1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to toy vehicles and, more specifically, to foldable electric powered child riding vehicles.
2. Description of the Related Art
Electric powered child riding vehicles have become popular recreational and educational toys for children. Such vehicles typically have a relatively slow speed capability of, for example, no more than ten mph. In general, electric powered child riding vehicles require a safe and sizeable riding area so that a child has room to manipulate and operate the vehicle. Moreover, existing electric powered toy riding vehicles are large, bulky, and therefore not easily transported in, for example, the trunk of a car. Thus, the toy vehicles are, in almost all circumstances, operated on or around the property of the owner, e.g., the child's backyard, surrounding sidewalks and neighborhood etc. As a result of the riding area requirement and lack of portability, existing electric powered child riding vehicles have traditionally been prevalent mostly in middle and upper-class residential neighborhoods were safe sidewalks and large properties provide adequate vehicle operating room.
Several types of foldable child riding, electric powered vehicles have been developed. Nevertheless, difficulties are still encountered in providing a vehicle that can be promptly converted from a folded position to a deployed riding position, and then checked for correctness of the assembly and operational safety.
Therefore, there is a need in the art for an improved foldable electric powered child riding vehicle.
The present invention is directed to a foldable electric powered child riding vehicle comprising a front module and a rear module which are pivotally connected to each other. In a riding configuration, the modules are secured together in an unfolded (i.e., deployed) position. An electric drive of the vehicle is selectively disabled until the modules have been secured in the deployed position. In a storage/transportation configuration, the modules are electrically disengaged and may be rotationally folded such that a roadside surface of the front module becomes proximate the roadside surface of the rear module. This folded configuration allows for convenient storage and transport of the vehicle.
In one embodiment, the foldable electric powered child riding vehicle comprises a front module, a rear module pivotally coupled to the front module, and at least one mounting assembly connected between the front module and the rear module. The mounting assembly allows the modules to be selectively moved between a deployed state in which the modules are secured to each other in a riding position and operating power may be provided to the vehicle, and an un-deployed state in which operating power is prevented from being provided to the vehicle.
In another embodiment, a foldable electric powered child riding vehicle is provided having a front module, a rear module pivotally coupled to the front module, and at least one mounting assembly connected between the front module and the rear module. The mounting assembly allows the modules to be selectively moved between a deployed state in which the modules are secured to each other in a riding position, and an un-deployed state.
Embodiments of the invention include vehicles where a protective hood or a rider seat or both have foldable portions. Such portions are secured in upright positions for facilitating vehicle operating and folded down for facilitating storage/transportation of the vehicle.
Other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed solely for purposes of illustration and not as a definition of the limits of the invention, for which reference should be made to the appended claims. It should be further understood that the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale and that, unless otherwise indicated, they are merely intended to conceptually illustrate the structures and procedures described herein.
In the drawings:
The teachings of the present invention will become apparent by considering the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
For illustrative purposes, the images in
The appended drawings illustrate exemplary embodiments of the invention and, as such, should not be considered limiting the scope of the invention that may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
The present invention advantageously provides a foldable electric powered child riding vehicle. In a folded storage/transportation configuration, the vehicle is dimensioned to fit in a small compartment, such as a trunk of a passenger car. For operational safety, an electric drive of the vehicle is selectively enabled when the vehicle is secured in an unfolded riding configuration for allowing operation of the vehicle in a forward and/or reverse direction.
The front module 102 generally includes a front chassis 108, a steering unit 110, at least one front wheel 112 (two wheels 112 are shown) kinematically coupled to the steering unit 110, a hood assembly 114, as well as conventional ride controls (not shown) for operating an electric motor, brakes, optional displays, light indicators or rearview mirrors, and the like.
The steering unit 110 includes a tiltable steering shaft 132 and a steering wheel 134 that is rigidly fastened to the shaft 132. In one embodiment, the hood assembly 114 illustratively comprises a protective bracket 136, two side bars 138, and two lockable pins 154. The protective bracket 136 is pivotally connected to the front chassis 108 using at least one hinge 126 and is supported in an upright position by the side bars 138. Each side bar 138 is rotatably attached to a respective arm 146 of the bracket 136 by a hinge 118 and may be detachably fastened to the front chassis 108 using the lockable pins 154.
The rear module 104 generally includes a rear chassis 120, a rider seat assembly 122, a cover (fender) 124, an electric drive 202 (shown with broken lines), at least one drive wheel 128 (two wheels 128 are shown) kinematically coupled to the drive 202, as well as conventional features (not shown), such as a port for connecting a battery of the electric drive 202 to an external charger, a hitch, optional light indicators, and the like. It will be appreciated that the front wheel(s) and the back wheel(s) may be of the same size or of different sizes. Moreover, a three-wheel vehicle is also contemplated wherein, for example, two rear wheels and a single front wheel are provided.
The rider seat assembly 122 comprises a stationary horizontal portion 140 and a foldable back portion 142. In the depicted embodiment, the back portion 142 is pivotally linked to the horizontal portion 140 using at least one hinge 116. Alternatively (not shown), the back portion 142 may similarly be linked to the rear chassis 120. In the depicted embodiment, the back portion 142 is illustratively supported in an upright position by pillars 148. The back portion 142 is secured to pillars 148 using fasteners 144, such as a lock-down screw (as shown), clamp, and the like. The pillars 148 may be mounted on a floorboard or, alternatively, sidebars of the rear chassis 120.
