This invention relates to inflatable rescue and safety apparatus for receiving personnel in aquatic environments and, in particular, to such apparatus and devices as are carried aboard airplanes and ships whose passengers are at peril from exposure to the elements in the event that the craft goes down at the sea.
This invention is an improvement on my inflatable rescue and safety apparatus described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,574,804 B1, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
According to the prior art publication of PCT/CH99/00619 the object, of the device disclosed is to provide raft having a greater surface area for personnel, at the sea, wherein an ordinary boat operates and permits someone stuck beneath the device, when it inflates, to move onto the device and to stay there by means of releasable spreadable and re-lockable openings that permit shipwrecked persons to grasp the netting in order to rejoin one of the openings. It also allows survivors, if required, to hold on by hands and feet using handles and safety belts. However, survivors are neither protected from the weather and exposure in a cold sea, waves that can pass through the netting, and exposure to the sun, should the raft be disposed upside-down, shipwrecked persons will not have access to the handles and safety belts.
According to the prior art patent document DE 3210 590 A1, a device is disclosed for use in open water, which is a multiple-person buoy without netting, the tarpaulins of which cover a certain number of openings, and do not form a floor on all the surface. Shelters are provided, but they are located on certain units, they are fixed and they do not communicate with each other but form multiple spaces.
Children can slide into the openings, survivors can encounter waves, water can stagnate in the tarpaulins and form pockets there, and when survivors are in the shelter, an imbalance will be created and the multiple buoy will be returned. This situation can get worse when units are coupled in a rough sea, because nothing assures that shelters are arranged head-to-tail in order to balance loads. On the contrary, in the panic condition, unfortunately, it is impossible to perform such operation, and many persons will likely be exposed to water and the weather conditions.
Rescue boats and rafts that are currently available in the market provide only a small surface area, with capacity for a limited number of persons on board. Moreover, aircraft slides and toboggans require skillful folding with a link system in the form of snap fasteners so that they are opened in the correct orientations.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide an inflatable rescue and safety flotation device that is able to overcome these drawbacks.
The above objects and other advantages are achieved by the inflatable rescue raft of the invention that is made totally reversible by the use of handles and mating fasteners that are distributed on both sides of the raft and safety belts that can be accessed for use, regardless of the original orientation of the raft. The raft is also equipped with modular units containing a floor and personnel shelter that mates with the fasteners on the surfaces of the raft. The shelters can be joined to form interconnecting multiple spaces or erected at a single selected location on the surface of the raft without regard to the orientation of the initial opening of the raft.
The invention will be fully understood by reading the description which follows of the several embodiments provided as non-restrictive examples and with regards to the underlying figures.
a shows an apertured fabric strip 27 provided with accordion pleated section 41 in the form of a bellows with a stabilizing weight 30, which can be lead, and positioned in the center of the strip 27. Also shown in
b shows a weight-containing member 53, the apertured fabric strip 27 with weight 30 in its center, the strip being attached, by means of a plurality of snap-hooks 39, that engage rings 40 attached to the weight-containing member 53. Two series of rings distributed in two opposing lines on the weight-supporting member 52 permit the placement of the weight element 30 below the raft regardless of how the raft is initially disposed in the water.
a shows a modular shelter 12 fitted with rectilinear shelter structural 12H in the form of an H, unfolded covered by two adjacent rectangular fabric panels along with four integral triangular panels 13. The marginal edges of the panels forming this shelter portion are provided with fasteners, e.g., zippers or hood and loop fasteners.
b shows the structure 12 in the form of an H, in a semi-folded position.
a shows a sewn fabric strip 23 extended by a seal bead 26.
b shows a sewn fabric strip 23 with a fixed seal bead or seam 26 in its surroundings.
c shows the bag 11 with a tube having a slit 32 and a seal bead 26, threaded to the slit 32 of the tube.
a shows a bag 11, on the edge of which fixed tubular loop sections 28 are provided, and at the end of which two flexible fasteners 31, e.g. lengths of cord, are provided.
b is a tie rod 29 near the bag 11, provided at one end with a handle 29H and at the other end an eye 29I.
c shows an inflatable grille member 58 provided with the mesh netting 2. The mesh netting 2 includes a resealable personnel access opening 3, handles 4, tubular loop sections 28, which can be flexible or rigid, secured to the grille for receiving tubular loop sections 28 that are affixed to the bag 11 (
a shows a male part attachment means for securing bags, handles, and the like in the form of a tab portion 33 provided with a push-button 34.
b shows a female receiving piece in the form of semi-cylindrical receiving member secured to a support panel 35 and provided with an orifice 36 adapted to receive the extended push-button 34 of the male part.
c shows the tab 33 engaged in the receiving channel 35, the push-button 34 extending from the orifice 36.
a shows another male fixing mode for bags, handles, and the like, where a tab 43 is folded on itself with a section to be pressed from above, the tab being provided with two projecting lugs 44.
b shows the female partially conically shaped receiving part 45 provided with two orifices 36 into which lugs 44 are engaged for securing the mated portions together.
