Steering mechanisms for hospital beds

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 8327479
  • Patent Number
    8,327,479
  • Date Filed
    Friday, December 2, 2011
    12 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, December 11, 2012
    11 years ago
Abstract
A vehicle for use in hospitals, and the like, giving better mobility, steering, braking and passenger handling while providing comfort to the passengers from the time they lay down until they are standing on the side through the rotation and tilting ability of the frame.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to beds for use in hospitals, nursing homes or residential homes.


SUMMARY OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION

Embodiments of the present invention are directed to beds with rotating sleep surfaces that can be configured to sit into a chair and also may stand a patient up like a lift chair on the side of the bed.


The present invention includes 8″ casters for specific ease of steering.


The present invention includes a braking system operated by hydraulics whereby the casters may be locked and released with one cylinder. Components of the braking system thereof are strategically located inside the bottom frame rails.


The present invention includes a steering system that is spring loaded to the floor and lifted with a hydraulic cylinder.


The present invention includes a twin scissor mechanism actuated by a cylinder with a cylinder extension so that the mechanism may operate at full extension in a confined space.


The present invention includes a rotating sleep surface mounted to the center frame at the top of the scissors allowing operating rotation of 360 degrees.


The present invention includes a mounted platform system attaching to the rotating sleep surface that allows the upper frame to tilt around the four-way platform at optimal degrees of tilt.


The present invention includes arm rails that are mounted to the main frame operated by pin or latch release to allow straight in and out movement. The rail is spring loaded and will automatically release when the pin or latch is activated. The up/down feature will stop at designated points along the back of the rack and is controlled by a rack and pinion guide system.


The present invention includes side egress chair capabilities allowing the entire sleep surface to rotate 360 degrees left or right of center and can transition to a seated position at 90 degrees left or right of center. This side egress chair position is locked at 90 degrees, 180 degrees and 270 degrees.


The present invention includes side egress lift chair allowing the patient to transition from a suspended comfort position to a chair position to a gentle walkout exit position. Walkout exits are obtainable at 90 degrees and 270 degrees.


The present invention allows 30 degree tilt which is easily achieved by main frame proximity to the floor when the scissors are raised to a predetermined height.


The present invention will be described hereafter with reference to the attached drawings that are given as non-limiting examples.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a PCV Braking Mechanism.



FIG. 2 is an exploded side perspective view of a PCV Steering Mechanism.



FIG. 3A is a side view of a Twin Scissor Lift Mechanism in an extended lift configuration.



FIG. 3B is an end perspective view of the Twin Scissor Lift Mechanism shown in FIG. 3A.



FIG. 3C is a side view of the device shown in FIG. 3A, illustrated in a collapsed configuration.



FIG. 4 is an exploded view of a Rotating Surface Mechanism.



FIG. 5A is a top view of a Four Way Equal Platform Tilting Mechanism shown in FIG. 4.



FIG. 5B is a rotated view of the Four Way Equal Platform Tilting Mechanism shown in FIG. 5A (rotated 90 degrees).



FIG. 6 is a top view of the Four Way Equal Platform Tilting Mechanism shown in FIGS. 5A and 5B shown attached to a sleep surface frame.



FIG. 7A is a side view of an Arm Rail Mechanism.



FIG. 7B is a side view of the device shown in FIG. 7A, illustrating the arm rail at first retracted position.



FIG. 7C is a side view of the device shown in FIG. 7A, illustrating the arm rail at a second retracted position below the position shown in FIG. 7B.



FIG. 8 is an end view (looking from the foot end) of a Comfort Side Chair Egress Mechanism.



FIG. 9 is an end view (looking from the foot end) of the device shown in FIG. 8 with the bed translated into a Comfort Side Standing Egress configuration.



FIG. 10 is a side view of a PCV Tilt Mechanism.



FIG. 11 is a top view of a sleep surface with a Manual Retracting/Extending Foot Section Mechanism.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION

PCV Braking Mechanism



FIG. 1 illustrates the PCV Braking mechanism is made of 4 -8 inch locking casters, 2 -hex rods, 1 -drive shaft bar, 1 -hydraulic cylinder, 2 -clevis mounts.


