The present invention concerns a back support device for a backrest, especially in order to heighten and adapt a backrest in a children's chair. The back support device is suitable for a children's chair with existing low backrest and side pieces, possibly with the opportunity for vertical and horizontal adjustment of the seat plate and foot plate. Further, the invention concerns a back support and safety bow set for a children's chair and the use of a backrest support device and the set in a children's chair.
It is well known that small children, that is children such as in the age when they may sit by themselves (about 6-7 month) until they master sitting safely in a children's chair (about 2 years), need additional support for sitting properly in the chair. The support helps the child in relieving muscles and the skeleton and hinders the child in bending far out of the chair, possibly safety equipment hindering the child from falling out of children's chairs is used in addition.
In order to obtain maximum support for the child it is known to shape mould the seat of a children's chair and to integrate a cross bow and crotch bar. The disadvantage with shape moulded chair seats is that the seat may not be varied in relation to the size and age of the child. Often, such a seat is combined with a harness in order to secure the child from climbing out of the chair. However, the harness does not provide the extra physical support which may be necessary.
In later years, a development has evolved in the direction of more countries and regions having their own safety measures for equipment to be used by children, such as in children's chairs. This must be taken into account in the development of new children's chairs, but it may be difficult to adapt chairs which have been produced for a long period before such safety provisions were put into force. It is especially difficult to perform such adaptations on chairs that have already been sold for many years, without making physical interventions on the chairs. There are thousands of such chairs around in homes. Further, it is a disadvantage continuously having to change the production of such chairs as changes are made in regulations and to put up production lines adapted to each country and their special regulations. It would therefore also be an environmental advantage to be able to adapt a standard children's chair with adaptive equipment making it simple and reasonable to update the chair without having to throw away the entire chair when changes in regulations happen.
This is for example the case with the children's chair Tripp Trapp® which was developed as early as in 1972 and patented in 1976 and which still is a very popular children's chair in many countries.
The Tripp Trapp® chair is designed to be adjusted in coherence with the body size of the child and therefore has a seat plate and a foot plate which may be moved to different height positions in that they glide in tracks in the side pieces and are locked by tightening the distance between the side pieces. The sitting plate may further be adjusted in the depth position in that a plate is pushed in relation to the backrest which is permanent. The backrest consists of two parallel crosspieces with about constant height and distance in relation to each other. Both crosspieces are arched towards the back in the middle portion to adapt to the users back.
For the Tripp Trapp® chair a children's safety bow was also developed for use with the smallest children as described in Norwegian patent NO 132.782 (Petter Opsvik). The safety bow fits in thereto adapted tracks on the inside of the side pieces, in the same height as the back support device, and is arched forward to define an opening for the child together with the back support device. In installing the safety bow, the safety bow is compressed to slip each of the ends into the tracks in the side pieces and the safety bow thereby locks itself in the correct position by its own tension, without the use of tools of any kind. Possibly, a crotch strap may be used which is threaded onto the safety bow and which is fastened via a hole in the seat plate.
It has also proven difficult to adapt existing chairs and children's equipment to new effective demands, if the above mentioned original functions of the chair are to be maintained at the same time. This is for example the case of the demand for a tall and adapted back on children's chairs to prevent the child in throwing itself backward and hurt the dorsal vertebra or falling out.
From DE 9612828 a combined back support and seat plate padding device is known for use in a children's chair similar to the chair mentioned above. The device has back support with a top part extending above the back rest with a rear sleeve for threading onto the back rest, alternatively a flap for wrapping around the rear side of the back rest and reattaching to the padding device by a zipper. The device being one continuous piece is limited in the adjustment of the seat height as a low position will strain the transition between the seat plate portion and the back support portion. Further, the mounting of the device without zipper would necessitate demounting of the chair, with the help of tools. However, by using a zipper, the device might easily be tampered by a child, thus jeopardizing the functioning of the device.
It is therefore an objective to provide equipment as mentioned above so that the owners of older chairs and new chair may upgrade their chairs according to changes in regulations and standards. Further, that the chair does not need to be equipped as a children's chair for the smallest children when this is not the users situation, namely when the chair is used by a child over the age of 3 or by an adult. It is also an objective to avoid physical adaptations, such as making holes in any of the parts or inserting screws that leave spoiling marks in the chair which will be visible when there no longer is use for the back support device or the safety bow. Such interventions may further result in the risk that the user makes adaptations in the wrong manner, so that the safety is not kept intact. It is therefore an objective with the invention to make the fastening of the additional equipment as intuitive and simple as possible, without the use of tools, and upholding safety at the same time.
In order to attain these objectives the applicant has developed a back support device which solves the above mentioned problems.
The present invention thus concerns a back support device for use in a children's chair wherein the children's chair comprises at least one backrest, two side pieces, one seat plate and one safety bow with ends, the safety bow being detachably fastened to the side pieces and the backrest or the side pieces having at least one opening or groove each, the back support device having a top part extending beyond the backrest in the height direction and wherein the back support device further comprises: left and right arms for at least partly inlay into the opening(s) or groove(s) in the backrest or the side pieces; wherein parts of the arms are locked in said opening(s) or groove(s) by the safety bow.
The invention further concerns the use of the back support device above in a children's chair, a children's set for a children's chair comprising such a back support device and a safety bow, and the use of the children's set in a children's chair.
The invention will now be described in further detail by the help of examples of embodiments and the attached drawings, none of which are meant to limit the scope of the invention which is defined only by the appended claims.
