The present invention relates generally to hinged toilet seats, and the lateral retaining of the seat on the underlying toilet bowl rim when in the seat is in a lowered position. The invention relates in particular to methods and means for fastening such retainers to the undersides of toilet seats.
Conventional toilet seats have plastic or metal hinges and fittings to a porcelain toilet bowl which, over time and due to use, become loose and allow the seat to wobble laterally when the weight of a person is applied on the seat.
This inevitable wobble or play in the attachment between the seat hinge brackets and the bowl is very annoying to people who use the seat, and in some cases can be dangerous and cause the person to fall or lose their balance.
The brackets, fittings and fasteners are usually formed of plastic and cannot be sufficiently tightened to avoid the wobble problem. Attempting such tightening often leads to stripping of the threads or other damage to the plastic fittings.
Conventional bumpers installed upon the bottom of a toilet seat serve to prevent the marring of the underlying bowl rim, but nothing to prevent the lateral wobble of the seat relative to the rim. In fact, the relatively small bumpers may even encourage such slippage or play, due to their relative height in combination with the possibly sloped and/or curved low friction surface of the bowl rim.
Toilet seats generally tend to align properly with bowl rims when no pressure is placed upon them, but when a person places weight upon the seat or lid, the seat bumpers often shift laterally on the bowl rim and the seat often shifts laterally so and drop down to rest directly upon the bowl rim. While the result may be annoying to some persons, others such as the elderly or infirm using such a toilet may be startled to the point of losing their balance and slipping from the seat, thus possibly risking serious injury.
In the prior art, retainers either integral with or installed to the bottom surface of a toilet seat have been described, the retainers preventing lateral movement of the seat relative to the bowl rim. The retainers grip the inner and possibly also the outer edges of the bowl rim, and provide some angular resilience in order to accommodate bowl rims having different slopes.
Moore, U.S. Pat. No. 2,104,714, discloses a toilet seat having two laterally spaced apart halves, with adjustable spacing therebetween. The bumpers beneath the seat halves are also adjustable and each include a single depending extension to catch the outer edge of the rim, but the bumpers must be manually adjusted with a tool (e.g., screwdriver) each time the spacing between the seat halves is adjusted.
McCawley, U.S. Pat. No. 3,646,620, discloses a toilet seat guide, two of which are immovably affixed to opposite sides of the seat bottom.
Adams, U.S. Pat. No. 4,747,167, discloses a non-shiftable toilet seat assembly in which the bumpers are immovably affixed to the seat bottom
Wofford, U.S. Pat. No. 4,893,360, discloses an apparatus for positioning a seat on the rim of a toilet bowl which requires at least two mating retainers to be immovably affixed to both the bowl rim and seat bottom
Caldwell, U.S. Pat. No. 5,212,840, discloses a stabilizing toilet seat guide which includes specific angles and dimensions for the depending retaining portion.
Armanno, Sr., U.S. Pat. No. 5,361,425, discloses retainers having a resilient intermediate portion which allows the depending retainer portions and member from which they depend to arcuately rock to accommodate uneven bowl rims.
All of the prior art retainers and retaining systems are difficult to install and adjust. Due to the difficulty of installing such prior art devices, it is believed that they have not become widely available commercially.
It is an object of the present invention to provide anti-wobble toilet seat retaining systems which are extremely easy to install and adjust. It is another object of this invention to provide toilet seats which have strong, easily adjustable, anti-wobble retainers.
These objects and others which will become apparent from the following disclosure are achieved by the present invention which comprises in one aspect a toilet seat having integral anti-wobble means for prevention of lateral slippage of a toilet seat when placed in its normal, horizontal position on a toilet bowel, during normal use when a person sits on the toilet seat.
A different aspect of the invention is a system for the prevention of lateral slippage of a toilet seat comprising a retainer comprising a base portion which comprises a seat bottom contact surface and an extender portion which functions to extend against the side of the upper portion of the bowl so as to prevent lateral movement of the seat relative to the bowl, and hook and loop material for removably securing the contact surface against the bottom surface of a toilet seat. Either the hook material is adhered to the bottom of the seat and the loop material is adhered to the top of the retainer, or vice versa.
Another aspect of the invention is a toilet seat system comprising at least one retainer attached with hook and loop material so that the retainer can be removed and replaced, and can be easily adjusted to different positions. The retainer is positioned so that the extender just touches the inside of the bowl when the seat is down. In some embodiments, the retainer can touch the outside of the bowl, or with a U-shaped retainer, the retainer can touch both the inside and outside of the top rim of the bowl.
The use of hook and loop mating tape allows the one or more retainers to be very easily installed and adjusted, and also easily removed for cleaning or other purposes.
The invention consists in the novel combination and arrangement of parts hereinafter more fully described, illustrated and claimed with reference being made to the attached drawings.
Referring now to the drawings wherein similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the several figures of the drawings,
As shown in
Although one retainer can be used in cases where the retainer has a U-shaped configuration (not illustrated), it is preferred to have two retainers, one on each side of the toilet seat to mate with insides of the left side and right side of the upper side of a toilet bowl. The extender is preferably of a tapered configuration. An angle of between 15 and 75 degrees to the toilet seat bottom when connected is preferred, and an angle of 30 to 60 degrees to the toilet seat bottom is more preferred. In some embodiments, an angle of 45 degrees is very suitable.
The base or level portion can be of any length not exceeding the radial width of the bottom of a toilet seat, with a length of between 0.75 and 2.25 inches being preferred, a length of between 1 and 2 inches more preferred, and a length of 1.5 inches most preferred. The edge parallel to the inside edge of the toilet bowl is preferably between 0.1 and 0.6 inches long.
While others have proposed similar retainer systems to prevent lateral movement of toilet seats on toilet bowl rims, a common problem due to the design of the hinges 20, no one has previously proposed a fastening system which has the advantages of the present invention with respect to adjustability and removability for cleaning. Other systems were permanently adhered, typically with screws or adhesive, and as a result have not become widely available commercially.
Referring now to
When the toilet seat 22 is in the down position, with customary bumpers 23 resting on top 19 of the bowl 26, the novel extender portions 25 optionally touch the inside of the toilet bowl 26. Alternatively a slight space, for example 0.10 to 0.30 inch, is provide between the extender portions 25 and the vertical edge of the top of the toilet bowl.
The integral extender portions can alternatively be on the outside of the toilet seat 22 so as to engage the outside 24 of bowl 26 when in the down position (not illustrated). When the extender is on the outside toilet seat, it can not extend for the entire outer circumference of the toilet seat because the back portion of the top surface of a normal, typical bowl extends backwards.
A toilet seat 22 having built in extender portions 25 made of the same material as the main portion of the toilet seat has many advantages. If the seat is made of wood or plastic, it can be made in one piece. However, the seat must be made with the extender portions the factory during original manufacture rather than being an aftermarket item to be added or installed by the consumer.
While the invention has been described and illustrated with respect to one embodiment, other embodiments, alternatives, and modifications should become readily apparent to those skilled in this art without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention.