The present invention relates to injection molded plastic furniture having improved feet and methods of making such furniture. This application claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/334,197.
Injection molded plastic furniture includes chairs, tables, stools, plant stands, and many other useful forms of furniture. A major advantage of such furniture is its low manufacturing cost. Typically, such furniture is made of a thermoplastic such as polypropylene, polystyrene, polyethylene, acrylic, acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), or mixtures and combinations thereof. Fillers such as calcium or talc may also be added. The selection of which of the many commercially available plastics to use depends on a variety of design and production factors, principle among which are the strength, toughness, stiffness, and durability of the overall structure in view of the intended use of the furniture item. For economical reasons, often the furniture item is injected molded as a single piece or as a set of small number of pieces of the same plastic which are then assembled together. See for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,401,854 B2 to Adams which discloses an injection molded stackable folding chair.
Sometimes it is useful or necessary to attach to the floor-contacting parts of the injected molded plastic furniture a separately manufactured foot. One benefit of using such a foot is to provide the article of furniture with improved friction in order to reduce the slippage of the article on smooth surfaces. Another is that, when feet are used on an article of furniture with legs such as a chair or table, the amount of internal stress the article must withstand when a load is applied is reduced. The internal stress reduction achieved by using feet can be very significant. The “ASTM Test Results” section later in this document illustrates differences in how long specific chairs hold a set weight before failing when feet are used and when they are not used. One chair held for 76 minutes with conventional feet, but only for about 1 minute with no feet. For that chair, and for many other articles of furniture, feet are a critical and integral component. Other reasons feet may be used are to cushion impacts on the furniture or to protect substrates from being scuffed by the more rigid material comprising the furniture.
Feet are usually attached to an article of furniture shortly after the injection molding of the furniture although they could also be attached sometime thereafter. The article of furniture is usually provided with a cavity or socket for receiving the anchor portion of the foot. With conventional feet, the cavity and the anchor portion are normally shaped and sized so that the foot is retained by friction. The anchor portion is designed to be slightly wider than the cavity and to be compressed into the cavity to create an interference fit (also known as a friction or press fit). In some cases, press fits create a satisfactory mechanical connection. However, they are not sufficient for connecting feet to furniture. The initial grip strength is on the low side. In addition, conventional feet are normally made of a semi-flexible material. Any semi-flexible material will take a compression set over time. So as time passes and the feet are compressed, the grip of the foot into the cavity lessens. Consequently, it is possible for frictionally retained feet to be jostled or knocked off (or to simply fall off) of the article of furniture to which they were attached. Although this conventional foot retaining method has been standard practice in the resin furniture industry for many years if not decades, it does not result in a reliable grip of the foot onto the chair. The ASTM Test Results section shows how if just one foot falls off it can cause a chair to no longer meet industry standards for outdoor furniture.
Even though semi-flexible materials take a compression set, they do not take a set as quickly as fully flexible, softer, lower-durometer materials. That is why semi-flexible materials are used for furniture feet instead of a softer material. The trade-off of not using softer foot material is that some grip on surfaces is sacrificed. Softer feet would provide more frictional grip on substrates.
The last weakness of conventional feet is the difficulty of inserting them. Since the anchor portion of the foot must be made wider than the cavity to create a friction fit, assemblers must exert themselves to squeeze the foot into the cavity. Often feet are inserted only to the point where they are stable enough to stay in place until they can be hammered fully in. Still, getting the feet even partially inserted into the cavity is difficult with conventional feet.
Another type of foot commonly used for furniture consists of a rubber washer with a bolt that passes through the center of the washer. The washer may be seated in a cylindrical metal housing to which a bolt or threaded rod is attached. Usually the head of the bolt is recessed into the washer so that only the washer makes contact with the floor. An example of such a product is available from Custom Rubber Corp., and sold as a Non-Marking Molded Rubber Leveling Foot. The leg in which the foot is attached typically has a threaded cavity or nut into which the bolt is secured. While this type of foot is securely held, several minutes may be required to install these feet on the legs of three-legged or four-legged furniture. The feet themselves are also much more expensive than feet which are extruded and friction fitted into a leg cavity.