In a non-restrictive example of an embodiment, the present devices are comprised of an inflatable grille 1,
In the first step, during a shipwreck and inundation, persons caught beneath the device, which is expanded, unlock openings 3 and move onto the device, lock these opening,
In the second step, personnel stabilize the raft by adjusting, if necessary the weight 30 element to the desired suspended position, as shown in
In the third step, personnel organize the mounting of one or more shelters 8. A shipwrecked person unfolds the web which is used for the floor 7, unfolds the structure in the form of spider 19 as illustratively shown in
In the circumstance where the raft and those aboard make landfall, and desire to camp on the land, one or more bags 11 can be removed from the raft to establish a campsite on land by means of conventional tent pegs, fasteners, cords and the like 14 stowed inside the bag 11 and that can be attached to the periphery of shelter 8 and the floor 7, as shown in
This type of tent which fits in an elongated bag is suitable for use with or without rescue boat, and it is not necessary to provide the ends of the bag with male fasteners. Rather, cords are used for fixing tent pegs anchored to the ground and the floors. Shelters can also be joined together on land using similar attachment procedures.
With regard to fastening of panels and floors to rods, fasteners, cords or button holes, pressure straps, straps with knobs, hook and loop fasteners, snap hooks, sealed zippers, eyes with fasteners can be used, and those are not to be limited.
Webs forming the floor and shelter portions can be joined to the bag 11 in any available manner known to the art. They can be adhesively bonded, heat-sealed, sewn, and then rolled, folded on themselves, held by elastic straps, straps with fasteners, VELCRO® fasteners, snap-hooks, zippers, cords and knobs, and the like.
The exterior of bags 11 are preferably provided with handles, straps, VELCRO® attachments, or other means to facilitate grasping them.
Two webs are interconnected in a bag, they are fixed one after the other, where the web forming the floor is in the front and the web forming the shelter is in the rear. Bags are removably fixed on the grille by means of male receiving fasteners 33 and 43 which are distributed on both sides of the device. Female fasteners 35 and 45 are fixed on the ends of bags 11 and adapted to receive male fasteners. The male fasteners are positioned along the greater part of, or the whole grille for retaining a predetermined number of bags 11 on the grille. Each bag contains two webs forming the floor 7 and the shelter 8, which make the device lighter because bags are not positioned all over and there is the choice to set up shelter(s) at location(s) where desired, as determined by the circumstances. Similarly, handles 4, are made to be removable using the same kind of male/female fasteners.
The removable fasteners for bags 11 containing modular floor and shelter units, are female receiving pieces in the form of a half-cone 35 (
A similar receiving piece can be adapted for removably fastening handles 4, e.g., two receiving fasteners being bonded, heat-sealed on a plate or mould, the plate with fasteners then being heat-sealed to the rod or tube. By withdrawing the handle and pressing the button 34 or tab 43, the handle 4 is disengaged from one end then from the other. It can then be moved from the submerged to the upper side of the rat.
In an alternative embodiment, the handles 4 are permanently mounted and secured to both sides of the raft, and are not removable.
These types of fasteners can be adapted for fixing stops and upright posts 22 to the grille. It is also possible to use clips of safety belts and zippers. These examples are not limited.
All the fasteners for the bags, handles, stops, upright, posts of shelters, fasteners of floors will be disposed on two sides of the grille.
In another embodiment, bags are made to be removable by a fastener composed of a tube provided with a slit 32 fixed along the edge of the bag as a receiving piece and of a female seal bead 26 fixed on a fabric or other thin piece of material 23 joined to the grille. The seal bead 26 is slid by means of a slit inside the tube. The seal bead can be in an extension of the fabric or at right angles and fixed within the surrounding fabric, as in
In yet another embodiment, bags are made to be removable by a utilizing fastener on the bag 11 with flexible, rigid or elastic tubular sections 28 (see
Safety belts can be made removable by snap hooks fixed to each of its ends to allow them to be placed end-to-end and create chains.
To facilitate reversing the position of bags and handles on the raft, the reverse side of the raft is provided with indicia marking their locations in order to save time in finding and disengaging the bags.
The weight element 30 is formed by apertured thin strips 27 forming sections, within surroundings of each strip, a lead weight 30, for stabilizing the weight element, and at each end of each strip provided with pleated part in the form of an accordion 41 and means such as rings 40 and snap-hooks 39 allowing the bottom of the strip to hang up/remove on the rod for forming the weight element and releasing it by fixing it to rings on rods 52 by means of snap-hooks. Rings 40 on the rod 52, are distributed on two lines above and under the raft to ensure that the weight element is always located under the raft or at the necessary position, as shown in
Fluid-tight membranes or webs, which are doubled to form pockets can be used for the floor 7 and shelter 8, can be fitted with one-way valves and inflated automatically or by an air-gas generator or manually with a hand-pump, in order to create an insulation from the elements.
