This invention pertains to a protective garment, such as a protective coat or protective coveralls, for a firefighter or for an emergency rescue worker. This invention provides that the protective garment is equipped with a litter, which, when not deployed, is adapted to be stored within the protective and which, when deployed, is adapted to facilitate carrying a wearer of the protective garment, so equipped.
Commonly, a firefighter or an emergency rescue worker who wears a protective garment, such as a protective coat, protective coveralls, or protective overalls, also wears a drag harness, which is a harness used by a rescuer to drag a stricken wearer from a perilous situation. Such a harness may be also called a drag rescue device.
Commonly, as worn with a protective garment, such as a protective coat or protective coveralls, a drag harness has two arm loops, each of which is adapted to receive one of the arms of a wearer, and a drag grip, which extends outwardly through an aperture or apertures in an upper region of a back-covering portion of the protective garment.
Drag harnesses, as discussed in the preceding paragraphs, are exemplified in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,682,671, 4,854,418, and 6,205,584 B1, and in United States Patent Application Publications No. US 2005/0173188 A1 and No. US 2005/0211188 A1.
This invention provides, for a firefighter or for an emergency rescuer worker, a protective garment, which is equipped with a litter. When not deployed, the litter is adapted to be stored within the garment. When deployed, the litter is adapted to facilitate carrying a wearer of the protective garment. Preferably, the litter has two, flexible, longitudinal members and multiple, flexible, transverse members, which extend between the longitudinal members, outside the protective garment, when the litter is deployed.
Preferably, the protective garment has a back-covering portion, which is adapted to cover the back of a wearer, and the back-covering portion has a pocket, in which the litter, when not deployed, is adapted to be stored and which is located where the back-covering portion is adapted to cover a lower region of the back of the wearer. Preferably, the litter has two, flexible, longitudinal members and multiple, flexible, transverse members, which extend between the longitudinal members, outside the protective garment and outside the pocket, when the litter is deployed.
Preferably, the protective garment is equipped with a drag harness and with a litter, as described above. Preferably, moreover, the drag harness has two arm loops, each of which is adapted to receive one of the arms of a wearer. Preferably, moreover, the litter has two, flexible, longitudinal members, each of which is attached to one of the arm loops of the drag harness, and multiple, flexible, transverse members, which, when the litter is deployed, extend between the longitudinal members, outside the protective garment and, if the pocket described above is provided, outside the pocket.
Herein, directional terms, such as upper, lower, side, and back, are taken from a standpoint of an erectly standing wearer of the protective garment.
As illustrated in
The drag harness 20 may conform to one of the drag harnesses disclosed in United States Patent Application Publications No. US 2005/0173188 A1 and No. US 2005/0211188 A1, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein. The drag harness 20 has two arm loops 22, each of which is covered by the protective coat when the protective coat 10 and the drag harness 20 are worn by the firefighter and each of which is adapted to receive one of the arms of the firefighter wearing the protective coat 10 and the drag harness 20.
The drag harness 20 has a drag grip 24, which is accessible at a back-covering portion 40 of the protective coat 10, through two apertures 42 in an upper region 44 of the back-covering portion 40 of the protective coat 10. Each aperture 12 is defined by a grommet 46. In other respects, the drag harness 20 may conform to one of the drag harnesses disclosed in United States Patent Application Publications No. US 2005/0173188 A1 and No. 2005/0211188 A1, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein.
The back-covering portion 40 of the protective coat 10 has a pocket 50, in which the litter 20, when not deployed, is adapted to be stored. The pocket 50 is located at a lower region 48 of the back-covering portion 40, where the back-covering portion 40 covers a lower region of the back of the firefighter wearing the protective coat 10. The back-covering portion 40 of the protective coat 10 has two flaps 52, 54, which can be separated to open the pocket 50 and which can be drawn together to close the pocket 50, and has a hook-and-loop closure 56, which can be used to attach the flaps 52, 54, to each other when the flaps 52, 54, are drawn together to close the pocket 50.
The litter 30 has two, flexible, longitudinal members 32, which are made from strapping, as illustrated, or from rope and which have distal ends 34 and proximal ends 36. The litter 30 has multiple, flexible, transverse members 38, which are made from strapping, as illustrated, or from rope, and which extend between the longitudinal members 32, outside the protective garment 10 and outside the pocket 50, when the litter 30 is deployed. The litter 30 has a gripping loop 60, which is made from strapping, as illustrated, or from rope, and which is attached to the distal ends 34 of the longitudinal members 32, such that the gripping loop 60 is outside the protective garment 10 and outside the pocket 50, when the litter 30 is deployed. The proximal end 36 of each of the longitudinal members 32 is attached, at a juncture 62, to one of the arm loops 22 of the drag harness 20, whereby the drag harness 20 and the litter 30 are unitized.
So unitized, the drag harness 20 and the litter 30, when deployed, facilitate carrying the firefighter wearing the protective coat 10, by one rescuer grasping the drag grip 24 of the drag harness 20 and by another rescuer grasping the gripping loop 60 of the litter. The firefighter being carried can drape his or her legs over the longitudinal members 32, as illustrated in
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080072361 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |