This disclosure relates to chairs, in particular office chairs, allowing motion of a seat support relative to a chair column.
Rocker mechanisms for office chairs are known from the prior art. These are assemblies of relatively simple construction in the seat substructure of chairs in which a backrest support is rigidly connected to a seat support of the chair. The seat support-backrest support combination thus formed can, by means of the rocker mechanism, which connects the seat support-backrest support combination to the chair vertical column, be pivoted rearward about a pivot axis running perpendicular to the chair longitudinal direction when the user of the chair leans on the backrest. Only very simple movements can be realized by means of rocker mechanisms of said type. Thus, when the occupant leans rearwardly, both the back and seat tilt, maintaining the same angle therebetween.
Further, synchronous rocker mechanisms are known from the prior art. These are to be understood to mean assemblies in the seat substructure of chairs, which assemblies serve to realize a coupled-together kinematic mechanism which provides a certain movement of the seat part and backrest relative to one another. By means of these synchronous mechanisms, while both the seat part and the backrest are moved, the movement may be in a different controlled path. On the seat support there is mounted the seat, which is generally provided with a cushioned seat surface. The backrest support, which customarily extends rearward and upwardly relative to the seat support, bears the backrest of the chair.
To realize the desired synchronous movement of seat support and backrest support, it is customarily the case in such synchronous mechanisms that the seat support and backrest support are articulately coupled, either directly to one another or with the aid of additional coupling elements. Such synchronous mechanisms are used in particular in office chairs. They are generally of complex construction, expensive to produce and cumbersome to assemble.
The present disclosure provides a chair that, in a relatively simple manner in terms of construction, exhibits the same or approximately the same functionality as a chair equipped with a conventional synchronous mechanism.
A chair according to the present disclosure may include a seat support connected to a backrest support. The backrest support may be rotatably connected to a rear part of a base frame, whereby a pivot axis is defined about which the backrest support is pivotable. The seat support may be connected to a front part of the base frame by at least one four-joint coupling mechanism (sometimes referred to herein as a double motion link mechanism), whereby the seat support is moved in a defined movement path in the chair longitudinal direction during, and responsive to, a pivoting movement of the backrest support.
Here, the expressions rear, front, etc. relate in each case to the chair longitudinal direction. The chair longitudinal direction is generally perpendicular to a center line of the backrest or backrest support. In other words, a person seated in the chair and facing straight ahead would be generally facing along the chair longitudinal direction.
In some embodiments the rigid connection between a seat support and a backrest support, such as is known from conventional rocker mechanisms, is replaced with a simple resilient connection. In this way, with a simple structural design, a movement profile can be realized which corresponds to the movement profile of a synchronous mechanism.
In some embodiments, the four-joint coupling mechanism connecting the seat support to the base frame allows a movement path of the seat support which can be defined in a particularly precise manner. In other words, by way of the four-joint coupling mechanism, the seat support can be guided in a particularly precise manner on a desired path when the backrest support induces a movement of the seat support owing to a user of the chair performing a leaning-back movement.
Chairs of the present disclosure may provide a particularly high level of seat comfort without the need to resort to more cumbersome and expensive solutions. It is a further advantage that the chair is not only of particularly simple construction but can also be produced inexpensively. Furthermore, relatively simple and rapid assembly is possible.
Embodiments of the present disclosure provide a self-adjusting chair mechanism, in the case of which the user of the chair lifts themselves upward by exerting a load on the backrest. In other words, when actuating the mechanism by pushing the backrest backward, the user acts against their own weight bearing on the seat. The desired pivoting resistance of the backrest is thus, in effect, set automatically owing to the weight of the user. Whereas conventional self-adjusting mechanisms are normally composed of a multiplicity of interacting components, the solution according to the disclosed chairs is of relatively simple construction.
In one embodiment, the at least one four-joint coupling mechanism is in the form of a double motion link mechanism. In this case, the two elements mounted on the base frame can perform only a swinging movement. By means of the double motion link mechanism, a point connected to the coupling element, in this case the articulation point of the seat support, can be guided along a defined forward and upward path.
The two motion links of the double motion link mechanism are rotatably mounted by way of their bearing ends on the front part of the base frame with the formation of positionally fixed bearing points, whereas the free ends of the two motion links are rotatably connected to a movable coupling element. This coupling element may be in the form of an arm which extends forward as viewed in the chair longitudinal direction and which is rotatably connected to the seat support, whereby an axis of rotation of the seat support, which axis of rotation is movable in the chair longitudinal direction, is defined.
