This disclosure generally relates to child safety products that are used with hinged doors to limit or prevent injury caused by fingers being pinched in doorjambs.
Finger guards are used to prevent injury when body parts are inserted into the gap created by a hinged door and frame. These products prevent injury by holding doors in fully or partially open positions.
A finger-guard safety device (sometimes referred to as a “finger guard”) is a safety product that helps prevent injury from a body part, such as fingers, being squeezed or crushed in a doorjamb. The disclosed finger guard is simple to use and inexpensive to make. It is placed over a door hinge to block the free-swinging motion of doors in both directions to prevent the gap formed between the longitudinal inner edge of the door and the inner edge of the doorjamb from becoming small enough to pinch fingers.
The finger guard includes (and can consist or consist essentially of) a wedge and a protuberance. The wedge portion of the device rests on one side of the hinge and the protuberance goes through the gap to rest on the other side of the hinge such that the device straddles the hinge. When the door is forced open or closed, the inner edges of the door and the doorjamb meet resistance from the wedge or the protuberance, thereby maintaining the gap between them.
Embodiments of the invention can provide protection from pinched fingers when a child is on either the hinge or doorknob sides of the door. Embodiments can also include a safety device in combination with a hinge, or in combination with a hinge and a door, and a doorjamb.
The following figures are provided for the purpose of illustration only and are not intended to be limiting.
The disclosed finger guard 10, which includes, and can consist of or consist essentially of, a wedge 12 and a protuberance 14, is positioned on a door hinge of an installed door to prevent the door from potentially causing injury to body parts, such as fingers. The finger guard 10 helps prevent injury by keeping open the gap between a longitudinal inner edge of the door and an inner edge of a doorjamb. Doors typically have two to three hinges at regularly spaced intervals. The finger guard 10 is installed over the hinge, preferably over the top-most hinge to avoid calling the attention of, or being removed by, children or others. Once installed, the finger guard 10 blocks the free-swinging motion of the door in both directions. The door can be considered blocked sufficiently when a gap between the longitudinal inner edge of the door and the inner edge of the doorjamb is maintained such that the gap is at least great enough for a child's fingers to pass through, or preferably not less than about 0.25 inches (approx. 0.6 cm) to about 0.5 inches (approx. 1.25 cm) wide.
To install the finger guard 10, the device 10 straddles the door hinge such that the protuberance 14 and wedge 12 extend down opposite sides of the hinge, and the wedge 12 is lodged into the gap between the longitudinal inner edge of the door and the inner edge of the doorjamb as shown in
Referring to
In one embodiment, the first, second, and third surfaces 16, 18 of the wedge 12 are optionally recessed, although only one or two of them could be recessed. Referring to
The finger guard 10 can be made as a single piece, or the wedge 12 and protuberance 14 portions can be tooled separately and permanently or semi-permanently joined by means known in the art. The device 10 can be made of a material that is soft to the touch and gives slightly under pressure to prevent wear and damage to the device 10, doors, frames, hinges, and jambs. However, the material is also durable enough to allow the device 10 to substantially maintain its shape when the device 10 is installed and pressure is put on the door. In one embodiment, the finger guard 10 is made of rubber, plastic, polymer, or elastomer, and can be made, for example, with any suitable molding process. In one embodiment, the finger guard 10 is made from thermoplastic elastomer.
The wedge and protuberance can be connected together, or can be a unitary, monolithic, molded piece. The device has appropriate size in the wedge, the protuberance, and the gap between the wedge and the protuberance to fit over a hinge in a typical door. A shown in
As will be apparent, the embodiments of the present invention can be embodied in forms other than those specifically disclosed above, such as variations in the shapes. The particular embodiments described above are, therefore, to be considered as illustrative and not restrictive.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/509,425, filed Jul. 19, 2011, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61509425 | Jul 2011 | US |