The present invention relates to chairs, such as task and side office chairs, and more particularly, to an office chair that can be reclined.
Office chairs are known to include a seat, a reclinable backrest, and a mechanism that enables synchronous movement of the seat with the backrest as the backrest is reclined from a generally upright position or returned to the upright position from a reclined position. Recline tension provided by the chair may be automatically set as a function of a weight applied to the chair by the occupant seated in the chair. Thus, when a person is sitting with good posture, and at their healthiest position for maximum core strength, the recline tension is set in balance with the occupant's weight. This automatic weight-sensing feature eliminates the need to manually adjust tension each time a different user sits in the chair. Accordingly, the chair may be automatically tensioned correctly for each occupant.
An occupant of a chair may assume a sitting position with a relatively poor posture (i.e., may be slid forward in the seat in a relatively slouched position). This is generally considered an unhealthy sitting position. A problem in particular with a slouched seating position in a reclinable chair that automatically adjusts recline tension based on occupant weight is that the automatically adjusted recline tension necessarily applies a relatively high amount of pressure on the lower back when the occupant attempts to recline the chair. This provides risk for injury.
The above referenced weight sensing chairs typically use some form of a parallelogram, or four-bar linkage, to raise and lower the seat. Thus, as the backrest is caused to be moved to a reclined position, the front and rear of the seat may be caused to move upward. However, this results in a further problem in that lifting of the front of the seat may impinge upon the underside of the occupant's knee and restrict blood flow to the legs of the occupant to some extent.
Accordingly, a self-tensioning reclinable office chair that addresses at least some of the above referenced problems is desired.
According to an embodiment, a chair is provided having a seat base, a backrest interconnected to the seat base via a hinge connection and movable relative to the seat base about a backrest pivot axis between a normal non-reclined position and a reclined position, and a seat supported on the seat base and having a rear portion adjacent the backrest and a front portion defining a front edge of the seat. The rear portion of the seat is interconnected to the backrest via a hinge connection such that as the backrest is pivoted to the reclined position, the rear portion of the seat pivots relative to the backrest of the seat and is elevated. The front portion of the seat is interconnected to the seat base via a hinge connection such that the seat is movable about a seat front pivot axis and such that as the backrest is pivoted to the reclined position and the rear portion of the seat is elevated, the seat pivots about the seat front pivot axis thereby causing the front edge of the front portion of the seat to be lowered.
The chair may include a tensioning spring, a plunger for engaging the tensioning spring, and a front support bar that interconnects to the plunger and defines the seat front axis pivot axis about which the seat pivots. The tensioning spring may be mounted on the seat base beneath the seat such that a rear end of the tensioning spring is mounted to the seat base in a stationary position relative to the seat base. The front support bar extends within at least one slot formed by the seat base such that, as the backrest is pivoted to the reclined position, the rear portion of the seat is elevated, and the front portion of the seat is lowered, the front support bar moves to a rearward location within the at least one slot causing the plunger to compress the at least one tensioning spring.
According to an embodiment, recline tension provided by the chair is a function of a force required to compress the at least one tensioning spring mounted below the seat, a weight applied to the seat by a seat occupant, and a location of the weight applied to the seat relative to front and rear portions of the seat. Accordingly, as the weight is applied toward the front portion of the seat (such as by an occupant in a slouched seated position), the recline tension is reduced and, as the weight is applied toward the rear portion of the seat (such as by an occupant seated in an upright position with good posture), recline tension is increased.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the embodiments disclosed herein should become apparent from the following description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
For simplicity and illustrative purposes, the principles of the embodiments are described by referring mainly to examples thereof. In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the embodiments. It will be apparent however, to one of ordinary skill in the art, that the embodiments may be practiced without limitation to these specific details. In some instances, well known methods and structures have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure the embodiments.
A chair 10, which may be a task office chair, is shown in
The chair 10 can be positioned in an upright position (as shown in dark grey in
In
According to an embodiment, the chair 10 is configured to provide synchronous-tilting that not only is able to account for the occupant's weight applied to the seat 12, but also able to account for the occupant' posture in the chair 10 to automatically adjust recline tension. Here, recline tension refers to the amount of force required to be applied to the backrest by the occupant of the chair to cause the backrest to recline. Recline tension must be sufficiently strong so as to prevent unwanted recline movement by an upright seated occupant.