The casters are mounted to the four corners of the bed into square tubes. The tubes are drilled to allow for set screws in each caster and to slide a full length hex rod through the head of the caster to lock the brakes. The hex rod is put through the short 1 by 3 inch frame tube on both ends of the bed. A clevis is mounted to one end of each of the hex rods. The drive shaft bar is mounted to the clevis on each end. The drive shaft bar runs through the long 1 by 3 tube. There is a slot cut into the side of the long tube to connect the hydraulic cylinder to the drive shaft bar. When activated the cylinder rocks the clevis, the clevis rotates the hex rod and locks or unlocks the brakes on all 4 of the casters.


PCV Steering Mechanism



FIG. 2 illustrates the steering mechanism 100 is made of 2 plastic or rubber wheels 110, springs 115, hydraulic cylinder 120, metal rods 113a, 113b and square tubes 122.


The steering mechanism 100 is mounted to the frame 150 with 3 metal square tubes 122 that are welded to the main base frame 150. There are holes 123 in the cross section of tube 122 to mount the spring loaded rods 113a, 113b to and put the threaded hydraulic cylinder 125 through. The spring loaded rods are attached to the bar the casters 160 (FIGS. 1, 8) are mounted to so the springs keep them on the floor. There is a bar 125 that connects above the square tube 122 to the spring loaded bars to make sure they stay straight up and down. It is the same bar that the hydraulic head 120h pushes on to lift the casters 160 (FIGS. 1, 8 and 10) off of the ground. This keeps the casters 160 on the floor until the bed needs to be moved side to side when the cylinder will raise them. This mechanism allowed us to push the bed 60 feet in a straight line by itself.


Drawing Legend



125 Metal Bar



122 Square Tube



123 Apertures



128 Bushing



115 Spring



113
a,
113
b Metal Rod



120 Hydraulic Cylinder



112 Axle



110 Wheels


Twin Scissor Lift Mechanism



FIGS. 3A-3C illustrate the twin scissor mechanism is made of custom cut steel bars, steel rods, steel tube, copper or nylon bushings, copper or nylon washers, cylinder extension block 75, nylon blocks and wheels, and can be driven by hydraulics cylinders, air cylinders, air bags, or several electric mechanisms. We chose the hydraulic cylinder because of load we want to lift. We plan to build less expensive models with the other mechanisms in the future.


The scissor mechanism has 8 scissor arms mounted with welds and washers between them to 6 cross structural support rods, 1 cross structural support bar and 1 cross structural support tube. The cross structural support tube has 2 clevis arms 79 welded to it and a custom designed cylinder extension 75 mounted to clevis arms 79 with bushing and washers so the extension 75 will pivot. The bottom of the cylinder is mounted with a screw to the top of the cross structural support bar and the top of the cylinder is attached with threads to the inside of the cylinder extension block 75. This allows a larger cylinder to fit in a smaller space and get full range of motion. The top of the scissor is mounted to the bottom of the main lift surface (50, FIG. 4) and to the top of the metal scissor housing that has a metal mounting bracket that is welded to both the main lift surface and the top of the scissor housing. Inside the metal mounting brackets are nylon blocks with holes in them to lock the cross structural support rods in place and allow them to move very quietly straight up and down on one end of the scissor. The other ends are attached with channel iron. The channel iron is welded to the top of the scissor housing on both sides and the bottom of the main lift surface. The channels act as tracks for the nylon wheels to run in. The wheels move from one end (our foot end) to the other end (our head end) causing the scissors to lift. The purpose of using the scissor is to get very low and very high while having an almost square top to work around to achieve degree of tilt on all 4 sides.


Rotating Surface Mechanism



FIG. 4 illustrates the rotating surface is made of steel angle iron, custom cut 4 piece metal guide, aluminum round plate, aluminum and steel channel, bearings, nuts, bolts, nylon pads.