Tubular structures can be semi-flexible and/or joined since they are folded to size, they can be formed by folds of membranes, be included in folds or connected to the structure. In folds and hems, it is possible to thread pipes, flexible rods, which can be telescopic, articulatable, bendable, that are provided with pivot devices to cause them to pivot or interlock, and in other ways-known in the art. Pipes and rods that are flexible can be mounted at the time of manufacture.
If structures are inflated by water, an anti-freeze composition, which is to be injected, should be provided as a emergency material.
According to the choice of the user, some rafts are provided with a bag containing a telescopic bar mounted on a pivot, with a sail; oars and oar locks mounted on rods or tubes can be provided; and a plate for fixing a motor can also be provided.
The maximum loading and the number of persons should be indicated clearly on the grille.
The length of membranes, floors and/or shelters can be provided to optionally cover one or several of the mesh net openings. The surface of the device or a raft can be made only of two openings, with a shelter covering one opening and the floor covering two openings. The assembly technique allows the multiplication of sheltered spaces by coupling with adjacent spaces, or if preferred, shelters can be formed individually, and distributed on the surface as desired.
Where a large mesh netting opening is designed to support a predetermined personnel loading, several persons can hold side-by-side in two rows face-to-face in the same mesh, the two last persons at each end grasping handles. Persons who are face-to-face, with safety belts in addition, are supported feet against feet, when the sea is rough.
The shelter structure 12 using the support in the form of an H applies to parallelepipes. The structure on three sides 37, in the form of a square (or rectangular) shown in
The structure in the form of a spider having radial supports as illustrated in
It is not obligatory to fix handles on the side on which bags are fixed. Between two shelters in the case of clearances, the sealing will be ensured by fixing strips between upright posts and roofs, for example, using hook and loop fasteners. On some panels or roofs, transparent panels forming windows 56 can be provided.
Depending upon the diameter of the inflated members 58, floors can be flush with handles or to the rear of handles. In that case, openings or slits 25 are provided to provide access to handles 4. The inflatable members and sections can be protected from friction by flexible reinforcing strips, as commonly used in the field of inflatable articles.
Resealable openings 3 are made to be unlockable and lockable from either side for example by strips of VELCRO®, with a handle on each strip. Nippers of the pincer type, with a spring and long, wide ergonomic arms that can be grasped, one of the arms of pincer being provided with a link connected to the netting to avoid the pincer from failing into water, jaws of the pincer surrounding the opposing edges of the access opening. By means of a pincer, it is possible to be grasped, of which arms forming flexible levers 46 are mounted in one block to the axis 57, each provided with a protruding part 51. These protruding parts 51 of levers engage a female receiving piece 48 which is provided with two orifices 47 to meet two protruding parts 51. This type of pincer can be laid flat, as shown by
According to standards and the effective technique for rescue boats, the grille will be constructed with air-tight compartments and/or with an inner wall forming an air chamber, these compartments being composed of one or a plurality of one-way valves, as well as with pressure relief valves.
Any known inflation systems can be used. Where the manufacturer selects a system with straps or pull cords for releasing compressed air or other gas from one or more pressurized containers, the straps are guided by wheels, pulleys, conduits or other known means that permit the small cords to slide. These elements are fixed to rods, and straps, and small cords are connected to a single handle, such as a loop accessible from outside of the container. Compressed air bottles or other gas generators can be placed in a protective pouch or fixed by straps, or by other customary means known to the art. The grille expands from a protective cover or a bag which is opened, for example by yielding to the inflation pressure.
According to the certification standards imposed by various national safety authorities, the device must be equipped with all means required to ensure the reliable inflation of the raft and all customary emergency supplies such as cords on rods, ladders, anchor, complete outfitting with emergency and rescue kits, accessories, reflecting bands, oar locks, and the like.
As will also be apparent from the above detailed description, a bag affixed fixed to the inflated grille, containing and covered by an opaque web floor, with or without a shelter, is suitable for placement in a swimming pool for safety purposes and also to provide sunlight protection to reduce heating of the pool water and also to reduce heat loss when the pool is not in use at night or on cool days.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0607/01 | Apr 2001 | CH | national |
0333/02 | Feb 2002 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH02/00172 | 3/25/2002 | WO | 00 | 12/10/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/079027 | 10/10/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1727902 | Reno | Sep 1929 | A |
3781933 | Soter | Jan 1974 | A |
4088363 | Palmer | May 1978 | A |
4678443 | Edwards et al. | Jul 1987 | A |
4766918 | Odekirk | Aug 1988 | A |
5692795 | Mininger | Dec 1997 | A |
6574804 | Boujon | Jun 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
32 10 590 | Oct 1983 | DE |
2 678 669 | Jan 1993 | FR |
1 101 585 | Jan 1968 | GB |
WO 01 06076 | Jan 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050095932 A1 | May 2005 | US |