Not applicable.
Not applicable.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to an apparatus for use with the shoulder strap component of a seat belt of the type commonly found in a vehicle. More specifically, the present invention relates to an apparatus intended for utilization to improve the comfort of the shoulder strap component of a seat belt in relation to a user when the seat belt is in use.
Seat belts and other vehicular seat restraint systems commonly feature a mechanical design wherein a user is restrained in a seated position by a combination of a waist strap component and a shoulder strap component. Although the inventor acknowledges that discomfort with regard to the use of a seat belt can be attributed to either or both the waist strap component and the shoulder strap component, discomfort occasioned by a waist strap component is beyond the purview of the present disclosure and, in fact, it is the intent and focus of the inventor to provide an effective means of remediating discomfort occasioned by a shoulder strap component.
2. Background Art
Seat belts and other vehicular seat restraint systems commonly feature a standard arrangement featuring a waist or lap strap to secure a user's lower torso and a shoulder strap designed to secure the user's upper torso. In nearly all embodiments of the common seat belt, the waist strap component of the arrangement is adjustable and allows persons of differing sizes to adjust the waist strap to their respective likings regardless of body size and shape. Unlike the waist strap, the the shoulder strap component of the arrangement is rarely adjustable and is commonly an awkward and uncomfortable nuisance for children, smaller individuals, well-endowed women, and other persons for whom the proximity of the shoulder strap to their face and neck provides substantial discomfort. The discomfort caused to a person by the use of a shoulder strap may force the individual to forego the use of the seat belt or vehicular restraint system altogether, thus increasing the risk of injury or death to the individual in the event of a collision.
As identified above, the present arrangement of the shoulder strap component of a common seat belt assembly can cause substantial discomfort to a user and ultimately encourages the forbearance of seat belt use and, thus, the concomitant negative public policy result of decreased highway safety. In light of the aforementioned circumstances, there is and has been a long-standing need for an apparatus that can enhance the level of comfort experienced by a passenger using a seat belt assembly featuring a shoulder strap component. Several inventions have attempted to meet this long standing need.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,421,614 to Yu Zheng discloses a seat belt adjuster adapted to receive a conventional seat belt and alter the positioning of a shoulder strap in relation to a user. The mechanism whereby the invention accomplishes this result is by tethering the shoulder strap to the waist strap by enclosing both between two panels and creating channels between the two panels through the use of Velcro straps adjusted per a user's preferences.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,799,737 to Marc B. Greene discloses a device for adjusting the shoulder strap of a vehicular seat restraint system to allow for passengers of varying heights by engaging the shoulder strap at a point intermediate to its upper and lower ends of attachment within the seat belt assembly and providing a third point of attachment for the shoulder belt to the vehicle.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,938,535 to Dolores Condon, et al. discloses a fully adjustable shoulder/lap seat belt adapter for maintaining correct placement and spacing per a user's selection between the shoulder strap and and lap strap of an existing seat belt assembly. As with Zheng, the mechanism whereby this invention operates is a direct attachment of the shoulder strap to the waist strap.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,958,416 to Dan Frishling discloses an invention very similar to that disclosed by Condon wherein Frishling conceives the maintenance of correct placement and spacing as between shoulder strap and lap strap via an adapter that clips at each end of the adapter, one end to an intermediate point in the shoulder strap and the second end to an intermediate point in the waist strap.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,201,099 to Terry A. Campbell discloses an adapter that adjusts the placement of a shoulder strap in a three-point seat belt assembly by means of a clipping mechanism that tethers a shoulder strap directly to the waist strap at a single point where the adapter clip is engaged.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,203,110 to Judy P. Proteau, et al. discloses a seat belt adjuster similar to that disclosed by Campbell wherein the seat belt adjuster tethers a shoulder strap directly to the waist strap at a single point where the seat belt adjuster is engaged. The specific mechanism of operation differs in that the Proteau disclosure operates by means of a dual cuff, one cuff enveloping the shoulder strap and the second cuff enveloping the waist strap.
U.S. Patent Application 2003/0172500 filed by William Reilly discloses a shoulder strap re-positioner wherein a clip having an āSā configuration is positioned in such a way as to tether the shoulder strap directly to the waist strap of a standard three-point seat belt assembly, the shoulder strap being engaged by the upper open loop and the waist strap being engaged by the lower open loop of the āSā configured clip mechanism.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,142,575 to Kimberly A. Patterson discloses a safety belt adjuster similar to Zheng wherein a larger body of material engages both the waist strap and shoulder strap, altering the trajectory and positioning of the shoulder strap by the influence of openings and slots within the body of material.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,605,380 to Paul J. Gerstenberger, et al. discloses a seat belt adjuster, again designed to alter the positioning of a shoulder strap in relation to a user, wherein the mechanism by which the adjuster alters the positioning of the shoulder strap is a means of connecting the shoulder strap to the lap strap in such a way that the two remain at a fixed distance from one another and the shoulder strap remains away from the face and neck of a user.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,786,078 to Steven E. Schreier discloses yet another seat belt adjuster that operates by clipping the shoulder strap to the waist strap, thereby altering the trajectory and positioning of the shoulder strap as the same proceeds upward across the torso of a user.
