The present application claims priority from German patent application 10 2012 006 279.6, filed on 29 Mar. 2012, the disclosure of which is also herewith expressly made the subject of the present application.
The invention relates to a cladding element made of chain mail, for cladding shapes having different radii, according to the preamble of Claim 1.
Chain mail is widely used, usually to protect the elements clad therewith, for example even to protect parts of the body from injury. Typically, the chain mail thus fulfils a protective function against pointed or sharp objects, as for example also in the case of the protective glove according to EP 0 758 854 B1, which forms the basis of the preamble of Claim 1. It is known from this specification that, as a result of its manufacture, a chain mail material has two directions of extent, wherein the chain mail is substantially less stretchable in one direction of extent—or is not stretchable at all—than in a transverse direction which preferably extends at a right angle thereto. This principle is used in that case in the context of a closing strip that is consequently less capable of being folded up.
DE 35 33 894 A1 discloses cladding elements made of chain mail for cladding shapes having different radii, wherein the direction of extent of the material is changed depending on the desired stretch. There is no correlation between the chain mail and arcs.
Taking as a starting point this prior art, the object of the present invention is to clad three-dimensional round shapes such as spheres or annular shapes or segments thereof, in efficient manner.
This object is achieved by a cladding element having the features of Claim 1.
The invention makes use of the direction of extent, wherein the direction of extent in which the chain mail is less stretchable or, preferably, is not stretchable at all is arranged along an arc, while indentations are provided transversely thereto. In fact, when moving over the outside of a three-dimensional rounded or spherical body, as a large radius is replaced by smaller and smaller radii, the material is gathered up more and more. Once the maximum possible gathering is reached, however, the material bunches and can no longer be laid taut around the shape. By providing indentations or recesses, or by removing material, however, it is ensured that the shape can be covered in a taut arrangement. Shapes of this kind can then be used for the greatest variety of purposes, including for example architectonic purposes or design elements, since the balanced combination of direction of extent makes it possible to precisely follow the curvatures of the shape. For example, it is possible to clad loops in cables, arcs in hoses, corners and curves in pipes, corners of furniture, shoulder heads on garments, mittens, overshoes, knee or elbow pads, parts of socks, abstract designs, shrimping nets, collecting bags, pouches or similar products where these half-round or spherical shapes occur.
For manufacture, as few parts as possible are to be used as blanks, since these have still to be joined together in cladding the shape. The indentations and notches make this possible without problems, since notches of this kind can where necessary be positioned one after the other, such that shapes of entire circles can be clad with the chain mail. For this reason, the blanks preferably comprise a single or two parts.
Preferably, the direction of extent of the chain mail that is less stretchable or in which it cannot be stretched at all is arranged around the arc whereof the radius is typically the larger or largest. As a result, a support function may be generated there by the arrangement of the direction of extent, and the other blank parts associated therewith may be oriented to this such that the desired abutment of the material against the basic shape is produced.
With certain shapes, it is necessary to flatten the blank in the region of the indentations, or rather between the indentations, such that optimum shaping is made possible. For this purpose, there may be formed between the indentations a trapezoidal shape whereof the upper side lies below the upper edge points of the indentations.
Further advantages will become apparent from the subclaims and the description which follows of preferred exemplary embodiments.
The invention will be explained in more detail below with reference to a number of exemplary embodiments. The Figures show:
The invention will now be explained in more detail by way of example with reference to the attached drawings. However, the exemplary embodiments are merely examples, which are not intended to restrict the inventive concept to a particular arrangement.
Before the invention is described in detail, it should be pointed out that it is not restricted to the respective components of the device or the respective method steps, since these components and methods may vary. The terms used here are merely intended to describe particular embodiments and are not used restrictively. Moreover, where the singular or indefinite articles are used in the description or the claims, this also includes the plural of these elements provided the overall context does not unambiguously indicate otherwise.
The Figures show various blanks and shapes that are formed from these, for using chain mail as a cladding element for cladding shapes having different radii with the chain mail. The problem, when cladding round or rounded shapes with chain mail, lies in the fundamental structure of the chain mail. Chain mail has a basic direction of extent in which the chain mail is preferably less stretchable—or is not stretchable at all—than in a further, transverse direction which in particular extends at a right angle thereto. The result is that when cladding round or rounded shapes, in particular if they have different radii, the chain mail has to be gathered up more and more. Once the maximum possible gathering is reached, however, the material bunches and can no longer be laid taut around the shape, which results in corresponding sacrifices from an aesthetic point of view.
For this reason, there are provided in the blanks for 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 and in the further blanks 41, 51 indentations, notches or recesses in order to remove excess material and to ensure that the shape to be clad can be covered in a taut arrangement. If this is done with a balanced combination of direction of extent, the curvature of the shape is precisely followed. In this way, any round and rounded shape, included abstract shapes, can be clad in the greatest variety of areas of use, that is to say including in the sectors of architecture or design. In particular, the following are conceivable: loops in cables, arcs in hoses, corners and curves in pipes, corners of furniture, shoulder heads on garments, mittens, overshoes, knee or elbow pads, parts of socks, abstract designs, shrimping nets, collecting bags, pouches or similar products where half-round or spherical shapes of this kind occur. The blanks are connected to one another by way of their edges 10a, 20a, 30a, 40a, 50a, 60a and at the edges 41a, 51a, regardless of whether these edges now form the edge of the original blank or the edge of the indentations 12, 22, 32, 42, 52, 62.
It can be seen from the Figures that preferably a single blank 10, 20, 30, 60 or two blanks 40, 41; 50, 51 are required to clad the rounded shape. The fewer blanks there are, the more efficiently can the three-dimensional rounded shape be clad. To do this, it is in fact necessary for the edges 10a, . . . 60a to be connected by being sewn together by means of metal rings which preferably have the diameter of the rings of the chain mail. This then gives a shape as illustrated for example in
In the case of a shape which is outwardly rounded resp. rounded out on both sides, a blank 20 according to
All the exemplary embodiments have in common the fact that the shape typically has a plurality of radii R1, of which only in
According to
According to
Where necessary, as in the exemplary embodiments according to
A comparable shape can be produced by the blank according to
If there is a desire for wider basic shapes which have sharply different radii, an embodiment according to
It will be appreciated that this description can undergo the greatest variety of modifications, alterations and adaptations that are within the range of equivalents to the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2012 006 279 | Mar 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/000918 | 3/27/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/143691 | 10/3/2013 | WO | A |
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