Children sometimes play with electrical outlets and plugs in the home. In play a child can stick his or her fingers or tongue or any other body part near a partially inserted plug and make contact with the prongs exposing the child to severe electrical shock. Such a shock can injure or possibly kill the child. Adults also can face a shock hazard inserting the plug into a receptacle by touch in the dark or around an obstacle. Many devices have been created to protect the children and adults from these hazards.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,305,634 to Lewis, indicates a device with offset slots which twist the plug electrical prongs providing a tighter grip in the outlet but repeated use will permanently bend and loosen the contacts inside the outlet. Also since the protective disc is not flexible it is made larger to provide adequate protection but this means that these plugs cannot be used close together in a power bar.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,810,199 to Kar, various hoods are employed to block fingers from contacting the live electrical prongs but these various embodiments all require specially adapted plugs but this is not universally adaptable to existing electrical plugs.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,531,800 to Avener, a device is attached to an electrical outlet and plug to prevent children from pulling out the plug. The invention of this patent is believed to be effective but requires the installation of a special wall receptacle or receptacle cover plate.
In U.S. Pat. No. 3,982,084 to cooperstien, a specially modified electrical receptacle is described wherein electrical contact with the prongs of the plug is not made until the plug is fully inserted into the receptacle. The invention of this patent is also believed to be effective but required the installation of a special receptacle and the use of a non-standard plug having an additional non-conducting prong which cooperates with the special receptacle.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,340,267 to Nakuga, describes a plug having a spring-loaded prong covering member is automatically retracted in such a way that the exposed portions of the prongs are covered when the plug is partially inserted into the receptacle. The invention of this patent does not require the replacement of the standard household electrical receptacle and is believed to be effective. However, its construction involves a number of parts which is believed to increase its cost of manufacture.
The present invention is an electrical plug safety boot which may be in the form of a curved flexible insulating disc which adheres to any common electrical plug to protect people from electrocution. The safety boot in general is an object to block finger contact from live electrical plug prongs. It can be installed on standard electrical plugs with or without ground prong. It comprises an electrically insulating flexible body made of silicone rubber or materials with similar properties. It can also be comprised of 2 different materials such as a high temperature flat center disc and contiguous flexible surrounding flaps or circumferential hood. It can be configured to mechanically bind to the prongs of the electrical plug and or adhere to the body of the same plug with adhesive or other method. The flaps or hood would be thereby affixed towards the centre of the electrical plug but free to flex at their extremity. The hood or flaps surround the electrical prongs and extend forwards longitudinally at least one half of the length of the electrical prongs thereby blocking fingers from touching them while the plug is partly inserted into the outlet. When the plug is completely inserted the safety boot flattens against the outlet.
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The present invention has universal adaptability in that it can be retrofitted to most existent plugs with or without a grounding prong. The simplicity of this safety boot permits the advantage of low cost manufacturing.
This invention can be distinguished from other similar inventions in that it can be retrofitted to existing plugs, whereas most other similar devices require new plugs to be manufactured to match their specific safety device.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2458153 | Festge | Jan 1949 | A |
2759160 | Kelley | Aug 1956 | A |
3629790 | McSherry, Jr. | Dec 1971 | A |
4810199 | Kar | Mar 1989 | A |
7011535 | Dickie | Mar 2006 | B2 |
8770994 | Fagan | Jul 2014 | B1 |
10454215 | Watkins, Jr. | Oct 2019 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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104283038 | Jan 2015 | CN |
106602328 | Apr 2017 | CN |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20230361500 A1 | Nov 2023 | US |