Collapsible easy chairs are commonly used in leisure situations within and without the home, and can be designed such that they may be folded into a compact configuration and moved to a new location. Collapsible easy chairs often include various articulated joints and may include one of many different types of locking mechanisms. As well, they may include more or less seating area, ranging from a simple seat-only design, to a complex chaise lounge design.
A collapsible chair may include a seat, a backrest, and a legrest, all supported on a base. The body-support portion of a collapsible chair, generally including the seat, backrest, and legrest may be constructed of a relatively flexible material, such as synthetic or natural fiber webbing, or it may be constructed of a harder material, such as a form of plastic or wood.
One example of a collapsible easy chair is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,570,926 issued to Papiernik et al., which discloses a chaise lounge-type chair that folds into and out of a relatively compact configuration. According to the Papiernik disclosure, an easy chair includes an elongated body support including backrest, seat, and legrest portions connected to flexible webbing upon which a person may sit or recline. The chair of Papiernik includes a number of hinged joints and a number of sliding joints. Given the arrangement of the chair joints and a manual locking mechanism, the chair of Papiernik may be unfolded or refolded in two distinct stages: a base-only stage, in which only the legs may be moved; and a chair-only stage, in which the backrest, seat, and legrest, and any included armrest, may be moved independently of the base.
In view of the prior art described above, a need exists for a collapsible chair having substantial stability when assembled, yet which may be easily reversibly collapsible in a coordinated manner. In addition, an improved chair may provide an easily usable armrest lock that, in combination with other features of the chair, may allow for adjustments to be made to a user's seating position even when a support base of the chair is locked stably in place.
While shown as including three body-support subcomponents, the collapsible chair could be constructed, according to the present disclosure, with fewer than all three body-support subcomponents; for example, a collapsible chair could be constructed that includes only the backrest and the seat. Also, although shown in the figures as including a single large, continuous body support mechanism, backrest 12, seat 14, and legrest 16 could be discrete segments of a collapsible chair with gaps between the segments of the support surface.
Backrest 12, seat, 14, and legrest 16, and any included support material, may be constructed of any suitable material for making a chair of sufficient strength to support a human user of the chair. For example, the backrest, seat, and legrest may be defined by a frame of metal tubing, or of plastic tubing, or of pieces of wood. In each case, the frame of the chair should be constructed such that the described segments of the chair can be connected via a number of hinges, sliding joints, etc. In the pictured embodiment, the backrest, seat, and legrest are defined at their peripheries by suitable metallic tubing, but other constructions are possible that fulfill the many aspects of the present disclosure.
As noted above, the body-support portion of the chair may include a support material 20 that rests on or otherwise is supported by the backrest, seat, and legrest. For example, support material 20 may be a flexible material such as a synthetic fabric mesh, or leather, or a non-mesh synthetic material, etc. Alternatively, the support material could be a relatively inflexible material such as a relatively stiff synthetic polymer, or a relatively hard natural material, etc. In some embodiments, support material 20 may be constructed of a material that is resistant to the elements, for use in an outdoor environment. Of course, many suitable support materials are possible, including varied types of fabric, or supports made from wood, metal, etc. In any case, the support material may be held to the body support portions of the chair by, for example, a removable attachment mechanism of some sort, like a cord or webbing, or the material may be nonremovably coupled to the frame, for example by use of one or more rivets.
The body-support portion of the chair, including backrest 12, seat 14, and legrest 16, may be mounted upon a relatively stable base 23, including perhaps a front base 28 and a rear base 30. If present, the front and rear bases may connect to the body-support portion of the chair by a number of front legs 24 and rear legs 26. Alternatively, the legs of the chair may be provided without their connecting bases, with the ends of the legs configured to rest upon the ground or other desired surface of repose.
Some portions of the collapsible chair may interact through a sliding displacement of adjacent structures. The seat side bars 38 may slide relative to the rear legs 26 through placement of the seat side bars 38 within a seat rest slide 60. Likewise, the front legs 24 may each be attached to, and may slide relative to, an armrest 48 at armrest lock 50. To couple movements of the front legs 24 and the seat 14, one or more of the front legs 24 may be connected to a seat side bar 38 by a seat-leg crossbar 42.
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As shown in the pictures of the described embodiment, an armrest bar clamp 70 may be held at least partially within lock shell 51. Armrest bar clamp 70 may function reversibly to fix the relationship between an armrest bar 49 and a lock engagement member 52 through which it passes. Armrest bar clamp may include a clamp shell 77, clamp projections 72, and projection tabs 73. A central portion of armrest bar clamp 70 may be configured as including an armrest bar opening 80. In its operative configuration, clamp shell 77 may be at least partially inserted into lock shell 51, as seen most clearly in
Clamp lock 71 makes up, in the depicted embodiment, a lower portion of lock engagement member 52, as seen in
In a depicted embodiment, lock insertion site 74 may have a generally oval cross-sectional area, such that a cross-sectional profile of lock insertion site 74 has both a long axis 78 and a short axis 79. In an initial configuration, clamp lock 71 may be attached to bar clamp 70 such that clamp projections 72 rest against the inner sides of lock insertion 74 at either end of long axis 78. In such an arrangement, which could be termed an “unlocked” configuration, bar opening 80 of clamp shell 77 may be in its most open position, allowing free sliding movement of any inserted armrest bar 49. A depiction of this arrangement can be seen in
Depending on the construction of the various parts of a collapsible chair, locking the lock engagement member in the above-described manner may prevent movement of the entirety of the chair, or only a portion of the chair. In the depicted embodiment, locking the lock engagement member prevents movement of the body-support portion of the collapsible chair; the base of the chair, including the legs and any other provided support surfaces, may be free to move to various degrees. During operation of the chair depicted in the Figures, engagement of armrest lock 50 fixes the relationship between an armrest bar 49 and a front leg 24. However, because seat side bar 38 is in a second sliding relationship with rear leg 26, and this relationship is not fixed by the armrest lock, some adjustment may be made in the position of the chair even though the armrest and front leg are fixed relative to one another.
Having described some of the many components making up a collapsible chair according to aspects of the present disclosure, there remains to describe some way of using the described chair. A user may initially find the collapsible chair 10 in a collapsed configuration, as shown in
Once a base for the chair has been established, a user may adjust the body support portion of the chair, including the backrest 12, seat 14, and legrest 16, to any desired configuration. For example, the user may wish to be relatively reclined, in which case the backrest 12, seat 14, and legrest 16 will assume an extended configuration, where the seat is substantially horizontal and the backrest and legrest form a small angle with a horizontal plane. For instance, the backrest and legrest may form a 45-degree angle from the horizontal, or a 30-degree angle with the horizontal, etc. As another example, the user may wish to be relatively upright, in which case the backrest, seat, and legrest may assume a more compact configuration, where the seat is substantially horizontal, and the backrest and legrest form approximately right angles with a horizontal plane.
When the user has established a desired configuration of the collapsible chair, the user may lock the chair into that configuration. To do so, the user may engage a lock engagement member 52 in an armrest lock that restricts movement between at least two portions of the collapsible chair. In the depicted embodiment, a user manipulates clamp tab 81 to rotate clamp lock 71 from an unlocked to a locked position and, thus, locks together at least one front leg 24 and an armrest bar 49. When the chair is locked into place, with the armrest secured relative to the legs (in the depicted embodiment), the user may sit in the chair.
Though the chair may immediately be used when locked, the user may also fine tune the position of the body support portion of the chair even after the armrest has been locked into place. As can be seen in the Figures, both the armrest support bar and the seat rest side bars are in sliding relationships with hinges to which they attach. Because engaging the lock engagement mechanism on the armrest reversibly fixes only one of these two sliding relationships, a user could still fine tune the seat position by manipulating the second sliding relationship. Notably, such manipulation can occur without changing the relative spacing of the legs of the base, which allows a stably established base of support for the chair to be maintained.
While the invention has been disclosed in its preferred form, the specific embodiments thereof as disclosed and illustrated herein are not to be considered in a limiting sense as numerous variations are possible. Applicant regards the subject matter of the invention to include all novel and non-obvious combinations and subcombinations of the various elements, features, functions and/or properties disclosed herein. No single feature, function, element or property of the disclosed embodiments is essential. The following claims define certain combinations and subcombinations which are regarded as novel and non-obvious. Other combinations and subcombinations of features, functions, elements and/or properties may be claimed through amendment of the present claims or through presentation of new claims in this or a related application. Such claims, whether they are broader, narrower or equal in scope to the original claims, are also regarded as included within the subject matter of applicant's invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080054686 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |