Jacketed cushioning elements and assemblies thereof in mattresses and upholstery

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6347423
  • Patent Number
    6,347,423
  • Date Filed
    Friday, September 29, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 19, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
The subject matter is a cushion core construction in which individual elements of cushion material in plug-like form are connected together in a string by capturing them between two strips of flexible sheet material which are joined together between adjacent elements to hold the elements in place. The preferred structural unit is a two-row module formed by joining two such strings at intervals of at least two elements to enable them to stand alone, and to facilitate their handling in their assembly with like modules to form a more extensive core.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to a series of jacketed individual bodies of homogeneous, resiliently compressible cushioning material joined together in a string adapted for use in various assemblies and orientations as the core cushioning material of mattresses, seat cushions, pillows, and upholstery.




Strings of pocketed wire springs have been employed for about a century in assemblies of such springs as cores for mattresses and cushions, beginning with the mattress construction patented by James Marshall in 1901, U.S. Pat. No. 685,160.




Similarly, chemistry has provided the bedding and furniture industry with foamed elastomeric material of a variety of kinds which have gained wide acceptance as cushioning materials, primarily in integral form as slabs or blocks when constituting the primary cushion core material, or in sheet form for use as padding on the faces or around the borders of assemblies of wire springs.




While some effort has been made to develop cushion cores from assemblies of individual elements of foamed elastomeric material, they have not come into widespread use, due perhaps to difficulty of manufacture. Examples are found in U.S. Pat. No. 2,858,881-Newall and U.S. Pat. No. 4,194,255-Poppe.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention adapts the pocketed spring technology to the manufacture of strings of individually jacketed, discrete cushion elements of homogenous resiliently compressible material, which facilitates their use in various assembly combinations and orientations made available by the omnidirectional resilience of the material itself











DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The invention is described in reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:





FIG. 1

is a schematic representation of an arrangement for selecting discrete cushion elements singly from a supply hopper for delivery between two fabric strips which are joined together before and behind each element to embrace the element;





FIG. 2

is a diagram of the motion pattern of the strip-joining mechanism;





FIG. 3

is an elevation of a connected series of jacketed cushion elements of cylindrical form produced by the apparatus of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 4

is a top (or bottom) view of

FIGS. 3

or


5


;





FIG. 5

is an elevation of a modified form of the series of

FIG. 3

wherein the individual cylindrical elements over-extend the jacketing fabric strip;





FIG. 6

is an isometric view of the cylindrical, plug-like cushion element of

FIGS. 3

to


5


;




FIGS.


7


(


a


) and


7


(


b


) are respectively isometric and cross-sectional views of a form of cushion element modified from cylindrical form to alter its resilience;




FIG.


8


(


a


) is a cylindrical cushion element that is cored to modify its resilience as compared to d solidly cylindrical element, and




FIG.


8


(


b


) is a similarly cored cylindrical cushion element housing a wire coil compression spring;





FIG. 9

shows a two-row cushion core module preferred as the basic construction element of a cushion- or mattress-core assembly;





FIG. 10

is a fragmentary plan view, partially broken away, of a mattress showing two-row modules like those of

FIG. 9

, each of mattress width in length and laid alongside each other transversely of the mattress to be surrounded by a cushion border to which a top cushion layer is secured;





FIG. 11

is a fragmentary plan view of a mattress similar to

FIG. 10

but in which the two-row modules are made in full mattress length and extend the long direction of the mattress;





FIG. 12

is a fragmentary plan view, partially broken away, of a mattress similar to that of

FIG. 11

in that the modules run the long way of the mattress, but differing in that the modules lie on their sides so as to receive the body weight reposed upon the mattress in a generally radial direction relative to the cylindrical cushion elements;





FIG. 13

is a fragmentary cross-sectional elevation of the mattress of

FIG. 12

, reposed on the sectional bed bottom of a hospital bed, or so-called adjustable bed; and





FIG. 14

is a cross-sectional elevation of the mattress of

FIGS. 12 and 13

, shown full length with the bed bottom in a reclined sitting position.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION




Referring initially to

FIGS. 3 and 5

, the connected series or string


20


of jacketed cushion elements


22


comprise individual plug-like cylindrical bodies of resiliently compressible material embraced along their curved surfaces by a pair of strips


24


of sheet material joined together on diametrically opposite sides of the cylindrical bodies.




The resiliently compressible material of each cushion element


22


is preferably polyfoam, which may be a polyurethane resin blown with a suitable blowing agent and preferably having a predominantly open-celled structure. Alternatively, the material can be foam latex, sponge rubber, rubberized hair, or any of the resilient cushioning materials known which are generally homogenous in character and which are essentially omnidirectionally resilient.




