The present disclosure relates generally to a wheeled luggage article and particularly to a luggage article with a loop-shaped wheel bracket.
Luggage items and in particular luggage cases (i.e., suitcases) conventionally include wheels attached to the case to allow the case to be pulled along. Brackets attach the wheels to the cases. Each bracket supports one or more wheels and generally permits the one or more wheels to rotate about a horizontal axis. Each bracket may be fixed about a vertical axis to prevent the one or more wheels from swivelling about the vertical axis (generally referred to as fixed wheels) or may be rotational about the vertical axis to permit swivelling of the one or more wheels about the vertical axis (generally referred to as spinner wheels).
The design of such wheels and wheel assemblies for luggage articles presents a particular unique challenge. Specifically the wheels have to be robust enough to withstand use under heavy loading of the case and transport over rough surface as well as when the case is dropped on its wheels. On the other hand the wheels must also be light and compact so as to maximize the weight and volume that the luggage article can carry for a given overall size and weight. The wheels must also be simple and relatively cheap to produce and assemble to minimize cost.
A further problem that has been identified with conventional cases is that the wheel brackets generally transfer shock loads from the wheels to the cases and may be noisy as well. As such, the shock loads commonly are transferred through the case, disturb the arrangement of one's belongings, and/or cause damage to the belongings. The noise may be an annoyance and may make the use of the luggage case unpleasant.
It is therefore desirable to provide an improved luggage article, and more specifically an improved wheel bracket that addresses the above described problems and/or which more generally offers improvements or an alternative to existing arrangements.
Documents that may be related to the present disclosure in that they include various wheel brackets are: CN102578778, CN201194600, CN201675239, CN202278929, CN202407510, CN20528768, EP001175822-0002, EP0051995, US20110168508, U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,738,542, 2,914,340, 2,923,961, 2,942,290, 2,987,752, 4,392,668, 4,422,212, and 6,478,315.
According to the present disclosure there is therefore provided a luggage article as described in the accompanying claims.
The present disclosure advantageously provides a luggage article with a shock absorbing wheel bracket having a loop-shaped profile. The wheel bracket may have an open-loop or closed-loop shape, and in some examples may have a generally C-shape profile. The wheel bracket may include an upper end portion that is attached to the luggage article and a lower end portion that is attached to the one or more wheels. The wheel bracket may include a spring member, such as a leaf spring, which may be overmoulded with a plastic material. The wheel bracket advantageously may provide improved shock absorption and/or rolling noise reduction compared to conventional luggage articles.
In one example, a luggage article having a loop-shaped wheel bracket is provided. The luggage article includes a luggage wheel assembly having a wheel bracket attached to and extending from the luggage article. The luggage article may also include one or more wheels attached to the wheel bracket. The wheel bracket includes a spring member having a loop-shaped profile and the one or more wheels are rotationally attached to a lower end of the loop-shaped spring member.
In some examples, the wheel bracket is rotationally attached to the luggage article. In some examples, the wheel bracket is attached to the luggage article at a location on an upper arm of the spring member. In some examples, the wheel bracket is attached to the luggage article at an intermediate position or proximate an end portion of the upper arm.
In some examples, the luggage wheel assembly has a loop-shaped spring member which includes a lower arm that is integrally formed with the upper arm and defines a transition. The lower arm may extend radially inwardly from the transition toward a rotational axis of the one or more wheels. In some examples, the transition defines an apex. In another example, the upper and lower arms extend from the transition or apex at an angle of between 0 and 90 degrees, and preferably between 30 and 60 degrees.
The luggage wheel assembly includes a loop-shaped spring member. In some examples, the loop shaped spring member is selected from a metal leaf spring, a steel leaf spring, a titanium leaf spring, a polymeric leaf spring, a carbon-fiber-reinforced composite leaf spring, or a combination thereof.
In some aspects, the wheel bracket further includes a coating that surrounds the loop-shaped spring member. In some examples, the coating forms a hub at a lower end of the loop-shaped spring member for attaching the one or more wheels to the wheel bracket. In some examples, the coating forms a spinner wheel axle housing at an intermediate portion of an upper arm of the loop-shaped spring member. In some aspects, the spinner axle housing defines a swivel axis about which the wheel bracket spins relative to the luggage article.