Together, the front chassis 108, the rear chassis 120, and hinge assemblies 106 form a foldable frame of the vehicle 100. In one embodiment, the mounting assembly 106 facilitates connectivity for a portion of wiring to the electrical drive 202 of the vehicle 100 only after the front chassis 108 and the rear chassis 120 have been secured together in a stretched or deployed position corresponding to the riding configuration of the vehicle. In this embodiment, the electrical drive 202 may be enabled (i.e., electric motor may be started and/or operated) only after the vehicle 100 has been properly unfolded and secured in the riding configuration, thus protecting a child from riding a partially or defectively assembled vehicle.
The mounting assembly 106 generally comprises a lockable fastener 302 (e.g. a lock-down screw) and a receptacle 304. For a purpose of graphical clarity, the fastener 302 and receptacle 304 are shown in a disengaged position. In the depicted embodiment, the receptacle 304 comprises a portion of the front chassis 114. Alternatively (not shown), the receptacle 304 may be an insert that is rigidly coupled to the rear chassis 120.
The fastener 302 and receptacle 304 have mating threads 306 and 308, respectively. In the riding configuration, the fastener 302 is pushed downward into, and turned with respect to, the receptacle 304, thus attaching the front chassis 108 to the rear chassis 120. In this position, opposing surfaces 332 and 334 of the fastener 302 and receptacle 304, respectively, coincide and become compressed against one another. Oppositely, the fastener 302 may be unscrewed from the receptacle 304 to transform the vehicle 100 from the riding configuration to the storage/transportation configuration, as discussed in detail below in reference to
In one embodiment, the fastener 302 includes a conductive portion, such as a disk 310 attached to a bottom surface 336 of a recess 312 and the receptacle 304 comprises a contact group 314 disposed in a post 326 of the receptacle. In this embodiment, the fastener 302 and post 326 are both formed from non-conductive materials (i.e., insulators), such as plastics, epoxy-based compounds, and the like. The contact group 314 generally comprises a stationary peripheral contact 316 (e.g., circular contact) and a spring-loaded central contact 318. The central contact 318 is movably positioned in a cavity 324 and is axially biased using a spring 328. The peripheral contact 316 and central contact 318 are coupled to wires 320 and 322, respectively. Outside the receptacle 304, the wires 320 and 322 are conventionally insulated. The wires 320, 322 are conductors of a network that, in operation, enables the electric drive 202 (e.g., connects a drive battery to an electric motor of the drive). In the vehicle 100, the electric motor can be operated only when the peripheral contact 316 and the central contact 318 form an electric circuit with the conductive disk 310. This occurs only when the vehicle is in its fully-deployed state.
The contacts 316 and 318 protrude through a surface 330 of the post 324 such that, when in an engaged position with the fastener 302 screwed into the receptacle 304, both contacts reach the conductive disk 310. The conductive disk 310 facilitates the short circuit between the contacts 316 and 318, thus making the electric drive 202 operational. In the vehicle 100, the short circuit between the contacts 316 and 318 is formed after the mounting assembly 106 has securely attached the front chassis 108 to the rear chassis 120, i.e., in the riding configuration of the vehicle. Oppositely, when mechanical coupling between the chassis 108 and chassis 120 is at least partially disengaged or loosened, such as by turning the fastener 302 is a direction opposite to the direction used in engaging the fastener in the receptacle 304, the spring 328 urges the disk 310 away from contact 316 so that a short circuit state of the contacts 316 and 318 is terminated and the electric drive 202 becomes disabled. Thus, easy manipulation of the mounting assembly 106 simultaneously secures the vehicle in the deployed state and also connects operating power.
In the vehicle of
In a further embodiment, the vehicle 100 may comprise a test circuit 201 for detecting the short circuit state of contacts of the contact group(s) 314 and, as such, if the front module 102 and the rear module 104 are secured in the stretched (i.e., deployed) position, the vehicle will operate. Illustratively, the test circuit comprises one or more light emitting diodes (LED) 203 and a push-button switch 205 enabling the LEDs to selectively radiate visible light when, in the riding configuration of the vehicle 100, the modules 102 and 104 are secured together.
From the deployed riding configuration, the vehicle of
With reference to
It will be readily appreciated by those having ordinary skill in the art that other electro-mechanical coupling configurations can be used to simultaneously secure the front chassis 108 and rear chassis 120 in their deployed position while creating an electrical short circuit between the conductors 420, 422 to provide safe deployment and electrical connection.
Thus, while there have been shown and described and pointed out fundamental novel features of the present invention as applied to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes in the form and details of the devices described and illustrated, and in their operation, and of the methods described may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the present invention. For example, it is expressly intended that all combinations of those elements and/or method steps which perform substantially the same function in substantially the same way to achieve the same results are within the scope of the invention. Substitutions of elements from one described embodiment to another are also fully intended and contemplated. It is the intention, therefore, to be limited only as indicated by the scope of the claims appended hereto.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/470,338 which was filed on May 14, 2003 and which is incorporated by reference.
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