Claims
- 1. A connector formed from a flexible resilient material comprising at least a strap, said strap having a nipple receiving opening communicating with a narrow rectangular slot through a constricted opening formed therein, a nipple on one surface of said strap, said nipple having a rounded dome and a narrow stem, said dome slightly larger than said nipple receiving opening, and said stem sized to slide snugly in said rectangular slot, said nipple spaced far enough away from said nipple receiving opening so the strap can be bent into a loop with said nipple overlying said nipple receiving opening whereby when the nipple is forced through said nipple receiving opening and said narrow stem of the nipple is forced through said constricted opening into said rectangular slot, said strap portion is locked into a looped position; said connector further comprising safety means for locking said strap in the looped position, said safety means including a stop wall formed on said one surface of said strap on an opposing side of said nipple from said opening, said stop wall positioned so it is transverse to the length of the strap, said strap positioned so when said nipple stem is slid into said rectangular slot with the strap locked in folded position, a distal edge of said strap beyond the rectangular slot engages a facing surface of said stop wall whereby forces exerted on said loop in a direction which would force the nipple stem to be moved out of said rectangular slot are prevented by the engagement between the distal end of said strap and the facing surface of said stop wall.
- 2. The connector described in claim 1 wherein said safety means further includes upwardly extending parallel walls formed on and transverse to said one surface of the strap and a horizontal bridging wall, the facing surfaces of said upwardly extending walls separated by the width of the distal end of said strap, and said bridging wall spaced above the surface of the strap by the thickness of the distal end of the strap, said distal end of the strap being under said bridging wall when the stem of said nipple is in said rectangular slot, whereby said strap is locked in a looped position with the distal end of the looped strap coextensive with the surface of said strap.
- 3. The connector described in claim 2 including horizontally extending parallel walls formed on said one surface of the strap, said horizontally extending walls spaced apart so their facing surfaces are separated by the width of the distal end of said strap, the distal end of said strap beyond the rectangular slot engaging the facing surfaces of said parallel walls thereby preventing the distal end of the strap from pivoting on the nipple whereby the strap is securely locked in a folded position.
- 4. A connector formed from a resilient material comprising a rectangular portion, a truncated triangular portion attached to one end of said rectangular portion, an elongated strap portion attached to the small end of said truncated triangular portion, said strap portion thinner than both the rectangular portion and the truncated triangular portion so it can be folded over itself to form a loop, a nipple mounted on said truncated triangular portion, said nipple including a rounded dome and a narrow stem, a plurality of walls mounted on said first triangular portion and connected together to form an open rectangular enclosure comprising parallel walls and a transverse stop wall, the spacing between the facing surfaces of the parallel walls equal to the width of the distal end of the strap portion, said nipple positioned at the entrance to said rectangular enclosure, a loop formed by parallel upwardly extending walls transverse to the surface of said truncated portion and a bridging wall, said loop positioned on the opposite side of the nipple from the open rectangular enclosure, the facing surfaces of said upwardly extending walls spaced apart by the width of the distal end of said strap, the height of said bridging wall above the surface of said truncated triangular portion equal to the thickness of the distal end of the strap, a nipple receiving opening slightly smaller in diameter than the diameter of the rounded dome of the nipple formed near the distal end of said strap portion and communicating with a narrow rectangular slot through a constricted opening, said narrow slot extending from said nipple receiving opening toward the distal end of said strap, the stem of said nipple sized to slide snugly in said rectangular slot, said nipple portion spaced far enough away from said nipple receiving opening so the strap can be bent into a loop with the distal end of the strap under said bridging wall and said nipple overlying said nipple receiving opening whereby the nipple with said narrow stem may be forced through said nipple receiving opening and the stem moved into said narrow rectangular slot, said distal end of said strap spaced from the nipple receiving opening in such a way that after the stem of said nipple is moved into said rectangular slot, the distal end of the strap can be moved until its edge abuts the stop wall and the side edges of said strap abut the facing surfaces of the parallel walls, whereby the strap is locked in a looped position.
- 5. The connector described in claim 4 including a rectangular strap receiving slot formed in said rectangular portion.
- 6. The connector described in claim 4 including a duplicate truncated triangular portion attached to the end of said rectangular portion opposite said one end, a duplicate strap portion attached to the small end of said duplicate truncated triangular portion and extending in a direction opposite to the strap portion at the other end of the connector, duplicate nipples, nipple receiving openings, horizontal walls and bridging walls formed on said duplicate truncated triangular portion whereby the strap portions at the opposite ends of the connector can be folded and locked in a looped position.
Parent Case Info
This application is a division of application Ser. No. 817,420, filed Jan. 10, 1986, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,827,578.
US Referenced Citations (11)
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number |
Date |
Country |
17365 |
Apr 1904 |
DE2 |
75881 |
Nov 1949 |
DEX |
1406502 |
Apr 1964 |
FRX |
224268 |
Nov 1942 |
CHX |
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
817420 |
Jan 1986 |
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