The invention relates to a swing assembly. More specifically, the invention relates to a swing assembly that includes a seat, such as a bouncer seat, that can be attached to and detached from a child swing frame.
Various types of child bouncer seats are known in the art. Child bouncer seats include a support frame and a seat that fits onto the support frame. A child can bounce up and down on the support frame to provide the child with some amusement. Some bouncer seats also can vibrate or play music.
Various types of child swings also are known in the art, such as open top child swings and closed top child swings. Typically, child swings include a support frame, hanger arms pivotally attached to the support frame, and a seat attached to the hanger arms. Electrically powered drive mechanisms are utilized to supply energy to the swing to move the swing seat in a reciprocal motion back and forth.
Children need constant supervision and may fall asleep when placed in a swing. Most commercially available child swings are cumbersome and too large to be easily moved from room to room. To avoid leaving a child unattended in the swing, a caregiver must either remain in one location with the swing or must remove the child from the swing and carry the child as the caregiver moves from one location to another. If the child has fallen asleep in the swing, removing child may awake the child and cause the child to cry.
Child swings have been developed that include detachable swing seats so that a parent can transport a sleeping child in the swing seat to a different location without disturbing the child. Once the swing seat is set on the ground or other stationary surface, however, the child generally wakes up due to the abrupt disruption of movement.
There is a need to provide a swing assembly that includes a detachable swing seat which can entertain and soothe a child in any location, on or off the swing frame.
An aspect of the present invention relates to a child swing. The child swing includes a swing frame, at least one hanger arm rotatably coupled to the swing frame, and a bouncer seat assembly including a bouncer frame and a seat coupled to the bouncer frame. The bouncer seat assembly is adapted to be attached to and detached from the at least one hanger arm. When the bouncer seat assembly is coupled to the at least one hanger arm, the bouncer frame and the seat can undergo swinging movement with the at least one hanger arm relative to the swing frame. When the bouncer seat assembly is detached from the at least one hanger arm and placed on a surface, the bouncer frame allows the seat to undergo bouncing movement relative to the surface.
Another aspect of the present invention relates to a child swing. The child swing includes a swing frame. The child swing includes at least one hanger arm moveably coupled to the swing frame, the at least one hanger arm including a mount having an arcuate surface. The child swing further includes a seat. The child swing also includes at least one attachment assembly associated with the seat and having a complementary arcuate surface, the at least one attachment assembly adapted to be coupled to the mount of the at least one hanger arm. The arcuate surface and the complementary arcuate surface are adapted to move relative to each other to allow the seat to recline relative to the at least one hanger arm.
Yet another aspect of the present invention relates to a child swing. The child swing includes a swing frame and first and second hanger arms moveably coupled to the swing frame, each of the first and second hanger arms including a mount. The child swing also includes a seat adapted to be attached to or detached from the respective mounts of the first and second hanger arms. The first and second hanger arms are separate from one another on the child swing.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and are not restrictive of the invention as claimed.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate several embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. An effort has been made to use the same reference numbers throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts.
In electric swings, the swing 1 can include a motor mechanism and a power supply for supplying power to the motor mechanism to drive swinging motion of the seat 20. The motor mechanism and the power supply can be disposed within a frame housing 50. The power supply may be, for example, a battery pack.
The swing frame 10 generally includes first and second front legs 12, first and second rear legs 14, frame housings 50 to which the front and rear legs 12,14 are coupled, a front cross member 16 extending between the front legs 12, and a rear cross member 18 extending between the rear legs 14. In other embodiments, the swing frame 10 can include first and second front legs only or first and second rear legs only. Other swing frame embodiments, such as those with different-shaped legs, various fold configurations, and different sizes (full, compact, travel) are contemplated by the invention.
As shown in
The swing frame 10 optionally can be configured to fold. For example, the front legs 12 and the rear legs 14 can be assembled so as to pivot relative to each other within the respective frame housings 50, such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,645,080, issued Nov. 11, 2003, and U.S. Publication No. 2004/0198512 A1, published Oct. 7, 2004, both of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety. A caregiver can fold the swing frame 10, for example, by moving the rear legs 14 toward the front legs 12.
