This invention relates to a resilient seating structure, and particularly relates to a seating structure which provides buoyant seating for a user sitting on the seating structure, and further particularly relates to a seating structure which is rockable by the user.
Many types of currently available seating structures provide a user with resilient seating accommodations. Such structures typically include some form of support, with resilient structure, directly beneath the area where the user sits. The resilient structure could include various types of springs having compressive properties, various elements having resilient properties, and the like, all of which are compressed when the user is seated on the seating structure and which return to a normal extension when the user withdraws from the seating structure. Some seating structures of the present include facility which allow the user to rock the structures.
An example of a seating structure with a resilient and a rockable seating area is disclosed and illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 5,913,568, which issued to Stephen T. Brightbill and David W. Flesner on Jun. 22, 1999. The seating structure of this patent includes two, identical, moving seat assemblies, which are located side by side, and which, in their entirety, define a seating area of the structure. Each seating assembly includes a seat platform situated on resilient structure located only directly beneath the seating area of the seating structure. The resilient structure includes any of several types of “motion mechanisms” which could be pneumatic (e.g., air bladder), hydraulic, magnetic, or motorized mechanisms. The “motion mechanisms” could also include springs having a variety of configurations as illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 5,913,568.
Another example of a seating structure having a resilient seating area is disclosed and illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 6,139,095, which issued to Richard C. Robertshaw on Oct. 31, 2000. The seating structure of this patent also includes two, identical, moving seat assemblies, which are located side by side, and which, in their entirety, define a seating area. In one embodiment, each seating assembly includes a seat platform situated on a plurality of flexible rubber balls located only directly beneath the seating area of the seating structure.
Each of the seating structures described and illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,913,568 and 6,139,095 include two platforms which form the seat area for receipt of the left and right buttocks, and portions of the respective left and right thighs, of the user of the seating structure. The resilient structure below the two platforms, in each patent, allows the raising and lowering of one platform relative to the other platform, and a tilting or rocking effect of each platform, to accommodate the leaning and shifting action of the user seated in the seat area. This accommodation results from the placement of the resilient structure only directly beneath the seat area, thereby exerting a force directly toward the buttocks and thighs of the user.
While the seating structures of U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,913,568 and 6,139,095 provide a useful function and purpose, there is a need for a seating structure which does not apply a force directly toward the seated anatomy of the user. Also, there is a need for a seating structure which provides a feeling of buoyancy for the user of the seating structure. Further, there is a need for a seating structure which is rockable, while providing a feeling of buoyancy.
Therefore, it is an object of this invention to provide a seating structure which does not apply a force directly toward the seated anatomy of the user.
Another object of this invention is to provide a seating structure which provides a feeling of buoyancy for the seated user thereof.
A further object of this invention is to provide a seating structure which is rockable, while providing a feeling of buoyancy.
With these and other objects in mind, this invention contemplates a seating structure, which includes a frame, a platform formed with a seating portion, and means for supporting the platform in a floating relation to the frame independently of engagement with the seating portion.
This invention also contemplates a seating structure wherein the platform is formed with a non-seating portion and the means for supporting the platform is captured between, and in engagement with, spaced portions of the frame and the non-seating portion of the platform.
This invention further contemplates a seating structure wherein the non-seating portion is adjacent the seating portion, has surfaces on opposite sides thereof, and the means for supporting the platform is in engagement with the surfaces on opposite sides of the non-seating portion thereof for supporting the seating portion of the platform in a floating relation to the frame.
Additionally, this invention contemplates a seating structure, which includes means, positioned adjacent the means for supporting the platform, for precluding any movement of the means for supporting in a direction of the means for precluding.
Also, this invention contemplates a seating structure which is rockable while supporting the seating portion of the platform in a floating relation to the frame.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more fully apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment, the appended claims and the accompanying drawings.