The strips


24


of sheet material which jacket the individual plug-like cushion elements


22


are preferably a weldable, fibrous thermoplastic material for strength, economy of manufacture, and ease of manufacturing control. Such a material lends itself to being joined or seamed by ultrasonic welding, thus avoiding the need for adhesives to join the opposing strips


24


of sheet material before and behind each element


22


.




I perceive that other sheet materials may also be used, for example, those of predominantly natural fibers blended with a sufficiently high thermoplastic content to be weldable, or even a thermoplastic film material if capable of exerting an adequate grasp upon the individual cushion element


22


to prevent displacement of the cushion element axially from its surrounding jacket, which is preferably left open at both ends.




While it would be less desirable as overly labor-intensive, it would also be possible to use a textile fabric of entirely natural fibers, e.g., cotton or linen, cross-seamed at predetermined intervals by sewing, and later filled by inserting the individual cushion elements


22


.




In the cross-seaming joinder of the two strips


24


of sheeting, I prefer a double line of connection, i.e., welds


26


, of the strips


24


together between successive individual cushion elements


22


of the string. Lines of welded connection should be lines of intermittent welds


26


for preservation of the tensile strength of the strips


24


and to facilitate the control of the weld. Between successive cushion elements, the lines of welds and the strip material between them form a hinge


28


, which need not be long but preferably sufficient to allow some freedom of deflection of the individual cushion elements when joined to form the two-row module of

FIG. 9

, still to be described.




Dimensionally, I have found it very satisfactory to use cylindrical cushion elements having a height to diameter ratio of 2 at a height of 5 inches. Using 5-inch wide strips of needled and calendared polypropylene fiber sheeting, I provide a hinge section 28 one-quarter inch long throughout the width of the strip by welding the two opposed strips together with two lines of intermittent welds each ⅜″ long and {fraction (1/16)}″ wide spaced ¼″ apart within each line of welds, and with a space of ⅛″ between the two lines.




The cylindrical cushion elements


22


, for example, if of polyurethane foam, may have a density within the customary range, depending upon the firmness of the “feel” desired in the mattress or cushion using the illustrated cushion core construction. The elements


22


may be die-cut or trepanned from a slab of foam of the desired thickness, but are preferably either molded individually in cylindrical form and trimmed to desired height, or continuously extruded and cut to length.




While the firmness or softness of the cushion is readily varied by selection of the appropriate density of the foamed cushioning material of the individual cushion elements, further modification of resiliency of the cylindrical form at any density is possible. For example, the tautness of the wrap of the strips


24


about the cylindrical elements will vary the resulting “feel”, which will be firmed by increased wrap tension, effecting pre-compression of the cushioning material. More elaborately, referring to FIGS.


7


(


a


) and


7


(


b


), the jacketed element


22


, being thermoplastic and surrounded by a thermally weldable fabric, may be stiffened by a radial penetration of ultrasonic welding units from both sides to join the jacket strips to the polyurethane core in a rigid weld


30


of solid material between two partially compressed columns


32


at mid-height of the element


22


. The weld


30


, if linear, may be varied in length to vary the stiffening effect. Other weld forms will suggest themselves.




A softening of the cushion element


22


, on the other hand, may be achieved by coring the element as shown at


34


in FIG.


8


(


a


), or a further stiffening by inserting into the cored element a wire coil spring, as at


36


in FIG.


8


(


b


).




To prepare the strings of cushion elements


22


for practical use, they can be joined, row upon row, with cushion elements upstanding in mattress or cushion-size assemblies, by the use of adhesives, for example of the hot melt variety, or by welding of the jacketing strip material of adjacent rows at the hinge sections


28


between cushion elements, displacing the weld by one cushion element between successive rows, as in my prior U.S. Pat. No. 4,451,946.




For practical purposes, however, I prefer the two-row module


40


for its versatility, and prefer to fabricate it by connecting two rows of the jacketed cushion elements together at every other hinge section between elements. A hot-melt adhesive may be used for the purpose, but a simple spot weld at mid-length of the hinge connection


28


will suffice and is preferred. The two-row module is likewise fabricated as a continuous chain, using an insertable ultrasonic probe and anvil similar to that yet to be described for making the jacketed elements in connected series or “strings”.




The two-row chain is severed into modules


40


of length appropriate to the intended use by simply cutting through the hinge connections


28


between corresponding successive cushion elements of the two rows. The preferred double line of welds


26


between successive cushion elements


22


preserves one line of welds on both sides of the shearing cut, and thus the integrity of the jackets adjacent to the separating cut.