The hanger arms 30 are positioned to engage the swing frame 10 via the frame housings 50 as described above, so that the bouncer seat assembly 22 is suspended from the swing frame 10 in a stable manner. In one embodiment, the hanger arms 30 can swing independently relative to the swing frame 10. For example, one hanger arm 30 can be driven by the motor mechanism, while the other hanger arm 30 is not. When a caregiver activates the motor mechanism, motion can be transmitted through one of the frame housings 50 (the one housing the motor mechanism) to one of the hanger arms 30, a ‘lead’ hanger arm. The non-motor-controlled hanger arm 30, a ‘follower’ hanger arm, joined to the lead hanger arm by the presence of the bouncer frame assembly 22 on the hanger arms 30, can follow the motion of the lead hanger arm 30. The bouncer seat assembly 22 can thus swing back and forth on the swing frame 10 in a forward direction and a rearward direction.
As mentioned above, the bouncer seat assembly 22 is suspended from the swing frame 10 by the hanger arms 30, as seen in
The bouncer frame 77 supports soft goods in the form of the seat 20. As shown in
As shown in
The bouncer frame 77 also includes attachment assemblies 90, which are coupled to the seat support frame 81. In an alternative configuration, the attachment assemblies 90 can be coupled to the base frame 79. The attachment assemblies 90 can be screwed in place or bolted in place on the bouncer frame 77. The attachment assemblies 90 can releasably attach to the hanger arms 30 of the swing 1, which will be explained in more detail below.
The hanger arms 30 each include a hanger mount 40. The hanger mounts 40 are configured to attach to the attachment assemblies 90 of the bouncer seat assembly 22, so that the seat 20 can be suspended from the swing frame 10.
In a first embodiment, the mounts 40 preferably have an arcuate shape (they can be circular shaped or disk shaped) and are located at an end portion of the hanger arms 30, as shown in
Referring now to
The caregiver can select an appropriate recline position for the bouncer seat assembly 22 (and therefore the seat 20) on the swing 1 by positioning the tabs 40 in one of the three slots 55a, 55b, 55c corresponding to that recline position on each mount 40. When the tab 49 is fitted within one of the slots of the mount 40, the bouncer seat assembly 22 is held in place at a predetermined recline angle on the swing 1.
The mounts 40 of the swing 1 support the weight of the bouncer seat assembly 22 by their being in direct contact with, and being disposed beneath, the attachment assemblies 90 of the bouncer frame 77. In more detail, each of the first and second attachment assemblies 90 includes a half-circular shaped attachment housing 47, which has the same shape (or substantially the same shape) as the top half of the mount 40 to which it is to be coupled. The mounts 40 and the attachment housings 47 have arcuate surfaces that are complementary with each other. For example, each can have a convex shape, as seen in
When a caregiver desires to attach the bouncer seat assembly 22 to the swing 1, the caregiver slides the first and second side attachment housings 47 over the respective mounts 40, allowing a post receiving portion 82 of the mounts 40, as shown in
When the caregiver desires to remove the bouncer seat assembly 22 from the swing 1, and the tabs 49 of the attachment assemblies 90 are positioned in either of slots 55a or slots 55c of the mounts 40, the caregiver need only actuate the latches 48, which lifts the tabs 49 from the slots, and, at the same time, lift the bouncer seat assembly 22 upwards to detach it from the mounts 40. When the tabs 49 are positioned within slots 55b, the caregiver does not need to actuate the latches 48 to lift the bouncer seat assembly 22 away from the mounts 40. The caregiver can then take the bouncer seat assembly 22, with child, to a new location, and place the bouncer seat assembly 22 on a support surface, such as a floor.
