Chair for a drum

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6672660
  • Patent Number
    6,672,660
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, October 24, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 6, 2004
    21 years ago
  • CPC
  • US Classifications
    Field of Search
    • US
    • 297 1951
    • 297 461
    • 297 4522
    • 297 202
    • 297 19511
    • 297 311
    • 297 42341
    • 297 42345
    • 297 34412
    • 297 201
    • 297 2151
    • 297 21511
    • 297 214
    • 248 1771
    • 248 1885
  • International Classifications
    • B60N238
    • Term Extension
      56
Abstract
A chair having a seat plate supported by legs, the seat plate having a top side with two concaves therein below where a seated person's hip bones project and optionally an additional concave rearward of the two concaves and below where the seated person's coccyx projects. The positions of the concaves are selected to be where a performer on a drum is likely to be seated when playing a drum while seated. The two concaves may be circular or may be elongated in the forward-rearward direction. The seat plate may be circular or it may be a bicycle seat shaped with downward and outward sloping concaves for the femoral thigh regions at the sides and toward the front.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to a drum chair used by a performer when playing a drum.




A drum chair used when a drum is played ordinarily includes nothing similar to a back-rest, etc. that might obstruct a performer's movement since the performer usually moves rapidly or even violently while seated on the chair. Even when such a back-rest may be installed, it is positioned slightly toward the rear so as not to obstruct the movement of the performer. Its size is reduced to an extent such that it may not obstruct the performer's movement. As a result, the body weight of the performer is squarely placed on the drum chair.




DESCRIPTION OF A PRIOR ART EMBODIMENT




An example of a prior art chair is shown in

FIGS. 10 and 11

. The most frequently used drum chair


50


shown in

FIG. 10

has a round seat plate


51


which is almost flat on its top side and the seat plate is supported by legs


55


. The drum chair embodiment


60


shown in

FIG. 11

includes a seat plate


61


of a saddle type with a narrowed front tip. A convex


62


or like upstanding at the rear of the seat plate is intended to promote a feeling of stability when a performer sits on the chair.




There are curved concave regions with a slightly inclined surface where the thighs of the performer rests. As shown, the seat surfaces where the femoral parts or thighs of the performer are placed are usually approximately flat.




Nevertheless, the buttocks


91


of the human body P are not flat, as shown in FIG.


9


. When a performer is seated in a chair, in the skeletal structure, the hip bones


93


at the right and left protrude down at the pelvis and the coccyx


94


also protrudes down. The frame of the human body is surrounded by muscles and the buttocks


91


have a highly complicated curved surface.




As a consequence, the body regions below the hip bones


93


and the coccyx


94


are pressed more intensely by the seat surface of the chair than are the other parts of the buttocks


91


due to the weight of the performer seated in the chair. When a performance lasts a long time, e.g. an ordinary stage performance may last two to three hours and an ordinary recording session may take from seven to eight hours, the performer may become fatigued and may feel pain.




In addition, twin pedals have been used in recent drum performances, requiring a performer to operate two pedals with both legs. The performer may be operating the drum pedals with his heels raised from the floor, requiring that his weight be balanced by the seat surface alone and forcing him to adopt an unstable posture which would increase his fatigue.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The object of the present invention is to eliminate the problems described above.




The invention provides a chair structure with which the performer can perform pleasantly and in a stable posture, reducing fatigue or ache even during a long performance. The top side of the seat plate of the drum chair includes two concaves located below where the hip bones of the performer protrude down at both sides of the rear of the center of the seat plate, giving the seat plate an improved cushioning effect.




In addition, the seat plate of the drum chair may have a single concave below where the coccyx of the performer protrudes and behind the concaves below the hip bones, described above.




In another embodiment of a drum chair both the right and left sides of a bicycle seat shape seat plate are shaped as curved concaves capable of more comfortably holding the femoral regions of both legs of the performer. Alternatively, each curved concave region of the plate is a surface that becomes lower toward the edge.




Other object and features of the invention are described below with reference to the attached drawings.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING(S)





FIG. 1

is an oblique view of a drum chair of the invention.





FIG. 2

is a front view of the seat plate of the chair in FIG.


1


.





FIG. 3

is a cross section along line


3





3


of the seat plate shown in FIG.


1


.





FIG. 4

is a cross section along line


4





4


of the seat plate shown in FIG.


1


.





