The present invention relates to a chair for chairlifts, having at least one seat part which is pivotable about a horizontal axis.
The present invention also relates to a method for pivoting at least one seat part of a chair of a chairlift.
In order to be able to transport passengers safely, chairs of chairlifts have a safety bar. A problem with a closed safety bar is that particularly large passengers may have a space problem between the underside of the closed safety bar and the seat part. The problem cannot be remedied by generally increasing the distance between the seat part and the underside of the closed safety bar since too large an intermediate space would considerably increase the risk of smaller people, especially children, falling. Therefore, for larger passengers, individual adaptation, complying with the regulations in force, is desirable.
In EP 1 721 801 A, this takes place by means of elastic elements on the safety bar, which press from above on the thighs of the passengers and yield elastically in the case of large people. Although the risk of even small passengers slipping through can be minimized as a result, it can give rise to an oppressive feeling for some passengers.
Therefore, the invention is based on the object of creating an apparatus of the type mentioned at the beginning, which affords more comfort to large passengers without reducing safety in the process.
This object is achieved in the case of a chair of the type mentioned at the beginning in that an elastic element is arranged between the seat part and a frame of the chair and pushes the seat part upward.
The object is also achieved by a method of the type mentioned at the beginning in that the seat part is pivoted counter to the force of an elastic element.
A particular advantage of the elastic element in the apparatus according to the invention is that the distance between the seat part and the underside of the safety bar is variable, and so, in particular in the case of larger and generally also relatively heavy people, the elastic element is compressed and the space between the safety bar and the seat part thus becomes larger.
In a preferred embodiment, the elastic element is pretensioned in an upper, unloaded position of the seat part. This position is referred to as the starting position. As a result of the pretension, oscillation or rocking of the elastic element is intended to be reduced to a minimum.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, the pretension of the elastic element in the starting position is greater than a defined weight force of a passenger. If the force of the elastic element is greater than the weight force of a passenger, the seat part will remain in the starting position on account of the elastic element. This is desired in particular in the case of smaller passengers and children, in order not to increase the clear distance.
By means of an actuating device, the seat part can be pivoted into a lower entry and/or exit position counter to the force of the elastic element. In this case, a seat face of the seat part forms, in the lower entry and/or exit position, an approximately horizontal plane and allows particularly smaller passengers to get on and off more easily.
Within the scope of the invention, provision can also be made for the seat part to be lockable in the entry and/or exit position. Throughout the passage through a station, the seat part can thus be fixed entirely in its comfortable lower entry and/or exit position.
In a particularly preferred embodiment, in order to lock the seat part in the lower position, provision is made for a locking element connected to the seat part to be connected to the actuating device via a control element, wherein, furthermore, the locking element connected to the seat part is lockable in the entry and/or exit position by way of a blocking element.
In a further advantageous embodiment of the invention, the blocking element is movable into a locking position and into a releasing position by the control element, wherein the locking position is understood to be the position in which the seat part is locked in its lower entry and/or exit position, and the releasing position is understood to be the position in which the seat part can be pivoted.
In the releasing position of the blocking element, the force of the elastic element will automatically attempt to pivot the seat part with a passenger located thereon into the upper position or starting position and to limit the space between the underside of the safety bar and the seat part to a defined minimum.
Body weight or height and the resultant space requirement between the underside of the closed safety bar and the seat part are generally mutually dependent variables. People with a body weight of, for example, 90 kg generally have either longer legs or bigger thighs than lighter people. In order to adapt the space requirement between the underside of the safety bar and the seat part to the length of the legs or to the thighs of a passenger, the elastic element is dimensioned such that, with a passenger who has a body weight of, for example, less than 80 kg, the seat part is pivoted back completely from the lower entry and/or exit position into the starting position after the seat part has been released. The space between the underside of the closed safety bar and the seat face is thus reduced to a defined minimum and the risk of smaller people slipping through between the safety bar and seat part is reduced.
