The present invention relates to a rocking chair in which a chair component is movable in a rocking motion with respect to a chair base.
There are many types of rocking mechanisms that permit movement of a chair component with respect to a chair base. One such rocking mechanism that uses a pair of coil springs is the described in the Bottemiller et al. U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,916,084 and 4,786,106.
Other types of rocking mechanisms are also described in Bottemiller et al. U.S. Pat. No. 4,371,142 and the Apissomian U.S. Pat. No. 4,411,468.
The present invention includes a rocking chair which has a flexible joint between a chair base and a chair component permitting rocking action. The flexible joint includes a housing with a plurality of internal surfaces. A plurality of compressible rods are disposed within the housing and a rigid member extends among the rods to engage the rods against the internal surfaces of the housing. The rigid member is attached to either the chair base or the chair component while the housing is then attached to either the chair base or the chair component whichever is not attached to the rigid member.
A rocking chair construction of the present invention is generally indicated at 10 in
The chair component 12 includes a back portion 18 and a seat portion 20 and left and right arm sections 22 and 24 which extend between the seat portion 20 and the back portion 18. Although a specific chair component is described and illustrated, any type of a chair component that can be secured to the rocking mechanism 16 is within the scope of the present invention.
The base 14 as illustrated in
The rocking mechanism 16 includes left and right support arms 36 and 38, a housing 40, a plurality of resiliently compressible rods 42, 43 and a separator bar 44.
The housing 40 includes an upper half 46 and a lower half 48 which are secured to each other by a plurality of screws 50 to form a chamber 52 as best illustrated in
The separator bar 44 is fixedly attached at a left end 52 to the left support arm 36 and at a right end 54 to the right support arm 38. The left and right support arms 36 and 38 are fixedly attached to the chair component 12 by suitable screws or other fasteners or by welding or other known methods of attachment. The manner of attachment is not important to the present invention.
The lower half of the housing 48 is fixedly attached to a downwardly extending shaft 56. A sleeve 58 extends through the aperture 34 into the base 14 securing the shaft 56 to the base 14. The sleeve 58 receives the shaft 56 such that the shaft 56 rotates within the sleeve 58. It will be understood that the chair component is rotatable 360° relative to the base 14.
Although the housing is described and illustrated as being attached to the base 14 and the bar 44 being attached to the chair component 12, the attachments could be reversed. The housing could be attached to the chair component while the bar 44 is attached to the base.
The rods 42, 43 are preferably made from a polyurethane elastomer. An important characteristic of the rods 42, 43 are that the rods are resiliently compressible. The rods are preferred to be compressible. By resiliently compressible is meant that the material that the rods are made of has the ability to recover and return to its original shape or position after having been compressed.
As the chair component 12 is rocked back and forth, the separator bar 44 through its connection to left and right support arms 36 and 38 is moved along its longitudinal axis back and forth as indicated by arrow 60. Surfaces 62 of the separator bar 44 engage the resiliently compressible rods 42, 43. Since the rods 42, 43 are compressible, the rods 42 permit the bar 44 to turn along its longitudinal axis as indicated by arrow 60 thereby permitting a rocking motion to the chair component 12. The rods 42, 43 provide a resistance to the movement of the chair component which is desirable in a rocking mechanism. Since the rods 42, 43 are also resilient, that is, the rods are capable of returning to their original shape or position after having been compressed, the chair component 12 will return to its original position since the rods 42, 43 force the separator bar 44 to move back to its original position.
Preferably, the polyurethane rods have a durometer of approximately 60 Shore A hardness. The stiffness (resistance) of the rocking motion is changeable by durometer and rod diameter size or thickness. Theoretically, there is no lower limit to the durometer needed other than that the rocking motion will not be stiff enough if too low of a durometer is chosen. However, at higher durometers, the rods 42, 43 may start to take a permanent set and shape, and although providing a rocking motion, such rods will not provide as smooth of a rocking motion to the chair component 12. In the example of polyurethane, polyurethane will take a permanent set and shape at a durometer of approximately 80 Shore A hardness and higher. For materials other than polyurethane, the upper limit may be a different durometer value. It has been found that for polyurethane a suitable durometer is approximately 50 to 65 Shore A hardness.
While polyurethane has been given as a specific example, other materials may be used such as other elastomers. It is believed that other materials will work as well as polyurethane as long as the material is resiliently compressible. Synthetic and natural rubbers will also produce a rocking motion although not as desirable as the rocking motion produced by polyurethane.
Although the separator bar is illustrated in
Similarly, the cross sectional configuration of the rods does not have to be circular. Depending on the internal shape of the chamber of housing, the rods may have a different cross sectional configuration other than circular. The primary characteristic needed is that the rods 42, 43 engage a surface of the bar 44 when the bar is turned about its axis and to provide some resistive force during the rocking motion.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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