In some examples, the luggage wheel assembly includes a spring member defining one or more engagement features that receives a portion of the coating to form a mechanical attachment between the spring member and the coating.
In some aspects, at least one portion of the upper arm of the spring member extends substantially horizontally or extends substantially uniformly about a portion of the outer circumference of the one or more wheels. The wheel bracket may be attached to the luggage article at the at least one portion, where the at least one portion is a substantial portion of the upper arm.
In another example, the wheel bracket of the luggage wheel assembly is attached to the luggage article adjacent the transition of the spring member or distal to the transition at a distance that is substantially the length of the upper arm. In some examples, an effective arm length defined by the upper arm may be substantially greater than, or greater than, or less than, or substantially less than an effective arm length defined by the lower arm. In some examples, at least one portion of the lower arm of the spring member extends to form a curve, a substantially straight length, or a twisted shape. In some examples, the rotational axis of the one or more wheels is substantially parallel to or substantially at a right angle to a surface of the upper arm and/or the lower arm of the spring member.
In some examples, the luggage wheel assembly may have at least one portion of the lower arm of the spring member oriented substantially parallel to the one or more wheels or oriented substantially perpendicular to the rotational axis of the one or more wheels. In some examples, at least a portion of the lower arm is twisted such that at least one end portion of the lower arm distal to the transition of the spring member is oriented substantially parallel to the one or more wheels or is oriented substantially perpendicular to the rotational axis of the one or more wheels.
In some aspects, at least one end portion of the lower arm defines a hub for attaching the one or more wheels.
In other examples, the luggage wheel assembly includes a wheel bracket that forms one or more wheel abutments adapted to contact an outer circumferential surface of the one or more wheels to limit the deformation of the loop-shaped spring member. In some examples, the one or more wheels comprise one wheel or two wheels. In some examples, the wheel bracket is located between a pair of wheels or the wheel bracket includes laterally-spaced apart tines that extend along opposite sides of a single wheel.
In some aspects, the luggage wheel assembly includes a wheel bracket and the one or more wheels of the wheel bracket form part of a spinner wheel assembly.
In some examples, the loop-shaped profile of the spring member is an open loop profile or a closed loop profile. In some examples, the spring member having the open loop profile is a C-shaped spring member. In some examples, the spring member having the closed loop profile is an O-shaped or oval-shaped or D-shaped spring member.
In one aspect, a luggage article includes one or more luggage wheel assemblies as described herein. The luggage article includes a plurality of walls together defining an outer structure of the luggage article, and the one or more luggage wheel assemblies are attached to and extend from one of the walls.
This summary of the disclosure is given to aid understanding, and one of skill in the art will understand that each of the various aspects and features of the disclosure may advantageously be used separately in some instances, or in combination with other aspects and features of the disclosure in other instances.
The present disclosure will now be described by way of example only with reference to the following figures in which:
Referring to
The luggage article 100 may be split along an opening line 114 into a lid section 116, which includes the front wall 102, and a base section 118, which includes the rear wall 104. The lid section 116 may be connected to the base section 118 along a portion of a side of the article 100 via a hinge 120 in a conventional manner, and the luggage article 100 may be opened at the opening line 114 to access the internal volume. The hinge 120 may be formed of a zipper 122 and a fabric strip, a piano hinge, discrete hinges spaced apart, or an articulating joint. The piano hinge, the discrete hinges, or the articulating joint may be made from metal, plastic, any other suitable material, or any combination thereof. The hinge 120 may be stitched to the lid 116 and also to the base 118, or may be coupled in another suitable manner. A zipper 122 along a periphery of the opening line 114 or other conventional closure arrangement, for example clamp locks, may secure the lid section 116 to the base section 118 to close the luggage article 100.
The luggage article 100 may include at least one handle. The depicted luggage article 100 includes a telescoping tow handle 124 associated with the top wall 112. The depicted case also includes fixed carry handles 126 attached to the top wall 112 and the side wall 106. The telescoping handle 124 and the fixed carry handles 126 may be associated with any wall of the luggage article 100.
