The present invention relates to a device cradle removably holding an electrical device, such as a BMI calculator, and having a substantially semicircular clip assembly formed on a rear surface thereof for releaseably clipping an elongated cylindrical object such as a stethoscope tube. The present invention also relates to a method of advertising wherein the device housing is used as an advertising vehicle by disposing advertising material on an outer surface of the device cradle.
In hospitals, doctors frequently need to perform various types of calculations, right on the spot while consulting patients or reviewing test results or medical records of patients, regarding patient's current physical condition for diagnosis, determination of the kind of treatment or dosage of a particular medication, or other various medical purposes. For this, doctors often carry various portable, handheld electronic devices such as a BMI (body mass index) calculators, countdown timers, or common hand calculators. Those usually medical devices, usually kept in pockets of doctors' gowns or held in their hands are at a risk of loss or misplacement. Since a stethoscope is a must-carry medical tool worn by almost all doctors on duty, it would be advantageous to provide some means to detachably attaching such medical devices to the cylindrical tubing of a stethoscope. Further, doctors often have to use a handheld medical device of a different type or sometimes a same type but different one when rotating among different departments in a hospital or working at different hospitals. Therefore, instead of forming such an attachment means directly on a particular kind of a medical device, it would be more advantageous to provide a device cradle that can replaceably hold a standard-sized single kind of medical device, or even different kinds, and form aforementioned attachment means on the device cradle.
The prior art discloses some portable electric devices having clips for attaching the device to an external object. Typically the structure of clips is straight and flat. Such clips are designed to attach the device to flat objects such as shirt pockets, belts, and car visors. Many of these types of clips have a spring biased mechanism that allows the clip to open and close, facilitating the application and removal of the associated device. Examples of these types of flat clips are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 276,512 to Webster, U.S. Pat. No. 5,075,931 to van Kuijk, U.S. Pat. No. 5,361,459 to Hyvonen, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,678,281 to Kamp. A problem with these types of flat clips is that they do not work well, if at all, when used to secure a device to a cylindrically shaped object, for example, tubing or hoses. The tubing, when clipped under such clips, is easily dislodged from the clip, and further, may be undesirably compressed by the flat spring biased surface of the clips.
There are other clips that are designed to secure to cylindrically shaped objects, for example, tubing and hoses. Circular hose clips as disclosed for example in U.S. Pat. No. 6,389,650 to Yamada and in U.S. Pat. No. 5,309,607 to Hohmann. These are not designed to be integrated into a device housing. Furthermore, although these may grip a hose or tubing, they are not readily removable without tools. Therefore these hose clamps are inappropriate for attaching to a device housing. U.S. Pat. No. 6,507,267 to Russell discloses a generally triangle-shaped clip formed by bending a single piece of metal, which has a separate mounting base for attaching to a thermostat bottom wall. Similarly, U.S. Pat. No. 4,707,906 to Posey discloses a substantially circular tube holder made from a thin elongated metal strip that is sized to hold a standard-sized hospital tubing. Those types of clips, however, do not have a substantially semicircular body that can form a substantially circular aperture on a flat device surface for holding cylindrical tubing therein, and further, are not pivotally openable for removing the tubing with ease. Further, the biasing force of those clips comes not from a separate biasing member, such as a spring, but from inherent resilience of their composing material, that is, resilient metal, and thus, the gripping force of such clips become weaker faster, due to metal fatigue, than the clips using a separate biasing member.
What is lacking in the prior art is a device cradle that is capable of exchangeably retaining a portable electrical device such as a BMI calculator as well as securely and removably attaching to a cylindrically shaped external object such as the tubing of a stethoscope.
It is accordingly an object of the present invention to provide a device cradle sized and configured to exchangeably retain a single kind or different kinds of handheld electric devices.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a clip that securely and removably attaches such a device cradle to an external cylindrically shaped object.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a clip that is easily attached and removed from an external cylindrically shaped object without tools or excessive force.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a clip shaped so as not to unnecessarily and undesirably compress ,and thus potentially impair, soft rubber cylindrical tubing.
Still another object of this invention is to provide a spring biased clip upon a cradle for holding a medical device such as a BMI calculator, that will removably attach the cradle to stethoscope tubing without compressing the tubing or impairing the function of the stethoscope.
Yet another object of this invention is to provide an inexpensive way to place multicolor advertising upon a device housing to attract the attention of the user and other viewers.
These objects of this invention are accomplished by providing a spring biased clip attached to a device cradle. In the preferred embodiment, the device cradle is sized and configured to hold a BMI calculator.
