Numerous apparatus are known that attempt to impose a barrier between the mucosal membranes of a person and airborne-spread infectious diseases, or to prevent the outward spread of such diseases from the wearer. One variety of these are face shields, which include a transparent visor that covers the entirety of a user's face, and one of various structures to attach this visor to the head of the user. One common expedient is to stand off the visor from the face of the user by a thick strip of Styrofoam, foam rubber or the like that wraps around a considerable portion of the user's forehead and temples. The attachment is completed by passing a simple ring around the entire head of the user. A second approach mounts the face shield on the user's nose, after the manner of eyeglasses.
Ideally, a face shield should be lightweight, comfortable, firmly secured to the head of the user but nonetheless easy to put on and take off, have a standoff that separates the user's face from the inner surface of the visor, have a means for defining the shape of the transparent visor itself, and be capable of having its transparent visor easily replaced.
A face shield according to the invention comprises a frame that has a headband, a visor support member and a standoff member spacing the headband from the visor support member. The headband, which is preferably molded from an elastic polymeric material, has a center for mounting adjacent the user's forehead, a right end and a left end. The right and left ends of the headband are disposed rearwardly of the center and in use are disposed adjacent a rear portion of the user's head. The headband includes a strap portion with a thickness that is less than its width. The strap portion extends from the center by a first length around the head of the user to the right end and extends from the center by a second length around the head of the user to the left end. A reinforcing rib is formed on the outer surface of the strap portion to extend outwardly therefrom. The reinforcing rib does not extend for the entire length of the strap portion but only for left and right reinforced portions thereof. The distal portions of the strap portion remain unreinforced, and therefore are more elastic or springy than the reinforced portions. The visor support member is disposed radially outwardly from the headband, is elongate and has a center. A transparent visor is removably fastened to the visor support member to downwardly depend therefrom, thereby protecting the eyes, nose and mouth of the user from certain airborne contaminants and impeding the emission of water droplets and the like outward from the user into the general environment.
In an embodiment, the right and left ends of the strap portion terminate in concave hooks that face away from the back of the user's head. In an embodiment, an elongate fastening strap is used to fasten these hooks together. The fastening strap may have a first hole which is slid onto a first one of the hooks, and a plurality of second holes, spaced from the first hole and each other, one of which is slid onto a second one of the hooks to complete the fastening of the face shield to the user.
In an embodiment, right and left sections of the reinforcing rib are joined to the standoff member, which has a length, in a front to rear horizontal direction, and a width, in a lateral horizontal direction orthogonal to the front to rear horizontal direction, which are much greater than its thickness in a vertical direction. The standoff member thus aids in the stiffening of the strap portion of the headband.
In an embodiment, a plurality of spaced-apart holes are formed near the upper margin of the visor. A plurality of barbs, formed to extend outwardly from an outer surface of the visor support member, are inserted into respective ones of these holes, to releasably attach the visor to the visor support member.
In one embodiment, a forehead cushion, which is molded of a thermoplastic polymeric material that is softer than the material used to mold the headband, is disposed on an inner surface of the strap portion. In an embodiment, the inner surface of the forehead cushion is divided by a plurality of channels into sub-areas, permitting the selective deformation of the sub-areas and enhancing user comfort.
In one embodiment, a width, in a vertical direction, of a central section of the strap portion of the headband is greater than the width of either a right or a left section thereof. The increase in width increases the surface area of contact to the user's forehead and therefore enhances comfort.
In an embodiment, the overall width in a horizontal lateral direction of the visor support member is greater than an overall width in the horizontal lateral direction of the headband. The overall width of the headband in turn is greater than an overall width in the horizontal lateral direction of the standoff member. The unreinforced portions of the headband strap portion, in an unflexed position or condition, are relatively close together. But, when the headband is fitted to the head of the user, the unreinforced portions of the strap portion will outwardly flex to assume one of a plurality of flexed positions. Within a predetermined range of these flexed positions, the convex curve defined by the visor support member is not deformed by the flexure of the unreinforced strap portions.
Further aspects of the invention and their advantages can be discerned in the following detailed description as read in conjunction with the drawings of exemplary embodiments, in which like characters denote like parts and in which:
A face shield according to an illustrated embodiment of the invention is generally shown at 100 in
The frame 102 in turn has a headband 110, adapted to be worn around the head of a user, a visor support member 112 and a standoff member 114 that outwardly spaces the visor support member 112 from the headband 110. As seen in
In one embodiment, the right end 122 of the strap portion terminates in an outward-facing, outwardly concave right hook 128, while the left end 126 terminates in an outward-facing, outwardly concave left hook 130 that faces away from hook 128. Hooks 128 and 130 may be used as attachment points for the fastening strap 108, in a manner later described.
