Reconfigurable chair for infant carriers and toddlers or...

Chairs and seats – Convertible – Alternately usable seat mounts

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C297S125000, C297S118000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06659544

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to industrial chairs for use with children. More specifically, the present invention relates to a reconfigurable chair designed to accommodate either a toddler or small child sitting or an infant in an infant carrier for use in restaurants or at home.
2. Description of Related Art
When families go to a restaurant or other similar facility to eat out, they often take their small children and infants. For a more pleasurable dining experience for the entire family, and particularly the adult diners, toddlers and small children and infants must be properly and safely accommodated at the table.
While older and or larger children are often able to sit in regular adult chairs, some with the aid of a Conventional booster seat, the small child, toddler and infant child require special accommodations. For example, traditional high chairs have long been available for toddlers who are able to sit up on their own, but who are yet too small to sit in an adult chair, even with a booster seat. Furthermore, high chairs are particularly suitable for rambunctious toddlers for whom a certain amount of containment is required during a meal. High chairs provide some restraints, such as belts or crotch restraints, for a child placed therein, and therefore, provide peace of mind for the parents or caregivers during the meal. Additionally, the seating arrangement for a toddler is generally smaller than in an adult chair, thereby helping to maintain the child in a seated, upright position.
While conventional high chairs are most often suitable for toddlers who can sit upright by themselves, they are entirely inadequate for infants who do no yet have the motor skills to sit upright on their own. Infants are generally brought into restaurants in infant carriers, often referred to as a “pumpkin seat”. Infant carriers usually include a cradle-shaped base for comfortably carrying or supporting the infant. A pivoting handle is usually attached to the base so an adult may manipulate and transport the carrier. When dining with an infant child, parents or caregivers often have to place the infant carrier and infant on the table, on a chair (if large enough), or on the floor. All of those available options for placement of the infant carrier are undesirable. Not only is the carrier exposed to the chances of falling, or food spillages, but oftentimes there is not sufficient table space for placing the carrier thereon. Furthermore, a chair may be too small to accommodate the carrier. Even if the chair is large enough, the awkward and cumbersome shape of infant carriers often requires that the chair and carrier be wedged against the table to ensure that the carrier does not fall off of the chair. This can present a precarious, and therefore, dangerous situation for the infant. Finally, placing the infant and carrier on a dirty, drafty restaurant floor is certainly an option to be avoided, even though it is often the safest of the available options.
One option, but one which is dangerous and discouraged or prohibited by many restaurants, is to turn a traditional high chair upside-down and place the infant carrier in the wide base of the chair. In doing so, the chair rests on the very narrow seat portion. Therefore, the upside-down chair is very likely to be tipped over or fall, which could injure an infant placed thereon. Furthermore, the restaurant could be exposed to legal liability for an injured child. While such an option is discouraged, parents or caregivers sometimes still choose to do so, and restaurants will allow them for the purposes of accommodation or lack of a more suitable option.
Attempts have been made to develop a support device specifically for infant carriers. Many such structures are expensive and complicated and are only adapted to a specific carrier design. If a restaurant does not have a specific device for the infant carrier, the parents or caregivers have to carry their own support device. As may be appreciated, it is very inconvenient and time-consuming to have to transport and set up such a device in a restaurant.
One type of device, for supporting a variety of styles of different infant carriers, consists of a sling stretched between two support elements. The sling forms a hammock to receive the carrier. Such a device is usually suitable for the purpose of supporting the carrier above the floor, regardless of the shape of the carrier. However, such devices must be purchased and maintained by a restaurant in addition to their other separate high chair structures. Further, these devices do not reach table height and thus do not allow the infant to be engaged in the dining experience.
Another commercially available product purports to be suitable for both infants and toddlers. Essentially, the product is a traditional high chair which can recline for cradling an infant. However, such a product requires that the infant be removed from its carrier and placed in the plastic seat of the product. For a parent or caregiver, such a scenario is not desirable. First, the plastic seat is hard and cold, and may even be dirty. Personal infant carriers usually have cushions on which the baby rests and the parents or caregivers know that their carrier is clean. Therefore, they are reluctant to switch the infant from their personal carrier to a public high chair device. Secondly, the infant may be nestled in blankets and other such covers, and may even be sleeping. Having to wake the infant and/or move all of the blankets to the public high chair device would further deter use of such a product. Finally, the parents, caregivers, or the restaurant staff are left with having to store the bulky, empty infant carrier during the meal.
Therefore, it would seem that the only practical option is to maintain a large number of dedicated infant carrier support devices in addition to high chairs for small children. A significant drawback, however, to any dedicated infant carrier, is that the restaurant must keep a substantial number of such devices on hand, and also must obtain separate high chairs for toddlers. Available infant carriers and high chairs are large and bulky, and therefore, require a substantial amount of floor space. While some high chairs and infant carriers are stackable, generally they are not.
Another drawback is the additional purchase and replacement costs for separate devices. However, restaurants, and particularly family-type restaurants, desire to keep their family patrons not only satisfied, but also comfortable with the thought that their children will be safe during the dining experience. Therefore, they maintain a large number of different devices to do so.
Another drawback to having a large number of dedicated support devices is the cleaning required for such structures. Food is usually splattered all over by toddlers and may also be splattered by older infants. Of course, parents and caregivers do not want to place their child in a high chair or other device which is still dirty from the previous child. Therefore, the workloads of waitpersons, buspersons, and hosts are all increased to ensure clean high chairs and infant carrier support devices are always available.
Some attempts have been made to provide a seat adapted to accommodate both small children and infants in an infant carrier. So, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 6,010,184 to Lee et al. a reconfigurable high chair provides a movable sliding seat designed for small children and cross bars that support an infant carrier when the seat is slid out of the way. A problem with this design, however, is that the movable seat involves several posts that move and that are subject to breakage over time thus endangering the child. In addition, the shape of the frame and chair allows several points, where an appendage or piece of clothing can get caught as the chair is moved from an up position to a down position.
Another problem is the support mechanism for the high chair is a fixed width and will only accommodate a single width seat.
It is therefore an object of th

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