A rapid development has taken place in the level of equipment in private homes over the last years, especially concerning upgrades and new purchases of electronic devices and aids. In a large degree, this development takes place in the dayrooms of a home, such as the living room or in the kitchen.
In this connection, it has been observed that parents to a larger extent than before, are disturbed by external influence, such as by their own or other family members cell phones, TVs, video, computers, internet, wireless phones, videogames etc.
I addition, several families have a more tight time schedule than before, where both parent work for example, and need to attend to several duties simultaneously and/or in a shorter time, such as house work like cleaning, laundering, dishwashing and especially cooking, simultaneously as helping children with homework, making appointments, checking e-mail, text messages and answer machines, etc. Moreover, more adults are in an increasing degree in contact with work from home.
This increased activity and degree of disturbance at home, makes focus shift away from a child sitting in a children's chair, such as at meals, which for example are taken in the kitchen or the living room. By proper use of a children's chair, the parents should always have full attention on the child, as long as it sits in the chair.
In addition, there is also observed an increase in children's chairs being placed and used in unfortunate surroundings, such as on soft or thick carpets, possibly on several layers of carpets as well as against tables with a tall edge etc. The reason for this may be varied, but may for example be due to meals being moved to the most used dayroom such as the living room, where the furnishing is not particularly suited for the use of children's high chairs, or for example that the nowadays popular concept of a table in “bar counter” height is used as the kitchen table, even though it is not suited for use together with high children's chairs.
The disadvantage of the reduced focus and attention on a child in the children's chair is of course that the child can make movements leading to the chair being overturned. In the user guides for children's chairs it is clearly made attention to that a child never should be left unattended in a children's chair without the supervision of an adult. This especially concerns children secured by harness or in other manners to a children's chair. A soft support will for example obviously give any chair less stability and increase the risk of overturning. Further, a tall table edge will provide a child sitting in a high children's chair a better possibility of pushing itself away from the edge of the table, and more importantly the pushing force will be directed more downward towards the rear legs of the chair, and this will lead to increased possibility for tilting of the chair because the pushing force strains the rear legs of the chair down towards the floor surface. If the children's chair is placed on a soft support, or a support with high friction, the child will have an even better opportunity to strain the chair firmly against the floor and by so doing tilting the chair backwards, in stead of the chair gliding backwards like some chairs of prior art are meant to do.
Such a chair is the Tripp Trapp® chair from Stokke A S, which has standard gliders as safety devices in plastic in each corner on the underside of the chair, so that the chair glides away from the table when the child pushes itself from a normal dining table top. In normal use according to the user guide, the security is preserved and satisfies all safety regulations, but the problem is that the user guides are not always complied with and that the products thereby are used in a wrong manner. Lack of supervision of the child when it sits in the chair is an improper use which may lead to the child tilting the chair.
JP 10234503 shows a contact piece for mounting in one single position on the underside of the front end of a horizontal leg rod, which projects slightly further forward than the end of the leg rod, to prevent forward tilting of the chair.
DE 3,224,806 shows a right angled or T-formed glider, for mounting on the underside of corner joints of furniture in a fixed position.
The objective of the invention is to provide a device to increase the safety in children's chairs, beyond the safety regulations, and to reduce the chance of improper use of the chair leading to danger for the child.
Further, the objective of the invention is to provide such a device, which may reduce the danger that may follow from wrongful use of the chair, wherein the chair may be changed back to its original form without making physical, permanent changes in the chair. The chair should be possible to return to its original form and state or to an approximately original state, wherein the device is not distinctive on the chair, but easily may be reused with minimal assembly work.
The objective is to provide an extended backward directed support along and past the chairs rear leg parts and the possibility for adjustment of the chair both in relation to the child in the chair, such as according to the age of the child, as well as according to the support. Further, such an extended support should provide minimal influence of the ability to navigate behind the chair, so that no one trips in such a supporting device.
The invention thus concerns a glider device according to claim 1.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a glider device for a leg of a chair, especially a leg of a chair for a children's chair, comprising a plate which comprises at least one fastening opening and wherein the plate has one smooth underside and a topside, characterized in that it may be fastened in at least two different length positions in relation to the leg of the chair it is fastened to, and that it in both positions has a horizontal extent which is larger than the area it covers on the leg of the chair.
Further advantageous embodiments appear form the dependent claims.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is therefore provided a glider device mentioned above, wherein the gliding device is a horizontal extended glider in relation to an original glider or spacer on the leg of the chair. The topside of the plate may comprise raised edges and may comprise two or more fastening openings. The fastening openings may have conical edges which open towards the underside of the plate, preferably wherein the fastening openings are conical screw holes. The glider device may comprise an anchoring element for permanent attachment in an existing hole on the underside of the leg of a chair, and possibly thereto belonging fastening elements, preferably wherein the fastening element is a nut plug and the fastening element is a screw, more preferably wherein the fastening element is a screw with countersinkable head.
In one embodiment the fastening openings are connected by an open track, preferably the track has the same or smaller width than the diameter of the fastening opening, more preferably the track has vertical walls. Further, the raised edges may comprise longitudinal edges which partly or completely cover the right and left side edges of the gliding device, the raised edges may also cover a transverse end edge of the glider device, partly or completely, preferably continuously with the left and right side edges. At least parts of the right and left raised edges may bear against the vertical parts of the leg of a chair in an extended position.
In another embodiment the underside of the gliding device has a lower friction than the underside of the leg of a chair.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is therefore provided a safety kit for a children's chair, characterized in that it comprises two glider devices as mentioned above, two anchoring elements and two fastening elements, and possibly two replacement gliders.
Another aspect of the invention relates to the use of a glider device or a safety kit as mentioned above, as a safety device on a children's chair to reduce the friction between the chair's rear leg and a support, preferably a soft support such as a carpet.
Still another aspect of the invention relates to the use of a glider device or a safety kit as mentioned above, to move the tilting point for the chair rearward in relation to the tilting point of the chair itself.
In the further description the following terms will be used which should be understood as follows unless something else is given.
By the term “in front”, “forward”, “front” and “forward directed” is meant the mainly horizontal direction, which the face and chest of a child sitting in the chair is facing towards during normal use.
Further, by the term “behind”, “rearward”, “rear” and “rearward directed” is meant the opposite mainly horizontal direction, which is the direction towards which the back of the child sitting in a chair generally is directed towards during normal use of the chair.
The invention will in the following be illustrated by examples of embodiments with referred to the figures, which are not limiting for the invention.
The extended glider 1 has an underside which comprises a gliding surface 11. The glider surface 11 has a surface which is wider and/or longer in extent than normal spacers on children's chair, such as in relation to standard gliders which are supplied as standard on a Tripp Trappe® chair. The extended glider is provided with a frontal fastening opening 12 and a rear fastening opening 13, such as screw holes, for fastening of the extended glider on the underside of the children's chair by help of the fastening element 3. The front and rear fastening openings 12 and 13 are preferably adapted to the fastening element, and are in this embodiment conical so that corresponding conical screw heads are countersunk during fastening and do not get in contact with the floor and influence the gliding properties of the safety device, or make scratches in the floor surface.
The extended glider comprises three mainly vertical raised side edges, i.e. two longitudinal edges 14 and a transverse end edge 15. The edges 14 and 15 will completely or partly surround and bear against the vertical parts of the rear legs of the children's chair, like a kind of shoe.
In both the cases shown in
In this embodiment, as shown in
As shown in the
I
The rear standard gliders 21 are fastened to a hole on the underside of the rear leg parts that appears by removal of the standard gliders. The standard gliders may be thrown away as they will not fit in the holes after the anchoring element 2 is mounted, such as when a nut plug is fixed into the chair as shown in
In
In an alternative embodiment as shown in
If the user no longer wishes to have the safety device mounted on the chair, the extended glider may be demounted and removed and be replaced by the optional replacement glider 4 mounted in the holes under the chair, for example by driving it as shown in
Normally, the safety device is supplied as a package containing all the necessary parts for a chair, and thus the invention also relates to a kit comprising:
The safety kit may for example be supplied separately as a safety kit, or be combined with other products, such as chosen from one or more of: a children's harness, a children's rail or a raised back of the chair, such as a baby kit.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20082491 | Jun 2008 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO09/00205 | 5/29/2009 | WO | 00 | 12/3/2010 |