Not Applicable
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
This is a device, which will allow the user to “add” a step in needed situations such as hard to reach places in the kitchen, or closets. The step is portable and easily stowed when not in use.
2. Prior Art
The prior art in this area reveals that there are a variety of means to add a step in certain applications. These can be attached to cabinets such as Caminiti, U.S. Pat. No. 5,131,492 or drawers as in Gaede, U.S. Pat. No. 3,481,429. Additionally, there are fold away steps, Horvath, U.S. Pat. No. 3,136,386.
While these are indeed similar ideas, they are permanently attached or affixed to an object.
This device is a portable additional step, which can be moved from location to location and provides the user with greater flexibility in terms of ease of access and utility.
One of the difficulties in the home or business is reaching overhead areas. People stand on chairs, footstools and the like to reach these difficult areas.
This device combines the utility of a step with portability so that the device will not clutter up the home or be a traffic hazard in a kitchen or garage.
The device will provide another step, which will raise to a level of approximately six to eight inches above the level of the rest of the device. The additional step is raised by use of a hinge mechanism, which has been placed on the outside edges of the step. This is not a step stool because it can be stored under a cabinet or in its own storage place and hidden from view.
It is a portable unit that allows the user to have within his or her grasp a device, which will add an additional step wherever one may be needed. The device is in the shape of a hollow, rectangular box. In the approximate middle of the device is a piece of wood with a hole in the middle. This piece of wood rotates up and down and provides the additional step.
The hole in the center of the piece allows the owner to carry the device from location to location with relative ease. The step—when in the down position—will remain flush with the rest of the unit and can be used as a platform. The device when used as a platform is raised off the ground approximately six to eight inches. The step is raised and lowered by two sets of hinges, which are connected to the step and to one side of the rectangular box.
This particular device 50 is in the shape of a rectangular box or frame. The device is comprised of a flat planar surface 100 with a step 200 which can be raised and lowered approximately six to eight inches.
In the center of the device is the recessed step 200, which rotates around a nut and bolt assembly, 400, 410, on both sides of the bottom surface of the recessed step 200.
In the “down” position the recessed step 200 lies flush and parallel with the flat planar surface 100.
A hole 250 in the middle of the recessed step 200, which is raised or lowered, allows the user to carry the device from place to place and stow it wherever desired. When the step 200 is “down” the device 50 can be slid under a couch or stowed between appliances. This keeps the device 50 out of the way of the homeowner.
The hinge 300 as depicted in
The stop mechanisms 310 are positioned so that the step 200 rotates to a position slightly greater than ninety degrees from the vertical plane. This angle will insure that the step 200 stays in place as it rotates upward to approximately one hundred and ten degrees from the vertical plane of the device. The degree of rotation of the step 200 in relation to the horizontal plane allows the step to be raised and stay in an upright position without the necessity of a separate hinge or other locking device.
The step 200 is prevented from rotating more than approximately one hundred and ten degree by the stop mechanism 310, which has been placed adjacent to the hinge 300.
The choice of material will be selected so that the device will be able to support an adult and be durable for that purpose.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2592912 | Knipper | Apr 1952 | A |
3136386 | Horvath | Jun 1964 | A |
3311190 | Naumann | Mar 1967 | A |
3481429 | Gaede | Dec 1969 | A |
4846304 | Rasmussen | Jul 1989 | A |
4924970 | Seals et al. | May 1990 | A |
5005667 | Anderson | Apr 1991 | A |
5009282 | Willsher | Apr 1991 | A |
D323537 | Wilkinson | Jan 1992 | S |
5085290 | Guirlinger | Feb 1992 | A |
5131492 | Caminiti | Jul 1992 | A |
5641034 | Calmeise et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
5967255 | Young | Oct 1999 | A |
6425457 | Lundry | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6439342 | Boykin | Aug 2002 | B1 |