The invention relates to a tongue plate assembly for a seat belt system and, more particularly to a tongue plate assembly having an anti-rattle construction and a method for making the same.
Tongue plate assemblies that latch into buckles for securing a seat belt about an occupant of a vehicle seat are usually made from a stamped-metal tongue plate in which the tongue plate has a hard plastic insert located at an elongated, laterally extending opening in a wide portion of a plate body for the seat belt webbing. In many seat belts systems, the tongue plate assembly typically is positioned between the side trim of the vehicle and the outboard side of the vehicle seat when in the unlatched or stowed condition. In some recent model vehicles, there has been a gradual reduction in the amount of space between the side of the vehicle seat and the side trim of the vehicle interior. In some instances, the seat belt twists and positions an edge of the tongue plate assembly to engage a pillar or side rim in the vehicle. Accordingly, when the vehicle is undergoing rough ride conditions, the tongue plate assembly is more likely to shake and vibrate on the belt webbing and engage against the hard side trim panel in the vehicle interior generating undesirable noise in the vehicle compartment.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,837,519 (incorporated by reference herein) is directed to a non-cinching tongue plate assembly having a latch plate with a coating of hard plastic material over molded onto the plate. In a cinch tongue plate assembly, a slidable cinch member or portion is a distinct, discrete member which is slidably mounted for movement relative to the tongue plate body to cinch or grip the belt passing through the assembly such as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,480,854 and 4,588,207 (both incorporated by reference herein). As described in the latter patent, a slidable cinch member is free falling along the belt until the seat belt is latched; and after latching, the cinch portion grips the belt to limit free transfer between the shoulder belt portion and the lap portion. In a typical cinch-type tongue plate assembly, the slidable cinch member has top and bottom sides extending over the top and bottom sides of the tongue plate and has outer side edge portions wrapped about the outer side edges of the tongue plate. Thus, there is a need for providing noise reducing material on the cinch member, and particularly the side edges thereof which are projecting laterally outwardly relative to the tongue plate body.
The non-cinch, tongue plate assembly of the '519 patent lacks a slidable clinch member slidably mounted on the tongue plate body. In the '519 patent, it is stated that while the hard plastic is being molded onto the tongue plate and is still warm, a soft plastic over molded onto the warm, hard plastic material on the plate. While providing noise reduction, over molding two coatings of plastic material onto the latch plate assembly undesirably increases the manufacturing costs for the latch plate. In this regard, two insert molds need to be employed into which the operator has to manually load the part onto which the over mold is to be applied. So in the latch plate assembly disclosed by the '519 patent, there is a first insert mold in which the operator places the plate body for having the hard plastic over molded thereon. Thereafter, with the hard plastic still warm, the operator removes the plate body with the warm over mold of hard plastic, and places it in the next insert mold. This insert mold is then cycled for over molding the soft plastic material onto the warm, hard plastic material. As is apparent, the two insert molds require significant operator intervention for generating the over molded latch plate assembly of the '519 patent.
Accordingly, there is a need for an anti-rattle, tongue plate assembly having a distinct, discrete cover member, particularly for a cinch type of tongue assembly having a slidable cinch member on a tongue plate body and having an anti-rattle construction. The tongue plate assembly with the distinct, discrete cover member may improve the manufacturing cost efficiencies for the anti-rattle construction.
In accordance with a disclosed embodiment, an anti-rattle tongue plate assembly is provided that may include a cover member which is a component distinct from the plate body and which has a soft material at predetermined locations on the cover body to reduce noise. That is, the softer material on the distinct cover member endeavors to minimize noise when the tongue plate assembly engages against interior components of the vehicle such as during rough ride conditions. The cover member may be made into a distinct component to be operably connected to the tongue plate body.
The cover member may be a seat belt cinching member of hard material, such as a hard plastic, having soft plastic or other anti-rattling material thereon to reduce noise. The cinching cover member may be slidably mounted on the tongue plate and may be provided with soft material at predetermined locations to reduce noise due to the impacts with portions of the vehicle.