FIG. 5

is an oblique view of a second embodiment of a drum chair.





FIG. 6

is an oblique view of a third embodiment of a drum chair.





FIG. 7

is an oblique view of a fourth embodiment of a drum chair.





FIG. 8

shows a drum chair from above and indicated the state of a performer sitting.





FIG. 9

is a side view showing the positional relationships of the skeletal structure of a seated performer.





FIG. 10

is an oblique view of an embodiment of a prior art drum chair.





FIG. 11

is an oblique view of another embodiment of a prior art chair.











DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION




The chair


10


of

FIG. 1

for use with a drum according to the invention includes a seat plate


11


which has a cushioning effect. The plate includes two separated concaves


12


and


13


defined into its top side seating surface and disposed below where the hip bones of the performer protrude downward at the right and at the left and to the rear of the center of the seat plate


11


.




When a performer is seated in the chair


10


, his hip bones


93


at both sides protrude downward because of the skeletal structure of the human body, as is shown in FIG.


9


and as described above. The buttock regions below the hip bones


93


are intensely pressed placing a heavy burden on them due to the weight of the performer, the seat surface of the chair and the movement of the seat, thereby causing an intense localized pressure. The performer will feel fatigue and pain because of the concentrated load against the regions below the hip bones especially when a performance lasts a long time. When the performer uses twin pedals, moreover, his posture becomes unstable and his fatigue will increase.




The invention avoids this concentration of the pressure. Fatigue and pain are mitigated and a stable user posture on the seat is maintained by providing the two concaves


12


and


13


below the hip bone regions at those parts of the seat plate both at the right and at the left toward the rear of the center of the seat plate


11


at locations corresponding to the normal regions below where hip bones


93


of the performer protrude.




As is shown in the cross sections in

FIGS. 3 and 4

, the seat plate


11


includes a base material layer


31


for providing a cushioning effect, like urethane or sponge, inside the seat plate. The base layer


31


is surrounded by a synthetic leather or cloth surface


32


that is secured to the base layer by an adhesive agent and the surface


32


is also assembled together with a base plate


33


by pins


34


. Installation assembly


35


receives the legs of the chair.





FIG. 1

shows curved concaves


14


and


15


at the femoral region described below and a convex


19


at the rear of the seat plate. There is a stitched portion


36


of the surface


32


and the leg assembly


40


is attached to the assembly


35


.




The concaves


12


and


13


for the hip bones may be easily formed by creating the concaves in the surface of the base material


31


where the regions under the hip bones press at positions at the right and left and somewhat toward the rear of the center of the seat plate for a performer who sits in a correctly seated posture, as shown in FIG.


8


. The positions of the concaves may be modified, depending upon the shape of the seat plate and/or the preference of the performer.




Each of the concaves


12


and


13


for the hip bones may be circular or oval in its peripheral shape and gradually depressed, like a crater or a dimple, as shown in

FIG. 4

, between two and three centimeters deep at most below the normal top surface


11




a


of the seat plate


11


.




In the second embodiment of

FIG. 5

, the concaves


12


A and


13


A for the hip bones in the chair


10


A are oval in their peripheral shape, with their longer axis extending in the front and rear direction of the seat plate


11


. The oval shape and orientation enable coping with variations in the posture of the performer, who might tend to sit more toward either the front or the rear than the chair designer might expect.




In the third embodiment


10


B for the drum chair shown in

FIG. 6

, concaves


12


B and


13


B are also of an oval shape with the long axis forward and rearward. The concaves are provided in a seat plate


11


B which is normally circular in shape as seen in the prior art.




The

FIGS. 6 and 7

reference numbers corresponding to those in

FIG. 1

are for the same structure.




In the fourth embodiment of the chair


10


C shown in

FIG. 7

, a single additional concave


16


for the region below the coccyx is placed below where the coccyx of the performer P (see coccyx


94


in

FIG. 9

) is situated, rearward of the concaves


12


and


13


toward the rear of the seat plate


11


. A concave


16


below the coccyx enables mitigating fatigue and pain in the vicinity of the coccyx


94


, helping the performer to maintain a satisfactory posture and concentrate on the performance.




In the embodiments of the invention shown in

FIGS. 1

,


5


and


7


, the right and left sides at the front of the seat plate


11


are each formed in the shape of curved concaves


14


and


15


which are capable of holding the femoral part


95


of both legs of the performer. It is preferable for each of the curved concaves


14


and


15


to be formed as a surface C which becomes gradually lower toward the edge of the seat plate, as in FIG.