It is also known to provide rubber caps encompassing the head of a bolt; such as the Molded Rubber Bumper Bolts again made by Customer Rubber Corp. With this type of foot, there are multiple issues. First among them, the rubber must be made very hard so that it cannot slip away from the head of the bolt since soft, flexible plastic would not have adequate resistance to decoupling from the head of the bolt during use. Also, the assembly of such feet would be time consuming and/or require special receiving cavities in the furniture. Next, the cost of such feet, due to the need for a somewhat large metal bolt as a component and to the expensive nature of insert molding, is much higher than with conventional feet. Finally, such feet could come partially or fully unscrewed during use.
The present invention fills the need for a new type of foot for injection molded furniture:
We provide a foot having an anchor portion which fits into a cavity in the leg of a chair (or to the legs or floor-contacting parts of other furniture). The anchor has a base with a substantially flat bottom surface to which a pad is attached. The pad is made of soft plastic such as flexible polyvinyl chloride and the anchor is made of a hard plastic such as rigid polyvinyl chloride. Preferably the anchor and pad are co-extruded to form a chemical bond between the hard and soft plastics. Ribs on the anchor engage and preferably deform the side wall of the cavity to create a mechanical interlock between anchor and cavity.
The criticality of the features and merits of the present invention will be better understood by reference to the attached drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed for the purpose of illustration only and not as definitions of the limits of the present invention.
a is a perspective view of the foot shown in
In this section, some preferred embodiments of the present invention are described in detail sufficient for one skilled in the art to practice the present invention. It is to be understood, however, that the fact that a limited number of preferred embodiments are described herein does not in any way limit the scope of the present invention as set forth in the appended claims.
Referring to
Referring now to
The anchor portion 38 and the pad portion 40 join along junction 42. The anchor portion 38 comprises a set of two pairs of opposing self-centering surfaces 44, 48 which act to center the anchor portion 38 as the foot 36 is being inserted into the leg cavity 22. The anchor portion also has two pairs of opposing alignment surfaces 50, 52 which act to assist in the alignment of the anchor portion 38 within the leg cavity 22. The alignment surfaces 50, 52 are designed to be only slightly wider than the leg cavity 22 so that the foot 36 can be easily inserted by hand until the opposing wedging surfaces 54 stop the penetration at which point the foot 36 is held steadily enough by friction in the cavity 22 in a partially-inserted position (see
The horizontal junction 42 between the anchor portion 38 and pad portion 40 should be flat or slightly curved or rippled such that the surface area of the pad which contacts the anchor portion is at least 75% and preferably over 90% of the area of the bottom surface of the pad. Because the pad is preferably made of a material that is softer than the anchor, tearing of the pad may occur if the contact surface of the pad portion with the anchor portion is less than 75% of the area of the bottom surface of the pad. This tearing can occur if the feet are on a chair or other article which is slid or “scooched” across the floor or on any other article which must withstand lateral forces. To further improve the strength of the attachment between anchor and pad, the pad may extend up the edges of the anchor portion as shown in
It is to be understood that the foot 36 shown in
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Two more embodiments of feet in accordance with the present invention are depicted schematically in
Referring now to
The anchor portion and pad portion of a foot according the present invention are most likely to be made of thermoplastics, although it would be possible to have the anchor portion be made of metal. When the anchor portion is made of a thermoplastic, it may be made of one that is the same as or different from the pad portion. In the context of this patent application, two thermoplastics are to be construed as being different if they have different chemical or physical properties. For example, an anchor portion that is made of a hard PVC that has a durometer hardness of 74 on the Shore D scale and a pad portion that is made of a soft PVC that has a durometer hardness of 60 on the Shore A scale are to be construed as being made of different thermoplastics. In embodiments wherein the anchor portion and the pad portion of a foot are made of different thermoplastics, these portions may be joined together by any means known in the art which will provide a bond strong enough to keep the portions from separating during use. Co-injection molding, insert molding, or other bonding methods known in the art may be used. Most preferably, the portions are made from materials which are chemically compatible and chemically bond during co-extrusion.