The two motion links of the double motion link mechanism perform a forward pivoting movement about their bearing points during and responsive to a rearward pivoting movement of the backrest support.
The double motion link mechanism is designed such that, during a rearward pivoting movement of the backrest support, the axis of rotation of the seat support moves forward and upward on a substantially rectilinear movement path.
The movement path is inclined with respect to the horizontal, in particular if the substantially rectilinear movement path runs with a uniform upward inclination in the forward direction. In this case, the movement path preferably encloses an angle of 10 to 15 degrees with the horizontal.
The pivot axis formed by the connection of the backrest support to the rear part of the base frame is positionally fixed.
The connecting element connects the seat support to the backrest support such that a movement of one of the two parts induces a non-identical consequential movement of the respective other part.
In a further embodiment, a spring mechanism having at least one spring element is provided, which connects the base frame to the seat support. The spring element assists the movement of the combination of seat support and backrest support. Said at least one spring element is preferably a tension spring, by means of which the pivoting resistance of the backrest support can be set.
An exemplary embodiment will be discussed in more detail below on the basis of the drawings, in which:
Here, all of the figures show the invention not true to scale but merely schematically, and only with the major constituent parts thereof. Here, the same reference signs are used to denote elements of identical or similar function.
An office chair 1 according to the invention comprises, as illustrated in
As best seen in
The pivot axis 9 is thus situated a considerable distance above the seat support 4, in the region of the lower half of the backrest support 5. The pivot axis 9 runs perpendicular to the chair longitudinal direction 7.
The seat support 4 comprises a lower shell 13 and an upper shell 14. The upper shell 14 is connected to the lower shell 13 at the front end 15 of the seat support 4 and at the rear end 16 of the seat support 4. Between the lower shell 13 and upper shell 14 there is a receiving chamber 17. The lower shell 13 may extend as a direct elongation of the connecting element 6 and serves for the connection of the seat support 4 to the base frame 3. The upper shell 14 may serve for supporting a seat cushion.
Preferably, the seat support 4 is connected to each extension 10a, 10b of the front part 10 of the base frame 3 as viewed in the chair longitudinal direction 7 byway of a four-joint coupling mechanism which is configured as a double motion link mechanism 18. In this way, the seat support 4 is moved on a defined movement path 20 (see
The entire pivoting mechanism may be, as regards the kinematic arrangement thereof, of mirror-symmetrical construction about its central longitudinal plane. In this respect, in this description, it should be understood that structural elements can be provided in pairwise fashion at both sides. For example, a first double motion link mechanism 18 may be assigned to the right-hand side of the chair 1 through a first extension 10a, and a second double motion link mechanism may be assigned to the left-hand side of the chair 1 through a second extension 10b; the backrest support 5 can have a twofold articulated connection to the base frame 3 etc. (see
The connecting element 6 connects the seat support 4 to the backrest support 5 such that a movement of one of the two parts induces a non-identical consequential movement of the respective other part. In the exemplary embodiment shown here, the seat support 4 and backrest support 5 form a structural unit, but are movable relative to one another rather than being rigidly connected to one another. The seat support 4 and the backrest support 5 in this embodiment are directly linked via the elastic connecting element 6. In other embodiments a rotary joint, hinge, or pivot joint may be used to connect the seat support 4 to the backrest support 5.
Furthermore, a spring mechanism having at least one spring element can be provided. The spring mechanism can include tension springs 23 which connect the base frame 3 to the seat support 4.
The double motion link mechanism 18 connected to the base frame 3 projects through the opening 21 in the lower shell 13 into the receiving chamber 17 between the lower shell 13 and upper shell 14 of the seat support 4. As best seen in
To realize a particularly stable construction, the coupling element 34 maybe manufactured from two congruent components which are arranged on the articulation points 32, 33 so as to be spaced apart from one another by means of spacers and which receive the two motion links 24, 25 between them.
By means of the arrangement of the coupling elements 34 of the double motion link mechanisms 18 arranged to the right and to the left on the base frame 3, and the configuration thereof, the synchronous movement of the seat support 4 can be individually adapted to the demands placed on the office chair 1. For example, by changing the lengths of the coupling elements 34 and/or the angular positions thereof, it is possible to define the extent to which the seat support 4 is tilted during a pivoting movement of the backrest support 5, and/or the extent to which the seat support 4 is displaced horizontally forward relative to the base frame 3 as viewed in the chair longitudinal direction 7. In one embodiment, the positionally fixed bearing points 28, 29 of the double motion link mechanism 18 are spaced apart vertically from one another. The front bearing point 28 is situated below the rear bearing point 29. The two articulation points 32, 33 arranged at the free ends 30, 31 are likewise spaced apart vertically from one another. The front articulation point 32 is situated above the rear articulation point 33 in at least the initial position shown in
In one embodiment, the two motion links 24, 25 are of different lengths. The front motion link 24 may be longer than the rear motion link 25.
