The present invention relates to a foam mattress or cushion pad and method of manufacturing the same for use either as a topper for a mattress or cushion or as a resilient core of a mattress or cushion.
It is quite common in the manufacture of mattresses or cushions today to build up the mattress or cushion from layers of foam material having differing resilience and support, as well as breatheability, i.e., ability to allow air to pass through the layer or layers of foam material. Most commonly, the foam materials used in such mattresses or cushions are polyurethane-based or latex\synthetic latex based. Those materials, though, are generally closed-cell materials which may create air pockets to trap the air and thereby insulate or trap body heat in the mattress or cushion, thereby rendering the mattress or cushion uncomfortable and possibly unhealthy. To counter this entrapment of heat in the mattress or cushion, open-cell foams or fibers, such as polyester foams or fibers, are often used and are often surface modified by being cut in different configurations, such as convoluted surfaces having an egg crate or rib configuration or, alternatively, the layers of foam are often perforated to create better air flow characteristics for dissipating body heat. Such convoluted or perforated foam may be better for air circulation than flat sheets of foam material, but such configurations may give rise to less support or less resiliency of the resulting layers of foam material or give rise to a waste of material if the foam is perforated to create flow passages. The present invention is directed to overcoming the air flow circulation problem characteristics and the support problems of most convoluted foam materials, as well as air circulation problems characteristic of those configured convoluted foam layers while simultaneously avoiding the waste foam characteristics and cost of perforating the layers of foam to improve air flow characteristics.
In accordance with the practice of this invention, a foam or fiber pad is cut on both top and bottom sides in a wave-shaped pattern of ridges and valleys. The ridges and valleys on the bottom side of the pad are angled relative to the ridges and valleys on the top side of the pad and the depth of the valleys on the top and bottom are sufficient that the valleys intersect one another to create spaced air ventilation holes through the foam or fiber pad. In order to create such foam or fiber pads, a block of foam or fiber material is cut horizontally from one side or corner of the block of foam in a wave-shaped and preferably, sinusoidal-shaped pattern from one side or corner to the opposite and then the block of foam or fiber is rotated 90° and a similar horizontal wave-shaped cut is made from one side of the block to the opposite side. Because the block is rotated 90° from the first cut to the second, the wave-shaped pattern of the second cut is normal or perpendicular to the wave-shaped pattern of the first cut. By making repeated cuts through the block in this fashion with a conventional band saw cutter, and by spacing the cuts such that adjacent cuts intersect, the block may be cut into multiple pads having a wave-shaped top surface, a wave-shaped bottom surface with the waves of the top and bottom surface offset from one another by 90° and with the valleys of the top surface intersecting the valleys of the bottom surface to create the spaced holes or ventilation apertures through the multiple pads so created.
In accordance with the practice of this invention, the ventilated pads configured as described hereinabove may be used either as topper pads on a mattress or cushion or as resilient spring cores of a mattress or cushion, which cores may be surrounded by solid foam encasement side rails and covered top and bottom by flat or perforated sheets of foam to create a mattress body ready to be upholstered either with or without fiber padding between the top surface of the mattress and the upholstered covering.
These and other objects and advantages of this invention may be more apparent from the following description of the drawings.
With reference to
With reference now to
After all of the cuts have been made from the one side 38 to the opposite side 40, the block is then rotated 90° to the position illustrated in
It will be appreciated that by manufacturing the pads 10 according to the process described hereinabove and illustrated in
With reference now to
With reference now to
This illustrated mattress 60 is, of course, a single-sided mattress. This invention, though, is equally applicable to double-sided mattresses in which event the bottom side of the mattress would have the same multiple plies of covering materials as the top side.
In one embodiment of the invention, the bottom ply of base foam material 66 was made from a 1.5 pound per cubic foot urethane foam having a 50-70 IFD (a standard measure of load-bearing capacity of a resilient material standing for Indentation Force Deflection). The spring core foam pads 10 were made from 1.5-2.5 pound per cubic foot urethane foam material having a 20-80 IFD. The foam encasement side rails were made from a 1.2-2.5 pound per cubic foot urethane foam having a 50-80 IFD. The top layer 68 of open cell foam material was made from a 1.2-4.0 pound per cubic foot polyester material having a 15-40 IFD. The top layer of visco foam or latex foam material 70 was made from a 1.8-8.0 pound per cubic foot visco foam or latex foam material having an 8-40 IFD. These density and IFD measure of foams are exemplary only and are not intended to be limiting. Similarly, the use of the pads in a mattress having these particular density and IFD characteristics are not intended to be limiting to the use or characteristics of these pads, but are only exemplary of characteristics and applications to which the pads of this invention are applicable.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3197357 | Schulpen | Jul 1965 | A |
3222697 | Scheermesser | Dec 1965 | A |
3940811 | Tomikawa et al. | Mar 1976 | A |
4207636 | Ceriani | Jun 1980 | A |
4700447 | Spann | Oct 1987 | A |
4713854 | Graebe | Dec 1987 | A |
4866800 | Bedford | Sep 1989 | A |
5249319 | Higgs | Oct 1993 | A |
6668409 | Blumer | Dec 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080060139 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |