The present invention relates to a toy vehicle, especially a pedal vehicle for children, which is preferably in the form of a tractor without the invention being limited thereto. In principle, the invention is also applicable to a motor-driven toy vehicle.
It is the object of the present invention to develop a vehicle of the contemplated type in such a way that the play value of the vehicle is enhanced. The vehicle should also be operable by young children and meet high safety standards.
This object is achieved according to the invention by the features of patent claim 1.
Advantageous developments of the invention are characterized in the subclaims.
According to the invention the toy vehicle has fastened thereto a rear excavator which is fastened by means of a receiving block to the rear side of the vehicle body. The receiving block preferably includes a coupling bolt which passes through annular coupling elements of the vehicle body.
The receiving block has rotatably fastened thereto a seat boom which consists of a boom and a seat shell fastened thereto. The boom has fastened thereto a linkage preferably made of plastics, which holds an excavator shovel and which is preferably provided with two handles for lifting, lowering and pivoting the excavator shovel.
Furthermore, according to the invention the receiving block has mounted thereon a support leg which is pivotable between a raised and preferably laterally swung-out position and a lowered position in which the support leg rests with a foot on the ground. Moreover, according to the invention the receiving block has mounted thereon a securing hook means which in a first position locks the support leg in the raised position and, at the same time, locks the seat boom in a predetermined angular position and which in a second position blocks the support leg in the lowered position, the seat boom being additionally released for rotation.
When a child is traveling with the toy vehicle, the support leg must of course be in the raised position because, otherwise, the support leg would drag along the ground. For fixing the support leg in the raised position the securing hook of the securing hook means is brought into a position in which the hook grips over the support leg so that said leg is immovably held. The seat boom is here locked in a predetermined angular position, whereby a situation is prevented where the seat boom with the mounted linkage and the excavator shovel can pivot back and forth during travel of the toy vehicle.
When the child wishes to use the rear excavator, he/she will first move the securing hook into a preferably slightly raised position in which the support leg is released from the securing hook and is movable into the lowered position in which the support leg rests on the ground. If this is the case, the securing hook is moved into a second, preferably downwardly pivoted position in which the support leg is blocked and the seat boom is simultaneously released for rotation. Preferably, the securing hook is here rotatably arranged, i.e., it is rotated into the various positions.
Since the receiving block with the rear excavator is supported by the support leg on the ground, the child can now sit down without any risk on the preferably provided seat shell of the seat boom without the toy vehicle being able to tilt about the rear axle and without the forces that are acting on the receiving block being in a position to damage the toy vehicle. Since the seat boom is released for rotation, the rear excavator can now be pivoted within the intended range of rotation.
Since the two above-described states are created and secured by rotating a single securing hook means, easy operability is ensured. The arrangement of toy vehicle and rear excavator satisfies high safety standards.
With great advantage the securing hook means comprises a securing hook which is rotatable about an axis, an engaging means which is non-rotatably connected to the securing hook, and a securing bolt which is arranged in the receiving block.
The securing bolt is displaceably arranged in the receiving block, namely between an upper position in which it engages with its upper end into a recess in the bottom side of the seat boom, and a lower position in which it engages with its lower end into a recess of the lowered support leg. The engaging means which is firmly connected to the rotational axis comprises a rod-like engaging section which extends in a direction transverse to the axis and which engages into a space between two lateral stops of the securing bolt, so that the securing bolt is displaceable upwards or downwards by rotating the securing hook and the engaging means connected thereto.
When the support leg is in the raised position, its position can be secured in that the securing hook grips behind the support leg with its hook-like projection at the side facing away from the axis thereof. To be able to pivot the support leg into the lowered support position, the securing hook is slightly pivoted upwards without its engaging means hitting against the securing bolt as the engaging means has a corresponding play between the two stops of the securing bolt. The securing hook is only rotated upwards to such a degree that the support leg can be pivoted outwards. The support leg preferably contains two support leg sections extending at an angle relative to one another and is pivotable with its end facing away from the support foot about an axis inclined relative to the vertical. The angle is preferably about 45°.
When the support leg is pivoted such that its lower support leg section has assumed a vertical position and rests with the support leg on the ground, the securing hook is pivoted downwards to a stop, the securing bolt being shifted in this process and entering with its lower end into a lateral recess of the support foot, whereby the position thereof is secured. The upper end of the securing bolt has exited from the recess of the seat boom so that said boom is freely rotatable.
As has been mentioned above, the seat boom has fastened thereto a linkage holding a shovel, with which the shovel can be moved into the desired and angular position. The linkage includes an excavator arm which is hinged with one end to the seat boom and which at the other end hingedly supports a shovel arm with a shovel hinged thereto, the excavator arm being adapted to be pivoted back into a raised end position in which the excavator arm is detachably fixable. To this end it is suggested that the excavator arm should have pivotably mounted thereon a second securing hook which due to gravity in the pivoted-back end position of the excavator arm grips behind a stop mounted on the seat boom. The second securing hook is here rotatable about a horizontal axis. The excavator arm is released by pivoting the second securing hook upwards.
Further details of the invention will become apparent from the following description of a preferred embodiment of the toy vehicle and from the drawings, in which:
As shown in
A seat boom 4 is rotatably fastened to the receiving block 3 and is provided with a seat shell 5 below which the swivel joint is positioned.
The free end of the boom 4 has hinged thereto an excavator arm 6 on which a rigidly fastened handle 7 and a hingedly supported handle 8 are mounted laterally side by side. The pivotable handle 8 is hingedly connected in its central portion to a parallel rod 9 whose free end has hinged thereto a shovel arm 10 which at such a position is also hinged to the free end of the excavator arm 6 so that the parallel rod 9 extends in parallel with the excavator arm 6.
The shovel arm 10 is hingedly connected at its free end to an excavator shovel 11 which is also hingedly connected to the excavator arm 6 via a shear-type linkage 12.
Moreover, the receiving block 3 has hingedly supported thereon a support leg 13 with a lower support foot 14. In the illustration of
Furthermore,
When the securing hook 15 is rotated downwards, the engaging attachment 24 will hit against the lower stop 27 of the securing bolt 23, subsequently displacing the securing bolt 23 downwards, the bolt entering with its lower end into a recess in the upper support leg section 19. In this position, the support leg is secured in the vertical position, and the seat boom 4 is released for rotation (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 042 646.5 | Sep 2004 | DE | national |