In the accompanying drawings:
Referring to
A compartment 48 is formed in the housing 34 between a lower or base surface 50 of the shelf 44 and a spaced upper surface 52 of the plate 46. Also, inboard surfaces S4 and 56 of the side panels 40 and 42, respectively, provide opposite side enclosures of the compartment 48. The side panel 42 is also formed with an outboard surface 58. Further, the compartment 48 is open at front and rear ends thereof in the preferred embodiment, but could be closed without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
It is noted that the housing 34 could be formed without the portion of side panel 40, which includes the surface 54, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The housing 36 is constructed in the same manner as the housing 34, as described above. Therefore, the various structural features and relationships of the elements of the housing 36 will not be described herein, but will be identified by the numeral of the corresponding element of the housing 34, followed by the letter “a.” For example, the inboard side panel of the housing 36 will be identified as “panel 42a.”
The seating structure 30 further includes a platform 60 which is formed with a front edge 62, a rear edge 64, a right-side edge 66 and a left-side edge 68. The platform 60 is also formed with an upper surface 70 and an undersurface 72. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the platform 60 is formed in the shape of a rectangle, with a right side-to-left side dimension being slightly greater than a front-to-rear dimension. The platform 60 could be formed dimensionally different and in many other shapes, other than rectangular, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the platform 60 could be, but not limited to, such shapes as round, oblong, square, etc., or one or more of the edges 62, 64, 66 and 68 could be formed with an arcuate shape.
A pair of spaced, parallel, enclosed elongated slots 74 and 76, with closed ends, are formed through the platform 60 and extend from a location near the front edge 62 of the platform to a location near the rear edge 64 thereof. In addition, the slot 74 is located inboard of the right-side edge 66 of the platform 60 by a first prescribed distance. Also, the slot 76 is located inboard of the left side edge 68 of the platform 60 by a second prescribed distance, which, in the preferred embodiment, is the same as the first prescribed distance, but could be different therefrom without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Referring to
As shown in
As shown in
Referring to
Each of the cribs 78a, 80a, 82a and 84a, and the corresponding alpha-numerically identified cribs (e.g., 78b) could be structured to form the enclosure 88 having a configuration other than a square configuration without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the enclosure 88 of each crib could be round, diamond shaped, oblong, oval, triangular, or any shape which will perform the function of the crib, as described hereinbelow.
It is noted that the floors of the plurality of cribs 78a through 78d, 80a through 80d, 82a through 82d, and 84a through 84d, define prescribed portions of the respective elements to which the cribs are attached such as, for example, the shelves 44 and 44a, the platform 60, and the enclosure plates 46 and 46a.
Referring to
When assembling the components of the seat structure 30, a lower portion of each of the resilient elements 90a, 90b, 90c and 90d is positioned in the cribs 78d, 80d, 82d and 84d, respectively, and are adjacent the floor of the respective crib. Rather than being adjacent the floor of the respective crib, each of the resilient elements 90a through 90h could be in engagement with the floor of the respective crib without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The platform 60 is then manipulated to align the slots 74 and 76 with the inboard side panels 42 and 42a, respectively, and the platform is moved to position the slots over and about the respective inboard side panels, as described above.
It is noted that, as shown in
In this position, the upper portions of the resilient elements 90a, 90b, 90c and 90d are adjacent, and could be in engagement with, the floors of the respective cribs 78b, 80b, 82b and 84b. Thereafter, a lower portion of each of the remaining resilient elements 90e, 90f, 90g and 90h is positioned in, and adjacent, and could be in engagement with the floor of, the cribs 78b, 80b, 82b and 84b, respectively. In this crib-nested position, an upper portion of each of the resilient elements 90e, 90f, 90g and 90h extends to a plane which is slightly above the top edges of the outboard side panels 40 and 40a, and the inboard side panels 42 and 42a.
