The present device and system is related to self-contained breathing apparatuses, and more particularly to safety systems for users of self-contained breathing apparatuses who work on dry surfaces and near marine areas.
A self contained breathing apparatus (“SCBA”) is a device used to enable breathing in environments which are immediately dangerous to life and health (IDLH). For example, firefighters wear an SCBA when fighting a fire. The SCBA typically has a harness supporting an air tank which is connected to a facepiece, all of which are worn or carried by the user. The tank typically contains air or gas under high pressure (2200 psi-4500 psi) and is connected to a first stage regulator which reduces the pressure to about 80 psi. The SCBA usually has a second stage regulator that has an inlet valve which controls the flow of air for breathing between the air tank and the facepiece. Typically, the inlet valve controls the flow of air through the second state regulator in response to the respiration of the user.
Typically, a diaphragm divides the regulator assembly into an inner chamber having a pressure corresponding to the pressure within the facepiece of the SCBA and an outer chamber having a pressure corresponding to the pressure in the surrounding environment, which is typically ambient pressure. The diaphragm is coupled to an actuating mechanism which opens and closes the inlet valve. The user's respiration creates a pressure differential between the inner and outer chambers of the regulator assembly which, in turn, causes displacement of the diaphragm thereby controlling (that is, opening and closing) the inlet valve mechanism. As a result, such regulators are often called pressure demand regulators.
The facepiece of the SCBA is typically maintained at a positive pressure as compared to the surrounding environmental pressure to, for example, prevent toxic gases and vapors in the surrounding environment from entering the facepiece. This positive pressure can, for example, be facilitated by biasing the diaphragm with a spring.
Present harnesses are designed to be worn by the user over the garb. However, there is no allowance for the SCBA pack/harness to be worn over a Coast Guard approved lifejacket, nor is an approved lifejacket large enough to fit over a SCBA pack/harness. Thus, those who work on dry surfaces adjacent to marine environments, such as a boat, dock, or off-shore rig, and who are required to wear a SCBA unit cannot wear an appropriate lifejacket. As a result, the users and employers will be in violation of 46 CFR §185.508 in the very instance that the CFR spells out they are required to wear a lifejacket, “(3) In the event of flooding, fire, or other events that may possibly call for evacuation;” (46 CFR §185.508), which is in reference to when an individual must don a lifejacket.
This invention, in it's entirety, is the integration of a flotation device (United States Coast Guard approved flotation device or otherwise) onto, into, alongside, with or in-tandem with a SCBA unit, (a self contained breathing apparatus as a whole or by its parts, the pack, shoulder straps, mounting device, tank, etc. or by affixing the flotation device onto any of the previously mentioned SCBA unit or it's parts). The flotation device is intended to support the weight of the user as well as the weight of his or her SCBA unit and its parts. The flotation device is intended to be self inflating, but it may also be rigid. One way of possible integration, in no way the sole method of personal flotation device integration encompassed by this invention, is described below.
This invention entails a self contained breathing apparatus, SCBA unit, and or SCBA harness altered or manufactured so that a personal flotation device (“PFD” or “lifejacket”) is integrated onto, within or alongside the SCBA unit. In general, the breathing systems that presently compose a SCBA do not float. Depending upon the composition of the compressed air tank, be it carbon fiber, steel or aluminum, the SCBA unit will range from a few pounds positively buoyant, to negatively buoyant, a range which changes as the user consumes the compressed air within the tank.
In the illustrations one method (by no means the exclusive method) of PFD to SCBA integration is displayed. It is described in more detail below.
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The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Obviously, modifications and alterations will occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150013673 A1 | Jan 2015 | US |