An embodiment of the present invention relates to an airbag module.
An embodiment of the present invention may be applied to advantage to a front passenger airbag, to which the following description refers purely by way of example.
Modern cars are being equipped with an ever-increasing number of active and passive safety devices. The passenger compartment, in particular, is being installed with an increasing number of airbags to provide the best possible crash protection of all the occupants.
Almost all cars are now manufactured with a front passenger airbag, which is stowed in a housing formed in the dashboard and closed at the front by a cover hinged to the dashboard. Currently manufactured cars have two types of airbag covers: exposed, i.e., visible in the trim; or concealed, i.e., integrated invisibly in the trim. In cars with the cover integrated in the framework, the trim material may be fabric, leather, or plastic. To allow the airbag cover to open in the event of a crash, the trim material around the cover is weakened by an incision on the inside (i.e., invisibly) to form a shear line running along the opening sides of the cover.
In the event of a crash, the front passenger airbag expands and blows open the cover, shearing the trim material along the inner shear line. In the event of a head-on crash, and particularly when not wearing a seat belt, the passenger may be thrown against the dashboard and injured by the cover as it is blown open by the expanding airbag. To protect the passenger from injury caused by opening of the front airbag cover, it has been proposed to make the cover in two hinged flaps.
A cover divided into two flaps, however, is relatively weak in the middle, at the dividing line between the two flaps, and is therefore difficult to make so that it is strong enough in the middle not to give way or at least yield partly when pressed from the outside. In this connection, it is important to bear in mind that normal use of the dashboard requires that the front passenger airbag cover be capable of withstanding fairly high external pressure (of around 1000 N).
In addition, more and more use is being made of airbags with two separate, asymmetrical inflation charges, i.e., with different inflation capacities (e.g., a 30/70% or 40/60% inflation capacity distribution). These provide for adjusting inflation of the airbag to the intensity of a head-on crash, but, when used together, the two charges may result in uneven inflation of the airbag. In other words, the higher-inflation-charge part of the airbag is inflated more than the lower-inflation-charge part.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,451,075A1, which is incorporated by reference, discloses a closure for an airbag assembly including a flexible outer skin and a layer of foam material covering a retainer member having an air bag deployment opening therein closed by a moveable door that is overlapped with the retainer member to support the door against movement inwardly of the retainer member while providing free hinging movement thereof with respect to the retainer member for stressing and separating the layer of foam and the outer skin for forming a deployment path therethrough for the air bag.
An embodiment of the present invention is an airbag module designed to eliminate the above drawbacks, and which at the same time is cheap and easy to produce.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
As shown in
As shown in
In addition to central edge 12a, top flap 6 has a lateral edge 12b which rests on the framework of trim 5. Similarly, in addition to central edge 13a, intermediate flap 8 has a lateral edge 13b which rests on the framework of trim 5; and, in addition to central edge 14a, bottom flap 10 has a lateral edge 14b which rests on the framework of trim 5.
Because top flap 6 rests centrally on intermediate flap 8 and bottom flap 10, and intermediate flap 8 rests centrally on bottom flap 10, flaps 6, 8 and 10 open in a precise compulsory sequence: top flap 6 opens first, followed by intermediate flap 8, and finally bottom flap 10. In other words, resting on intermediate flap 8, top flap 6 opens to allow intermediate flap 8 to open; and, resting centrally on bottom flap 10, intermediate flap 8 opens to allow bottom flap 10 to open.
The three flaps 6, 8, 10 resting centrally one on top of another, top flap 6 (resting on both flaps 8 and 10) opens first; intermediate flap 8 (resting on bottom flap 10 and supporting top flap 6) opens second; and bottom flap 10 (supporting both flaps 6 and 8) opens last.
In an embodiment shown in the attached drawings, top flap 6 is in the shape of a right-angle trapezium with its major base hinged along axis of rotation 7; intermediate flap 8 is in the shape of a right-angle trapezium with its major base hinged along axis of rotation 9 (more specifically, intermediate flap 8 is specularly symmetrical with top flap 6); and bottom flap 10 is in the shape of an isosceles triangle with its base hinged along axis of rotation 11.
Because flaps 6, 8, 10 of cover 4 rest centrally on one another and at the same time rest laterally on the framework of trim 5, cover 4 is extremely strong centrally and capable of withstanding severe pressure (even over 1000 N) with no appreciable yield.
In an embodiment shown in
Given the above arrangement of inflation charges 15 and 16 of airbag 2, when both inflation charges 15 and 16 are activated, the gas produced by inflation charge 16 at the initial inflation stage cannot expand upwards, on account of bottom flap 10 over inflation charge 16 only being able to open after top flap 6 and intermediate flap 8. As a result, at the initial inflation stage and until bottom flap 10 starts to open, the gas produced by inflation charge 16 flows towards top flap 6, thus balancing the inflation capacities of inflation charges 15 and 16, and so inflating airbag 2 symmetrically.
In a different embodiment not shown, cover 4 of airbag 2 comprises only top flap 6 and intermediate flap 8, both of which are triangular; and inflation charge 16 is located under intermediate flap 8.
An embodiment of cover 4 as described may have numerous advantages it may be cheap and easy to produce; compared with traditional covers, it may reduce potential interference of flaps 6, 8, 10 with the windscreen as the flaps open; it may safeguard against the passengers head coming into contact with flaps 6, 8, 10 as they open; and it may have a much more rigid central area.
Moreover, an embodiment of cover 4 as described provides for symmetrically inflating airbag 2, even when using asymmetrical inflation charges, by simply locating the lower-power inflation charge 15 under top flap 6 which opens first, so that part of the inflation pressure produced by the higher-power inflation charge 16 is transferred to top flap 6, thus balancing the inflation pressure and so inflating airbag 2 symmetrically.
From the foregoing it will be appreciated that, although specific embodiments have been described herein for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without deviating from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. Furthermore, where an alternative is disclosed for a particular embodiment, this alternative may also apply to other embodiments even if not specifically stated.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2008A000013 | Jan 2008 | IT | national |
The present application is a national phase application filed pursuant to 35 USC §371 of International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/IB2009/000015, filed Jan. 8, 2009; which further claims the benefit of Italian Patent Application BO2008A000013, filed Jan. 9, 2008; all of the foregoing applications are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB09/00015 | 1/8/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/6/2011 |