In one of the embodiments illustrated herein, the slidable cinch member extends about all four sides of the tongue plate and the outer side edges of the slidable member are provided with the anti-rattle material. The rear side of the slidable cinch member may also be provided with an anti-rattle, soft material. The anti-rattle material may be a continuous piece of soft molded plastic having a central strip extending across the rear side of the cinch member and having end portions which are joined at opposite ends of the strip and which extend laterally along the respective side edges of the cinch member. The soft material may substantially cover the entire lateral side of the cinch member. In one embodiment, the soft material may also be extended to cover the four corners of the slidable, cinch member.
In accordance with an embodiment, an anti-rattle cinch tongue plate assembly is provided, which has a cinch cover plate or member which is slidably mounted on the plate body and has a slot through which the seat belt passes. The cinch cover member may be cinched against the plate body and may be provided with a soft material that is bonded and mechanically joined to the cover member. In an embodiment, the cover member may be a hard material, such as a first plastic, and the soft material may be another plastic material which is over molded onto the hard material and may have interfacing portions mechanically retaining the soft material on the cover member. The outer edge of the cinchable cover member may be provided with a mechanical groove in which a soft cover member is positioned for reducing the noise when the cover member comes into engagement with a hard plastic material side trim of the vehicle.
The features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description, appended claims, and the accompanying exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings, which are briefly described below.
A tongue plate assembly 10 is shown in the drawings. The tongue plate assembly 10 may have a tongue plate body 12 which is usually formed of a piece of hard metal and which is formed with a wide portion 14 having a slot 15 for receiving a seat belt 16 which passes through the slot. The plate body 12 may also be provided with a narrow latching portion 18 formed with the slot or opening 20 for being latched to a buckle 32. A hard plastic cover member 22, which is a distinct component from the plate or tongue body 12, is made of a hard material such as plastic material and is mounted on the wide portion 14 of the plate body 12. The hard material for the cinch cover member is usually a plastic material, such as nylon or acetyl material.
The cover member 22 may also be a cinch member that is slidably mounted on the plate body 12 in such a manner that the entire tongue plate assembly 10 is free-falling in the sense that it may be pulled and slid downwardly by the user when buckling up in a three point suspension as shown in
In order to engage the tongue assembly 10 in a locking engagement with the seat belt buckle 32, the occupant of the seat grasps the tongue assembly 10 and pulls the assembly 10 downwardly in a lateral direction across the shoulder and lap of the occupant until the tongue is brought into a latching engagement with the buckle 32. During this downward pull, sufficient webbing 16 is pulled out to define the lap engaging band or portion 42 and a shoulder engaging band or portion 44 about the occupant. The user may grasp the sides 54 of the cover member 22 when pulling the seat belt downwardly to buckle up, and the webbing 16 freely slides past the cinch cover member 22 which is in a non-cinching position during this bucking operation. When the tongue plate assembly 10 engages with the buckle 32, the pull of the retractor (not shown) exerts an upwards force on the shoulder belt 44 pulling the cover member 22 upwardly and outwardly toward the turning loop. Thus, the cover member 22 is carried such that the cinching surface 22a on the cinch cover member 22 engages and pushes the belt into a snubbing engagement with a liner surface 21a on the stationary liner 21 on the stationary tongue plate 12. More specifically, the shoulder belt portion 44 comes across the top side of the tongue plate assembly 10 across the upper side of the liner 21, past the cinching surface 22a on the cinch bar or member 22b and through the slot 15 in the tongue plate body 12, and across a lower pull bar 22c on the cinch cover member 22 to the lap belt portion 42. The upward and outboard pull on the lower pull bar 22c of the cinch cover member 22 by the shoulder belt portion 44 forces the cinch surface 22a on the top plate 22b of the cinch cover member 22 to also slide upwardly to cinch and push the top side of the belt and force the lower side of the belt against the cinching surface 21a on the liner 21. Thus, the pull of the upper shoulder belt slides the cover member 22 to slide along the plate body 12 into the snubbing position and to shift the cinching surface 22a towards the fixed, stationary cinching surface 21a on the liner 21 so that the belt is cinched or gripped between the cinching surface 22a and 21a. In this cinching position, the belt is gripped so that there is less likelihood of a belt transfer between the shoulder portion and the lap portion when the buckle is engaged and cinched. This arrangement is in contrast to the tongue plate disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,837,519 where there is no slidable cinch member and no cinching of the belt.
