Chairs and seats – Bottom or back – Contoured bottom
Patent
1998-11-06
2000-03-07
Brown, Peter R.
Chairs and seats
Bottom or back
Contoured bottom
2972849, 29745235, A47C 720
Patent
active
060330244
DESCRIPTION:
BRIEF SUMMARY
TECHNICAL FIELD
The invention concerns a seat, especially a motor vehicle seat
STATE OF THE ART
Today most of these types of motor vehicle seats, as known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,938,529 for example, have a frame stabilizing the seating area, preferably in the form of a steel band frame. This steel band frame has foamed-in upholstery. The upholstery in turn has side cushions that serve to support the vehicle passengers on the side as well. But driving around curves or lateral shocks produce very high lateral stresses on the side cushions, and they can be deformed, since the resilience of the frame is not effective enough.
DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION
Starting from the state of the art, this invention is based on the problem of developing a seat of the type mentioned above that can take these lateral stresses too.
This problem is solved by a seat with the features in claim 1.
A reinforcing element can be applied for this purpose to the transverse parts of the frame that connect the side parts and connect the side cushions to one another. This reinforcing element is attached by connectors whose distance apart can change, so that depending on the distance between the connectors, the resilience can be adjusted to the corresponding requirements, so that the vehicle seat remains in its desired original form.
The principle of a dual-flexing beam is followed, so that depending on the cross section of the reinforcing element and the movement of the clips, the corresponding resilience can be defined.
SHORT DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 shows a section through the seating surface of the motor vehicle seat.
FIG. 2 shows a top view onto the frame.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The invention will now be explained with the examples in the enclosed drawings. But the embodiments are only examples, which should not limit the inventive concept to a certain physical arrangement.
According to FIG. 1, a seat, which can be a motor vehicle seat 10, but also any other seat, has a seating surface 12 with upholstery 11. The upholstery is supplemented on the sides by side cushions 13, which support the user laterally. In the seat itself, there is a frame 14 that stabilizes the seat and whose lateral parts 14a run into the side cushions 13. This frame, which also has transverse parts 14b connecting the side parts 14a, is a steel band frame, but it can also be made of other materials, such as plastics or fiber-reinforced plastics that have the corresponding elastic properties.
An additional reinforcing element 15 can be attached to at least one of the transverse parts 14b, preferably on the transverse part adjoining the front edge of the seat. This reinforcing element 15 reinforces at least the middle area of the transverse part 14b and for that purpose can be attached to the transverse part by at least two connectors 16 that can move along the transverse part 14b. This form of embodiment produces a dual flexing beam in the middle area, so that when there is lateral stress 18 on it, the resilience 19 can counter it and keep the seat in its original shape.
The right side of FIG. 1 shows that the connector 16 can run along the transverse part 14b in other positions, shown in dashes, in the direction of arrow 20. Here, the distance x between the two connectors changes, which influences the stiffness and the resilience 19 of the side cushions 13. While distance is x, lever arm a acts as the lever arm of the resilient force; this lever arm becomes larger than lever arm a1 and hence the stiffness of the side cushion 13 becomes smaller if connector 16 is pushed to the left into the position in dashes; and the smaller lever arm a2 becomes the lever arm if connector 16 is pushed to the right into the position in dashes; this causes an increase in stiffness.
The clipped-on reinforcing element, which can be a wire or any kind of section for example and is made of plastic or metal, causes a definable resilience that can be measured when there is lateral stress, depending on the diameter of the wire and the movement of the clips. By u
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Franke Edgar
Pfau Karl-Heinz
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