The sport of Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus (“SCUBA”) requires that a diver carry a portable supply of air from which to breathe. Early divers found it was most convenient to carry this tank on their back, attaching it with a harness that could be tightened around the diver's body. Over time the sport became more popular and various mounting systems were developed. These systems typically share several common features. They provide for a tank which is attached to a lift device (Buoyancy Compensator) and then attached to the diver's body. Historically the most common system was to attach the tank to a rigid plate known as a backplate. This backplate was adjusted by the diver as a means to hold the tank steady. Over time this hard plate was integrated into a portion of the lift device and the system was designed to fit the diver like a jacket. This “jacket style” buoyancy compensator was built to match a variety of sizes i.e. small, medium, large; in many cases they also provided some measure of adjustability.
Adjustability of various diving systems has been an issue since the advent of SCUBA. This is because individuals of various sizes must personalize the SCUBA rig in order to prevent the tank from shifting. In the past, as well as today, various products allow the diver to move the webbing to tighten or loosen the fit of the SCUBA system. Ease of adjustment was quickly seen as an important feature as was ease of removability. Divers wanted systems they could easily fit to their person but also systems that allowed quick removal. This latter concern is especially relevant in emergency situations where a diver must quickly be removed from his or her equipment. Because typical backplate designs are cumbersome to adjust and relatively slow to remove, many manufactures began using a “quick release” buckle; this is also known as a “side release buckle”. This buckle allowed the diver to depress tabs and release the webbing, freeing the system. These buckles were also typically designed so that the diver might easily tighten or loosen the strap while maintaining the continuity of the webbing.
The aforementioned adjustability creates two notable problems. First, divers using a quick release buckle might suffer from an accidental release, freeing the system unintentionally. In this case it is possible for the diver to become separated from their life support system. Secondarily, the adjustability of the webbing is accomplished by weaving a free end of the webbing through the buckle. This routing leaves a tail that hangs below the diver. This dangling strap can catch on protrusions, snagging the diver or damaging the environment.
The instant inventor has always prioritized the need to avoid both risks by promoting continuous “one piece” style webbing. Other manufactures also use one piece webbings that are not notably dissimilar to very early diving systems. However, systems that utilize a one piece design are difficult to adjust and are not quickly removed during emergencies. The present invention is directed addressing the above and also provides many other benefits and advantages.
The present invention provides all the benefits relevant to quick adjust and quick release systems but without the aforementioned disadvantages, such as, but not limited to, unintentional or accidental release of the quick release buckle. The present invention permits the diver to quickly adjust a one-piece continuous piece of webbing by simply pushing or pulling the webbing in the desired direction. The functionality can be accomplished in several ways with the first iteration being an accessory plate which is fixed to an existing diving backplate. This product is the core of the system allowing the webbing to slide on through a smooth passage. Other embodiments of the invention allow the webbing to slide through fixed and rotating roller bars. The same function can also be performed by looping the webbing through a smooth portion of a mold or fabricated backplate which is considered another embodiment of the invention.
The present invention permits for the rapid adjustment of the webbing. Yet, the functionality is further enhanced by additional inventive features that support accessory items to be fixed at the waist. The webbing is permitted to slide through these fixtures. Normally sliding webbing would prevent a fixed position for accessories. However, the present invention supports any needed waist mounted accessory. As a non-limiting example, a primary diving light mounted to the hip will stay in place while the webbing slides to adjust for the diver's size. Similarly, a fixed d-ring can be mounted to the diver's hip with the webbing sliding through the fixture. These features allow any range of items to be fixed to the diver's waist while allowing full adjustability to the webbing.
Consonant with the need to adjust the diver's waist and arm webbing is the need for an adjustable crotch strap which is also achieved by the present invention. A crotch strap prevents the diver's system from sliding up and above their head. Conventional crotch straps are extremely useful though usually cumbersome to adjust and also often suffer from the same dangling/entrapments problems discussed above for typical quick adjust buckles. The present invention provides a buckle that eliminates all excess webbing of the crotch strap while allowing the crotch strap to be adjusted quickly and easily. Once adjusted the buckle maintains a firm grip and even allows significant torque on the crotch strap such as incurred while being pulled by a DPV.