In one embodiment, the axis of rotation 38 of the seat support 4 does not lie on the imaginary straight line formed by the two articulation points 32, 33. Instead, the axis of rotation 38 lies below said straight line, specifically approximately at the level of the articulation point 33 of the rear motion link 25, at least during almost the entire movement of the seat support 4 on the movement path 20.
During a pivoting movement of the backrest support 5 in the rearward pivoting direction 19, the two motion links 24, 25 of the double motion link mechanism 18 perform a forward pivoting movement about their bearing points 28, 29, as indicated in
In the initial position shown in
In the end position shown in
In all positions of the double motion link mechanism 18, the articulation point 32 of the front motion link 24 can be situated above the articulation point 33 of the rear motion link 25.
The double motion link mechanism 18 is designed such that, during a rearward pivoting movement of the backrest support 5, the axis of rotation 38 of the seat support 4 moves forward on a substantially rectilinear movement path 20.
During the forward pivoting movement of the motion links 24, 25, the articulation points 32, 33 pass over the bearing points 28, 29 of the respective motion link 24, 25. The coupling element 34 and thus the axis of rotation 38 of the seat support 4 move substantially on a straight line for a majority of the movement path 20. The relative position of the axis of rotation 38 of the seat support 4 with respect to the articulation point 33 of the rear motion link 25 remains virtually unchanged.
The substantially rectilinear movement path 20 may be inclined with respect to the horizontal and runs with a uniform upward inclination in the forward chair longitudinal direction 7, as shown by way of the intermediate positions in
A pivoting movement of the backrest support 5 from the initial position into the rearwardly pivoted position is associated with an immediate lifting movement of the seat support 4 with a slight forward inclination. The seat support 4 is thus driven along synchronously in a defined relationship with respect to the backrest support 5, with a slight tilting of the seat surface. This gives rise to the desired synchronous effect in which the angle of the seat support 4 relative to the backrest support 5 changes.
The weight of the user has a direct effect on the pivoting resistance of the backrest support 5 which is perceptible to the user. A user of low weight has to overcome a considerably lower pivoting resistance when pivoting the backrest support 5 than a heavy user. This has the effect that, subjectively, every user experiences the same “perceptible” resistance when pivoting the backrest support 5.
In the illustrated embodiment, the double motion link mechanism 18 is designed such that, shortly before the end position of the two motion links 24, 25 illustrated in
As used herein, a four-joint coupling mechanism is to be understood to mean a construction corresponding to a four-bar coupling gear unit which is, logically, composed of four interconnected elements, wherein the first gear element is formed by the base frame of the chair. The three further elements correspond to the input element, the output element, and the coupling element of a coupling gear, wherein, in the present case, the four-joint coupling mechanism does not perform the function of a gear unit but serves solely for the guidance of the seat support, which is connected to the coupling element, relative to the base frame, such that neither an input element nor an output element in the sense of a gear unit is provided.
The invention is not restricted to the exemplary embodiment. All of the features presented in the description, in the following claims and in the drawings may be essential to the invention both individually and in any desired combination with one another.
1 Office chair
2 Chair column
3 Base frame
4 Seat support
5 Backrest support
6 Connecting element
7 Chair longitudinal direction
8 Rear part of the base frame
8
a,
8
b Chair arm
9 Pivot axis of the backrest support
10 Front part of the base frame
10
a,
10
b Extension
11 Receiving opening
12 (unused)
13 Lower shell
14 Upper shell
15 Front end of the seat support
16 Rear end of the seat support
17 Receiving chamber
18 Double motion link mechanism
19 Pivoting direction
20 Movement path
21 Opening
22 (unused)
23 Tension spring
24 Front motion link
25 Rear motion link
26 Bearing end of the front motion link
27 Bearing end of the rear motion link
28 Bearing point of the front motion link
29 Bearing point of the rear motion link
30 Free end of the front motion link
31 Free end of the rear motion link
32 Articulation point of the front motion link
33 Articulation point of the rear motion link
34 Coupling element
35 Arm
36 Free end of the arm
37 Actuation section
38 Axis of rotation of the seat support
39 Pivoting movement
40 End region of the movement path