The invention is designed to help a person that has difficulty standing from a powered seat lift chair. It allows them to maintain more of a level setting position prior to exiting from the chair. The rear section of this seat is adjustable to different angles to allow for different angles in relation to the floor.
Power seat lift chairs that are on the market to assist people that have difficulty stand from a chairs. These types of chairs, such as commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 10,758,439 B1, which is hereby incorporated by reference, have the whole seat that moves upward from the rear of the chair. The seat is generally attached to the front chair support which is mounted between the left chair leg and the right chair leg of the chair with a hinge or rotating device which maintains the front of the seat attached to the chair. As the seat is lifted from the rear it develops a steep angle in relation to the floor. For some persons, that angle may cause them to exit the chair sooner than they would like, resulting in a somewhat unstable standing position. The present invention solves that issue and provides options.
In the present environment of power lift seat chairs, there is a lack of power lift seat chairs with seats that allows for different seat exit positions. The present invention has the ability to adjust the rear section of the seat of a power lift seat chair allowing for different exit angles from the chair. This improvement allows the rear section to remain more level to the floor as the front section of the seat is raised, allowing the person to walk off the chair with the aid of the arm rest.
The standard seat, such as the one in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 10,758,439 B1, needs to be removed by disconnection the power lift device from the seat bottom. Lift the back of the seat up and remove it from the front rotating device. The adjustable angle chair seat of the present invention then needs to be attached to an attachment device that pivotally attaches the front section of the seat to a front chair support and a power lifting device attached to the bottom surface of the front section of the adjustable angle chair seat.
The present invention is designed to help the person using a powered seat lift chair to aid them in standing from the chair. Having a two-piece seat allows different sitting angles, allowing them a choice of the position of the seat which gives them the best sitting and exiting position that best suits their needs.
The following
A hinge (3) connects front section (1) and rear section (2) together. An attachment device (4) that attaches front seat section (1) to the top of a chair seat brace that is attached to the right front chair leg and the left front chair leg in a position designed to support the seat like that of commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 10,758,439 B1, as shown in
Steel support flat bars 6 are designed to lock front seat section (1) and rear seat section (2) together forming a solid horizontal plain, and moveable to allow the front seat section (1) and the rear seat section (2) to obtain a desired angle using the hinge (3).
Brackets (7) guide the movement of flat bars (6) forward and backward to lock the front seat section (1) and the rear seat section (2) into the desired position. Each guide has a set screw to lock the flat bars (6) into the desired positions. An attachment bracket (8) is attached to the bottom of the front seat section (1) for attachment to the lifting device.
The adjustable angle chair seat has two sections, a front section (1) and a rear section (2). The front section consists of approximately ⅔ of the seat area and the rear section is approximately ⅓ of the seat area from front to back. The seat has an approximate length of 18″ from the front of the seat to the back of the seat and a width of 19½″. The front section is pivotally connected to the back section with a hinge (3).
The seat obtains different angles as it is raised from the chair platform. This is accomplished with two bars (5) made of a strong material that have predetermined angles built into the bars. They are attached one on each side of the seat of the front seat section, one on the right side of the seat and one on the left side of the seat extending from front to back. The rear most part of the bar is located approximately 2″ under the rear section of the seat. When bar (6) is locked on front seat section (1) and the seat is raised with the power lift device, the back section will not move up until the angle portion of the bar (5) contacts the rear seat section. That angle is approximately 2″ lower than the portion attached to the front seat section which now places the rear seat section at a more level position to the floor, allowing a flatter and more stable platform for the person to sit on as the seat is being lifted upward. The result being that the person, with the help of the arm rest, can walk out of the chair.
Another feature of the adjustable angle chair seat is being able to lock the front and rear sections together making it a one-piece seat for those that prefer that type of departure from the chair. Two flat strong bars (6) are attached to each side of the seat bottom as shown in
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