The present invention relates to a safety belt, particularly for sports cars or other racing vehicles.
As is known, safety belts are provided inside motor vehicles, directly or indirectly anchored to the body of the motor vehicle. Safety belts are used to hold the driver against his/her seat in case of sudden deceleration.
In racing vehicles, the various safety belt straps serve to immobilize the shoulders, the pelvis and the legs of the driver. The various straps of the safety belt are connectable at a single point, usually in front of the torso and at the height of the driver's pelvis, by means of a buckle which allows the locking and the simultaneous release of the straps.
For a better understanding of the state of the art and the problems inherent thereof, a conventional safety belt for racing vehicles will be described first, as illustrated in
The buckle comprises a casing 4, which houses a locking and release mechanism which may be manually activated to cause the simultaneous release of the tongues 3 of the safety belt straps, with the exception of the tongue 3b of one strap, generally the thigh strap. The locking and release mechanism comprises a series of longitudinal retaining pins 13, each of which is engaged through a respective through hole 12 formed on each of the tongues of the safety belt.
According to the regulations in force, all the straps of the belt may be separated from the buckle. According to the intended use, however, one strap may remain locked to the buckle, therefore, as is often the case, the fixed strap may remain locked to the buckle. This causes the tongue 3b of the fixed strap to remain permanently locked to the buckle even when the buckle is in the open condition and all the other tongues are released by the buckle.
Inside the casing of the buckle, an annular retaining disc 15 is mounted wherein a series of through holes 21 are formed in circumferentially spaced positions. Each through hole serves to allow passage of a respective longitudinal retaining pin 13, which locks a respective tongue of the safety belt to the buckle. With the exception of the longitudinal pin 13a, which locks the tongue 3b of the fixed strap, all the other pins are longitudinally releasable from the tongues and from the annular retaining disc 15, due to the locking and release mechanism. The annular retaining disc serves to distribute or allocate to all the pins of the mechanism the tensile forces transmitted by each individual strap of the belt to the respective pin to which the tongue of that strap is attached.
Recently introduced standards in force require the tongues to withstand particularly high tensile loads.
The object of the present invention is therefore to provide a safety belt for a sports car that mainly addresses the problem of making a buckle with a particularly high mechanical strength for the tongues without, however, increasing the weight of the buckle or the safety belt as a whole.
The aforementioned and other objects and advantages are achieved by a safety belt having the features set forth in claim 1. Preferential embodiments of the invention are defined in the dependent claims.
In summary, a safety belt strap has a fixed tongue which is locked to the buckle and forms a plurality of through holes suitable to receive a respective plurality of releasable retaining pins which lock the other tongues of the belt to the buckle. In this way, the forces transmitted by the fixed strap to the buckle are distributed and discharged directly not only by one pin, but by all the retaining pins.
The features and advantages of the safety belt according to the present invention will be apparent from the description hereinafter, provided by way of non-limiting example. Reference is made to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring to the figures, a safety belt, particularly for sports cars or other racing vehicles, comprises a buckle 1 and a plurality of belt straps 2, for example, six belt straps. In the figures, only one belt strap 2 is illustrated in
The buckle 1 comprises a casing 4 in this cylindrical drum-shaped example, defining an axis A with a cup-shaped body 5 and a base 6, coupled together by means of screws 7.
The casing may have a side surface 8 substantially cylindrical in this example, and a front surface 9 orthogonal to the axis A. The side surface 8 of the casing has a plurality of slots 10 not angularly equidistant around the axis A and intended, in use, to receive a respective tongue of the safety belt straps.
Throughout the present description and the claims, the terms and expressions indicating positions and orientations, such as “longitudinal”, “radial”, “tangential”, refer to the central and longitudinal axis A.
Each tongue 3, in a manner known per se, is formed of a shaped metal plate having one or more through openings 11 in a radially outer position for passing a strap of the safety belt through them and a through hole 12 defined in a position that in use is radially more internal or central, i.e. closer to the axis A of the buckle. Each through hole 12 serves to allow the passage of a respective longitudinal retaining pin 13.
The buckle 1 has a locking and release mechanism, of a kind known per se, which serves to hold releasably the tongues of the safety belt. The manufacturing and operational features of the locking and release mechanism are not per se relevant to the understanding of the invention, therefore they will not be described in detail herein. It is sufficient to note here that the locking and release mechanism comprises a release control member 14, for example a release lever 14 hinged to the front surface 9 of the casing, and a plurality of releasable retaining pins 13 adapted to lock the tongues 3. The releasable retaining pins 13 extend parallel to the longitudinal direction of the axis A.
