Rocking, reclining, folding chair

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6676206
  • Patent Number
    6,676,206
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, May 16, 2002
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 13, 2004
    21 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Examiners
    • Cranmer; Laurie K.
    Agents
    • Fields, Esq.; Scott J.
    • National IP Rights Center, LLC
Abstract
A rocking, reclining, foldable chair is disclosed. The invention comprises a curved rocker or rockers having a limiting extension; a leg or legs pivotally attached to said rocker; a seat pivotally attached to said leg or legs; a releasable support pivotally attached to any two of the aforesaid parts to prevent said chair from folding unexpectedly; a back pivotally attached to said seat or leg or legs; a pair of arms movably connected to said back; and a leg rest pivotally attached to said seat and said arms, said leg rest being movable between a rocking and a reclining position; and moving means for moving said leg rest, said back and said seat between said rocking and said reclining position.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to chairs and, more particularly, to a rocking chair that can be positioned as a reclining chair and is capable of being folded for transportation and storage.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




There are chairs that rock, chairs that recline, chairs that rock and recline, and even versions of rockers and recliners that can be folded for transportation and storage. However, until this invention, there have not been any chairs that accomplish all three tasks: rock, recline and fold. The combination rocker/recliners heretofore available utilize complex unsightly mechanisms and heavy, cumbersome support structures to make them work safely. Such chairs require unattractive upholstery to hide the said mechanisms. Additionally, some of these chairs move from one position to the other with a rapid, unnatural action; some often feel as if they will topple over; some require great effort to move from one position to the other position; many require getting out of the chair to manipulate its mechanism from one position to the other; and most require greater effort than many senior citizens are capable of exerting just to get out of the chair.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




A rocking, reclining, foldable chair, comprising: a curved rocker having a straight or reverse curved extension; leg(s) pivotally attached to said rocker; a seat pivotally attached to said leg(s); a back pivotally attached to said seat or leg(s); arms movably connected to said back; a leg rest pivotally connected to said seat and arms via said arms to said back; locking support means to hold the chair folded for transportation and/or storage and unfolded for use; and additional locking support means to hold the chair in its rocking position when locked and in its reclining positions when unlocked.




In a more preferred embodiment, the moving means includes arms; a leg rest; slots in either said arms or said leg rest; and pins attached to the upper end of each leg rest or to the arms engaging said slots such that said pins are located at the first end of the slots when the chair is in the rocking position, said pins being located at the second end of the said slots when said chair is in the reclining position, whereby said pins move from one end of said slots to the other end of said slots when a user pulls up on said arms and shifts their weight backward in said chair thereby moving said leg rest, said seat and said back from said rocking position to said reclining position and whereby a user can return to the rocking position merely by shifting his or her weight forward which reverses the process and allows the arms to drop and the pins to lock at the first end of the slots.




In a further embodiment, the invention is a method for a person sitting in a chair to go from an erect rocking position to a reclining position and back to the rocking position by shifting his or her weight, comprising the steps of (a) providing a chair which can rock and recline; and (b) balancing the lengths of the components of the chair and the angles that the components bear to each other whereby, the user can move virtually effortlessly from the rocking position to the reclining position and back to the rocking position by changing the combined center of gravity of the user and the chair merely by shifting his or her weight by leaning backward or forward.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




For a better understanding of the present invention, reference is made to the following detailed description of an exemplary embodiment considered in conjunction with the attached drawings, in which





FIG. 1

is a perspective view of an embodiment of a chair constructed in accordance with the present invention shown in a rocking position;





FIG. 2

is a perspective view of the chair shown in

FIG. 1

in a reclining position;





FIG. 3

is a side view of the chair shown in

FIG. 1

in a folded position;





FIG. 4

is a partial detail side view of the chair shown in

FIG. 1

showing the connection between an arm and the leg rest when the chair is in the rocking position;





FIG. 5

is a partial detail side view of the chair in

FIG. 1

showing the connection between an arm and the leg rest when the chair is in the reclining and folded positions.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




One embodiment of a chair constructed in accordance with the present invention is shown in

FIGS. 1 through 5

. A rocking, reclining, folding chair


10


has parallel curved rockers


12


, each of said rockers


12


having a straight extension


14


extending tangentially from the rear of the rockers


12


. The rockers


12


are immovably connected to each other by one or more crossmembers


16


. Front legs


22


and rear legs


26


are held on the curved rockers


12


by brackets


18


, which brackets


18


are permanently secured to the rockers


12


by rivets. The legs


22


and


26


can rotate within the brackets


18


. A seat frame


28


is pivotally connected to the upper ends of the legs


22


and


26


by rivets. A back frame


40


is pivotally connected to the seat frame


28


by rivets. The back frame


40


is also pivotally and movably connected to the rear aspect of the arms


30


by rivets or pins


42


which run in slots


32


cut in the arms


30


. The front ends of the arms


30


are pivotally and movably connected to the upper ends


36


of the leg rest frame


34


by rivets or pins


42


which move in slots


38


in the leg rest


34


. Said leg rest frame


34


is pivotally attached to the front of the seat


28


. Telescoping tubes


24


with locking means


50


are attached to the seat


28


and a leg


22


maintaining the angle between them to hold the chair in a configuration for sitting and when unlocked to permit it to fold for transportation and storage.




The chair


10


is used and operated as follows: The chair


10


is shown in its rocking position in FIG.


1


and in its reclining position in FIG.


2


. To move from the rocking position to the reclining position, a seated user leans forward slightly to release the pressure (caused by sitting against the back of the chair) between the pins


42


and the slots


38


, lifts up on the arms


30


one inch and leans back. See

FIGS. 4 and 5

. Raising the arm


30


raises the pins


42


in the slots


38


unlocking the leg rest


34


and the back


30


, allowing the back


30


to ease rearward pulling the leg rest


34


toward the horizontal, shifting the center of gravity of the seated user and the chair rearward, rocking the chair backward until stopped and held in the reclining position by the extension


14


of the rocker


12


coming into contact with the ground. To return to the rocking position from the reclining position, the user merely leans forward which shifts the center of gravity forward which rocks the chair


10


forward bringing the back


40


forward and lowering the leg rest


34


to the vertical, allowing the pins


42


to run down the slots


38


locking the chair into the rocking position. As the user becomes familiar with the chair


10


, he or she can start the aforesaid sequence by merely moving his or her head forward to return to the erect rocking position from what has been called the “astronaut” (reclining) position, NASA as well as users of the “La-Z-Boy” type chair have found the reclining position to be most comfortable, restful and protective of the body. With a little practice, from the reclining position users can rise right out of the chair


10


on to his or her feet into a standing position, a real boon to those of us who have gotten older and have trouble getting out of a conventional chair.




In the reclining position, the extension


14


of the rocker


12


in conjunction with the triangular configuration of the seat frame


28


as one side; the back frame


40


as a second side; the arm


30


and upper end


36


of the leg rest


34


as the third side of the triangle serves to limit the backward travel or rotation of the chair


10


. This limitation of rotation conveys a greater sense of security to the user than the old fashioned porch rockers which have been known to topple over backward which the present invention will not do in normal use. The rearward shifting of the center of gravity of the chair


10


and the user rockers the chair


10


to an angle of about 40 degrees between the back


40


and the horizontal. This is easily accomplished by the triangular configuration fixing or limiting the angle between the extension


14


and the back


40


at 40 degrees for the reclining position. The aforesaid triangular configuration is set and controlled by the relative distances between the points of attachment of the seat frame


28


, back


40


, arms


30


and upper end


36


of the leg rest


34


. The actual angles (and the relative movement) are controlled by the configuration and length between attachment points of the arms


30


, seat


28


, back


40


and the slots


38


formed in the upper ends


36


of the leg rest


34


or by other means which can be utilized to fix and control the movement of the chair into the desired positions.




In the illustrated embodiment, this movement is dictated by the quadrilateral shape formed by the seat frame


28


, the upper end


36


of the leg rest


34


, the back


40


and the arm


30


when in the rocking position. (See

FIG. 1.

) If the seat frame


28


is considered to be the base of the trapezoid and the arms


30


are the top, the relative lengths of the sides (i.e., the upper end


36


of the leg rest


34


and the back frame


40


between the seat


28


and the arms


30


) alter the angles as the relationship goes from the quadrilateral to the triangular when moved from the rocking to the reclining positions. (See

FIG. 2.

) As one side is longer than the other, a change of the angle which the long side bears to the base changes the angle which the short side bears to the base by, for example, a factor of two, which opens the angle between the seat and the back at the user's hip from 90 degrees to 115 degrees or 25 degrees while opening the angle at the knee between the seat and the leg rest from 90 degrees to 140 degrees or 50 degrees putting the users into the most comfortable “astronaut” position for restful reclining. There are reclining chairs on the market which are equilateral and hence the angle between seat and back is the same as the angle between the seat and the leg rest and the angle of the seat and the horizontal is unchanged. Those chairs force the user into unnatural and hence uncomfortable positions in which the user is constantly sliding downward onto the base of his or her spine instead of resting comfortably with the entire body adequately and equally supported as in the present invention.




From the rocking position, the chair


10


can be folded (see

FIG. 3

) for compact storage or transportation. To put the chair


10


into its folded position, the support locks


50


which hold the telescoping support tubes


24


are released and the legs


22


and


26


and the back


40


are pushed forward relative to the seat


28


. Because the parts of the chair


10


are connected by a single rivet at each junction, the parts can rotate with respect to each other, thereby permitting the chair


10


to be folded.




It will be understood that the embodiment described herein is merely exemplary and that a person skilled in the art may make many variations and modifications without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. All such variations and modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A rocking, reclining, foldable chair, comprising:a curved rocker or rockers having a limiting extension; a leg or legs pivotally attached to said rocker; a seat pivotally attached to said leg or legs; a releasable support pivotally attached to any two of the aforesaid parts to prevent said chair from folding unexpectedly; a back pivotally attached to said seat or leg or legs; a pair of arms movably connected to said back; and a leg rest pivotally attached to said seat and said arms, said leg rest being movable between a rocking and a reclining position; and moving means for moving said leg rest, said back and said seat between said rocking and said reclining position.
  • 2. A chair according to claim 1, having means for adjusting the angle which the user's back and head relate to the seat.
US Referenced Citations (8)
Number Name Date Kind
444992 Pohl Jan 1891 A
514445 Cornell Feb 1894 A
1711371 Zentmyer Apr 1929 A
1860867 Matthews May 1932 A
1889646 Ernst Nov 1932 A
2710645 Luckhardt Jun 1955 A
2715937 Thomas Aug 1955 A
4092041 Landry et al. May 1978 A