Not Applicable
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material which is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright rights whatsoever.
Field of the Invention
The Technical Field of this application is that of ergonomic workplace furniture and equipment, specifically related to an adjustable, but very stable multiple-shelf stand to support computer accessories for use by workers while they are standing.
I am the inventor of this two shelf computer accessory stand. I have a college degree as an engineer, and I have worked in the office on computers since 1985.
Over the last 29 years, I began to slowly but steadily gain weight, to a large part due to sitting in my chair many hours at work each day while working on the computer.
Working in offices at various companies over the years I have also had problems with occasional neck, back, arm, and wrist pain and discomfort, due to the desks, computer monitors, and keyboards not being ergonomically best positioned to reduce such strain.
To seek to reduce user discomfort and to burn more calories, I decided to get out of my chair and try standing up while working on my computer, so that I could occasionally flex my back muscles, move my legs, flex my back, and shift my weight between my feet while also working on my computer keyboard, mouse, and monitor.
So I went to large local retail stores which sell computer equipment and asked their representatives to sell me a computer stand I could set on my desk to use the computer while standing upright. None of the stores I checked offered any such product for sale, and the sales representatives seemed surprised at my request.
Then, not being able to purchase such a computer accessory stand, I made a crude prototype to test my theory that standing up is better for me, the computer user, than sitting down. I took some empty cardboard boxes and taped them together to arrange a temporary platform with the right dimensions, to place on my work desk at the right height for my needs. Then I placed my laptop computer on top of this cardboard box platform and while standing I began using my laptop computer, placed on top of the cardboard box platform.
I found that I was satisfied with the keyboard height and preferred to work while standing up, using the laptop on top of this early prototype cardboard platform. However, while using the laptop my neck was constantly titled downward at an uncomfortable angle, leading to some neck strain.
So, I decided to build a wooden prototype two shelf computer accessory stand following the design shown in
Background Art
Currently, there are specialized computer desks designed for use while standing, treadmills modified to use computers while exercising, and complex adjustable computer accessory stands with supports stabilized by springs and counter weights.
However, there are no two shelf computer accessory stands with a broad base, simply designed to be set upon an existing office desk or table, with firm, stable vertical cylindrical supports providing comfort and stability for the worker's use while he or she is standing. Simple vertical cylindrical supports provide more stability, much less vibration and erratic motion, and more comfortable and more productive platforms for the worker's use than do complex supports consisting of cantilevers, springs, and counterweights. This simple system is also less expensive to manufacture and sell, making it more likely to be purchased by companies and individual consumers, with the potential of changing the paradigm of office work from the sedentary, unhealthy seated norm to a new more healthy standing alternative.
This product is a two shelf support system for the computer monitor, keyboard and mouse, allowing the computer user to work with the computer while standing up at his/her desk at office or at home. It is designed as one integrated structure which simply sits on top of one's existing desk, table, or counter top.
The FIGURE: Isometric View of the Two Shelf Computer Accessory Stand
This two shelf computer accessory stand is designed for the user to simply place on top of an existing desk at home or at the office, then move his/her monitor and keyboard, with separate mouse, if applicable, over to this stand and use the computer while the user is standing upright. The shelves are specifically constructed at the best heights above the desk a) to position the computer monitor at the correct eye level so the user looks straight ahead, maintaining good straight posture without straining/craning his/her neck, and also b) to position the computer keyboard, with or without a separate mouse, at the correct height so that the user's forearms and wrists lie flat during computer usage, so that the positions of the computer monitor, keyboard, and mouse minimize strain on the user.
Then, if/when the user no longer wishes to stand upright to work on the computer, he or she can simply manually lower the monitor and keyboard either a) to their desk top or b) to the lower shelf and base of the computer stand, respectively, to work while sitting down for a period of time. Another option, to work while sitting for periods of time, is for the user to have duplicate monitors installed, one installed on the desk adjacent to the two shelf computer accessory stand, simply relocate the keyboard and mouse to the desk top, and switch the computer output to the desk top monitor.
Basic design of this two shelf computer accessory stand is shown in the attached drawing of the basic stand model, The FIGURE. The stand is composed of a flat, rectangular base, with vertical cylindrical upright supports which support a lower shelf at the front side of the stand, and a higher shelf at the back side of the stand. See the attached drawing, The FIGURE.
Materials of the shelves and vertical upright cylindrical supports may be either ferrous, or non-ferrous materials, including without limitation plain carbon steel, stainless steel, wood, bamboo, aluminum, plastic, fiberglass, laminates, and all other materials that may be chosen to support safely the weight of the computer accessories, from four ounces to 70 pounds.
Height of the two shelves above the base may be fixed for different models to be manufactured and sold, or may be variable, to be adjusted by the product purchaser using threaded upright cylindrical supports.
The components of this invention shown in
A variety of models of this basic design may be manufactured and sold to meet the requirements of various computers and computer accessories, as well as for different ergonomic needs of users of various heights, arm lengths, and personal dimensions. Some models shall be manually adjustable, with threaded vertical cylindrical supports for each user to vary the height of the shelves as needed.
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