As can be appreciated from the above cited prior art examples, the state of the art favors adjustment of the positioning of a shoulder strap of a standard three-point seat belt assembly in relation to a user by varying means in which the shoulder strap is tethered directly to the waist or lap strap of the seat belt assembly. Adjustment of the shoulder strap in this manner creates additional strains on both the shoulder strap and the waist strap of the seat belt assembly and affects the dispersion of forces in the seat belt in the event of a collision. Further, adjustment of the shoulder strap in this manner is only effective if the user does not change position beneath the re-positioned shoulder strap.
Beyond the cited prior art, various inventors have disclosed mechanisms whereby the shoulder strap of a seat belt assembly in a vehicle may be altered by means of direct attachment of an intermediate point in the shoulder strap directly to a component of the vehicle interior or chassis, such as a door frame or interior wall. Although likely effective, adjustment of the shoulder strap in this manner requires modification of the vehicle or the manufacturer's installation of the mechanism at the time the car is assembled. Accordingly, adjustment of the shoulder strap by this means is both costly and static.
It is further known in the prior art that mechanisms may be attached to the shoulder strap that regulate the amount of slack that a user chooses to keep in an engaged seat belt shoulder strap. To the extent that a user selects to maintain a level of slack in the shoulder strap sufficient to reposition the shoulder strap away from the face and neck of the user, it seems clear that the effectiveness of the seat belt assembly in the event of an accident is compromised and, therefore, this method is not favored.
Broadly stated, an apparatus for altering the positioning of a seat belt shoulder strap relative to a user is presented. More specifically, an apparatus is presented whereby alteration of the positioning of a seat belt shoulder strap relative to a user is engendered via direct interaction between an intermediate point of the shoulder strap and a body part of the user. In this sense, the now disclosed inventive concept is not dependent upon interaction of any kind with the waist strap of a seat belt assembly nor direct interaction with any other interior component of the vehicle in which the seat belt assembly is installed.
In more specific embodiment, the present invention is an apparatus for altering the positioning of a seat belt shoulder strap relative to a user by means of restraint, wherein the means of restraint exerts force upon the shoulder strap at a point intermediate to the total length of the shoulder strap when the means of restraint is in interaction with a body part of the user, the body part preferably being the arm of the user.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a mechanism whereby a seat belt assembly shoulder strap may be repositioned in relation to a user by means of restraint rendered operative via interaction with a body part of the user, the body part preferably being an arm, thus enabling an adjusted shoulder strap position that is dynamic as opposed to static, the present invention enabling the position of the shoulder strap to be constantly altered in relation to the user based upon the user's own movements.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a mechanism whereby a seat belt assembly shoulder strap may be repositioned in relation to a user by use of an apparatus that is both easy to use and inexpensive to manufacture and implement.
It is still yet another object of the present invention to provide a mechanism whereby a seat belt assembly shoulder strap may be repositioned in relation to a user by use of an apparatus that may be adjusted for a user's preferences a single time and thereafter be constantly ready for implementation without further modification by a user.
It is an even further object of the present invention to promote a higher incidence of seat belt usage among motorists by alleviating the discomforts of an ill-positioned seat belt assembly shoulder strap.
These and other advantages of the present disclosed apparatus will become apparent to one skilled in the art in view of the figures and descriptions of the figures stated below.
The aforementioned advantages of the invention, as well as additional advantages thereof will be more fully understood as a result of a detailed description of the preferred embodiment when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
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While the foregoing written description of the disclosed invention enables one of ordinary skill to practice and use what is considered presently to be the best mode thereof, those of ordinary skill will understand and appreciate the existence of variations, combinations, and equivalents of the specific embodiment, method and examples herein. The invention should therefore not be limited by the above described embodiment, method and examples, but by all embodiments and methods within the scope and spirit of the invention as claimed.
Further, while specific embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, it is realized that numerous modifications and changes will occur to those skilled in the art. It is therefore to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/432,989 filed Jan. 14, 2011, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61432989 | Jan 2011 | US |