The release lever 14 in the present example is adapted to rotate around the axis A along a trajectory lying in a plane of movement orthogonal to the axis A. The rotation of the release lever 14 causes the simultaneous release of all the releasable retaining pins 13 from the tongues 3, except for one fixed retaining element 13a, in this example, a fixed retaining pin. The fixed retaining element 13a permanently holds the fixed strap of the safety belt locked to the buckle and is not releasable by the release lever 14. Therefore, the tongue 3a of the fixed strap of the belt is here defined as a fixed tongue. The term “fixed tongue” is intended herein to indicate that the tongue 3a is locked to the buckle in a non-releasable manner by means of the locking and release mechanism.
The fixed tongue 3a is integral to a conventional annular retaining disc, indicated at 15 in
According to one embodiment, the fixed tongue 3a of the fixed strap has one, two, or three through openings 20, each adapted to receive a respective length of the fixed strap of the safety belt. In the illustrated example, there are provided three adjacent or consecutive through openings 20 in a circumferential direction with respect to axis A.
The through hole 21a receiving the fixed retaining pin 13a, which is not operable by the buckle release mechanism, is preferably located adjacent to or near at least one of the through openings 20 for the fixed strap or straps of the safety belt.
In the embodiment illustrated, the through openings 20 are elongated in tangential directions with respect to the axis A.
The tongue 3a of the fixed strap may have a central opening 27, for example of a circular shape, adapted to allow the passage of a conventional longitudinal member (not shown) on which the release lever 14 is rotatably mounted.
In the illustrated embodiment, the tongue 3a of the fixed strap has five through holes 21 spaced circumferentially around the axis A. The number of through holes 21 as well as the number of tongues 3 are not to be considered limiting.
As illustrated, the through holes 21 may be distributed around the central opening 27.
When the safety belt is in the locked condition, with the various tongues 3 inserted into the slots 10, the tongues 3 are circumferentially arranged adjacent on one of the two sides of the tongue 3a, so that the releasable retaining pins 13 pass both through the through holes 12 of the tongues 3 and through the through holes 21 of the tongue 3a of the thigh strap.
The tongue 3a of the fixed strap may have one or more further through holes 22, preferably a plurality of further through holes 22 distributed circumferentially spaced from each other, adapted to receive one or more of the respective retaining elements 7 which are not releasable by actuating the release mechanism of the tongues. In the present example, the retaining elements 7 may be screws or other fastening elements (e.g. rivets) used to hold together the cup-shaped body 5 and the base 6 of the casing 4 of the buckle. The retaining elements 7 pass through the further through holes 22 and thus help to lock the fixed tongue 3a to the casing 4 of the buckle.
In the example shown here, the fixed tongue 3a is attached to the casing 4 of the buckle either by means of the fixed retention pin 13a, which passes through the through hole 21a of the fixed tongue, or by the screws 7 which pass through the through holes 22 of the fixed tongue. The screws 7 therefore perform a double action: an action of holding the fixed tongue 3a stable and a function of assembling the casing 4 of the buckle.
According to an alternative embodiment (not shown), the fixed retaining pin 13a may be omitted, and the permanent retaining action of the fixed tongue 3a may be transferred exclusively to at least one of the retaining elements 7 (e.g. screws) and preferably to more than one of the retaining elements 7.
If, as in the example shown in the drawings, a fixed retaining pin 13a is provided, the additional retaining action provided by the screws 7 is not indispensable. According to a further alternative embodiment (not shown), the screws 7 may be omitted, for example, if the casing 4 is assembled via fastening means other than screws or rivets. Alternatively, the screws 7 (or other fastening means of the casing 4) may be arranged externally or around the fixed tongue 3a without engaging it and without going through the holes made in it.
Preferably, the tongue 3a of the fixed strap has a contour at least partially corresponding or coincident with the contour of the buckle casing.
Several aspects and embodiments of the buckle and safety belt have been described. It is understood that each embodiment may be combined with any other embodiment. The invention, moreover, is not limited to the described embodiments, but may be varied within the scope defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102016000094766 | Sep 2016 | IT | national |