The coupling of a tab 49 into a slot of the mount 40 can provide a secondary locking mechanism for securing the bouncer seat assembly 22 to the swing 1. When the tab 49 is fitted into the middle slot 55b of the mount 40, which is provided at a 0 degree (top) position on the circular-shaped mount 40, the tab 49 fits directly into the slot 55b; no secondary locking feature exists for this coupling. However, when the tab 49 is fitted into either the recline slot 55a or the incline slot 55c, the tab 49 enters the slot 55a or 55c at a non-90 degree angle, and the tab 49 is held in place against a sidewall of the slot 55a or 55c. This non-orthogonal (angle different than 90 degrees) coupling of the tab 49 to the slot 55a or 55c provides for a secondary locking mechanism for the bouncer seat assembly 22. In order to unlock the tabs 49 of attachment assemblies 90 from slots 55a or slots 55c of the respective mounts 40, so as to change the recline position of the bouncer frame assembly 22 or to remove the bouncer seat assembly 22 from the swing frame 10, the caregiver can actuate the latches 48, and at the same time lift the bouncer seat assembly 22 off of the mounts 40 of the hanger arms 30.
In another embodiment, slots can be provided on a side surface of the mounts 40, instead of at the top surface of the mounts 40, and a tab can extend laterally from a sidewall of the respective attachment housings 47. In this embodiment, the tab-into-slot coupling provides for a secondary locking mechanism for holding the bouncer seat assembly 22 onto the swing 1. Because the tab-into-slot coupling extends transversely to the direction in which the bouncer seat assembly 22 is lifted off of the mounts 40, the latches 48 of the attachments arms 90 must be actuated to either change recline position or to remove the bouncer frame assembly 22 from the swing frame 20. For example, to remove the bouncer seat assembly 22 from the swing 1, the caregiver can actuate the latches 48 on the attachment assemblies 90, to cause the tabs to disengage from the slots of the mounts 40. With the latches 48 actuated, the caregiver then can lift the bouncer seat assembly 22 upwards to separate the mounts 40 from the respective attachment assemblies 90, and the caregiver can then place the bouncer seat assembly 22 on a support surface, such as a table or a floor.
The hanger arms 30, mounts 40, and the various attachment assembly components of the bouncer seat assembly 22 can be formed of various materials, such as metal or plastic.
When a caregiver has to leave an area nearby where a child is swinging on a swing 1, the caregiver can easily detach the bouncer seat assembly 22 from the swing 1, and carry the bouncer seat assembly 22 to any location the caregiver needs to go. Once the bouncer seat assembly 22 is detached from the swing frame 10, the bouncer frame 77 can be placed on a support surface, so that a child placed in the seat 20 can bounce up and down to entertain himself or herself. This will make it less likely that the child will be upset when removed from the swing frame 10.
The embodiments described above have been set forth herein for the purpose of illustration. This description, however, should not be deemed to be a limitation on the scope of the invention. Various modifications, adaptations, and alternatives may occur to one skilled in the art without departing from the claimed inventive concept. For example, for swings that have one hanger arm that extends downward from a central portion of a closed top swing, the attachment assemblies 90 of the bouncer seat assembly may be rigidly connected to a rear exterior shell of the child seat 20, in order to thereby be coupled to a mount of the centrally-positioned hanger arm. Furthermore, other locations for the attachment assemblies 90 besides what is shown and described herein may be contemplated (e.g., coupled to the base frame 79 of the bouncer frame 77). Also, other types of seats besides bouncer seats may be coupled to a swing frame using the attachment assemblies described hereinabove. For example, a jumper seat, a bassinet/sleeper seat, a changing table, or a purely stationary seat can be adapted to include attachment assemblies, so as to be attachable to a swing in accordance with at least one embodiment of the invention. Also, in an alternative construction, the attachment assembly for the seat (that attaches to the mounts of the swing) can be provided as part of the same mold that forms the child seat, thereby forming an integral child seat. Furthermore, in another configuration, the seat can be designed to detach freely from the swing frame at any recline position, in which case a latch is not needed in the attachment assembly. The spirit and scope of the invention are indicated by the following claims.