The present invention relates to a shoulder pad for a belt of a vehicle seat, particularly though not exclusively a child's safety seat, in which the seat belt forms part of the seat's harness.
Such a shoulder pad is adapted to be mounted on the seat belt for engagement with the shoulder of a user so as to increase the friction between the seat belt and the user's shoulder.
When a vehicle is subject to an accident involving impact from the front, the shoulders of occupants who are retained by seat belts tend to slide forwards relative to the shoulder straps of their seat belts. This results in the heads of such occupants moving forwards relative to the car body, with the possible result of making damaging contact with some part of the car body in front of their seats. It has been proposed to reduce this forward movement by providing shoulder pads on the seat belt shoulder straps that have the effect of increasing the friction between the seat belt and the occupant's clothing. However, in the initial phase of an accident, this can have the effect of subjecting the occupant's neck to unacceptably high forces.
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved shoulder pad for a seat belt.
According to the invention a shoulder pad of the type described above comprises a body having a first zone and a second zone to be mounted on the wearer's side of the seat belt, the second zone being thicker than the first zone.
Suitably the pad is mounted on the wearer's side of the seat belt so that, when the wearer is seated in a normal and substantially erect position, the first zone is located against the wearer's shoulder and the second zone is located at a lower height against a lower part of the wearer's torso.
Preferably the second zone is substantially thicker than the first zone which is suitably of relatively small thickness.
The first and second zones can both be adjacent to the ends of the pad body. The body can have attached to one end, near to the first zone, a tether portion for attachment of the pad to a car seat. The second zone is preferably adjacent to a distal end of the pad body.
Preferably the thickness of the pad increases gradually through the distance from the first zone to the second zone including the zones. The thickness of the pad is suitably appropriate to the seat belt and to the vehicle in which it is to be installed and the difference in thickness between the zones is also suitably selected to be appropriate to the circumstances.
The tapering portion of the shoulder pad, including the two zones, can comprise a thin substrate bearing a series of projections of progressively increasing height. In a preferred pad with projections of progressively increasing height the substrate suitably has a thickness in the range 0.5 to 1.5 mm, particularly 1.0 mm. In such a pad the smaller projections in the first (thinner) zone are suitably 3 to 5 mm (particularly 4 mm) thick, giving a total thickness of substrate and projection in the particular instance of 5 mm. The greater projections in the second (thicker) zone are suitably 8 to 12 mm particularly 10 mm) thick, giving a total thickness of substrate and projection in the particular instance of 11 mm. Preferably the body of the shoulder pad is attached to the tether peripheral stitching.
To help understanding of the invention, a specific embodiment thereof will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
As can best be seen in
Referring again to
During a subsequent phase of the accident, the tether 34 pulls the thicker projections 46, 48 and 50 on to the child's shoulder, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0406829.2 | Mar 2004 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2005/000997 | 3/22/2005 | WO | 00 | 7/15/2008 |