This invention relates to convertible bicycle trailer/transport units.
Although bicycles are themselves a means of transport, it is very often the case that bicycles themselves need to be transported from one place to another. Because of their construction and configuration, they are, generally speaking, not the most convenient of items to transport from one place to another. One approach is to carry them by vehicle, either one with a luggage compartment large enough to take a bicycle such as a van or truck, or which is equipped with some form of a rack, either on its roof or transversely across its rear, to which the bicycle can be attached. An alternative approach is to render the bicycle foldable, but this is not ideal for many bicycles used for sporting or leisure activities.
It is known to provide transportation cases for bicycles which take the form of a casing which is configured to accommodate the principal components of a bicycle, once it has been dismantled, in particular by removing the wheels from the frame and the handlebar from the forward steering post. A typical example of such a transportation casing has been commercialised and is available under the Trade Mark POLARIS, see www.polaris-apparel.com/. As can be seen, it has a handle enabling the entire case to be lifted with the bicycle components stored inside it, as well as a number of ground-engaging wheels or castors enabling the loaded casing to be transported, for example, along a walkway or on a platform or other public area in a transportation system. However, such transportation cases have no other function than to act as a casing for a disassembled bicycle. Other bicycle transport cases are referred to in US-A-2004/010377. This US specification discloses a variety of collapsible case designs where, in its uncollapsed state, the case may be configured as a transportation container for the components of a bicycle and which may be reconfigured, together with certain other components not necessary for the transportation function, to act as a single wheel trailer for a bicycle. The disclosure of this US specification, and the prior art discussed in it relating to other bicycle transportation cases, does refer to a bicycle trailer which can be reconfigured into a bicycle carrying case, i.e. switched between a “transport case” mode and a “trailer” mode, and vice versa.
DE 10 2006020688A1 discloses a device for transporting bicycles and luggage consisting of two rectangular frames and cross pieces defining a boxlike structure. The horizontal and vertical members of the frames may be disconnected from one another and reassembled together with a wheel to form a trailer. During transportation of the bicycle, the boxlike structure may be covered with a tarpaulin.
As explained in the US and German specifications, the provision of a transportation container for a bicycle which can be reconfigured into a trailer has a major practical advantage: it can be used by a traveller to transport their bicycle, for example, to a holiday destination and then, once there, it can be reconfigured to act as a trailer for the bicycle which has been reconstructed following its unpacking. The user then has a practical bicycle and trailer combination enabling the user to travel satisfactorily by bicycle with their luggage safely towed behind them in the trailer. The need to leave a dedicated transportation container at the port or airport destination, and to retrieve it later, is thus avoided, as is the cost of doing so, and the risk of damage or loss.
The constructions described in the US and German specifications and in prior art documents to which the US specification refers, are complex and inconvenient to use. In particular they require an amount of dismantling and reconstruction to reconfigure the item from one use to another. We have now found that by constructing a trailer in a certain way, it is possible easily to reconfigure the trailer to enable it to act as a transportation container for a bicycle or the major components of a bicycle when taken apart, principally the frame, wheels, handlebar and saddle.
According generally to a first feature of the present invention, there is provided a bicycle trailer comprising a framework, detachable wheels mounted to either side of the framework, and a cover configured to surround the framework, wherein the framework includes a plurality of telescopically connected members enabling the volume encompassed by the framework to be varied and the cover comprises a plurality of sheet members enabling the cover to be likewise expanded or reduced to match the volume encompassed by the framework, whereby the trailer may be used as a trailer towed behind a bicycle with the frame and cover surrounding a reduced volume for receiving items to be transported, or may be used as a carrying case configured to receive the wheels, frame and other components of a bicycle, together with the trailer wheels and a detachable towbar.
Preferably the framework comprises a generally rectangular base frame, two or more arched members fixed to the frame and two sockets fixed either side of the base frame for the receipt of a trailer wheel. Alternatively a transverse axle may be mounted on the frame to the ends of which the two trailer wheels may be attached. The base frame preferably includes a socket into which a towing bar may be inserted and locked therein.
The external shell preferably comprises one or more sections which may be deployed in an extended state when the trailer is being used as a carrying case to transport a bicycle and a partly folded relatively unextended state when the trailer is to be towed behind a bicycle.
The framework comprises two or more telescoping sections enabling the overall height and length of the framework to be extended sufficiently to accommodate a conventional bicycle frame, and which can be moved to a retracted position where they constitute members defining a reduced size interior space for receiving items which the user desires to transport when the trailer is being towed by the bicycle ridden by the user.
