The present specification relates to stadium seats, particularly for seats for simple stadia seats known as bleachers or bench seats.
Many stadiums and sports grounds, particularly in the US, use cheap seating known as ‘bleachers’, which comprise simple planks arranged in a step-like formation for people to sit on.
These bleachers are inexpensive, and used extensively. The seating is uncomfortable, however completely replacing them with stadium seats is prohibitively expensive and special constraints can limit this upgrade. There are more comfortable seating designs which can be attached to bleachers, however these are inconvenient to fit; further, any such seating should adhere to current safety practices and local fire and safety codes.
The object of the present invention is to provide a seat that can be conveniently attached to a bleacher or similar simple seating plank, and which conforms to safety practices and local fire and safety codes.
According to the present invention, there is provided a chair according to claim 1. According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a chair according to claim 8.
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the drawings, of which
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A limiter 36 is provided on the seat base 12 near each hinge pin 28. A similar limiter 37 is provided within each hinge recess 32. The limiter 36 and limiter 37 of each hinge 18 include surfaces that abut when the back rest arm 16 is in the fully folded position, and in the fully open position, to limit the movement of the back rest 14. Referring also to
The hinges 18 are dissimilar, the right side of the chair 10 bearing a break hinge 18A, while the left side of the chair 10 bearing a bias hinge 18B. Obviously, the break hinge 18A and bias hinge 18B could be reversed.
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The hinge recess 32 is circular, and break pad 22 is arcuate shaped, with the inner surface of the hinge recess 32 and the outer surface of the break pad 22 having a similar curvature. When the break hinge 18A is assembled, the break pad 22 presses against the inner surface of the hinge recess 32, and is kept in close contact with the inner surface of the hinge recess 32 by the force of the tension spring 25. This creates a resistance to the pivoting movement of the break hinge 18A, and consequently slows or damps the folding of the chair. The obround hole 43 allows the break pad carrier 24 and break pad 22 to be continually urged against the inner surface of the hinge recess 32, so that the damping effect is present even after wear of the break pad 22 or if manufacturing tolerance are imprecise.
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A washer 51 and bolt 52 which engages with the hinge pin 28 through the hinge recess 32 may be used to secure the back rest arm 16 to the seat base 12.
The break hinge mechanism described here uses a compression spring; the bias hinge mechanism uses a torsion spring. However, both the break hinge mechanism and bias hinge mechanism could be implemented using compression, tension or torsion springs, or similar resilient members. The break hinge mechanism and bias hinge mechanism could also be contained within a single hinge, with the other hinge being freely moveable or carrying out some other function.
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The horizontal section 62 of each j-hook 60 engages with bores or holes provided on the underside of the seat base 12. These may either be integrally formed with the seat base 12 such as using moulded plastic, or may be provided by u-plates 65 which are secured to the underside of the seat base 12. Each u-plate 65 has two lugs having holes formed in them, through which the horizontal section 62 of j-hook 60 is introduced, though a single-holed bracket or retaining shape could be used. The free end of each j-hook 60 (that is, the end opposite the vertical section 63 and return section 64) has a thread upon which a washer 67 and nut 66 can be threaded. The seat base 12 also has apertures 68 to permit access of a nut driver.
The j-hooks 60 are arrange so that at least one j-hook 60 engages with the front edge 71 of the bleacher plank 20, and one j-hook 60 engage with the back edge 72 of the bleacher plank 20. Ideally, three j-hooks 60 are provided, to resist any turning forces on the chair 10 and give stability; in this example, one j-hook 60 is shown with the hook positioned to hook over the front edge 71 of the bleacher plank 20 and two j-hooks 60 positioned to hook over the back edge 72 of the bleacher plank 20.
To engages each j-hook 60 with the bleacher plank 20, the vertical section 63 and horizontal section 62 of each j-hook 60 are positioned on the bleacher plank 20 to extend beyond the front edge 71 or back edge 72 as necessary, and then the washer 67 and nut 66 of each j-hook 60 are tightened using a nut driver though the apertures 68, so that each nut 66 bear against the respective u-plate 65 or other similar formation on the underside of the seat base 12. This draws each j-hook 60 towards the bleacher plank 20 so that the vertical section 63 and horizontal section 62 of each j-hook 60 grips the bleacher plank 20. The chair 10 is then secured to the bleacher plank 20.
Alternatively, one or more j-hooks 60 oriented similar could be provided to which can be tightened against one edge of the bleacher plank 20, with a fixed hook or clip on the opposite side of the seat base 12.
The j-hooks and other chair attachment hardware is an integral part of the seating system and arrives complete to site for rapid installation, so that the installer simply positions the chair on the bleacher planks and then tightens the j-hooks to the extent necessary to secure and constrain the chair against the bleacher plank.
This self-folding backrest innovation allows for a larger more comfortable chair when occupied when unoccupied the row spacing for egress remains code compliant.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005622.2 | Apr 2020 | GB | national |
This patent application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 from UK patent application GB2005622.2, filed Apr. 17, 2020, the entire contents of which is incorporated by reference herein.