The main lift surface 50 is made of 4 pieces of angle iron cut on a 45 degree angle and welded together to form four 90 degree angles. This makes the main frame 50 where everything else is attached. The flat side of the frame is on top and the wall side is faced down to the bottom. There are 2 channel tracks mounted with a weld to the bottom of the frame for the 2 scissor lift wheels to run in and 2 brackets welded to the bottom on the opposite side to make the scissor track straight up and down. The top of the surface has a custom cut round aluminum plate 40 mounted to the center. The mounts are made of steel and nylon. The bottom steel mounting brackets are welded to the frame to lock them in place and keep the round plate from moving. There are 4 custom cut nylon pieces that fit on the top and bottom of the round plate 40 inside of metal mounts for the round plate to ride on. There are 4 top metal pieces of the mount that screw into the frame top to lock the metal and nylon in place. These mounts cause the round plate 40 to make a smooth 360 degree movement. The top of the round plate has 2 pieces of channel custom cut and screwed to it to mount 2 bearings 60 and allow the sleep surface to tilt. The bearings are screwed to the top of the channel to mount the main support rod (20, FIG. 6, FIG. 10) for the sleep surface. As shown, the plate 40 includes circumferentially spaced apart apertures 45.


Four Way Equal Platform Tilting Mechanism



FIGS. 5A, 5B and 6 illustrate the Four Way Equal Platform Tilting Mechanism. The way the “Rotating Surface Frame” connects to the “Sleep Surface Frame” and the width of each allows the “Sleep Surface Frame” to fit over or around the “Rotating Surface Frame” on all sides. The “Rotating Surface Frame” has a triangle shaped main structural tilt bar mount that allows the back of the seat section or “Trend Section” to stay at an optimal degree of tilt while the front of that section fits over the “Rotating Surface Frame”. FIG. 6 illustrates the primary support rod 20 attached to bearings 60 above the tilt platform 50 under the back and seat sections 15, 16, respectively, of the patient support surface.


Arm Rail Mechanism



FIGS. 7A-7C illustrate the arm rail mechanism. The arm rails are made of steel, nylon, plastic gears, copper or nylon bushings, steel rods, custom cut metal blocks, snap rings, washers, rack and pinion, screws, springs, 1 latch or detent for the up-down feature and 1 latch or detent to release the rail from under the sleep surface.


The 2 frame rods are mounted through 2 holes in the sleep surface frame. The housing made of custom bent steel is mounted with screws or welded on the inside of the rail with 2 holes to house the gears and be the second guide for the 2 frame rods with bushings or washers on both sides. The frame rods are keyed to make the gears stay with the frame rods and spring loaded to push them out when they are released with the latch or manually pulled out. The custom made steel swing arms that move the rails low to high are welded to the frame rods on the outside of the bed. The glide mount rods are welded to the swing arms where there is a bushing inserted over the glide rods. The custom made glide blocks are mounted on top of the bushings with a washer on the inside and held on by snap rings on the outside. There are 2 holes in the glide blocks to mount the 2 glide slide rods though. A rack rod is mounted with the teeth facing up to the right guide block and a rack rod is mounted with the teeth facing down to the left guide block. The pinion gear is mounted in the center of the slide rods with the racks keyed into it to make sure the glide blocks move evenly in and out which causes the arm rail to travel straight up and down. The pinion is held in the center of the glide rods by a nylon mounting bracket that is screwed to the glide rods. The latch that holds the rail in any position is mounted through the top of the nylon mounting bracket stops the rails motion by hitting detent slots in the top of the upper rack.


Drawing Legend:





  • 1. Rack


  • 2. Pinion


  • 4. Glide Slide Rods


  • 7. Steel Swing Arms


  • 9. Detent Bar


  • 10. Release Latch



Comfort Side Chair Egress Mechanism



FIG. 8 illustrates the Comfort Side Chair Egress Mechanism. The comfort side chair egress is possible by attaching the Sleep Surface Seat Frame to the main structural tilt bar mount that sits on the rotating round aluminum plate 40. The main structural tilt bar mount 30 allows the Sleep Surface Seat Frame to be stopped in a flat position. When the sleep surface frame is rotated 90 degrees to either side of the main structural base frame, the scissors are raised high enough, the foot section 17 is 90 degrees vertically to main structural base frame and the seat 16 is flat or parallel to the main structural base frame, the bed can be manually positioned by the care giver into a chair perpendicular to the main structural base frame.


Comfort Side Standing Egress Mechanism



FIG. 9 illustrates the Comfort Side Standing Egress Mechanism. The comfort side standing egress is possible by attaching the Sleep Surface Seat Frame to the main structural tilt bar mount 30 that sits on the rotating round aluminum plate 40. The height of the main structural tilt bar mount allows the Sleep Surface Seat Frame to tilt 30 degrees down at the foot end. When the sleep surface frame is rotated 90 degrees to either side of the main structural base frame, the scissors are raised high enough, the foot section is kept perpendicular to the main structural base frame and a 30 degree tilt is applied to the seat, the bed will stand the patient up on the side of the bed.


PCV Tilt Mechanism



FIG. 10 illustrates a PCV Tilt Mechanism. The triangle shaped main structural tilt bar mount 30 that allows the main support rod 20 for the sleep surface to stay high or lower than the foot section 17. If the main support rod 20 for the sleep surface remains higher than the front of the seat section 16 it allows for a 30 degree tilt forward. If it remains lower it allows for a 30 degree tilt backwards. The full range of motion is 60 degrees.


Manual Retracting and Extending Foot Section Mechanism



FIG. 11 illustrates a sleep surface support with a Manual Retracting and Extending Foot Section Mechanism. The Manual Retracting and Extending Foot Section Mechanism located inside the “Sleep Surface Foot Frame” is made of one piece of channel iron welded to each side of the sleep surface foot frame to create a track to slide the extension in and out. There are manual stops going in and set pins on the outside to release it out. It is spring loaded to push out when the pin is released and will retract with pressure until it locks itself going in.

Claims
  • 1. A hospital bed, comprising: a base frame;a plurality of casters, one each attached to a corner portion of the base frame; anda steering mechanism coupled to the base frame residing under a center portion of the hospital bed, the steering mechanism comprising: an axle;first and second spaced apart wheels attached to opposing end portions of the axle;first and second upwardly extending and laterally spaced apart rods attached to opposing end portions of the axle, residing between the wheels;a mounting member attached to the main base frame having first and second laterally spaced apart channels, the first channel sized to slidably receive the first rod therein and the second channel sized to slidably receive the second rod therein, wherein the first and second rods reside under the mounting member proximate the wheels; anda first spring in communication with the first rod and a second spring in communication with the second rod, wherein the first and second springs reside under the mounting member, between the axle and the mounting member and cooperate with the first and second rods to define spring-loaded rods,wherein the casters at the corner portions of the base frame are in communication with the spring-loaded first and second rods which keep the casters on a floor until they are raised.
  • 2. The hospital bed of claim 1, wherein the mounting member has a length such that each opposing end is fixedly attached to a different long side of the base frame.
  • 3. The hospital bed of claim 1, further comprising a hydraulic cylinder that is attached to the mounting member intermediate the first and second rods to lift the casters off the floor.
  • 4. The hospital bed of claim 1, further comprising: a first bushing having a receiving channel that slidably receives the first rod therein, the first bushing residing in the first channel of the mounting member; anda second bushing having a receiving channel that slidably receives the second rod therein, the second bushing residing in the second channel of the mounting member.
  • 5. The hospital bed of claim 1, wherein the wheels have a smaller diameter than the casters.
  • 6. The hospital bed of claim 5, wherein the casters are eight inch casters.
  • 7. The hospital bed of claim 1, further comprising a lift mechanism and rotating sleep surface mechanism attached to the base frame.
  • 8. The hospital bed of claim 7, further comprising an articulating sleep surface frame attached to the lift mechanism the and rotating sleep surface mechanism, and wherein the lift mechanism and the rotating sleep surface mechanism cooperate to convert the bed into a side-exit chair bed.
  • 9. A hospital bed, comprising: a base frame;a plurality of casters, one each attached to a corner portion of the base frame; anda steering mechanism coupled to the base frame residing under a center portion of the hospital bed, the steering mechanism comprising: an axle;first and second spaced apart wheels attached to opposing end portions of the axle;first and second upwardly extending and laterally spaced apart rods attached to opposing end portions of the axle, residing between the wheels;a mounting member attached to the main base frame having first and second laterally spaced apart channels, the first channel sized to slidably receive the first rod therein and the second channel sized to slidably receive the second rod therein;a first spring in communication with the first rod and a second spring in communication with the second rod, wherein the first and second springs reside under the mounting member, between the axle and the mounting member and cooperate with the first and second rods to define spring-loaded rods;a first bushing having a receiving channel that slidably receives the first rod therein, the first bushing residing in the first channel of the mounting member;a second bushing having a receiving channel that slidably receives the second rod therein, the second bushing residing in the second channel of the mounting member; anda bar that is attached to an upper surface of the mounting member and resides over the first and second channels.
  • 10. The hospital bed of claim 9, wherein the mounting member comprises a square tube with upwardly extending opposing arms and a laterally extending center section, the center section having the laterally spaced apart channels.
  • 11. A hospital bed, comprising: a base frame;a plurality of casters, one each attached to a corner portion of the base frame; anda steering mechanism coupled to the base frame residing under a center portion of the hospital bed, the steering mechanism comprising: an axle;first and second spaced apart wheels attached to opposing end portions of the axlefirst and second upwardly extending and laterally spaced apart rods attached to opposing end portions of the axle, residing between the wheels;a mounting member attached to the main base frame having first and second laterally spaced apart channels, the first channel sized to slidably receive the first rod therein and the second channel sized to slidably receive the second rod therein; anda first spring in communication with the first rod and a second spring in communication with the second rod, wherein the first and second springs reside under the mounting member, between the axle and the mounting member and cooperate with the first and second rods to define spring-loaded rods,wherein the mounting member comprises a square tube with upwardly extending opposing arms and a laterally extending center section, the center section having the laterally spaced apart channels.
  • 12. The hospital bed of claim 11, wherein the mounting member has a width that is greater than a width of the axle so that the arms of the mounting member reside outside an outer edge of an underlying wheel and extend upwardly above the axle.
  • 13. The hospital bed of claim 11, wherein the mounting member is welded to the base frame.
  • 14. A hospital bed, comprising: a base frame;four corner casters, one attached to each corner portion of the base frame; anda steering mechanism coupled to the main base frame residing under a center portion of the hospital bed, the steering mechanism comprising: an axle having a first transverse length residing under a center portion of the hospital bed;first and second spaced apart wheels attached to opposing end portions of the axle, wherein the wheels have a smaller diameter than a diameter of the casters;first and second upwardly extending and laterally spaced apart rods attached to opposing end portions of the axle, residing between the wheels;a mounting member attached to the main base frame having a second transverse length that is greater than the first transverse length of the axle, the mounting member having first and second laterally spaced apart channels, the first channel sized to slidably receive the first rod therein and the second channel sized to slidably receive the second rod therein; anda first spring in communication with the first rod and a second spring in communication with the second rod, the first and second springs residing between the mounting member and the axle and defining spring-loaded rods,wherein the mounting member is a square tube and has a third channel intermediate the first and second channels, the hospital bed further comprising a hydraulic actuator with an actuator head that extends through the third channel.
  • 15. The hospital bed of claim 14, wherein the first and second wheels can be lifted with the hydraulic actuator.
  • 16. A hospital bed, comprising: a base frame;four corner casters, one attached to each corner portion of the base frame; anda steering mechanism coupled to the main base frame residing under a center portion of the hospital bed, the steering mechanism comprising: an axle having a first transverse length residing under a center portion of the hospital bed;first and second spaced apart wheels attached to opposing end portions of the axle, wherein the wheels have a smaller diameter than a diameter of the casters;first and second upwardly extending and laterally spaced apart rods attached to opposing end portions of the axle, residing between the wheels;a mounting member attached to the main base frame having a second transverse length that is greater than the first transverse length of the axle and with opposing ends that statically attach to opposing long sides of the base frame, the mounting member having first and second laterally spaced apart channels, the first channel sized to slidably receive the first rod therein and the second channel sized to slidably receive the second rod therein; anda first spring in communication with the first rod and a second spring in communication with the second rod, the first and second springs residing between the mounting member and the axle and defining spring-loaded rods,wherein the first and second wheels are located under a mass of weight in a center of the bed, and wherein the four corner casters can be spring-loaded down against a floor using the spring loaded rods that reside under the mounting member.
  • 17. A hospital bed, comprising: a base frame;a plurality of casters, one each attached to a corner portion of the base frame; anda steering mechanism coupled to the base frame residing under a center portion of the hospital bed, the steering mechanism comprising: an axle;first and second spaced apart wheels attached to opposing end portions of the axle;first and second upwardly extending and laterally spaced apart rods attached to opposing end portions of the axle, residing between the wheels;a mounting member attached to the main base frame having first and second laterally spaced apart channels, the first channel sized to slidably receive the first rod therein and the second channel sized to slidably receive the second rod therein; anda first spring in communication with the first rod and a second spring in communication with the second rod, wherein the first and second springs reside under the mounting member, between the axle and the mounting member and cooperate with the first and second rods to define spring-loaded rods,wherein the axle comprises first and second receiving apertures, the first aperture holding a lower end of the first rod and the second aperture holding a lower end of the second rod.
  • 18. The hospital bed of claim 17, wherein the mounting member has a length such that each opposing end is fixedly attached to a different long side of the base frame.
  • 19. The hospital bed of claim 17, wherein the mounting member comprises a square tube with upwardly extending opposing arms and a laterally extending center section, the center section having the laterally spaced apart channels.
  • 20. The hospital bed of claim 17, wherein the mounting member has a width that is greater than a width of the axle so that the arms of the mounting member reside outside an outer edge of an underlying wheel and extend upwardly above the axle.
RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a second divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/398,098, filed Apr. 5, 2006, which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,788,748 on Sep. 7, 2010, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/668,859, filed Apr. 6, 2005, through first divisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/850,144, filed Aug. 4, 2010, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,091,162 the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference as if recited in full herein.

US Referenced Citations (131)
Number Name Date Kind
1059515 Barr Apr 1913 A
1118931 Hasley Dec 1914 A
2722017 Burst et al. Nov 1955 A
2876654 Sweitzer Mar 1959 A
3021534 Hausted Feb 1962 A
3053568 Miller et al. Sep 1962 A
3063066 Peck et al. Nov 1962 A
3112500 MacDonald Dec 1963 A
3239853 MacDonald Mar 1966 A
3304116 Stryker Feb 1967 A
3428307 Kennedy et al. Feb 1969 A
3503082 Kerwit Mar 1970 A
3526008 Pruim Sep 1970 A
4038709 Kerwit Aug 1977 A
4084274 Willis et al. Apr 1978 A
4183109 Howell Jan 1980 A
4186456 Huempfner Feb 1980 A
4439880 Koncelik et al. Apr 1984 A
4453766 DiVito Jun 1984 A
4489449 Failor et al. Dec 1984 A
4592104 Foster et al. Jun 1986 A
4771492 Paine et al. Sep 1988 A
4847929 Pupovic Jul 1989 A
4862529 Peck Sep 1989 A
4926457 Poehner et al. May 1990 A
5014391 Schulte May 1991 A
5072463 Willis Dec 1991 A
5083625 Bleicher Jan 1992 A
5095561 Green et al. Mar 1992 A
5230113 Foster et al. Jul 1993 A
5348326 Fullenkamp et al. Sep 1994 A
5418988 Iura May 1995 A
5425151 Iura Jun 1995 A
5444883 Iura Aug 1995 A
5479666 Foster et al. Jan 1996 A
5497518 Iura Mar 1996 A
5507050 Welner Apr 1996 A
5613254 Clayman et al. Mar 1997 A
5680661 Foster et al. Oct 1997 A
5682631 Weismiller et al. Nov 1997 A
5692256 Kramer Dec 1997 A
5715548 Weismiller et al. Feb 1998 A
5724685 Weismiller et al. Mar 1998 A
5732423 Weismiller et al. Mar 1998 A
5745937 Weismiller et al. May 1998 A
5771511 Kummer et al. Jun 1998 A
5806111 Heimbrock et al. Sep 1998 A
5906016 Ferrand et al. May 1999 A
5940910 Weismiller et al. Aug 1999 A
5987671 Heimbrock et al. Nov 1999 A
6003174 Kantrowitz et al. Dec 1999 A
6047424 Osborne et al. Apr 2000 A
6058531 Carroll May 2000 A
6178575 Harada Jan 2001 B1
6182310 Weismiller et al. Feb 2001 B1
6256812 Bartow et al. Jul 2001 B1
6289536 Betson Sep 2001 B1
6315319 Hanson et al. Nov 2001 B1
6321878 Mobley et al. Nov 2001 B1
6357065 Adams Mar 2002 B1
6363552 Hornbach et al. Apr 2002 B1
6421854 Heimbrock Jul 2002 B1
6473921 Brooke et al. Nov 2002 B2
6505365 Hanson et al. Jan 2003 B1
6566833 Bartlett et al. May 2003 B2
6584629 Tsuji et al. Jul 2003 B2
6601251 Paul Aug 2003 B2
6611979 Welling Sep 2003 B2
6615430 Heimbrock Sep 2003 B2
6640360 Hornbach et al. Nov 2003 B2
6658680 Osborne et al. Dec 2003 B2
6675415 Wong Jan 2004 B2
6684420 Koenig et al. Feb 2004 B2
6691348 Plummer et al. Feb 2004 B2
6694548 Foster et al. Feb 2004 B2
6694549 Perez et al. Feb 2004 B2
6701554 Heimbrock Mar 2004 B2
6708358 Hensley Mar 2004 B2
6725474 Foster et al. Apr 2004 B2
6725956 Lemire Apr 2004 B1
6779209 Ganance Aug 2004 B2
6826793 Tekulve Dec 2004 B2
6880186 Johansson Apr 2005 B2
6880189 Welling et al. Apr 2005 B2
6886196 Nygren et al. May 2005 B2
6893386 Charoenchit May 2005 B2
6934984 Marsden et al. Aug 2005 B2
6938289 Morin Sep 2005 B2
6951036 Lemire Oct 2005 B2
6957461 Osborne et al. Oct 2005 B2
6978501 Vrzalik Dec 2005 B2
7017208 Weismiller et al. Mar 2006 B2
7024708 Tomas et al. Apr 2006 B2
7028354 Nygren et al. Apr 2006 B2
7062805 Hopper et al. Jun 2006 B2
7073220 Simmonds et al. Jul 2006 B2
7076818 Kummer et al. Jul 2006 B2
7086103 Barhelt Aug 2006 B2
7086107 Ellis et al. Aug 2006 B2
7107636 Metz et al. Sep 2006 B2
7171708 Osborne et al. Feb 2007 B2
7191482 Romano et al. Mar 2007 B2
7197779 Shalikar Apr 2007 B2
7213279 Weismiller et al. May 2007 B2
7216378 Barth et al. May 2007 B2
7216384 Allen et al. May 2007 B2
7222377 Kramer et al. May 2007 B2
7234178 Qi Jun 2007 B2
7237287 Weismiller et al. Jul 2007 B2
7257850 Tekulve Aug 2007 B1
7296312 Menkedick et al. Nov 2007 B2
7302722 Karmer, Jr. et al. Dec 2007 B2
7343916 Biondo et al. Mar 2008 B2
7373677 Barthelt May 2008 B2
7395568 Damewood Jul 2008 B2
7406731 Menkedick et al. Aug 2008 B2
7443302 Reeder et al. Oct 2008 B2
7454805 Osborne et al. Nov 2008 B2
7472439 Lamire et al. Jan 2009 B2
7676862 Poulos et al. Mar 2010 B2
20040064886 Alverson et al. Apr 2004 A1
20040158923 Perez et al. Aug 2004 A1
20060059621 Poulos et al. Mar 2006 A1
20060090261 Vrzalik May 2006 A1
20060150329 Nygren et al. Jul 2006 A1
20060179571 Newkirk Aug 2006 A1
20060195984 HakamiuN et al. Sep 2006 A1
20070000058 Brown et al. Jan 2007 A1
20070000059 Brown et al. Jan 2007 A1
20070151027 Hensley et al. Jul 2007 A1
20070294828 Hornbach et al. Dec 2007 A1
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20120090093 A1 Apr 2012 US
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60668859 Apr 2005 US
Divisions (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 12850144 Aug 2010 US
Child 13309914 US
Parent 11398098 Apr 2006 US
Child 12850144 US