The anchor portion is harder than the pad portion. The anchor portion thermoplastic is selected to have sufficient hardness and rigidity to enable the anchor portion to form the indentations in the manner described below. Preferably, the anchor portion is polyvinyl chloride having a durometer hardness of at least 70 on the Shore D scale. However, depending on the material used to make the furniture, the material used for the anchor portion may need to be made harder than 70 Shore D. This may require the use of ABS, nylon, filled polypropylene, polycarbonate, or another very hard thermoplastic, or possibly even metal. The pad portion thermoplastic is selected to have sufficient strength for at least partly supporting the article of furniture and operationally suitable abrasion resistance and friction properties with respect to its surface that is designed to contact the floor. Preferably, the pad portion material will be selected from one of the following types of thermoplastics: polyvinyl chloride (PVC), thermoplastic elastomer (TPE), polyurethane, real or thermoplastic rubber, silicone, and mixtures and combinations thereof. If using a metal anchor, a special metal-bonding plastic such as a TPV would be required. Preferably, the pad portion thermoplastic is a PVC that has a durometer hardness of no more than about 65 on the Shore A scale.
The shape the foot is to have can influence the process chosen to manufacture the foot. For example, feet having elongate shapes, such as the foot 36 shown in
Some preferred methods of attaching feet to articles of furniture according to embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to
When the foot is positioned as in
The walls 24, 26 of the cavity in
Most resin molded chairs which have foot pads rely on those pads to provide proper performance and stability. When one or more pads fall out of a chair the integrity and stability of the chair is compromised. The present invention essentially eliminates the risks involved with pads falling out.
When we prefer to use the insertion technique described in the discussion of
Molded plastic articles usually shrink to some extent immediately after the article is extruded or removed from a mold. The amount of shrinkage will depend upon the type and amount of plastic used. Inserting the foot immediately after the article is removed from the mold takes advantage of this shrinkage. The walls of the cavity will shrink around the anchor portion of the foot to tighten the grip of the cavity onto the foot, working in conjunction with the compressional force exerted by the cavity walls to create a reliable mechanical interlock.
The foot here disclosed has several advantages of other feet that have been used on furniture. First, the foot here disclosed can be made at a significantly lower cost than the non-marking molded rubber leveling feet that use a bolt and washer or similar structure. A foot configured as in
Another advantage of the foot here disclosed is ease of installation. One can install a foot into a chair leg in a matter of seconds. No special equipment or tools, other than a hammer or mallet, is needed.
The foot disclosed can be used in any type of Mono-Block Resin Furniture, regardless of the line of draw on the ribs in the foot cavities. This fact is especially used for Adirondack chairs where the line of draw on the rear and/or front legs creates ribs with very pronounced angles from vertical. Unlike the screw/bolt of prior-art designs the foot here disclosed can be installed into cavities/ribs/sockets formed by any angle of mold draw.
The pad portion of the foot can be made from 60 durometer (Shore A) material, which improves the performance of molded plastic chairs. That improvement is described below in the context of the test results discussed herein. One cannot use 60 durometer material for a washer in a bolt and washer type foot because the bolt would tear the washer when the foot is subjected to lateral forces, such as when a chair is slid across the floor. Tearing may expose the hard metal bolt which can scratch the floor. The hard metal bolt could also be exposed if the pad abraded away. Such a soft washer may also fold over onto itself during installation.
Although it is preferable that the entire article of furniture is made of a thermoplastic and be injection molded, the present invention is not limited to such furniture. Rather, the present invention encompasses all furniture, regardless of whether or not it has been injection molded in whole or in part, which have a receiving cavity for a foot in which the cavity is defined in part by a thermoplastic wall upon which the foot can act upon insertion to form an indention in the manner described above.
Other advantages of the current invention are illustrated in the sections below.
Injection molded chairs made of polypropylene were provided with cavities for receiving supporting feet. The cavities had walls with surfaces which were free of indentations. Feet having the design shown in
For comparison, conventional feet made of a single material, a semi-flexible PVC having a durometer Shore A hardness of 88, were inserted into the receiving cavities of similar injection molded polypropylene chairs. The force required to remove these conventional feet was measured using the same testing method and rig to be less than 4 pounds force. The cavities were inspected after the feet had been removed and found to be free of indentations.