As may be seen from
The latter feature has a fastening function which is apparent from
The squeezing of the arms 63 in the gap between the upper and lower crosspiece 3 and 4 is shown in closer detail in
In
The hooks 64 and 74 are one example of fastening means which may be used to lock the back support device to the crosspiece(s) or the backrest. Alternatively other fastening means may be used as known by the person skilled in the art.
The torsion rigidity of the back support device is of course dependent on what material it is made of, as well as the shape, as shown in the embodiments above. The back support device may as a starting point be made in any material such as wood, metal, plastic, reinforced plastic, foamed plastic or a composite material, and preferably plastic. The material should own torsion rigidity and a strength which secure that the fixing points, that is, the arms 63, 73, the hooks 64, 74 and the claws 65, 75 do not break under normal load. Alternatively, several different materials may be used in the back support device, such as a laminated assembly where the front side of the back support device has a padded quality, while the rear material, or a core, has a stiffening effect. Possibly, the safety bow 100, may be made of the same material and contain the same quality, such as a padding for example.
For comfort and safety reasons it may be an advantage that the back support device contains a certain flexibility. The flexibility may lead to the child not hurting its back, neck, and head if it leans backward. The back support device may also preferably absorb the force if the child should throw itself backward in a sudden movement and thereby also hinder that the chair tips backwards, for example by padding as mentioned above. Under such cases it is however also a danger that parts of the rear side of the back support device will lift itself somewhat away from the crosspieces 3 and 4 as the back support device may be strained in an arch. A danger thereby arises for the child to get a finger in between the back support device and the cross pieces 3 or 4 and pinch itself when the pressure on the back support device subsides.
In order to avoid pinching of fingers or the likes, one or more spacers are arranges on the backside of the back support device as shown in
In
In
The spacers 86, 96 may have any form and any number according to what is practical, preferable and/or aesthetical. In the embodiments over four spacers are shown, two for each crosspiece 3, 4. Alternatively the spacers may be formed as long ledges, such as between two and two of the shown spacers, either in the vertical or horizontal direction. Alternatively a large spacer covering a corresponding, smaller or larger area on the backside of the back support device may be used. The essence is that the spacer(s) is(are) not positioned too close to the side edges of the back support device so that the child may get a finger between the spacer(s) and the backrest 3, 4 and pinch itself if the back support device is lifted somewhat from the backrest.
As shown in the figures of the above embodiments, especially the top part of the back support device may be varied in different shapes sand looks, such as tall, low, narrow or wide shaped, as well as rounded, oval, round or square shaped. Most important is that the height and shape provides sufficient support for the child's back, neck and possibly head and that the shape is not suitable for the child hurting itself or moving outside of the support area defined by the shape. Any form and height of the back support device may be shaped to satisfy the safety regulations of different countries and regions. The shape may also be altered with changes in such regulations and makes it easy to renew only the back support device, without having to change the entire chair or parts of the chair. This solution is of course also preferable in terms of production, transport and environment.
In the embodiments the chair 1 has an original backrest, consisting of two horizontal parallel cross pieces 3 and 4 constituting a continuous opening with a defined height. However, the opening may just as well consist of two separate openings in the backrest or the side pieces of the chair, such as two parallel grooves for example, with a defined height and possibly a defined width. The openings need neither be continuous, but may be grooves such as tracks which makes locking possible by squeezing of the arms of the back support device with the safety bow and which hinder movement by friction.
The advantage with the back support device according to the invention is thereby that it may be used on an existing chair, such as a Tripp Trapp® chair or other chairs, without making physical changes on any parts of the chair, or demand the use of fixing means, such as screws. The back support device is simply hooked onto the backrest by the help of the existing components only and is squeezed tight in the side edges with the existing safety bow. The back support device does not hinder adjustment of the chair, such as height adjustment and/or depth adjustment of the seat plate, and the original functions of the chair are thereby attended to. The back support device may easily be removed, possibly together with the safety bow, or be replaced, or moved to another corresponding chair when it is no longer needed in the first chair.
Another advantage with the back support device according to the invention is that all necessary fastening organs for fastening in a children's chair may be integrated in the back support device, as shown in the figures, without the need for extra loose parts or the use of tools. The invention thus also concerns the use of the back support device in a s children's chair, and especially in a Tripp Trapp® chair.
As the back support device according to the invention is locked by the help of the safety bow 100, it may be advantageous to gather these parts in a set for the consumer. The present invention therefore also concerns a children's set for a children's chair comprising a safety bow and a back support device according to the invention, alternatively together with a children's harness and/or a seat cover and backrest cover, as well as the use of such a set in a children's chair, especially in a Tripp Trapp® chair.
The above mentioned alternatives and features may of course be used in combination with each other.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20060918 | Feb 2006 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO2007/000070 | 2/23/2007 | WO | 00 | 8/22/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/097636 | 8/30/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
132762 | Haupt | Nov 1872 | A |
375471 | Binder | Dec 1887 | A |
769495 | Schroeder | Sep 1904 | A |
2008392 | Heller | Jul 1935 | A |
D362554 | Grundner | Sep 1995 | S |
D365449 | Wood | Dec 1995 | S |
5860696 | Opsvik et al. | Jan 1999 | A |
D590608 | Ebina | Apr 2009 | S |
D599143 | Opsvik | Sep 2009 | S |
D614893 | Opsvik | May 2010 | S |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
9312828 | Nov 1993 | DE |
9530360 | Nov 1995 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090224582 A1 | Sep 2009 | US |