This invention concerns shades or “blinds” that include a plurality of parallel slats that can be tilted to open and allow light to be transmitted from one side to the other side of the blinds, or tilted to close and block the transmission of light from one side to the other side of the blinds. Typically these blinds are referred to as Venetian blinds and are used at windows and doors to control the passage of light there through.
The prior art Venetian blinds include a series of parallel slats that can be tilted to either open or close visual passage of light from one side to the other side of the blinds. Venetian blinds typically include an upper stationary support rail for mounting to the upper frame of a window and a lower movable support rail, with the slats suspended between the support rails, and pull cords that extend upwardly from the reach of the person operating the blinds to the upper rail then downwardly from the upper rail through openings in the parallel slats to the lower rail. When the person pulls the cords, the bottom rail is pulled upwardly and progressively collects the slats to lift them higher to raise the blinds.
While Venetian blinds have been known and used for many decades, most of them have included the lifting cords described above, which is a concern in the industry because there have been several deaths or near deaths of children that have inadvertently become entangled in the lift cords and have been choked. Further, when the lift cords are pulled downwardly, a significant downward force is applied by the pull cords to the supporting upper rail and its components, which tends to pull the upper rail away from the supportive wall structure. This requires that the upper rail be very securely constructed and securely attached to the window frame and allows the person operating the Venetian blinds to apply significant downward force on the lift cords to lift the lower slats toward the top of the window frame.
When the pull cord has been pulled to lift the lower rail and its adjacent slats to the desired elevation, the operator must manipulate the pull cord while the pull cord holds the slats at the desired position to engage a catch in the upper rail. This prevents the pull cord from allowing the slats and lower rail to move uncontrollably down. But the higher the blinds are raised the more the pull cord is moved downwardly within the reach of children, increasing the hazard of access and injury to children.
Even with the blinds in their fully lowered position with the pull cords out of reach of children, the portion of the pull cords that extend through the slats can still be reached by children. This is known as an accessible inner cord.
Other means have been developed that have attempted to solve the above described problems, but there still remains a need to have affordable cordless Venetian blinds to avoid the hazards, inconvenience and non-durability of the structure that comprises the blinds, and the need to provide cordless blinds and to omit the downward force that is required to raise the blinds.
This invention to provides improved Venetian blinds that can be manually lifted for raising the blinds and manually moved downwardly to lower the blinds without the use of a pull cord, and with the effort for lifting and lowering the blinds being less than the weight of the blinds as they are accumulated or released.
Another version of this invention is Venetian blinds that include lift and guide tapes that become stiff when formed into a rectilinear configuration and that act as a track to align the slats, and that lose their stiffness when bent and become flat in cross section when moved into a coil as the slats are lifted.
The invention provides a reliable and easily applied “brake” in Venetian blinds that positively maintains the lower rail at a desired height.
The cordless Venetian blinds can allow the bottom rail to be manually leveled by lifting or lowering an end of the bottom rail.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon reading the following specification, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now in more detail to the drawings, in which like numerals indicate like parts throughout the several views,
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When a person rotates the control rod 21, the drum 18 also rotates and the ladder strings 16a and 16b move up on one side and down on the other side. The support legs 17 of the ladder strings that extend under each slat maintain the elongated parallel slats 14 oriented parallel to each other, thereby reorienting the angles of the elongated parallel slats 14. This is conventional in the art.
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Lift and guide tapes 27 and 28 extend from the lower movable support rail 13 up through the support tape openings 22 and 23 in the slats 14, up to the upper rail 12 and into the upper rail and are attached to the upper rail by screws or other conventional connector means 30.
The tape collectors 32 and 33 are mounted in the lower rail 13 as shown in
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The Venetian blinds 10 will be mounted at a window (not shown) with the upper stationary support rail 12 supported by a bracket or other suitable supportive structure at the desired height, installed in static relationship with respect to the supportive structure. As shown in
Usually, when the assembly is being mounted to the window, the lower rail 13 will be positioned adjacent the upper rail 12 with the lift and lift and guide tapes 27 fully wound about the spools 48 and the pawl 40 engaging the teeth of the sprocket 37. The coil springs 35 will be wound tight when the lower rail is moved to its lowermost position. This substantially fully wound condition of the coil spring applies its maximum torque force to the lift and guide tapes 27, and the lift and guide tapes will be in a flat, not concave, configuration on the spools 48. After the upper rail has been mounted above the window, the pawl 40 is moved away from the sprocket by pushing its button 46. The sprocket 37 and the lift and guide tapes attached to the sprocket rotate and progressively increase its torsion at the collected slats and the lower rail, moving downwardly by the application of the weight of the collected slats 14. In the meantime the shapes of the lift and guide tapes progressively change from a flat cross section on the spool 48 to a concave cross section as the tapes unwind and move away from the spools, and vice versa.
The pawl's re-engagement with the teeth of the sprocket 37 freezes the vertical movement of the lower rail.
The lift and guide support tapes are conventional in the prior art, and usually are a heat treated powder coated steel with smooth surfaces to allow some slippage of the tape in the coil. There is a small amount of slippage between the layers of the tapes in their wound configuration in reels on the spools that may be overcome when leveling the lower rail 13. If the lower rail 13 is not level, a person can tilt the lower rail by lifting an end of the lower rail until the lower rail becomes and remains horizontal.
When the lift and guide support tapes are rectilinear they are concave in cross section. The concave cross section of the straight spans of the lift and guide tapes tend to engage the opposed edges of the elongated slats The bending of the tapes as the tapes are wound about the spools 48 causes the tapes to become flat in cross section and easy to wind up in a reel about the spools.
Although preferred embodiments of the invention have been disclosed in detail herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that variations and modifications of the disclosed embodiments can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/729,413, filed Jun. 3, 2015.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14729413 | Jun 2015 | US |
Child | 14929884 | US |