It is further noted that, as shown in
Referring again to
When the enclosure plates 46 and 46a are assembled with respective side panels, the resilient elements 90a through 90h are slightly compressed due to the vertical spacing within the respective compartments 48 and 48a. This slight compression results in the application of low-level forces to both sides of the platform 60 to thereby maintain the platform at a rest position, or static state position, as illustrated in
In the static state position as viewed in
Under the four-points arrangement, as described above, on a lower level below the platform 60, the resilient elements 90a through 90d engage the floors of the respective cribs 78b, 80b, 82b and 84b. Further, under the four-points arrangement, on an upper level above the platform 60, the resilient elements 90e through 90h engage the floors of the respective cribs 78a, 80a, 82a and 84a. In this buoyant position, the platform 60 is not touching any hard surface of the remainder of the seating structure 30 and is essentially floating due to the resiliency of the resilient elements 90a through 90h. In effect then, the platform 60 is captured between two layers of the resilient elements 90a through 90h. It is noted that the seating structure 30 could function to support a user, particularly in the centrally balanced position, with only the first set of resilient elements 90a through 90d, all of which would be in engagement with the undersurface 72 of the platform 60 in the non-seating portions 94a and 94b, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
It is noted that the upper and lower portions of the resilient elements 90a through 90h, which normally engage the floors of the respective cribs as described above, may be nested sufficiently within the respective cribs to perform the functions thereof without engagement with the floors of the respective cribs, all without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Referring to
The resilient elements 90a through 90h, which contain a pressurized medium, constitute an enclosed compliant expandable shell having a prescribed amount of the pressurized medium within the shell, which expands the shell to a prescribed configuration. The compliancy of the shell then allows the shell to assume a configuration other than the prescribed configuration when a person sits on the seating portion 92 of the platform 60.
Also, as an assembled component of the seating structure 30, sections of the platform 60, outboard from the seating portion 92, form non-seating portions 94a and 94b. The non-seating portion 94a is located between the edge 66 of the platform 60 and the slot 74, and the non-seating portion 94b is located between the edge 68 of the platform and the slot 76 thereof. The non-seating portions 94a and 94b define the portions of the platform 60 which are not used by the user. It is noted that the non-seating portions 94a and 94b are located substantially within the compartments 48 and 48a, respectively, of the housings 34 and 36, respectively, which provide enclosed protective chambers for the resilient elements 90a through 90h in their mounted and functioning locations.
The platform 60 is formed with the upper surface 70 and the undersurface 72. Since the seating portion 92, and the non-seating portions 94a and 94b, are formed by the platform 60, any reference herein to an upper surface and/or an undersurface of the seating portion and the non-seating portions will be to those portions of the upper surface 70 and the undersurface 72 of the platform which form the upper surfaces and the undersurfaces of the seating portion and the non-seating portions.
Further, the terms “upper surface” and “undersurface” as used herein to identify surfaces of the platform 60, are used for descriptive purposes only, in the context of the orientation of the seating structure 30 as illustrated in the drawings and figures hereof. In practical use, the seating structure 30 could be placed in other orientations, i.e., other than the orientation illustrated in the drawings and figures hereof. With respect to such other orientations, it is to be understood that the terms “upper surface” and “undersurface” will continue to identify the surfaces 70 and 72 of the platform 60 notwithstanding that such surfaces are not an upper surface or an undersurface in such other orientations.
The non-seating portion 94a of the platform 60 separates the compartment 48 into two cells 93 and 95. Cell 93 extends between the shelf 44 and the non-seating portion 94a, and represents a first cell adjacent the undersurface 72 of the platform 60. Cell 95 extends between the non-seating portion 94a and the enclosure plate 46, and represents a second cell adjacent the upper surface 70 of the platform 60. Similar cells 93a and 95a are formed below and above, respectively, the non-seating portion 94b. Therefore, resilient elements 90a and 90b are located in cell 93, resilient elements 90e and 90f are located in cell 95, resilient elements 90c and 90d are located in cell 93a, and resilient elements 90g and 90h are located in cell 95a.
In one aspect of the invention, a user sits on the seating portion 92 of the platform 60 in a centrally balanced position with the user's legs over the front edge 62 of the platform. In this centrally balanced position, each of the lower resilient members 90a through 90d are compressed and distorted from the static state position, all generally at about the same amount, in response to the weight of the user. At the same time, the upper resilient elements 90e through 90h will relax slightly from their static state position, but will remain firmly in the platform-supporting mode to preclude a sudden upward thrust of the platform 60. A sudden upward thrust could occur when the user shifts positions on the seating portion 92, which results in the tilting thereof. In the tilted position, selected ones of the upper resilient elements 90e through 90h will be compressed such as, for example, resilient element 90h, as illustrated in
During the period when the user is sitting in the centrally balanced position, the user experiences a sense of buoyancy and floating support by virtue of the resilient members 90a through 90d, which are located below the non-seating portions 94a and 94b of the platform. The buoyancy and floating sensation experienced by the user is further enhanced by the placement of the resilient members 90a through 90d under the non-seating portions 94a and 94b only, and not under the seating portion 92, whereby there are no impediments or obstructions beneath the seating portion 92 at any time, including all periods when the seating portion is occupied by the user.
It is noted that the edge 68 of the platform 60, which is an outboard edge of the non-seating portion 94b, could be attached to a vertical slide (not shown), or attached to a hinge, and a single resilient element such as, for example, the resilient element 90a, could be placed between, and nested in the respective cribs on, the shelf 44 and the undersurface 72 of the platform 60 at the non-seating portions 94a, or in engagement with the floors of the respective cribs, to provide the buoyant and floating effect for the seating portion 92, all without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
It is also noted that the seating structure 30 could function to support a user with only the first set of resilient elements 90a through 90d, all of which would be between, and nested in the respective cribs on, the shelves 44 and 44a, and the undersurface 72 of the platform 60 at the non-seating portions 94a and 94b, or in engagement with the floors of the respective cribs, all without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
In the preferred embodiment, the platform 60 is composed of a generally rigid material such as, for example, wood. However, the platform 60 could be composed of any other suitable material such as, for example, metal or plastic materials, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Also, with no impediments below the seating portion 92, the seating portion tends to droop slightly, in the context of a catenary effect, when the user is sitting thereon. The amount of the droop depends upon the thickness and rigidity characteristics of the material of which the seating portion 92 is composed. This catenary-effect property of the seating structure 30 further enhances the buoyancy and floating effect experienced by the user.
Referring to
Referring to
Also, the clearance distance (2z), and its structural relationship with the slots 74 and 76 of the platform 60, and the panels 42 and 42a, provide a means for allowing movement of the platform 60, and thereby the seat portion 92, relative to the frame 32, in an outward direction, from the front edge 62 and the rear edge 68, as indicated by directional arrows 140 and 142, respectively.
Referring to
Referring to
Also, the clearance distance (w−v), and its structural relationship with the slots 74 and 76 of the platform 60, and the panels 42 and 42a, provide a means for allowing movement of the platform, and thereby the seating portion 92, relative to the frame 32, in an outward direction, from the right-side edge 66 and the left-side edge 68, as indicated by directional arrows 144 and 146, respectively, in
Further, the seating portion 92 can be tilted and/or moved in compound tilting directions under the control of the user. For example, the user could lean in a direction which causes the seating portion 92 to tilt forward and to tilt to the right at the same time. The tilting feature of the seating structure 30 provides a rocking effect similar to that available with conventional rocking chairs, having bowed rocking rails which are located on the floor beneath the chair.
Consequently, the combination of the clearance distances (2z) and (w−v), and their structural relationships with the slots 74 and 76 of the platform 60, and the panels 42 and 42a, provide a means for allowing movement of the platform 60 in compound arcing directions, relative to the frame 32, which include at least two vector components of the arcing directions of movement on any adjacent two of the front edge 62, the rear edge 64, the right-side edge 66 and the left-side edge 68 of the platform, and thereby the seating portion 92. For example, referring to
Also, the combination of the clearance distances (2z) and (w−v), and their structural relationships with the slots 74 and 76 of the platform 60, and the panels 42 and 42a, provide a means for allowing movement of the platform 60 in compound outward directions, which include vector components of the outward directions of movement, as illustrated by directional arrows 144, 146, 140 and 142 (
Further, the combination of the clearance distances (2z) and (w−v), and their structural relationship with the slots 74 and 76 of the platform 60, and the panels 42 and 42a, provide a means for allowing movement of the platform in compound arcing and outward directions, which include vector components of the arcing direction and the outward direction of movement, in any of the front edge 62, the rear edge 64, the right-side edge 66 and the left-side edge 68 of the platform, and thereby the seating portion 92. For example, movement of the platform 60 in an arcing direction of the front edge 62, and in an outward direction of the front edge, is movement of the platform in a compound arcing and outward direction.
The seating portion 92 is capable of being tilted in a variety of directions as described above because the slots 74 and 76 are longer and wider than the length and width of the inboard side panels 42 and 42a, respectively, about which the slots are located, also as described above. A representation is illustrated in
As illustrated in
Even though the individual resilient elements 90a through 90h are either compressed or relaxed during the tilting of the seating portion 92, they are maintained in their respective four-point locations by the enclosures 88 of the cribs 78a through 78d, 80a through 80d, 82a through 82d, and 84a through 84d. In this manner, the resilient elements 90a through 90h continue to provide the buoyancy and floating effect, as described above, regardless of whether they are compressed or relaxed.
As described above, the frame 32 includes the first housing 34 and the second housing 36, which form compartments 48 and 48a, respectively, for protective and secluded cover for the non-seating portions 94a and 94b of the platform 60, the resilient elements 90a through 90h, and the cribs 78a through 78d, 80a through 80d, 82a through 82d, and 84a through 84d. The frame 32 could be constructed differently without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the frame 32 could be constructed by the use of metal columns or rods which would replace the outboard side panels 40 and 40a and the inboard side panels 42 and 42a.
In the preferred embodiment, the seating portion 92 is formed integrally with the non-seating portions 94a and 94b as a single piece in the form of the platform 60. The seating portion 92 could be formed as a separate piece from, but attached to, the non-seating portions 94a and 94b without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. In addition, the seating portion 92 could be formed, or covered, with softer cushioning material without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the seat portion 92 could be made from a fabric of sufficient strength to support the user, or from a netting material 96, such as that illustrated in
While the cribs 78a through 78d, 80a through 80d, 82a through 82d, and 84a through 84d are formed to provide the enclosures 88, a fence 100, as shown in
Further, opposing recesses 102 and 104, as shown in
A coil spring 110, as shown in
Referring to
Referring to
It is noted that the springs 134 and 136 could each be mounted in an inverted position without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The seating structure 30, as described above, includes the platform 60 having the seating portion 92, which encounters no impediments or obstacles therebeneath at any time, including during use thereof by a user. The seating portion 92 of the platform 60 is supported at locations which are isolated from and independent of the seating portion, that is, at the non-seating portions 94a and 94b. By use of the resilient elements 90a through 90h at the non-seating portions 94a and 94b of the platform 60, the seating structure 30 provides the user with a buoyant and floating experience which is relaxing and enjoyable, regardless of whether the user is sitting or rocking.
As noted above, the platform 60 is formed with the front edge 62, the rear edge 64 and the side edges 66 and 68. Referring to
It is noted that, while at least portions of the resilient elements 90a through 90h are in engagement with the respective portions of the undersurface 72 and the upper surface 70 of the platform 60 and spaced from the edges 62, 64, 66 and 68 of the platform as described above, other portions of the resilient elements could extend to, and be in engagement with, the edges without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
In general, the above-identified embodiments are not to be construed as limiting the breadth of the present invention. Modifications, and other alternative constructions, will be apparent which are within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20030080596 A1 | May 2003 | US |