Field of the Invention:
The invention relates to an office chair or an office chair element, in particular a backrest or seat, including a flat covering element, in particular a fabric, cushioning or webbing element, which is secured to support elements, for example to the arms of a support frame, and is tensioned between the same.
Covering backrests and seats of office chairs with fabric, cushioning or webbing elements in order to obtain a surface for leaning against or sitting on are known in the prior art. Welting is often used to secure such covering elements, said welting being attached to an outside edge of the covering element and introduced into a welt groove provided on the support element. A disadvantage of this solution is that the welt is often not placed fixedly in the welt groove, but rather “escapes” from the welt groove, in particular if the user of the office chair places a heavy load on the covering element.
It is an object of the present invention to secure the covering element in a reliable manner to the support element, in particular to prevent the welt escaping from the welt groove and to guarantee a defined fitting position for the welt.
This object is achieved through the invention provided in claim 1. Advantageous embodiments of the invention can be found in the subclaims.
A core idea of the invention is to use a strip-shaped welt element, which, in the fitted state, is placed in an accommodating groove that is realized on the support element, wherein a projection that extends in the longitudinal direction of the groove is provided in the accommodating groove and the welt strip is placed in the accommodating groove in a positive locking and/or force-locking manner, said welt strip being prevented from escaping by the projection. The welt strip is inserted into the accommodating groove by said welt strip being pressed into the accommodating groove, resiliently deforming the projection and/or the welt strip. To what extent projection and/or welt strip are deformable, is established by a suitable choice of material, as is familiar to the expert.
The invention creates a securing solution by means of which the welt is securely fixed in the accommodating groove. Even if the user of the office chair presents a heavy load on the covering element, the welt “escaping” from the welt groove is effectively prevented and a defined fitting position of the welt is ensured.
The welt strip is preferably an element with two oppositely situated side faces and two oppositely situated end faces, wherein the welt strip interacts with the accommodating groove in such a manner that, in the fitted state, the welt strip abuts against the contact faces of the accommodating groove by way of its side faces. To insert the welt strip into the accommodating groove, the welt strip is pressed into the accommodating groove with one of its end faces to the fore. It is particularly advantageous if the side faces are more than twice as wide as the end faces such that a characteristic strip shape is produced. This means that the welt strip can be inserted into the accommodating groove with its narrow side, which is advantageous for the fitting procedure. At the same time, the wider side faces form a particularly large abutment against the contact faces of the accommodating groove, which means that the welt strip is placed very securely in the accommodating groove and any tilting, canting or waggling of the welt strip is ruled out.
One embodiment of the invention has proved exceptionally advantageous, where the welt strip has a clamping strip, which extends in the longitudinal direction of the strip and consequently, at the same time, parallel to the longitudinal direction of the groove and, in the fitted state, abuts against the projection in the accommodating groove. The clamping strip, in this case, extends at a defined spacing from the end face of the welt strip which, in the fitted state, points out of the accommodating groove. In other words, the welt strip does not have to be inserted completely into the accommodating groove for fitting. Instead, it is sufficient for the welt strip to be inserted into the accommodating groove up to the point at which the projection engages behind the clamping strip. From this moment, the welt strip is no longer able to leave the accommodating groove just because of the load placed on the covering element. The use of the clamping strip is not only advantageous when the welt strip is being fitting into the accommodating groove. The position of the tensioning edge, over which the covering element or the welt rim is pulled, is not forcibly established by the accommodating groove in this case, but, depending on the embodiment, can also be defined by the length of the welt strip or the spacing between the clamping strip and the end face of the welt strip pointing out of the accommodating groove.
One embodiment of the invention is particularly advantageous for a permanently secure fitting position of the welt, where the accommodating groove is realized on the support element in such a manner that the angle between the direction of extraction of the welt strip from the accommodating groove and the tensioning direction of the covering element tensioned between the support elements is less than 90°. In other words, the accommodating groove is inclined relative to the tensioning direction in such a manner that overcoming the projection in the accommodating groove by extracting the welt strip in the direction of extraction is almost impossible, insofar as said projection abuts against the side face of the welt strip pointing in the tensioning direction. Correspondingly, in a preferred embodiment of the invention the projection is realized in such a manner that said projection, in the fitted state, abuts against the side face of the welt strip pointing in the tensioning direction.
The accommodating groove can be incorporated in the basic body of the support element. For example, a support element with the accommodating groove can be produced in an inexpensive manner as a plastics material injection-molded part. However, it is particularly advantageous when the accommodating groove is formed by a basic body of the support element for providing the one contact face of the accommodating grove, on the one hand, and by a profile element connected to the basic body for providing the other contact face of the accommodating groove on the other hand. Basic body and profile element, in this case, are preferably detachably interconnected, such that the opening and closing of the accommodating groove can be accomplished in a particularly simple manner by producing or releasing the connection between basic body and profile element. In the case of a two-part embodiment of this type of accommodating groove, the projection, corresponding to the above-described preferred embodiment, is realized on the contact face provided by the profile element, said contact face interacting with the side face of the welt strip that, in the fitted state, points in the tensioning direction.
Particularly reliable fixing of the welt strip in the accommodating groove is guaranteed when at least one side face of the welt strip is covered by a welt rim in such a manner that, in the fitted state, the welt rim abuts against at least one contact face of the accommodating groove. In other words, the width of the accommodating groove is established to match the width of the welt strip and the width of the welt rim in such a manner that the welt strip is placed fixedly between the contact faces of the accommodating groove when the welt rim is situated between at least one side face of the welt strip and a contact face of the accommodating groove. If the covering element itself serves as the welt rim, the fitting of the welt to the covering element is simplified. At the same time the covering has no potential weak point.