For a passenger with a body weight of, for example, 95 kg, it is possible to assume that they require more space between the underside of the closed safety bar and the seat part in order to sit comfortably. The elastic element is in this case dimensioned such that the seat part does not pivot back into the starting position after being released. The passenger therefore has more space under the safety bar.
When seat parts of a chair are separately pivotable, a larger and relatively heavy passenger thus has more space between the underside of the closed safety bar and the seat part than a smaller passenger sitting next to them. While ensuring safety for smaller and older passengers and possibly making it easier for them to get on and/or off, the comfort particularly for larger passengers is considerably improved.
Further preferred embodiments of the invention are the subject matter of the remaining dependent claims.
Further features and advantages of the invention can be gathered from the following description of a preferred exemplary embodiment of the invention with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The drive (not illustrated in the drawings) of the actuating device has for example a lever which is arranged on a support bar of the chair 1, as is known in principle for example from EP 1 780 091 A. The type of drive of the actuating device is, however, not limited to a mechanical apparatus, but can also be an electric or other drive.
In
In
If use is made for example of a drive as described in EP 1 780 091 A, the lever of the drive is actuated by means of a control rail in a station of the chairlift. The tilting element 6 is actuated in particular in an entry and/or exit area of the station. Directly before the exit area, the lever is actuated via the control rail and the seat part 4 is pivoted into the lower exit position. Throughout the time spent in the exit area, the lever bears against the control rail. After the exit area has been left, the seat part 4 pivots back up into the starting position at the end of the control rail. Immediately before the entry area, the lever is actuated again via a control rail and the seat part 4 is pivoted downward into the entry position. While passing through the entry area, it is easier for the passengers to sit down on the chair 1 on account of the pivoted position of the seat part 4. After the entry area has been left, the control rail also ends and the seat part 4 can pivot up in the case of small and average people or remains down in the case of heavier people.
In a preferred embodiment, the seat part 4 can be locked in the entry and exit position throughout the passage through the station by way of a dead-center locking mechanism on the lever. Immediately after the chair 1 enters the station, the lever is actuated only once and locked by the dead-center locking mechanism. Only immediately before the station is exited is the lever actuated again via a control rail and the dead-center locking mechanism released. The seat part 4 is then no longer locked and can pivot up.
In an alternative embodiment of the invention, the tilting element 6 can be dispensed with and the Bowden cable 5 or a linkage of the drive or the drive itself is directly connected to the seat parts 4 and pivots the seat parts 4 into the lower position. In order to keep the seat parts 4 in the lower entry and/or exit position, the seat part can be locked for example via the drive of the actuating device, as described above.
The actuating device can consist of the same components as described above.
In order to pivot the seat part 4 counter to the spring 2 with the embodiment according to the invention in
In addition to the opening 13, the control element 14 has a defined control cam 15 against which the blocking element 11 bears under spring force and is guided. By means of the control cam 15, the blocking element 11 located in the locking position is deflected out of the recess 16 in the locking element 10 and thus the seat part 4 is released. To this end, the control element 14 has to be moved to the left in the direction of the arrow 21 via the Bowden cable 5 and the tilting element. The defined control cam 15 is in this case formed such that the blocking element 11 bearing against the control element 14 is moved out of the recess 16. The bolt 12 is unloaded in this case and is located between the two ends of the opening 13 or the control slot thereof, such that the seat part 4 can move up by way of the force of the spring 2.
In a further development of the embodiment in
In all embodiments of
In the embodiment in
The use of a blocking element 11 to lock the seat part 4 in the entry and/or exit position is not absolutely necessary in the embodiment in
A mechanical reversal between the locking element 10 and the control element 14 is of course possible inasmuch as the bolt 12, which is fastened to the locking element 10, is then located on the control element 14 and engages in an opening in the locking element 10.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 451/2015 | Jul 2015 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2016/066421 | 7/11/2016 | WO | 00 |