FIG. 10

illustrates the utilization of two-row modules


42


of jacketed cushion elements of length corresponding to the width of the mattress


44


, and with the axes of the cushion elements


22


vertical when the mattress is horizontal, as on a bed. The modules


42


are encased, side by side, within a polyfoam border


46


which is secured to an underlying foam sheet and closed by a top sheet


48


also of polyfoam adhered to the border


46


, and if desired, to one or more of the modules


42


. This arrangement lends itself to a gradation of firmness, module by module, or by multi-modular zone, along the length of the mattress, i.e., from head to foot.





FIG. 11

illustrates an alternate mattress configuration


50


in which two-row modules


52


run lengthwise of the mattress, being of mattress length, and the individual cushion elements are axially vertical. This arrangement lends itself to a double bed or larger mattress that may be fitted out to suit the differing cushioning preferences of the two occupants of the bed.




The mattress


54


of

FIGS. 12

to


14


inclusive demonstrates the versatility of the omnidirectionally resilient cushion elements of the invention, for, in contradistinction to the more conventional, axially-vertical cushion-element orientations of

FIGS. 10 and 11

, the cushion elements


22


, again preferably in two-row modules


56


, are laid on their sides in the long direction of the mattress. The number of modules laid side-by-side will depend upon the width of the mattress, which, in this configuration, is especially adapted for mattresses which are required to flex, i.e., those designed for hospital beds and for so-called Adjustable Beds for home use. Conventional one-piece innerspring mattresses tend to separate from the supporting bed bottom


58


because their stiffness does not allow them to conform to the articulated bed bottom when the several sections are adjusted out of supine alignment.




In the mattress of

FIGS. 12

to


14


, on the other hand, the orientation of the hinged cushion elements


22


in the modules


56


permits them to flex readily, and enables the mattress


54


so equipped to conform to the shape assumed by the supporting bed bottom


58


.




Whether the two-row modules are positioned with the individual cushion elements


22


upright in the mattress, as in those of

FIGS. 10 and 11

, or with the elements


22


horizontal, as in the more flexible mattress of

FIGS. 12

to


14


, the two-row module maintains the relationship of the individual elements to each other in a basically four-element or quadratic array. This array preserves the interstices inherent in the tangential contact of the curved surfaces of the individual elements. In the assembled mattress, these interstices provide air circulation passages which are beneficial irrespective of the cushioning material employed but particularly so for constructions which employ foam latex, whose cellular structure does not “breathe”, and which otherwise might exhibit the “clamminess” that some find objectionable in integral mattress cores of foamed latex as such.





FIG. 1

depicts schematically my presently preferred arrangement of apparatus for the manufacture of the connected strings of jacketed cushion elements. It includes an upper hopper


60


containing a supply of cushion elements


22


which are supplied by gravity to a feed drum


62


provided about its periphery with a plurality of pockets


64


sized to hold a single cushion element


22


with its axis parallel to the rotational axis of the drum.




Extending in the direction of rotation of the drum


62


, beginning at the upper, element-receiving station and terminating at the lower delivery station, a sheet metal cover


66


conforms to the periphery of the drum


62


to maintain the cushion elements


22


in their pockets


64


. At the bottom of the drum, the cover is extended downwardly, and with an opposing sheet metal wall


68


, forms a chute to guide the cushion element


22


dropped from the lowermost drum pocket


64


into the convergence of two strips


24


of sheet material fed from supply rolls


70


on opposite sides of the descending path of the cushion element


22


falling from the drum.




The strips


24


of sheeting converge to their connection


26


with each other effected ultrasonically by an ultrasonic horn


72


poised on one side of the strips in opposition to a serrated anvil


74


mounted on the other side of the strips. Each is mounted for movement toward and away from contact with the other under the influence of appropriate compressed air drivers, and both are mounted for similarly powered vertical reciprocation in unison so as to index the string of jacketed cushion elements


22


downwardly after sealing each element into the strips by performing the ultrasonic weld above each new element dropped from the drum


62


.




The pattern of movement of the ultrasonic horn and anvil members


72


-


74


is depicted by FIG.


2


. With the sealing members


72


-


74


poised as in the solid line positions of

FIG. 1

, those members move into pressing contact with the sheeting strips


24


, closing them about the then uppermost cushion element


22


′ and welding them together by the application of ultrasonic energy for the necessary brief time. Thereafter, but with the horn and anvil in tight engagement with what will become the hinge section


28


between the newly embraced cushion element and the next element


22


″ to fall, the horn and anvil descend in unison to advance the strip and to draw more strip material from the supply rolls


70


. The horn


72


and anvil


74


then retract away from contact with the weld, and return upwardly to starting position for the initiation of another cycle. The latter movement may be a single combined movement along a curvilinear path, as indicated in solid line in

FIG. 2

, or separate sequential movements on rectilinear paths, as shown by broken lines.




