The invention relates to the fields of backpacks and bullet-proof vests. More particularly, the invention relates to a backpack that is convertible into a bullet-proof vest and vice versa.
We often hear news of gun fire in schools, universities and other public places around the world. If a stranger enters a building/area with weapons, students and teachers alike must take measures to protect themselves immediately from dangerous situations such as an open-fire, active shooter situation. Even though a bullet-proof vest serves great protection, most people don't wear bullet-proof vests in public or in private places, let alone students in university and school. Most students carry their objects and belongings in a backpack to school. However, a backpack is not the most ideal option for protection against heavy forces.
This backpack is designed to bind both the backpack and bulletproof vest into one. Two bullet-proof fabric sheets are sewed inside the front and rear portion of the backpack. When in a risky situation, individuals can pull the zipper from the right to the left side, open the top zipper, then wear the backpack from head down to their waist, and fasten it. It only takes a very short time to convert the backpack into a bullet-proof vest.
This invention is designed to meet safety needs in schools, universities, offices, public areas, etc. The backpack comprises a front portion, rear portion and top portion connected by zippers. The bullet-proof fabrics are sewed inside the front portion and rear portion. The wearer can carry it as a daily use backpack. In emergency situations, the wearer can pull the zipper from the right to the left side, open the top zipper, then wear the backpack from head down to body, and fasten it. It takes a very short time to convert the backpack into a bullet-proof vest.
Bullet-proof fabrics are typically made of a woven fabric shell and have layers of anti-ballistic materials such as Kevlar® and Spectra®. Such bullet-proof fabrics are sewed inside the front portion and the rear portion of backpack body. The bullet-proof area covers the torso but does not cover the head, the arms, and the lower body.
The bullet-proof backpack weighs about 7-8 pounds before loading the wearer's belongings inside.
The wearer can load/unload items from the front side or the right side of the backpack.
A convertible bullet-proof backpack and vest disclosed herein includes a body section divided into a front portion, a middle portion, and back portion. The middle portion has a head slot opening, and the front and back portions have respective sections of bullet-proof fabric integrated therein. A zipper runs around an outer perimeter of the front and back portions. In a backpack configuration, the zipper secures the outer perimeters of the front portion and the back portion together thereby forming a hollow backpack interior between them. In a bullet-proof vest configuration, the zipper is unzipped thereby allowing a user to insert their head through the head slot opening such that the front portion hangs in front of a torso of the user and the back portion hangs behind the torso of the user.
The invention will be better understood in light of the following description of the backpack according to the invention, given only by way of example, with reference to the annexed drawings, in which:
When the first zipper 20 is closed as illustrated in
The backpack front portion 14 and back portion 16 have bullet-proof fabrics 40, 42 sewed inside. (Also see
As illustrated, the backpack interior-facing surfaces 54, both on the front and back portions 14, 16, include cloth covers 58 over bullet-proof fabrics sections 40, 42. In particular, the front portion 14 has a first bullet-proof fabric section 40 sewn therein and the back portion 16 has a second bullet-proof fabric section 42 sewn therein. A first zipper chain 20a of the first zipper 20 runs around the three outer perimeter edges of the front portion 14 in a U-shape, and a second zipper chain 20b of the first zipper 20 runs around the three outside perimeter edges of the back portion 16 also in a U-shape. In other words, the first zipper chain 20a in the orientation shown in
In the vest configuration as illustrated in
When wearing the backpack 10 in the backpack configuration of
For simplicity or efficiency, the invention can be created in the absence of any additional element that is not specifically disclosed herein.
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