methods, assemblies, and components
US11896891B2 (en) 2018-09-14 2024-02-13 Sg Gaming, Inc. Card-handling devices and related methods, assemblies, and components
US11338194B2 (en) 2018-09-28 2022-05-24 Sg Gaming, Inc. Automatic card shufflers and related methods of automatic jam recovery
CN112546608A (en) 2019-09-10 2021-03-26 夏佛马士特公司 Card handling apparatus for defect detection and related methods
US11173383B2 (en) 2019-10-07 2021-11-16 Sg Gaming, Inc. Card-handling devices and related methods, assemblies, and components

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2649305A (en) * 1950-03-17 1953-08-18 Walter E Schoultz Playing card shuffler
US2705638A (en) * 1950-06-12 1955-04-05 Daniel E Newcomb Device for shuffling playing cards
US2711319A (en) * 1950-04-10 1955-06-21 Morgan Earl Playing card shuffler
US5261667A (en) * 1992-12-31 1993-11-16 Shuffle Master, Inc. Random cut apparatus for card shuffling machine

Family Cites Families (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1041271A (en) * 1911-07-22 1912-10-15 Charles T Hall Card-shuffler.
US2615719A (en) * 1950-07-29 1952-10-28 William A Fonken Means for shuffling decks of playing cards
US2728443A (en) * 1951-04-13 1955-12-27 Magnuson Roy M Shuffle feed mechanism for single filing articles
US3155218A (en) * 1962-02-19 1964-11-03 Fmc Corp Aerticle feeding mechanism
US3088577A (en) * 1962-02-19 1963-05-07 Fmc Corp Article feeding mechanism
US3588116A (en) * 1968-02-29 1971-06-28 Mamoru Matsuoka Card shuffler
US4310160A (en) * 1979-09-10 1982-01-12 Leo Willette Card shuffling device
US4586712A (en) * 1982-09-14 1986-05-06 Harold Lorber Automatic shuffling apparatus
US5096197A (en) * 1991-05-22 1992-03-17 Lloyd Embury Card deck shuffler
AT401887B (en) * 1992-10-13 1996-12-27 Casinos Austria Ag CARD MIXER
NL9301771A (en) * 1993-10-13 1995-05-01 Holland Casinos Card shuffler.
US5676372A (en) * 1994-04-18 1997-10-14 Casinovations, Inc. Playing card shuffler
US5718427A (en) * 1996-09-30 1998-02-17 Tony A. Cranford High-capacity automatic playing card shuffler
US6254096B1 (en) * 1998-04-15 2001-07-03 Shuffle Master, Inc. Device and method for continuously shuffling cards
AT5678U1 (en) * 2001-10-19 2002-10-25 Card Casinos Austria Res & Dev CARD MIXER
US7769232B2 (en) * 2003-07-17 2010-08-03 Shuffle Master, Inc. Unique sensing system and method for reading playing cards

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2649305A (en) * 1950-03-17 1953-08-18 Walter E Schoultz Playing card shuffler
US2711319A (en) * 1950-04-10 1955-06-21 Morgan Earl Playing card shuffler
US2705638A (en) * 1950-06-12 1955-04-05 Daniel E Newcomb Device for shuffling playing cards
US5261667A (en) * 1992-12-31 1993-11-16 Shuffle Master, Inc. Random cut apparatus for card shuffling machine

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20110012303A1 (en) 2011-01-20

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20110012303A1 (en) Shuffler for playing cards
US8814164B2 (en) Apparatuses and methods for continuously supplying sets of cards for a card game
US11097183B2 (en) Multi-deck automatic card shuffler configured to shuffle cards for a casino table game card game such as baccarat
US5575475A (en) Card shuffler apparatus
US7766333B1 (en) Method and apparatus for shuffling and ordering playing cards
US7066464B2 (en) Automatic card shuffler
US20100213668A1 (en) Automatic Card Shuffler with spaced roller pair
US20180036627A1 (en) Card handling apparatus
AU2012290314B2 (en) Card shuffler
US5261667A (en) Random cut apparatus for card shuffling machine
US3773325A (en) Air cushion table game
JPH09508809A (en) Card shuffler
US20110233863A1 (en) Card shuffling device and method
US3995859A (en) Competitive board game and mechanical energy-storing catch-and-propel mechanism usable therewith
US3927885A (en) Puck and bat for an air cushion table game
US9138635B1 (en) Mechanical shuffler
US20100295243A1 (en) Method and apparatus to shuffle and order playing cards
US3208751A (en) Game apparatus with ball dropping means and rotating target
JP2008043478A (en) Token loading device and game machine
US1725069A (en) Apparatus for playing table games
JPH09239144A (en) Air game device
JP2003159361A (en) Automatic card-shuffling apparatus and method therefor, carry belt, card control mechanism, and power transmission mechanism
JPH0520397Y2 (en)
AU2007312860A1 (en) Handheld card dealer
US9786196B2 (en) Training apparatus and method

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 10799311

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase

Ref document number: 10799311

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1