A unique and novel back plate frame and design is also disclosed. With the present invention, full adjustability of a backplate is also achieved to account for the size and height of various divers. Such adjustability permits divers to expand/shrink the backplate as required.
a and 12b illustrate the novel canister light attachment accessory that can be secured to the single side cinch or the full cinch adaptor in accordance with the present invention;
a, 18b and 18c illustrate several view of a novel tri-glide that is used as part of the novel crotch strap of
As seen in the various drawings several embodiments are disclosed for a continuous weave, quick adjust harness backplate system. Applicant also incorporates by reference all of the pictures files as part of the above-identified provisional application. It is noted that the provisional drawings were also labeled with short descriptions that are also incorporated by reference.
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In all three embodiments shown in
The three embodiments shown in
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Another aspect of the present invention shown in
In all embodiments or variations adjustability of the webbing is improved and all embodiments and variations can be used with existing old backplates in the field for such purposes. With current backplate technology the webbing is threaded through one hole or slot 502 and then quickly back out through the adjacent slot 504 (with both slots basically having the same length) and the tight bend radius between these two slots causes the webbing to stay locked. From a position of the wearer and especially considering his or her hand position in a shoulder back extended position, it is not feasible for the user to easily adjust and open up the webbing holes for exit or entry into the harness with current backplate technology. However, with the present invention, the enhancement devices shown in
As best seen in
Full cinch adaptor plate 50 can be a high-quality injection molded assembly that attaches to your back plate, though such is not considered limiting and can be constructed from a variety of materials that creates a hard or rigid plate body member 51. Cinch plate 50 can be provided with an accessory attachment slot 56a and 56b on each end or side. At least one and preferably a plurality of holes, such as, but not limited to, two holes 53 can be provided that affix cinch plate 50 to backplate 500. A first series of slanted or angled slots 52a and 54a are provided on a left side of body member 51 and a second series of slanted or angled slots 52b and 54b are provided on a right side of body member 51. Slots 52a, 54a and 52b, 54b are aligned with harness backplate slots 502, 504 (similar to enhancement device 520) when cinch plate 50 is properly secured to back plate 500. A riser or other hump like portions 60a and 60b are provided between slots 52a, 54a and 52b, 54b, respectively, for similar purposes as rod 530 of enhancement device 520. Riser 60a and 60b create slick or smooth surfaces that allow harness webbing 550 to slide freely when needed, but to remain secure while the diver is standing up with tanks on the diver's back.
Full cinch adaptor 50 may be used with a single or double tank. When in use with doubles, the lower part of the backplate can use molded spacers to keep the harness webbing from being pinched by the tanks, which helps to ensure that the webbing can slide freely. In most cases the lower bolt of the diver's double tanks will be of sufficient length to allow this slight offset. However, by using a bolt extender the diver is allowed to extend a short lower bolt where necessary. The bolt extender can be threaded directly to the lower bolt of a double tank configuration and in one non-limiting embodiment can use an inset Allen key fitting so it can be easily tightened in place.
When attaching the cinch adjustment plate 50 to an existing backplate 500 the old webbing should be replaced as it most likely will contain numerous wear spots and indents from d-rings and belt buckles, which could interfere with the smooth adjustment of the webbing with the cinch plate.
To install cinch plate 50 to an existing backplate 500 (having its old webbing and hardware secured thereto) the buckle, d-rings and triglides are removed from the waist strap. The waist strap is preferably unweaved from the lower slots 502 and 504 on the back plate and the tri glides are removed from behind the plate. The chest d-rings are also removed and finally the old webbing from the top backplate slots is removed.
With everything removed, the cinch plate assembly 50 is ready for attachment to backplate 500. Various attachment/fastening devices or hardware can be used for the attachment and all are considered within the scope of the invention. The attachment component describe herein are only by way of example and are not considered limiting. Two bolts 63a and 63b (relatively long) can be used for attachment purposes. Bolt 63b on the right side (as backplate 500 is worn by the diver) preferably secures cinch plate 50 and the light holder assembly (described in more detail below). If a hip mounted primary light is intended to be used by the diver the light holder assembly can also be installed at this time. Preferably the attachment hardware is provided with pre-applied loctite to ensure the connections remain secure. The preferred bolts should be able to tolerate several removal and replacement sessions before the loctite becomes ineffective.
After cinch plate 50 is installed to backplate 500 the desired accessory(ies) can be attached. Accessories can include the Halcyon weight pockets, the primary light assembly and/or the D-ring assembly or any combination thereof and all are considered within the scope of the invention. Other accessories can also be selected and used. Though the accessory components can be mixed, such as, but not limited to, a primary light on one side and the weight pocket on the other. etc., preferably each side only holds one accessory at a time.
With cinch plate 50 and accessories attached, installing webbing 550 occurs in much the same way as with conventional backplates 500 without a cinch plate 50 attached and is best seen in
Cinch adaptor plate 50 can also be provided with two relatively small rod pedestals 57 that keep the attached scuba tanks, re-breathers device or backpack device from coming directly in contact with webbing 550 as it rolls around through the dual slots of cinch plate 50, thus, given adequate space for the webbing 550 to roll around behind cinch plate 50 during adjustment. Other cutouts or holes, such as, but not limited to, cutouts 55 and hole 67 can be provided in body member 51 for providing clearance or access to portion of backplate, etc.
Adjusting the harness in connection with cinch adaptor 50 can be relatively quick and easy. The harness can be adjusted in or out of the water and can be used for easy in-water gear removal. Preferably, to tighten the harness, the diver uses both hands while grasping the ends of the waist band portion of webbing 550 and pulls up and out at roughly 45 degrees from the body. If desired, an optional triglide can be placed on webbing 550 as a “stopper” to allow a full stop when the harness reaches a desired fit. To loosen the harness, the user can grasp the shoulder straps portion of webbing 550 just above the waist, and then push the harness out and away from his or her waist.
Though not considered limiting, there are preferably three major components or accessories that are used with cinch adaptor plate 50, which can also be used with the embodiments described for
The assemblies can be preferably attached to the ends of cinch adaptor plate 50 by two different means. The assemblies can be mechanically fastened with a bolt or nut and washer type arrangement (such as but not limited to bolt 63b in
D-ring assembly 100 is shown in
Webbing 112 can be threaded on the inside or outside of d-ring assembly 100. Threading on the outside allows easy adjustment but leaves an exposed tab of webbing. Threading inside is slightly cleaner but also a bit slower to adjust. Once D-ring assembly 100 is secured to cinch adaptor plate 50, the waist portion of webbing 550 can be threaded through the slots 502 and 504 on each side of backplate 500 (as well as through slots 52a, 52b, 54a and 54 of cinch adaptor 50) just as they would be threaded without the cinch plate in place (i.e. secured to backplate 500). After passing through the appropriate slots of backplate and the slots of cinch plate 50, harness webbing 550 threads through the belt-like loop or passageway 130 associated with D-ring assembly 100 (See
As seen in
Using a hip mounted canister 600 with light holder assembly 200 allows easy adjustment of webbing 550 while leaving light 600 unaffected. As seen in
As mentioned above, the attachment hardware can be provided with pre-applied loctite to ensure the connections remain secure. These bolts can tolerate several removal and replacement sessions before the loctite becomes ineffective. Once end 212 of webbing 210 is in place (secured to cinch 50) continuous harness webbing 550 can be threaded through backplate 500 and the tab (end 216) runned through buckle assembly 230. To remove light holder assembly 200, bolt 63b which secures cinch plate 50 and light holder assembly 200 is first removed.
As mentioned above, cinch assembly 50 can also be used with weight pockets (not shown), in addition to the above described D-ring and light assemblies 100 and 200, respectively, and can attach to cinch plate 50 similar to how D-ring assembly 100 attaches to cinch plate 50 or how light holder assembly 200 attaches to D-ring assembly. Preferably, a weight pocket can be attached by securing the webbing tab to the appropriate side of the cinch accessory slot 56a or 56b. The webbing can be threaded on the inside or outside of the webbing assembly or secured with a grommet/webbing. Once the webbing tab is secured, the weight pocket can be threaded in place. The weight pockets can be adjusted toward or away from backplate 500 as desired. Any excess webbing can be fed into the weight pocket belt loop. The harness webbing threads through the backplate slots and the weight pocket belt loop passageway, which functions similar to passageways 130 and 252.
The above described features and benefits of the adapter assembly can be built directly into a new complete backplate assembly so that the same benefits of adjustability and fix positioning for the light canister, weight pockets, fix positioning for the D-ring for bottles and other accessory devices can still be applied to a complete back plate assembly Preferably, the new backplate would be built or designed with the accessory slot on each side of the backplate, and thus the backplate would not necessarily have to extend beyond the backplate as accessory slots 56a and 56b currently do. The angled slots for the new backplate can also be constructed such that they are different in length. Furthermore, the new backplate can be designed, molded, formed, built, etc. such that it has a raised or humped smooth portion between the angled slots to function similarly to roller 530 or riser 60a, 60b.
The present invention single side cinch of full cinch adaptor or upgrade plate are preferably used for improving webbing adjustability of the thousands of backplates 500 that are already out in the field. Newly built backplates incorporating the features and functions of the present invention can be provided with the third additional slot within the standard perimeter of the backplate and thus wouldn't need that additional overhang or overhang that is provided with adapter plate 50 to accommodate accessory slots 56a and 56b.
As best seen in
When a diver uses a second scooter, he or she normally tows it behind the diver, which can now be towed with the present invention by the second D-ring on the crotch strap. Currently it is difficult to add a second D ring, even with the new improved tri-glide 340 of the present invention because it would almost certainly cause the large medal tri-glide to end up centered directly between the diver's legs, causing it to be extremely uncomfortable for the diver to try to close his or her legs together. With the present invention crotch strap assembly, tri-glide 340 preferably stays backed up behind the diver's hips rather than in between the diver's legs. If a second D-ring is added for towing a scooter or attaching other diving accessories to, the second D-ring can be secured similar to the side-waist accessories are added with their pass-through effect as discussed above. Accordingly, the crotch strap itself passes through the passageway/slot of the second D-ring assembly and has its own independent attachment point, which can be an additional slot in the accessory device, cinch plate 50 or preferably a slot 517 in the backplate 500. Additionally, it can also be fasten via a bolt and washer type connection.
The quick adjust crotch strap 302 can be webbed with an adjustable buckle or tri-glide 340 that allows rapid resizing while eliminating any dangling webbing, and will hold securely while being used with a DPV. When installing the crotch strap assembly 30 the end of webbing 302 should run through the quick adjust buckle/tri-glide 340 with the curve facing up. Webbing 302 can be threaded through the backplate through slot 517 from the front to the back of backplate 500. Webbing 302 can be threaded through the novel quick adjust tri-glide 340 (
Though the crotch strap length is sized correctly, the quick adjust triglide 340 may still sit incorrectly, e.g. too far forward and between the diver's legs. To correct this, the quick adjust triglide 340 is left in place and webbing 302 can be removed from triglide 323 and second D-ring. The webbing is then pulled through until the quick adjust triglide 340 is at an appropriate distance from back plate 500. With triglide 323 and the quick adjust triglide 340 fairly close together webbing 302 can then be threaded back through triglide 323 and second D-ring. The excess webbing “tail” 347 can be cut off, while leaving enough for future length adjustments.
Once the adjustable crotch strap assembly 300 is sized correctly, modifications can be done quickly by sliding webbing 302 through the quick adjust buckle/triglide 340. Excess webbing 302 may also be tucked through back plate 500 and secured with a section of the EPDM band 349 on crotch strap 302.
It is also important to note that the pass-through accessory attachment devices discussed above can also be used at the shoulder position of back plate webbing harness 550. It can also be applied to the crotch strap to add additional D rings or other tensioning type accessories and it could also be applied to other positions around the harness. All uses are considered within the scope of the invention.
The present invention also discloses an ergonomic self-adjusting backplate system 400. Current backplates all act to be extremely stable and very good at weight balancing. However, due to the manufacturing process they are limited to single dimensional bins and forming. Therefore, current manufacturing processes and techniques do not permit for a compound curve that would actually match the curves and shapes of the human body, namely, the lumbar, the shoulder, etc.
The present invention ergonomic system 400, includes modern manufacturing processes, which permits the design shape of the rigid plate to use compound curves and floating adjustment type systems to help apply the weight of the scuba gear, rebreather systems or backpack mounting devices across the wearer's body more efficiently. The shoulder area includes compound curves 410 that tend to grip the upper and outer shoulder blade area, similar to a slightly tensioned hand, grabbing the top of the back of the shoulder and therefore transferring some of the load that was originally applied solely to the webbing strap coming across the shoulder. The present invention permits much of that weight to be managed by the compound curve structure at the top of the ergonomic backplate frame system 400. Down at the waist at the lumbar area of the back the present invention ergonomic system provides a pivotable compound curve fixture that rotates on an access about the central vertical frame 405. Certain bottom and top attachment parts that can be secured to vertical frame 405 are shown in
Ergonomic frame system 400 provides for multiple vertical positions to size between different torso heights and can also have a roller type system 413 close to the central vertical frame. Roller-type devices 413 act as the interface between the shoulder portion and the waist portion of webbing 550, can also be vertically adjustable up and down the spine of frame 405 as well. The spine or vertical frame can also be curved and contoured to mimic a side profile of a human spine so that the pressure points and areas where the weight energy comes in contact with the body are less abrupt and more widely dispersed, therefore, making them less noticeable to the wearer.
The weight on the present invention ergonomic plate can call for the omission of the current ballast that is naturally found in a 6-10 pound rigid back plate. The frame will be a much more minimal structure in terms of mass, therefore, unique weight application methods can be applied. These weight application methods can be adjustable vertically and horizontally. They can accept the common lead systems that are currently available, such as, but not limited to, soft weights in low fabric pouches or conventional hard lead which is found in a block shape from 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 pounds. The weight receiver component for the ergonomic plate can accept a whole range of typical lead on the market and can be purely adjustable so that the diver can zero end on his diving attitude while in the water applying weights and other devices. The diver can have his or her plate and system setup in perfect harmony by a wide range of vertical adjustment options with the weight attachment pockets and/or molded-in features. The molded receivers can be potentially located anywhere along vertical spine 405 of frame system 400 and can also be attached at the lumbar or the shoulder positions of this present invention modular ergonomic frame system 400. A wide variety of different shapes and features can be provided for the compound shoulder attachment. The shoulder attachment can be permitted to swivel and can come in different varieties of shapes to fit a wide range of different body types and different applications.
The present invention supports the convenience of rapid adjustment and enhanced comfort. The present invention redefines what it means to dive a backplate, building upon a platform of simplicity while providing unprecedented security and ease of adjustment. With the present invention one can enjoy all the performance advantages of a backplate while easily changing suits or divers. The invention accomplishes these goals without compromising the harness with quick release buckles and while avoiding the dangling pieces of webbing common to other forms of rapid adjustment.
Adjustments are accomplished by simply sliding the harness through the unique, cinch adaptor assembly. Thus, divers can easily adjust the fit of their backplate in or out of the water, simply by pushing or pulling on the webbing and enjoying an unprecedented level of adjustability. As discussed above, these adjustments have no affect on a hip mounted weight pocket, d-ring or light canister. Thus, the diver can enjoy the snug, stable fit of a harness without worrying that a tight fit will be difficult to remove while in the water or on the dive boat. The cinch allows the diver to quickly remove his or her dive system and adjust to changes in undergarments or diving suits. Meanwhile the enhanced security of a snug fitting harness further increases stability while eliminating the difficulty of getting into or out of the diving harness. As also discussed above, a quick adjust crotch strap is also secured to the cinch adaptor to ensure that any changes to the system can be done quickly and easily.
All time periods, measurements, amounts, weights, dimensions, values, percentages, materials, orientations, etc. discussed above or shown in the drawing figures are merely by way of example and are not considered limiting and other time periods, measurements, amounts, weights, dimensions, values, percentages, materials, orientations etc. can be chosen and used and all are considered within the scope of the invention.
While the invention has been described and disclosed in certain terms and has disclosed certain embodiments or modifications, persons skilled in the art who have acquainted themselves with the invention, will appreciate that it is not necessarily limited by such terms, nor to the specific embodiments and modification disclosed herein. Thus, a wide variety of alternatives, suggested by the teachings herein, can be practiced without departing from the spirit of the invention, and rights to such alternatives are particularly reserved and considered within the scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Application Ser. No. 61/184,625, filed Jun. 5, 2009, which application is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61184625 | Jun 2009 | US |