By way of example, for a given occupant of a given weight, recline tension is automatically set at an appropriate level (i.e., a level that prevents unintended reclining, but that is not too strong as to cause injury to an occupant attempting to recline the chair) based on occupant weight when the occupant has good upright seating posture as shown in
Thus, when the occupant 26 is sitting with good posture, at a healthy position for maximum core strength, the recline tension provided by the chair 10 is automatically set to appropriately balance recline tension with occupant weight. This weight-sensing feature does not require manual recline tension adjustment and is automatically tensioned correctly for each user.
In comparison, when the occupant 26 is sitting with poor posture (i.e., slid forward in the seat and slouched), the occupant 26 is considered to be at a relatively unhealthy sitting position. If recline tension remains the same for the same occupant seated as shown in both
Accordingly, the chair 10 provides seating that is healthy even when users or occupants slouch throughout the day. In addition, the above referenced feature results in providing the occupant with subtle feedback to which the occupant can react. For instance, as recline tension drops, the occupant's reaction is typically to scoot back in the seat thereby promoting and creating a more upright and healthy posture.
Further, the motion of the seat 12 when the backrest 14 is reclined, relieves pressure under the legs of the occupant behind his/her knees to prevent any restriction of blood flow to the legs. For instance, as shown in
According to an embodiment, the recline tension of the chair 10 is controlled by the amount of weight being applied to the seat 12 and where on the seat 12 the weight is being applied (i.e., toward the rear or front of the seat 12) along with a force provided by a helper or tensioning spring 38. For instance, as shown in
In comparison, weight sensing chairs using some form of a parallelogram, or four-bar linkage 46, to raise and lower the seat is shown in
A sliding-block linkage 54 according to an embodiment is shown in
As shown in
An embodiment of a side office chair 100 is shown in
The mechanism 116 includes a pair of tensioning springs 118 contained within the seat 102. The springs 118 extend parallel to each other and in a direction from front-to-back of the chair. The rear of the springs 118 are mounted in a stationary position to the seat base 112 and the front of springs 118 interconnect to a bar 120 or the like extending in front of and perpendicular to the springs 118. A tensioning screw 122 is connected to the bar 120 and permits some manual fine adjustment to the amount of recline tension provided by the mechanism 116.
The mechanism 116 defines a seat front pivot axis 124 about which the upper seat section 110 pivots relative to the stationary seat base 112 adjacent the front of the seat 102, a seat rear pivot axis 126 about which the rear of the upper seat section 110 pivots relative to the backrest 104, and a stationary backrest pivot axis 128 about which the backrest 104 pivots.
The bar 120 can define the seat front pivot axis 122 and hinge connection used to connect the upper seat section 110 to the seat base 112. The opposite ends of the bar 120 can extend within relatively short travel slots 130. Accordingly, as shown in
An embodiment of a task office chair 200 is shown in
As shown in
The mechanism 218 defines a seat front pivot axis 226 about which the seat 102 pivots adjacent the front of the seat 102, a seat rear pivot axis 228 about which the rear of the seat 102 pivots relative to the backrest 204, and a stationary backrest pivot axis 230 about which the backrest 204 pivots.
The bar 222 can define the seat front pivot axis 226 and provide a hinged connection. The ends of the bar 222 can extend within a relatively short stationary travel slots 132. Accordingly, as shown in
The task chair 200 may be provided with additional features. A handle underneath the seat may be provided to enable the seat to be slid forward for manual seat depth adjustment. Thus, as needed by the end user, the seat can be positioned closer to or further away from the backrest. In addition, a further handle located underneath the seat may adjust the chair height, (i.e., to effectively increase or decrease the length of the support post). These handles may be on opposite sides of the seat underneath the seat. Further, the arm rests may be adjustable so that they can be raised and lowered in height via a trigger under the arms of the arm rests.
The various components described above may be made of metallic, non-metallic, wooden, plastic, resins, composite, fabric or like materials. The above description illustrates embodiments of how aspects of the present invention may be implemented, and are presented to illustrate the flexibility and advantages of particular embodiments as defined by the following claims, and should not be deemed to be the only embodiments. One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that based on the above disclosure and the following claims, other arrangements, embodiments, implementations, and equivalents may be employed without departing from the scope hereof as defined by the claims.
Accordingly, the specification and figures are to be regarded in an illustrative rather than a restrictive sense, and all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the present invention. The benefits, advantages, solutions to problems, and any element(s) that may cause any benefit, advantage, or solution to occur or become more pronounced are not to be construed as a critical, required, or essential features or elements of any or all the claims.
This application claims the benefit under 35 USC § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/080,364 filed Sep. 18, 2020.
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