The device cradle with a clip assembly made in the present invention has a portable handheld cradle body having a receptacle sized and configured to removably and securably retain a particular electrical device therein and a substantially flat surface on which a clip assembly is mounted for thereby attaching the cradle to an external cylindrical tubing. The receptacle has an opening for inserting and removing the electrical device therethrough, and is bounded by four contiguous and generally perpendicular surfaces and by one surface generally opposed to the opening so as to define the shape of a generally rectangular box open at a side. The clip assembly has a substantially semicircular body and is pivotally connected to the flat surface of the cradle via clip flanges and cradle flanges formed on each such that the substantially semicircular body is positioned substantially perpendicularly to the flat cradle surface. The clip further has a biasing member such as coil spring disposed between the clip and the cradle such that an end of the clip pivotally moves between an open position and a closed position in which a substantially semicircular clipping aperture is formed between the clip body and the flat surface of the cradle for releaseably and perpendicularly clipping a generally tube-shaped object therethrough. The device cradle may further have advertising material on an outer surface thereof for advertising.
The foregoing objects, features, advantages and preferred embodiments of the present invention will be better understood from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The accompanying Figures depict embodiments of the present invention, and features and components thereof. With regard to means for fastening, mounting, attaching or connecting the components of the present invention to form the apparatus as a whole, unless specifically described otherwise, such means are intended to encompass conventional fasteners such as machine screws, machine threads, snap rings, hose clamps such as screw clamps and the like, rivets, nuts and bolts, toggles, pins and the like. Components may also be connected by friction fitting, or by welding or deformation, if appropriate. Unless specifically otherwise disclosed or taught, materials for making components of the present invention are selected from appropriate materials such as metal, metallic alloys, natural or synthetic fibers, plastics and the like, and appropriate manufacturing or production methods including casting, extruding, molding and machining may be used. Any references to front and back, right and left, top and bottom, upper and lower, and horizontal and vertical are intended for convenience of description, not to limit the present invention or its components to any one positional or spacial orientation.
Referring to the drawings,
In the preferred embodiment, the cradle 100 is sized and shaped to hold a well known BMI (Body Mass Index) calculator which can be removably fitted into the cradle 100 as shown in
For facilitating insertion and removal of the electrical device, the top and bottom surfaces 110 and 120 of the cradle 100 defines, in the preferred embodiment, a cut-in section 103 extending from edges of the opening 102 toward the rear surface 150 so that a user's finger may grasp the portion of the electrical device exposed through the cut-in section 103 during insertion or removal of the electrical device. But in other embodiment, such a cut-in section may not be present or may be defined on only a single surface of the cradle.
Further, for securably retaining the electrical device within the receptacle 101, even in the inverted position, a slight detent (not shown) may be formed on at least one of the inner surfaces of the receptacle so that the electrical device may be snap-fitted therein via the detent. Or, in another embodiment, the electrical device may be frictionally fitted into the receptacle.
Although the device cradle is described above as having the shape shown in
As shown in
In the preferred embodiment, the rigid clip body 210 has a substantially semicircular shape. However, the present invention contemplates in other embodiments rigid clips of various other shapes, for example, arched, humped, or other angled shapes with an angle less than 180 degrees on the side of the clip closest to the cradle, as long as such shaped clips are capable of accommodating, without compressing, cylindrically shaped tubing.
In the preferred embodiment an advertising indicia 300 may be disposed, preferably by imprinting, on at least one of the outer surfaces of the cradle 100 as shown in FIG. ( ). In that respect, the present invention also includes a method of advertising using the device cradle made according to the present invention. The method comprises the stapes of providing a device cradle having a substantially semicircular clip assembly as described above and disposing advertising indicia upon at least one of the outer visible surfaces of the device cradle 100. Disposing advertising indicia may be accomplished by imprinting multi-colored advertising indicia directly upon an outer surface of the cradle 100 as shown in the preferred embodiment, or in another embodiment (not shown), by imprinting such indicia on an insert and attaching the insert upon one of the outer cradle surfaces via adhesives or other attachment means, and optionally, further placing fixedly or removably a transparent cover thereon.
As will be realized, the invention is capable of other and different embodiments, and its several details are capable of modifications that are apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art, all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and description are to be regarded as illustrative in nature, and not as restrictive.
This application claims priority to and is a continuation-in-part of co-pending application Ser. No. 10/754,154, filed on Jan. 09, 2004, which is hereby incorporated by reference, and hereby claims the benefit thereof.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10754154 | Jan 2004 | US |
Child | 11743663 | May 2007 | US |