The invention relates to seating furniture allowing conversion into a bed, where its back rest can be swung into the plane of the seating surface with the aid of linkages and whereby the linkages at one end have a pivot joint to the seat frame and, at the other end, to the back rest.
For the protection of upholstery cover material on known furniture of this type, a drill material is placed on the seating surface after conversion into the bed position. The drill material is wound onto a self-retracting roller located behind the article of furniture when it is in the seating position.
It is the object of the invention to provide a simpler way of placing the drill material.
This object is achieved according to the invention by having the seating surface of the piece of furniture in its seating position covered with loose upholstery cover material which at one side is attached to the front underside of the seating frame and, at the other side, to the underside of the back rest whereby on the underside of the upholstery cover material a double layer of drill material is located which extends across the seating surface only, said upholstery cover material preferably being joined together with wadding and being attached to the front end of the seating surface.
Because of this arrangement, the drill material extends across the entire bed area formed by seat and back rest when the furniture is in the bed position, whereby the upholstery cover material is reversed during the conversion of the furniture into the seating position.
During normal seating on furniture with a back rest, 85% to 90% of body weight is transferred to the seat and only 10% to 15% onto the back rest. Therefore, the seat needs to be a lot more resilient than the back rest. When converting the seat into a bed by utilizing the back rest, the result is a bed area with differing resilience. This, of course, is undesirable.
It is therefore a further object of the invention to provide a piece of furniture of the above-mentioned type which, despite differing resilience of seat area and back rest in the seating configuration, has an at least approximately equal resilience in the bed position.
This is achieved by placing below the upholstery cover material a layer of foam plastics, rubberized hair, coconut fiber or the like.
For a piece of furniture in terms of the invention, the seating area in the seating position becomes resilient due to the relatively resilient foam plastics. When converting it into the bed position, however, this layer is removed from the seating surface and placed onto the back rest which then serves as a bed surface. Thus, one surface (the original seating surface) becomes softer and the adjacent back rest surface firmer.
It is expedient for the layer and the furniture cover material to be sewn together at least at the ends.
In order to avoid the formation of folds, it is advantageous for the layer and the upholstery cover material to be joined with elastic material to the underside of the back rest.
If only the seat and the back rest are used as a bed area, the result is a bed area of only 150 cm in width. The sleeping person or persons then lie along the wall, they are “latitudinal sleepers”.
In order to provide access to both sides of the bed, the bed area has to be enlarged by at least one further element; then, the arrangement is a so-called “longitudinal sleeper”.
The invention has the further object to create such a longitudinal sleeper in a manner which allows the elements of a latitudinal sleeper to be used whereby the additional element can be attached easily. This is achieved for a piece of furniture of the above-mentioned type in that a further upholstered element is hinged to the rear side of the back rest whereby the hinge is located in the lower area of the back rest and the upholstered surface points to the rear when the piece of furniture is in its seating position.
For a piece of furniture of such a design, the further upholstered element is also swung around when the back rest is swung around and, thus, an adequate bed length is created which points away from the wall. It is expedient if hinged legs are attached to the further upholstered element, which support it on the floor when in the bed position and which are connected via linkages with the back rest such that, when the further upholstered element is swung around, said legs will swing into the support position.
In the following, the invention is described in detail with the aid of the embodiment shown in the drawing without being limited to that particular embodiment. Shown are in:
According to the drawing, a back rest 4 is attached to a seating frame 1 including a seating surface 2 via lateral arms 3 allowing the back rest to pivot. At the rear side of the back rest 4, a further upholstered element 5 is connected with pivot joints whereby the pivot joint 6 is located in the lower area of back rest 4.
On the upholstered element 5, legs 7 are connected to pivot joints with the ends 9 adjacent to bearing 8 having links 10 connected to it which in turn have a pivot joint on back rest 4.
On the seating surface 2, a layer 11 is placed which is attached at one side to a cross member 12 located at the lower front side of seating frame 1 and at the other side with a cross member 13 of back rest 4. It is advantageous to incorporate an elastic element into the connection, e.g. rubber laces. It would also be possible to create an elastic connection via an elastic foam plastics layer.
According to
If the piece of furniture is to be changed from the seating position shown in
In this position, access to the bedding storage space is available which is located behind back rest 4. No further handling operations are required which is another advantage of the invention.
After pulling the loop handle 19 further towards the front, back rest 4 as well as upholstered element 5 swing into the bed position shown in FIG. 3. During this unfolding operation, layer 11 is pulled along by back rest 4 and placed onto this back rest while being reversed. Thus, the previous seating surface 2, which has now become part of the bed surface, becomes softer and the back rest 4, which now forms the middle part of the bed surface, becomes firmer.
At the same time, the upper layer of double layer 17 is swung around reversal point 18 and placed onto foam plastics layer 14. The legs 7 swing around their bearing 8 and support upholstered element 5 on the floor.
For the purposes of converting the unit from the bed into the seating position, a pawl 25 is attached to spring-loaded hook 23 with a pivot point. Then, pin 24 moves towards pawl 25 which in turn swings against hook 23 and lifts it so that pin 24 can travel past.
The invention provides the opportunity to make a varied offer available to the consumer because the individual elements allow various configurations. Thus, the piece of furniture described above can be manufactured and used without the additional upholstered element 5 without the requirement for significant set-up changes on the production line. If an additional folding bed on rollers is used, which can be stored under the seating frame the application range of the piece of furniture in terms of the invention can be extended further. Without a folding bed on rollers, the bed in terms of the invention has clear space underneath, a characteristic much valued by users.
The possible use of the individual elements in various combinations also offers great advantages for marketing. As is well known, word of mouth is the best advertising and if one configuration is well received, then this assessment will also extend to other configurations.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 441/2001 | Mar 2001 | AT | national |
This application is a national stage of PCT/IB01/02827 filed 14 Dec. 2001 and based upon Austrian national application A441/2001 of 20 Mar. 2001 under the International Convention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB01/02827 | 12/14/2001 | WO | 00 | 9/16/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/07413 | 9/26/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1240500 | Sisbower et al. | Sep 1917 | A |
2209880 | Fox | Jul 1940 | A |
5549355 | Illulian | Aug 1996 | A |
6295674 | Smith-McKelvey et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040083548 A1 | May 2004 | US |