The luggage article 100 may include at least one wheel assembly 128. The depicted luggage article 100 includes four wheel assemblies 128 mounted from the bottom end wall 110 of the case 110. Each spinner wheel assembly 128 is located proximate a bottom end corner of the luggage article 100. In other words, each spinner wheel assembly 128 is located on the bottom end wall 110 of the case near an intersection of one of the front and rear walls 102,104 and one of the side walls 106,108 of the luggage article 100. The spinner wheel assemblies 128 may be spaced apart from one another by substantially the width and/or depth of the luggage article 100.
Referring to
Referring to
The leaf spring 136 may include integrally-formed upper and lower arms 136a, 136b that converge together to form a transition 136c. The transition 136c may define an apex between lower arms 136a and 136b. The upper arm 136a may be formed as a substantially mirror image of the lower arm 136b about the transition 136c of the leaf spring 136 so that the upper and lower arms are symmetrical about the transition. The transition 136c may be positioned substantially equidistant between the upper and lower ends 136d, 136e of the leaf spring 136. When the leaf spring 136 is operatively attached to a wheel 132, the upper arm 136a may be referred to as an outer arm 136a, the lower arm 136b may be referred to as an inner arm 136b, the upper end 136d may be referred to as an outer end 136d, and the lower end 136e may be referred to as an inner end 136e based on the location of these features relative to a rotation axis of the wheel.
The leaf spring 136 may be over injected or overmoulded with a material to form a coating or outer layer 138. The coating 138 may entirely encapsulate or surround the leaf spring 136, except for one or more optional injection holes formed in the coating 138 during the moulding process and through which the leaf spring 136 may be exposed. Alternatively, the coating 138 may only partially encapsulate or surround the leaf spring 136. The coating 138 may be formed from plastic or other suitable materials. The coating 138 may be transparent, translucent, opaque, or a combination thereof, thereby providing the wheel bracket 134 with a distinct visual appearance. In implementations where the coating 138 is transparent or translucent, the leaf spring 136 may be visible through the coating 138. The coating 138 may resist creep in the leaf spring 136, especially around the transition 136c of the leaf spring 136. For example, the coating 138 may provide additional stiffness to the leaf spring 136 to resist the tendency of the leaf spring 136 to permanently deform as a result of long-term exposure to high levels of stress that are below the yield strength of the leaf spring. The coating may be selectively applied to the areas most benefitting from the coating, such as but not limited to adjacent the transition 136c.
With specific reference to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
As shown in
Alternatively, the spinner axle housing 144 may be located farther away from the transition 136c of the leaf spring 136 than the hub 156 is located to the transition 136c. In these alternative implementations, the effective lever arm between the hub 156 and the transition 136c (which may be a portion of the full length of the lower arm 136b of the leaf spring 136) is shorter than the effective lever arm between the spinner axle housing 144 and the transition 136c (which may be the entire length of the upper arm 136a of the leaf spring 136). As such, for a given impact load in these alternative implementations, the leaf spring 136 may resiliently deform and the spinner axle housing 144 may move downwardly toward the lower arm 136b of the leaf spring 136.
Referring to
Still referring to
During operation, the lower arm 136b of the leaf spring 136 may resiliently pivot about the transition 136c of the leaf spring 136 and/or bend or flex along its length in a relatively upwardly direction towards the upper arm 136a to absorb, attenuate, or dampen impact loads imparted on the one or more wheels 132. Similarly, the upper arm 136a of the leaf spring 136 may resiliently pivot about the transition 136c of the leaf spring 136 and/or bend or flex along its length in a relatively downwardly direction towards the lower arm 136b to absorb, attenuate, or dampen loads generated by the weight of the user's belongings. Thus, during operation, the arms 136a, 136b of the leaf spring 136 may elastically deform toward one another to absorb, attenuate, or dampen impact loads.
To limit the compressive deformation of the leaf spring 136, the one or more wheels 132 may abut directly against the wheel bracket 134. The curved inner surface 154 of the wheel abutment 150 may be adapted to contact the outer circumferential surface 152 of the wheel 132, thereby providing a positive stop to the travel of the one or more wheels 132 and preventing plastic deformation of the leaf spring 136. The leaf spring 136 may be designed such that the inner surface 154 of the wheel abutment 150 only contacts the circumferential surface 152 of the wheel 132 when the luggage article 100 is loaded over a weight capacity of the article 100 and a sufficiently large impact force is imparted on the one or more wheels 132.
Referring to
Referring to
Further, in the implementation of
Referring to
Referring to
In the implementation of
Referring to
In the implementations of
The implementation of
The implementation of
Referring now to
In a D-shaped configuration, the upper arm 636a is substantially linear, and the portion of the bracket formed by front transition 636c, front lower arm 636b, rear lower arm 636′b, and rear transition 636′c is curved. The front portion of the D-shaped configuration, such as between the front end of upper arm 636a and front lower arm 636b, may be relatively shorter in height than the rear portion, such as between the rear end of upper arm 636a and rear lower arm 636′b.
As shown in
During operation, front and rear lower arms 636b, 636′b may resiliently pivot about the front and rear transitions 636c, 636′c of the leaf spring 636, respectively. The front and rear lower arms 636b, 636′b may also bend or flex along its length in a relatively upward direction toward upper arm 636a in order to absorb, attenuate, or dampen impact loads imparted on the one or more wheels 632. Similarly, the upper arm 636a of the leaf spring 636 may resiliently pivot about the front and rear transitions 636c, 636′c of the leaf spring and/or bend or flex along its length in a relatively downwardly direction toward the front and rear lower arms 636b, 636′b to absorb, attenuate, or otherwise dampen loads generated by the weight of the user's belongings or other contents of the luggage article 100 as the one or more wheels 632 encounter surface features when in use. Thus, during operation, the upper arm 636a and lower arms 636b, 636′b of the leaf spring 636 may elastically deform toward one another to absorb impact loads. To limit the compressive deformation of the leaf spring 636, the one or more wheels 632 may abut directly against the wheel bracket 634. The leaf spring 636 may be coated with a plastic material similar to the leaf spring 136 and the coating 138 discussed in connection with
The luggage wheel bracket of the present disclosure has broad application. For instance, the wheel bracket may be coupled to a single spinner wheel, a double spinner wheel, and/or an upright wheel. Additionally, the luggage wheel bracket of the present disclosure may be coupled to various types of luggage articles, such as a hard-side suitcase, a soft-side case, a hybrid-side case, a duffel bag, or other types of luggage articles.
The apparatuses and associated methods in accordance with the present disclosure have been described with reference to particular embodiments thereof in order to illustrate the principles of operation. The above description is thus by way of illustration and not by way of limitation. In methodologies directly or indirectly set forth herein, various steps and operations are described in one possible order of operation, but those skilled in the art will recognize that the steps and operations may be rearranged, replaced, or eliminated without necessarily departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosed embodiments.
All relative and directional references (including: upper, lower, upward, downward, left, right, leftward, rightward, top, bottom, side, above, below, front, middle, back, vertical, horizontal, and so forth) are given by way of example to aid the reader's understanding of the particular embodiments described herein. They should not be read to be requirements or limitations, particularly as to the position, orientation, or use unless specifically set forth in the claims. Connection references (e.g., attached, coupled, connected, joined, and the like) are to be construed broadly and may include intermediate members between a connection of elements and relative movement between elements. As such, connection references do not necessarily infer that two elements are directly connected and in fixed relation to each other, unless specifically set forth in the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
15161907 | Mar 2015 | EP | regional |
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/085,139, filed on Mar. 30, 2016 and entitled “Luggage Article With Loop-Shaped Wheel Bracket” which claims priority to European patent application No. 15161907.9 filed on Mar. 31, 2015 and entitled “Luggage Article With Loop-Shaped Wheel Bracket”, which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entireties for all purposes.
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Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 15085139 | Mar 2016 | US |
Child | 17131992 | US |