The covering element or the welt rim is preferably sewn to the welt strip. This means that there is none of the contamination of the elements involved that occurs when using an adhesive method and also that the use of an expensive ultrasound welding method is not necessary. Nevertheless, the necessary strength is guaranteed by the principle of securement according to the invention, in particular whenever the covering element or the welt rim is clamped between the welt strip and the accommodating groove.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is described below by way of the drawings, in which, in detail:
All the figures just show the invention in a schematic manner with its essential components. Identical references in this case correspond to elements with an identical or comparable function.
The welt strip 3 produced from a plastics material is attached to the outside edge of the webbing element 2 and, in the fitted state shown, is placed in an accommodating groove 4 that is realized on the arm 1. The accommodating groove 4 has two oppositely situated contact faces 5, 6, extending substantially parallel to one another, for the welt strip 3.
One of the contact faces 5 is provided with a projection 8, which projects into the accommodating groove 4 and extends in the longitudinal direction 7 of the groove.
In the embodiment represented, the welt strip 3 has a clamping strip 10, which extends in the longitudinal direction 9 of the strip and consequently parallel to the longitudinal direction 7 of the groove. In the fitted state, the clamping strip 10 abuts against the projection 8 in the accommodating groove 4. The clamping strip 10, in this case, extends at a defined spacing from an end face 11 of the welt strip 3 that protrudes out of the accommodating groove 4.
The welt strip 3 has two oppositely situated side faces 12, 13 and two oppositely situated end faces 11, 14. The side faces 12, 13 of the welt strip 3 are more than twice as wide as its end faces 11, 14. The welt strip 3 interacts with the accommodating groove 4 in such a manner that said welt strip, in the fitted state, abuts against the contact faces 5, 6 of the accommodating groove 4 by way of its side faces 12, 13. To insert the welt strip 3 into the accommodating groove 4, the welt strip 3 is pressed with its end face 14 to the fore into the accommodating groove 4, resiliently deforming the projection 8 and/or the clamping strip 10. In the fitted state, the welt strip 3 abuts against the contact faces 5, 6 and is placed in the accommodating groove 4 in a positive locking and/or force-locking manner, being prevented from escaping in the extraction direction 16 by the projection 8.
The accommodating groove 4 is realized on the arm 1 in such a manner that the angle 15 between the direction of extraction 16 of the welt strip 3 from the accommodating groove 4 and the tensioning direction 17 of the webbing element 2 tensioned between the arms 1 is less than 90°. The projection 8 abuts against the side face 12 of the welt strip 3 pointing in the tensioning direction 17.
The accommodating groove 4 is formed by a basic body 18 of the arm 1 and a profile element 19 that is connected to the basic body 18 and serves as a webbing frame. In this case, the basic body 18 provides the one contact face 6 of the accommodating groove 4, whilst the profile element 19 provides the other contact face 5 of the accommodating groove 4. The basic body 18 and the profile element 19, in this case, are each produced from a plastics material. The projection 8 is realized on the contact face 5 provided by the profile element 19, said contact face interacting with the side face 12 of the welt strip 3 that, in the fitted state, points in the tensioning direction 17 of the webbing element 2.
The basic body 18 forms a substantially U-shaped accommodating means 20, into which the profile element 19 is placed. Basic body 18 and profile element 19 are detachably interconnected by means of screw connections 21. In the fitted state, the profile element 19 almost fills out the accommodating means 20. For the purposes of saving material, the profile element 19 is provided with chambers 23, which point in the direction of the U-base 22 of the accommodating means 20 and are interrupted at certain spacings by stabilizing webs (not shown), which ensure that the profile element 19 is fixedly supported on the U-base 22 of the accommodating means 20.
Once profile element 19 and basic body 18 have been interconnected, the welt strip 3 can be fitted. To this end, the welt strip 3 is slid with its one end face 11 to the fore into the accommodating groove 4 against the direction of extraction 16 defined by the position of the accommodating groove 4. At the same time projection 8 and/or clamping strip 10 deform resiliently until the projection 8 is pushed away beyond the clamping strip 10. To this end, a run-up inclination 25 can be provided on the bottom edge of the clamping strip 10. Once the projection 8 has slid over the clamping strip 10 and has engaged behind said clamping strip, the welt strip 3 is situated in its fitting end position, in which the projection 8 abuts against the clamping strip 10 and fixes the welt strip 3 in the accommodating groove 4. The underside 26 of the projection 8 facing the clamping strip 10, in this case, is provided with an inclination, which corresponds substantially to the contact inclination 27 of the clamping strip 10 for the projection 8, cf.
The width of the accommodating groove 4 is established to match the width of the welt strip 3 and the width of the webbing element 2 in such a manner that, in the fitted state, the welt strip 3 is placed fixedly between the contact faces 5, 6 of the accommodating groove 4. In this case, the webbing element 2 is clamped between the welt strip 3 and the contact face 6 of the accommodating groove 4. If the width of the webbing element 2 also corresponds in addition to the depth of the clamping strip 10, the webbing element 2 is also clamped between the welt strip 3 and the contact face 5 of the accommodating groove.
All the features represented in the description, the following claims and the drawing can be essential to the inventive step either individually or in arbitrary combination with each other.
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20 2009 006 921 U | May 2009 | DE | national |
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