Claims
- 1. A combined aquatic safety device and tote bag comprising a pair of rectangular buoyant cushions stacked one on top of the other, each cushion comprising a top surface and a generally rectangular planar bottom surface, said top and bottom surfaces on each cushion connected together by four side surfaces, the bottom planar surfaces on the stacked cushions facing each other, four separate rectangular skirts on each cushion extending out beyond each of the four edges of the said bottom surface of the cushion, the length of the part of the skirt connected to each edge of the bottom surface of a cushion selected so each skirt can be bent transverse with respect to the bottom surface of the cushion without affecting the other skirts, means on each skirt on one stacked cushion adapted to be connected to another skirt on the other cushion, the width of each skirt sufficiently long so that if the cushions are stacked one on top of the other and the skirts are bent transverse to the bottom surface of the cushion so the skirts extend toward each other, and overlap each other enough to be attached together by said connecting means to form a supply compartment between the facing bottom surfaces of cushions with walls of the supply compartment defined by the overlapping connected skirts on the stacked cushions.
- 2. The aquatic safety device described in claim 1 wherein the top and bottom surfaces of each cushion are generally planar.
- 3. The aquatic safety device described in claim 1 wherein the connecting means include male fastening members secured to two of the skirts attached to each cushion and female fastening members are secured to the remaining two skirts on each cushion whereby the skirts on one cushion can be attached to the skirts on another cushion..
- 4. The aquatic safety device described in claim 3 wherein male fastening members are secured to adjacent skirts on one corner of the cushion and female fastening members are secured to the adjacent skirts at the opposite corner of the cushion, whereby the male fastening members secured to the skirts of one cushion may be attached to the skirts of another cushion so that any number of cushions can be connected together to form a raft.
- 5. The combined aquatic safety device described in claim 4 wherein said male fastening members comprise rotatably mounted heads, said rotatably mounted heads located at spaced intervals with respect to each other on two of the skirts of each cushion, a plurality of female fastening members on the remaining two skirts of each cushion, said female fastening members comprising head receiving openings extending through the skirt, the rotatably mounted heads on the skirts of one cushion adapted to penetrate the head receiving openings on the skirts of another cushion, the width of the rotatably mounted heads larger than the width of the head receiving openings so when a rotatably mounted head extends through a head receiving opening and is rotated transverse to said head receiving opening, the male and female fasteneing members are locked together to form a raft or a pair of stacked cushions with a compartment formed between them.
- 6. The aquatic safety device described in claim 5 including means associated with said male and female fastening members for feeling when the rotatably mounted head is transverse to the said head receiving openings whereby the rotatably mounted heads can be rotated transverse to the head receiving openings in the dark to lock the male and female fastening members together.
- 7. The aquatic safety device described in claim 6 wherein said means for locking and unlocking said male and female fastening members in the dark comprise transverse grooves associated with each rotatably mounted head, one groove aligned with a head receiving opening and one groove transverse to said head receiving opening, whereby when the rotatably mounted head in a head receiving opening is rotated so it is transverse to a head receiving opening and is in the groove transverse to said head receiving opening, the rotation of said head until said head engages the groove transverse to the length of the head receiving opening can be felt in the dark, whereby the male and female fastening members can be locked and unlocked in the dark.
- 8. The aquatic safety device described in claim 7 wherein each of said male fastening members comprises a pedestal, said pedestal having a top surface, said transverse grooves formed in the top surface of said pedestal, said rotatably mounted head having an integral post depending therefrom, said post rotatably mounted in said top surface of said pedestal.
- 9. An aquatic safety device comprising a plurality of rectangular buoyant cushions, each cushion comprising a rectangular top surface and a generally planar rectangular bottom surface, said top and bottom surfaces on each cushion connected together by four side surfaces, four separate rectangular skirts on each cushion, each rectangular skirt connected to an edge of the bottom surface of the cushion and substantially in the plane of the bottom surface of the cushion and extending out beyond the edge of said bottom surface of the cushion, means on each skirt on one cushion for attachment to another skirt on another cushion, the width of each skirt long enough so if the cushions are close enough together and the skirts extend toward each other in the plane of the bottom surface of the cushion, the skirts overlap each other sufficiently so the skirts can be attached together to hold the cushions in side by side relationship whereby the cushions form a raft formed from any number of cushions, so persons holding on to the raft will not drift apart.
- 10. A combined aquatic safety device and a tote bag comprising a pair of substantially identical rectangular buoyant cushions stacked one on top of the other, each cushion positioned so the bottom surface of each cushion faces each other, said top and bottom surfaces connected to each other by four side surfaces attached to the edges of said top and bottom surfaces, separate rectangular skirts secured to each of the said bottom surfaces and extending out beyond each of the four edges of said bottom surface of each cushion, skirt fastening means releasably secured to each of the said skirts in such a way that the skirts on one cushion can be connected to the skirts on another cushion to form an emergency storage compartment defined by the facing bottom surfaces of cushions and side walls formed by the connected skirts of the cushions, a skirt of each cushion being initially unconnected together to serve as the mouth of the compartment so that supplies can be inserted in the compartment and then the pair of unconnected skirts can be connected together to close the mouth of the compartment to hold the supplies inside the compartment.
- 11. A combined aquatic safety device and tote bag comprising a pair of rectangular cushions stacked one on top of the other, said cushions having a top surface and a bottom surface, and stacked so the bottom surface of each cushion faces each other, said top and bottom surfaces connected together by four side surfaces, four separate rectangular skirts, each rectangular skirt connected to an edge of the bottom surface of the cushion and substantially in the plane of the bottom surface of the cushion and extending out beyond the edge of the bottom surface of the cushion, the length of the part of the skirt being connected to the edge of the bottom surface of the cushion in such a way that each skirt can be bent transverse with respect to the bottom surface of the cushion without affecting the other skirts, means on each skirt for connection to another skirt, the width of each skirt sufficiently long so that if the cushions are stacked one on top of the other and the skirts are bent transverse to the bottom surface of the cushion so the skirts on one cushion extend toward the skirts on another cushion, the skirts overlap each other enough so they can be connected together by said connecting means to form a supply compartment between the facing bottom surfaces of cushions with walls of the supply compartment defined by the said connected skirts, whereby blankets, food and beverages can be stored in said compartment, said means for connecting said skirts together arranged so the skirts can be partially disconnected to permit the stacked cushions to be opened transverse to each other so one cushion can serve as a cushioned seat and the other cushion can serve as a cushioned back rest, while the blanket, food and beverages carried in the compartment are available for use.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation in part of patent application Ser. No. 832,037 filed Feb. 21, 1986 now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (6)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
65901 |
Golding et al. |
Jun 1867 |
|
410304 |
Walters et al. |
Sep 1889 |
|
3763972 |
Karzmar et al. |
Oct 1973 |
|
4190918 |
Harvell et al. |
Mar 1980 |
|
4242767 |
McMullen et al. |
Jan 1981 |
|
4459714 |
Lin |
Jul 1984 |
|
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
832037 |
Feb 1986 |
|