The bicycle trailer preferably comprises at least two wheels mounted underneath the framework and enabling the trailer to be moved with rotation of those wheels when configured as a carrying case. Most preferred are four wheels each being castored. Particularly to assist moving the carrying case containing the bicycle components by rolling it along, a plurality of handles may be attached to the exterior of the cover, at convenient locations. The cover itself may be made up of a plurality of sections of flexible waterproof or water resistant material, and attached to the interior of the cover a plurality of rigid lightweight plates may be incorporated to provide impact resistance to the cover.
By constructing a trailer in this way, and using well-established principles of design, it is possible to provide a trailer which, with ease and convenience, can have its internal compartment expanded sufficiently to enable both its wheels, a towbar and the components of a bicycle—including the wheels frame, saddle and handlebar of the bicycle—to be accommodated. Once at the desired destination, the user can simply extract and reassemble the bicycle parts, and then partly collapse the trailer to its road-suitable size.
By way of example, an embodiment of the invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to the drawings, the internal components of the trailer/bicycle carrier illustrated are best seen in
The base frame 1 has two socket units 10 into each of which a trailer wheel 11 may be clipped when the unit is being used as a trailer. As shown in
Adjacent corner piece 22 and attached to frame member 1 is a socket into which the trailing end of a towbar 20 may be fitted. Suitable locking means may be provided to hold the towbar 20 to the frame 1. The front end of the towbar may be attached to the bicycle in any one of the standard ways of doing so, known in a variety of forms.
Although the various frame members illustrated are square section ones, they can also be of circular cross-section.
The corner pieces 22 to 25 are connected to the external shell or covering of the trailer, which is composed principally of left and right side panels 30, 31, front and rear panels 32 and 33, side walls 35 connected to panels 30, 31, a rear wall 36 connected to panel 33 and an extending top and front cover section 40. Panels 30 to 33, panel 35 and cover section 40 constitute a water-resistant exterior to the trailer.
The panels may be connected to the framework members by way of a set of loops, some at least of which may be in the form of two tapes with complementary the fastener materials on one side to enable the loops to be secured round the framework members.
Cover section 40 may be attached to side walls 35, rear wall 36 and front panel 32 by means of a sliding clasp fastener 41 having two ends for the sliding clasps located adjacent the front end of cover section 40.
Connected to the lower side of top and front cover 40, and to the tops of side walls 35 and rear wall 36, is a flexible foldable waterproof or water-resistant fabric skirt 42, which may be pleated when the cover 40 is attached by a sliding clasp fastener 41 to the side and rear walls 35, 36, the position shown in
Access to the interior of the trailer may be obtained by way of a double-ended sliding clasp fastener 43, set in cover 40, enabling the central portion of cover 40 to be opened.
Mounted on the insides of side walls 35 are two pockets (not shown in the drawings) which may be used for stowing the trailer wheels 11 when the trailer is being used to transport a bicycle. Access to the pockets is secured by operating a sliding clasp fastener 44 in each of side walls 35, and the position of the stowed wheels 11 when in the pockets is shown in
If the trailer as shown in
The wheels 11 are stored in the pockets accessible using fasteners 44 in the pockets to either side of the space within the trailer, as shown in
The bicycle transport unit then rests on wheels 15 and 17. Exterior handles may be provided on the top and/or front of cover 40 to enable the unit to be easily moved in a fashion analogous to moving a piece of wheeled luggage.
As can be seen from
The bolt head and nut may be moulded in a hand wheel to enable easy manual operation.
As shown in the drawings, the external shell or covering of the trailer is unlined. For side impact protection it is desirable to provide relatively rigid panels attached to the inside of the cover members to provide a more robust wall structure. These should be lightweight, for example of fluted styrene material or a laminate of styrene sheet and fluted styrene sheet. They may be fixed to the interior of the cover by means of hook and eye tapes sewn on to the rigid sheet and the cover respectively.
As noted above, the trailer illustrated in the drawings is one example of how a trailer may be constructed in accordance with the present invention. Numerous variations in the detailed construction may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, but the construction illustrated is a generally preferred one, in particular because of the ability which it possesses of being capable of being dismantled so that it occupies a very much reduced volume for long-term storage, for example between expeditions undertaken by the user.
By undoing the sliding clasp fasteners and the fasteners which attach the cover to the framework members, the entire cover may be removed from the framework so that it appears as in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1714030.2 | Sep 2017 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/073549 | 8/31/2018 | WO | 00 |