Although the pull force results shown above illustrate the dramatic increase in the grip strength of foot into cavity, other superior configurations potentially exist. Various features of the cavity, such as wall thicknesses, rib heights, and cavity length, width, and height, could be modified. Alternatively, the feet could also be adjusted to achieve the same relative dimensions as if adjusting the cavity. The end-result of such modifications might be even better pull force results. On the other hand, it may be determined that the grip strength of foot to cavity is greater than is necessary for a particular article of furniture. In which case, the anchor portion could for example be made narrower if that would allow for full hand insertion of the feet here disclosed while still providing adequate foot grip and retention.
Plastic chairs for outdoor use must meet certain standard performance requirements. ASTM F 1561-03 standard sets forth specific tests to be performed in order to determine if a plastic chair meets those requirements. One test involves placing the chair on a glass surface which simulates smooth surfaces such as linoleum and wet pool decks. Three hundred pounds is placed on the chair. The chair must then hold for at least 30 minutes without failing. Failure occurs when the chair collapses or when any visible evidence of structural damage develops such as cracking. Chairs are often left up beyond 30 minutes to further evaluate performance even though that is not specified as necessary per the ASTM standard.
Testing was conducted on three types of plastic molded chairs sold by Adams Mfg. of Portersville, Pa.: an Adirondack chair sold under the ERGO ADIRONDACK® brand, a regular Adirondack chair, and a low back chair. All three chairs were tested under four conditions when placed on a glass surface and carrying a 300 pound weight according to ASTM F 1561-03. First the chairs were equipped with feet configured as in
Table 1 shows the chairs with the new feet performed better than those with conventional feet. We attribute the improvement to the use of softer durometer material for the surface of the foot which contacts the floor. The softer material has better frictional properties. Prior to the present invention such soft materials could not be used because of tearing or inability to insure the soft material into a cavity in a chair leg without folding or distorting the materials. As Table 2 shows, the use of conventional feet results in hold time decreases of 10% and 13% for the two types of Adirondack chairs. Using conventional feet with the Low Back chair only resulted in a decrease of about 3% in hold time, but still the chairs with conventional feet had inferior performance.
Since conventional feet can and do fall out of a chair leg, the more important comparison is with failure times for chairs with 3 conventional feet and no feet. There are massive decreases in holding time when just one conventional foot has been removed. With one foot missing, the chairs tested lost anywhere from 47% to 70% of their holding strength.
Because failure time in this ASTM test is a predictor of failure of a chair during use, the feet disclosed here provide a much safer plastic chair.
Another thing this testing brings to light is that chairs that do not have the securely locked-in feet here disclosed can only be said to be able to pass the 30-minute ASTM requirement with the caveat “as long as none of the feet have fallen out”. The Adams Mfg. regular Adirondack chair tested, which held over twice as long as the ASTM standard dictates when all four feet were intact, did not pass the test with one conventional foot missing. Chairs that were made by competitors of Adams Mfg. were purchased at various retail locations and were also tested. A foot was easily removed from one such chair and that chair only held for 11 minutes before failing.
ASTM standards for outdoor furniture could in the future be updated to include a “pull force test” such as described in the previous section. The test might require that feet be able to withstand a minimum axially directed force of such as 45 lbs. or 60 lbs. without releasing from the cavity. It could stipulate that if the feet are unable to withstand that force, then, for a chair to be deemed as acceptable, all the feet would need to be removed before the chair is tested. This would reduce the occurrence and risk of consumers getting chairs with one or more missing feet which, as a result, do not meet ASTM's standard that chairs must hold 300 lbs. on glass for at least 30 minutes.
While we have disclosed certain present preferred embodiments of our feet for molded plastic furniture, furniture containing those feet and a method of installing those feet, it should be distinctly understood that our invention is not limited therefore but may be variously embodied within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13334197 | Dec 2011 | US |
Child | 14842114 | US |