The drum


62


is preferably driven intermittently by compressed air, for example, using a Bimba rotary actuator connected through a one-way clutch to drive an adjustable pulley connected by timing belt to a driven pulley on the shaft of the drum. The drive is not shown in

FIG. 1

, but its described components are conventional and readily available.




In the foregoing, I have described and shown my new cushioning elements united in string form by two facing strips of sheet material which encircle the individual elements in a frictional grasp, and as a two-row module preferred as the basic building block in the assembly of mattress and cushion cores. The omnidirectional resilience of the cushioning elements frees them from the limitations imposed upon innerspring mattress construction, allowing the lateral disposition of the individual elements which enhances longitudinal flexibility of a mattress and more faithful conformity to the articulated bed bottoms of hospital beds and the like.




The features of the invention believed new and patentable are set forth in the following claims.



Claims
  • 1. A string of connected, individually jacketed resiliently compressible cushion elements comprising:two strips of sheet material having therebetween a series of elongated bodies of a resiliently omnidirectionally compressible material; said bodies being spaced apart along said strips with their lengths arrayed transversely of said strips; said strips being joined together between successive bodies so as to embrace said bodies in holding engagement to secure said bodies between said strips.
  • 2. The subject matter of claim 1, wherein the width of said strips equals the lengths of said bodies.
  • 3. The subject matter of claim 1, wherein the width of said strips is less than the lengths of said bodies.
  • 4. The subject matter of claim 1, wherein the resiliently compressible material is polyfoam.
  • 5. The subject matter of claim 4, wherein said strips are weldable and the joinder of the strips between the bodies are welds.
  • 6. The subject matter of claim 5, wherein the welds which join the strips are intermittent along a line transverse to said strips.
  • 7. The subject matter of claim 5, wherein the polyfoam bodies are stiffened by compressing the bodies from opposite sides of the string into a narrow weld which also extends transversely of the strips, the stiffness of the jacketed cushion element being increased by said narrow weld and controllable by the length thereof.
  • 8. A cushion module comprising at least two strings of jacketed cushion elements as defined by claim 5, wherein said two strings are joined together by a welded cross-connection of the strips of both strings at intervals of at least two bodies therealong.
  • 9. The subject matter of claim 1, wherein the resiliently compressible material is foamed latex.
  • 10. The subject matter of claim 4 or claim 9, wherein the elongated boded is cylindrical and is cored axially.
  • 11. The subject matter of claim 4 or claim 9, wherein the elongated body is cylindrical, is cored axially, and houses a wire coil compression spring coaxially therewith.
  • 12. A cushion module comprising at least two strings of jacketed cushion elements as defined by claim 1, wherein said two strings are joined together by cross-connection of the strips of both strings at intervals of at least two bodies therealong.
  • 13. The subject matter of claim 1, wherein said bodies of resiliently compressible material are pre-compressed by the embrace of said strips to increase their resistance to compression.
  • 14. A flexible rectangular mattress core comprising a plurality of cushion modules each comprising at least two strings of jacketed cushion elements defined by claim 1 joined together side-by-side by cross-connection of the strips of both strings at intervals of at least two bodies therealong, each module having a length substantially the width of the core and extending transversely thereof.
  • 15. A mattress core according to claim 14 wherein the sheet material of the strips is weldable and the said joinder of said strings and their cross-connection to form said modules are effected by thermal welds.
  • 16. A mattress core according to either claim 14 or claim 15 wherein the transverse direction of said strips is perpendicular to the plane of the mattress core laid flat.
  • 17. A flexible rectangular mattress core comprising a plurality of cushion modules each comprising at least two strings of jacketed cushion elements defined by claim 1 joined together by cross-connection of the strips of both strings at intervals of at least two bodies therealong, said modules having the length of the mattress core and being oriented side by side in the long direction of the mattress.
  • 18. The mattress core of claim 17 wherein the transverse direction of said strips is perpendicular to the plane of the mattress core laid flat.
  • 19. The mattress core of claim 17 wherein the transverse direction of said strips is parallel to the plane of the mattress core laid flat.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Number Name Date Kind
685160 Marshall Oct 1901 A
2446775 Marsack Aug 1948 A
2858881 Newall et al. Nov 1958 A
3401411 Morrison Sep 1968 A
4194255 Poppe Mar 1980 A
4485506 Stumpf et al. Dec 1984 A
4523344 Stumpf et al. Jun 1985 A
5079787 Pollmann Jan 1992 A
5222264 Morry Jun 1993 A