In one embodiment, the tongue plate assembly 10 is formed to be of an anti-rattle construction by having the cover member 22 being formed of a hard material, which is a discrete or distinct slidable component which shifts relative to the tongue plate body 12. The cover member 22 may have softer material 50 at predetermined locations on the slidable cover member 22 to reduce noise due to impacts with portions of the vehicle body.
The cinch cover member 22 may include at least one locking groove, and the soft material is over molded on the cover member 22 and into the locking groove for binding and mechanically retaining the soft material on the cover member. The cover member 22 may have soft material covering the lateral sides 54 of the cover member 22, as seen in
In the embodiment shown in
In the method of forming the anti-rattle tongue plate assembly, the tongue plate body 12 is formed and the hard insert liner 21 is attached thereto. The cover cinch member 22 that slides on the tongue plate body 12 is formed as a distinct plastic molded part of hard material and the soft material 50 is molded and mechanically secured to the slidable cinch cover member 22 which is then mounted onto the tongue plate body 12 with the cover member 22 in which the soft material 50 may be positioned to prevent rattling when the assembly is installed in the vehicle. In this embodiment, the cover member 22 may be formed by molding the hard plastic material and then the cover member 22 is placed in an insert mold and the soft material 50 is over molded onto the molded cover member 22. Thereafter, the slidable cinch cover member 22 with the soft material 50 thereon is assembled onto the tongue plate body 12 to complete the tongue plate assembly.
The soft member 50 may include a center strip 50b on the exterior side lower pull bar 22c which extends across the underside of the cinch cover member 22 and which faces outwardly for engagement with the vehicle side trim or the like. This center strip 50b may be provided to reduce noise because the soft material 50 may engage the side trim of the vehicle rather than the hard material. The side strips or areas 50a of the soft material may be joined integrally at and to the opposite ends of the central strip 50b of the soft material and are adapted to substantially encompass the entire hard material side edges 54 of the slidable cinch cover member 22. This arrangement provides a soft material surface for the cinch cover member 22 such that the side edges substantially dampen noise if the buckle becomes twisted and if the side edges are brought into engagement with the trim. The corners of the slidable cinch cover member 22 may also be provided with soft material 50c for noise reduction.
The soft material 50 may be interlocked by a mechanical locking groove with the hard material of the cinch cover member 22. For this purpose, the cross-section through the central strip 50b of the soft material, as shown in
The mechanical interlock may be provided between the soft material 50 and the hard material at the sides 54 of the cinch cover member 22 as may be best be understood from
Turning now to the interlock construction shown in
As best seen in
Referring now in greater detail to the liner 21 which is shown in
The liner 21 may be applied to the tongue plate body 12 by slightly deforming the liner 21 and sliding along the tongue plate body 12 to position the channel 95 for insertion of the rear wall 15a of the tongue plate body 12 into the channel 95. Then, the upstanding rim 92 is inserted into the slot 15 in the tongue plate body 12 and then the nibs 96 are snapped into the holes 99 of the tongue plate body 12.
Turning now to the slidable cinch cover member 22, it may be formed with a hard plastic material in a one piece construction and may be provided with an upwardly extending protrusion 104 that prevents the slidable cinch cover member from sliding off the tongue plate body. The slidable cinch cover member is slidably mounted onto the liner 21 and onto the tongue plate body 12 with a flexing of the pull bar 22c and a sliding of the protrusion 104 which projects upwardly from the cinch bar 22b into the slot 105 in the upstanding rim 92 on the liner insert 21. This configuration assists in guiding the slide for straight travel which is also guided by the inturned side edges of the sides of the slide as will be described hereinafter.
As best seen in
The cinch cover member 22 is guided for sliding on the tongue plate body 12 by grooves 112 and 114 on the opposite sides of the cinch cover member. A leaf spring 116, as best seen in
The hard and soft materials may be moldable materials. The hard material may be a plastic material such as nylon or acetyl material. The soft material may be a cushioning material such as an elastomeric, vinyl material, or rubberized material. Manifestly, other materials may be used for the anti-rattle tongue plates described herein.
While there have been illustrated and described particular embodiments of the present invention, it would be appreciated that numerous changes and modifications will occur to those skilled in the art, and it is intended in the appended claims to cover all those changes and modifications which fall within the true spirit and scope of the present invention.
This application claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/715,032 filed on Sep. 8, 2005.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60715032 | Sep 2005 | US |