The headband 110 also has a reinforcing rib 132 that extends radially outwardly from an outer surface 134 of the strap portion 116. A right section 136 of the reinforcing rib 132 has a near end 138 that is joined to, and preferably is integrally molded with, a right margin of the standoff member 114. The right section 136 extends rightwardly, then around right temporal corner 140 and then rearwardly, to a far end 142. The far end 142 is far short of right end 122 of the strap portion 116, leaving a right unreinforced portion 144 that extends from rib far end 142 to the strap portion right end 122.
Similarly, a left section 146 of the reinforcing rib 132 has a near end 148 that is joined to, and preferably is integrally molded with, a left margin of the standoff member 114. The left section extends from near end 148 leftwardly, around left temporal corner 150 and then rearwardly, terminating in a far end 152. The far end 152 is far short of left end 126 of the strap portion 116, leaving a left unreinforced portion 154 that extends from left rib section far end 152 to the left end 126 of strap portion 116. The unreinforced portions 144, 154 will be more elastic or “springy” than the reinforced strap portions created by rib 132. As a result, they will compressably hug the back of the user's head to a greater extent than the rest of the headband 110.
In the illustrated embodiment, a thickness in a vertical direction of the reinforcing rib 132 is the same as a thickness in the vertical direction of standoff member 114. In the illustrated embodiment, the standoff member 114 acts as a portion of reinforcing rib 132, in that it resists any deformation in a horizontal direction of that portion of strap portion 116 that it adjoins. The vertical direction is shown at 508 in
The standoff support member 114 extends from the outer surface 134 of the headband strap portion 116 (
The visor support member 112 is wider in a vertical direction than it is thick in a horizontal direction, so as to lend stability to the position of the attached visor 106. As assembled to the visor support member 112, the visor 106 is supported by and downwardly depends from the visor support member 112. The visor 106 is removably affixed to the visor support member 112. In the illustrated embodiment, this is accomplished by providing a plurality of spaced-apart barbs 502 that preferably are integrally molded with, and outwardly extend from, the outer surface 500 of the visor support member 112 (
A detail of a representative one of the barbs 502 is seen in
As best seen in the exploded view shown in
The forehead cushion 104 (
The fastening strap 108 optionally may be used to even more firmly secure the face shield 100 to the head of the user. As seen in
While headband strap portion 116 has a shape that is mostly thin and wide, as molded it will have a plurality of cylinders along is length that are artifacts of knock-out pins of the injection mold tooling. Two of these are a cylinder 316 near end 126, and a cylinder 318 near strap end 122. Cylinders 316, 318 act as impediments to fastening strap 108 inadvertently slipping off of hooks 128, 130.
In summary, a face shield has been illustrated and described that includes reinforced and nonreinforced strap portions of a headband, which portions will therefore differentially flex when the headband is placed on the head of a user. While illustrated embodiments of the present invention have been described and illustrated in the appended drawings, the present invention is not limited thereto but only by the scope and spirit of the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5647060 | Lee | Jul 1997 | A |
20210298381 | Yeaman | Sep 2021 | A1 |
20210345701 | Mamatas | Nov 2021 | A1 |
20210386137 | Martino | Dec 2021 | A1 |
20210392970 | Basta | Dec 2021 | A1 |
20210392973 | Whitehead | Dec 2021 | A1 |
20220030976 | Harris | Feb 2022 | A1 |
20220061425 | Bailliet | Mar 2022 | A1 |
Entry |
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Amazon, Salon World Safety Face Shields Ultra Clear Protective Full Face Shields, downloaded Jun. 7, 2021, https://www.amazon.com/Salon-World-Safety-Face-Shields/dp/B08B2KJHRP/ref=sr_1_4_sspa?dchild=1&keywords=face+shields&qid=1623086717&sr=8-4-spons&psc=1&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUEyOFFGQkZMNkkwQU9SJmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwMDAyNzc1Q1VMQTc5V05QVUdkJmVuY3J5cHRlZEFkSWQ9QTAzNTg5ODBJQTlNMFBGWVk0M1Qmd21kZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9hdGYmYWN0aW9uPWNsaWNrUmVkaXJlY3QmZG9Ob3RMb2dDbGljaz10cnVl. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20220061422 A1 | Mar 2022 | US |