4


.




Stitching


36


is so placed along the edges of the seat plate


11


to avoid the stitching being felt around the femoral parts. The stitching


36


preferably avoids the curved concaves


14


and


15


.




The curved concaves


14


and


15


in the seat plate


11


for the femoral parts


95


of the performer P enables the weight of the performer to be dispersed over the holding surface that touches the femoral parts. This may mitigate the performer's fatigue while improving his performing posture.




The chair for a drum of the invention has two concaves below the hip bones provided toward the rear of the center of the cushioned seat plate and a single concave below the coccyx of the performer to the rear of the concaves below the hip bones. This enables the performer to perform pleasantly in a stable posture and mitigate fatigue and pain from performing, even when the performance extends over a long period of time.




Although the present invention has been described in relation to particular embodiments thereof, many other variations and modifications and other uses will become apparent to those skilled in the art. It is preferred, therefore, that the present invention be limited not by the specific disclosure herein, but only by the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A chair to receive a seated person having legs and buttocks, the legs having femoral thigh regions, the buttocks having hip bone regions, the chair comprising:a seat plate having a cushioning effect to cushion the buttocks of the person, the seat plate having edge regions and top, front, rear, and lateral sides, the top side of the seat plate being provided with a first set of concave portions positioned to respectively receive the hip bone regions of the buttocks of the person, the top side of the seat plate being further provided with a second set of concave portions positioned forward of the first set of concave portions and toward the front side of the seat plate to respectively receive the femoral thigh regions of the legs of the person, the second set of concave portions extending slightly downwardly and outwardly toward the edge regions of the seat plate.
  • 2. The chair of claim 1, further comprising a third concave formed in the top side of the seat plate and positioned below the coccyx of the person sitting on the seat plate and also located in the seat plate to the rear of the first set of concave portions for the hip bones.
  • 3. The chair of claim 1, wherein the seat plate has right and left sides toward the front of the seat plate which are concavely curved for holding the femoral thigh regions of the legs of the performer sitting on the seat plate with the hip bones generally above the first set of concave portions provided therefor.
  • 4. The chair of claim 3, wherein the seat plate has a bicycle seat shape and narrows toward the front at the right and left sides.
  • 5. The chair of claim 1, wherein the first set of concave portions are round in shape.
  • 6. The chair of claim 1, wherein the first set of concave portions are oval in shape, with the oval having a long axis extending in the forward and rearward direction of the seat plate.
  • 7. The chair of claim 1, further comprising chair legs attached below the seat plate and on which the seat plate is supported.
  • 8. The chair of claim 1, further comprising a convex peripheral region at the rear of the seat plate and behind the first and second concaves.
  • 9. The chair of claim 1, wherein the first set of concave portions are positioned in the seat plate at locations below where the hip bones of a performer on a drum are likely positioned when the performer is sitting on the seat plate for playing a drum.
  • 10. The chair of claim 1, wherein the seat plate has a bicycle seat shape and narrows toward the front at the right and left sides.
  • 11. The chair of claim 1, wherein the seat plate is circular in shape.
  • 12. The chair of claim 1, wherein the first set of concave portions are gradually depressed into the top side of the seat plate.
  • 13. The chair of claim 1, wherein the second set of concave portions extend forward in the seat plate from the first set of concave portions and to the front of the seat plate.
  • 14. The chair of claim 1, wherein concave portions of the first set of concave portions are separated from each other.
  • 15. The chair of claim 1, wherein concave portions of the first set of concave portions are spaced entirely away from the front, rear and lateral sides of the seat plate.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
2001-135273 May 2001 JP
US Referenced Citations (11)
Number Name Date Kind
4183579 Gonzalez y. Rojas Jan 1980 A
4607882 Opsvik Aug 1986 A
4932719 Gonzalez y. Rojas Jun 1990 A
5738326 Liao Apr 1998 A
6030045 Hoshino Feb 2000 A
6045193 Johnson Apr 2000 A
6079775 Lawson Jun 2000 A
6152524 Cox Nov 2000 A
6193309 Gootter et al. Feb 2001 B1
6254180 Nelson Jul 2001 B1
6450572 Kuipers Sep 2002 B1