This invention relates generally to articles of clothing and more specifically to such articles which a person can wear to keep himself cool in hot weather and warm in winter.
The object of the present invention is to provide, in combination, a vest with large pockets and a plurality of gel packs, at least one of which is housed within each of the pockets during use, each gel pack, when activated, absorbing heat energy for hours or, alternately, releasing heat energy over comparable time intervals, thereby helping the vest wearer to cool off in hot weather and warm up in winter.
A further object is to provide such a combination in which cooling gel packs, when the vest is used for cooling, can be activated by placing them in a freezer. Alternately, when the vest is used for warming, warming gel packs can be activated by heating them in a microwave oven or the like.
A still further object is to provide such a combination in which warming gel packs, rather than being activated by warming them in a microwave oven or the like, can be activated just by opening the gel pack's outer packaging wrapper and then shaking the gel pack itself and its contents.
The improved vest, which, in use, is fitted snugly about a wearer's upper torso, includes a plurality of generally rectangular pockets and first and second elasticized side bands. The pockets and the side bands are interconnected in such a way as to form an elongated, generally symmetrical array, the mid-section of which is spanned by at least two pockets, each contiguous pair of pockets in the mid-section being aligned side-by-side and perpendicularly to the array's center-line. Distal ends of the first and second side bands are connected to the mid-section and to first and second pockets, respectively, which, in use, are spaced apart from the mid-section. Moreover, in the preferred embodiment, the first and second pockets themselves are also spaced apart in use, preferably interconnected by a safety release buckle or the like and a pair of straps attached thereto and to the first and second pockets, respectively.
The pockets in the vest are dimensioned so that each of them can be fitted with at least one gel pack selected from a wide variety of heating and/or cooling gel packs. In those embodiments in which the pockets are sufficiently large that individual pockets can be fitted with more than one gel pack at a time, the wearer can augment the heat transfer capacity of those gel pack(s) initially fitted into such a pocket with additional gel pack(s) activated hours later, thereby sustaining the vest's capacity to transfer heat energy over longer time intervals than would otherwise be possible.
Closure of each pocket is preferably achieved with the use of a Velcro® fastener or equivalent such as a zipper, buttons or snaps. Alternately, one can fit an individual pocket initially with its capacity of gel pack(s) and sew the pocket closed.
All exposed layers of the vest's pockets are preferably fabricated from a water resistant cloth, such as a treated cotton, polyester, nylon or the like. Contiguous with the vest's outer cloth layer is a liner, which functions as an insulator. Formed of a heat-reflective material such as that described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,452,833, the liner is employed to conserve some of the stored energy in the gel packs.
In addition to the straps which attach the safety release buckle or the like to the first and second pockets, the vest preferably also includes first and second shoulder straps connected by a combination dual-slotted fastener and short strap loop to the center of the upper edge of the first and second pockets, respectively. Sized to go over the shoulder of the user, the first and second straps terminate proximate with the upper edge of the mid-section and are connected thereto at spaced apart locations, separated by a distance comparable to the width of one of the mid-section's individual pockets.
The vest, in the preferred embodiment, is also provided with means for adjusting the respective lengths of both the first and second shoulder straps as well as of at least one of the straps employed to attach the safety release buckle to the first and second pockets, so that not only can the vest be secured snugly about the user's upper torso but also the wearer can move the vest up and down, as needed, over a substantial distance to warm or, alternately, to cool selected areas of his body.
Further enhancing the usefulness of the vest is the fact that it can be worn with the mid-section held either next to the wearer's back or in front of his chest, so that a user can can reposition the vest to adjust for changing wind directions and temperatures which be may experience while he is engaged in such outdoor activities as running a foot race, sitting in a deer stand and the like.
In the drawings, the improved vest is indicated generally by the reference numeral 10. Included in the vest 10 are a plurality of generally rectangular pockets 11-14 and a pair of elasticized side bands 15, 16, which are interconnected so as to form an elongated, generally symmetrical array (
Each pocket 11-14 is sized so that at least one of any one of a wide variety of heating and/or cooling gel packs 30 can be housed within it. To accommodate a side-by-side alignment of the two pockets 11, 12 in the mid-section 20, into each pocket of which at least one such gel pack 30 can be fitted, the mid-section itself, in the preferred embodiment, measures about 12 inches in length by about 7 inches in width, with each of the pockets 11, 12 measuring about 7 inches by 6 inches. In addition, each pocket 13, 14 preferably also has approximately the same overall dimensions as does the individual pocket 11 or 12.
Examples of heating gel packs 30 which can be housed, more than one at a time, within a pocket 11-14 include the products known as HotHands and Model HH2, both of which are manufactured by HeatMax Inc. of Dalton, Ga. 30733. The model HH2 gel pack 30 comes with an outer packaging wrapper (not shown) and is of special interest because of the ease with which it can be activated and the fact that it has been found to perform well for hours in the vest 10. Indeed, this gel pack 30 is activated just by removing its outer packaging wrapper and then shaking the gel pack itself and its contents. Each HotHands gel pack, on the other hand, needs to be heated in a microwave oven or the like in order to activate it.
Examples of cooling gel packs 30 which can be readily fitted into the pockets 11-14 include the Ice-Brik Model IB3, which measures 5 inches long by 2.5 inches wide by 0.5 inch thick, and which is manufactured by Polar Industries, Inc. Activation of this cooling gel pack 30 entails placing it in a freezer.
An example of a gel pack (not shown) which, depending upon whether it is activated by freezing or, alternately, by being warmed in a microwave oven or the like, can be used either for cooling or warming, respectively, is available commercially in the form of hot and cold multi-purpose compresses.
Generally, the gel packs must be charged just prior to each use, whether or not they are removably housed in the pockets 11-14 of a vest 10.
As is best illustrated in
Means for pressing the pockets 11-14 against the user's torso includes the elasticized side bands 15, 16 and the strap 26 which, in the preferred embodiment, is adjustably mounted within a dual-slotted appendage of the safety release buckle's clasp element 35 (
In use, the vest 10 is held in position relative to the wearer's shoulders by a pair of shoulder straps 21, 22 (
For best results, each of the straps 21, 22, 26 should be adjusted so as to provide a firm fit about the user's torso and, in the process, stretch the elasticized side bands 15, 16 slightly. Also, clothing should be worn over the vest 10 to enhance its performance. Because the heat-reflective liner 40 is placed on the inside of the outer cloth layer 41 of each pocket 11-14, one can achieve a longer use lifetime for the gel packs 30 than would otherwise be possible.
Except for the placement of the heat-reflective liner 40 which is to be always worn on the inside of the outer cloth layer 41 of each pocket 11-14, the vest 10 is reversible in character. As a consequence, a user can wear the vest 10 in such a way that its mid-section 20 is held in front of his chest rather than behind his back. This feature offers special advantages for marathon runners and other athletes engaged for hours at a time in strenuous outdoor activities during which they may encounter abrupt reversals in wind direction and/or 180 degree changes in the direction they must run relative to the wind, sometimes forcing them to run against a cold wind after they have built up a sweat running before the wind, for example—with all such changes potentially giving rise to adverse physiological effects on an athlete and his performance, but which the vest 10, quickly reversed and worn back to front or vice versa, can help to ameliorate.
This application is a non-provisional application of the earlier filed provisional application, Ser. No. 61/630,362, filed Dec. 9, 2011, and claims the benefit of the priority of the filing date of Dec. 9, 2011, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. Sec. 119(e).