The present invention relates to wrist rest assemblies for use along the front edges of devices to be operated by a person's hands or fingers, such as in front of a computer keyboard, computer mouse or other input device.
Wrist rest assemblies are known for use along the front edge of a device to be operated by a person's hands or fingers, such as in front of a computer key board, computer mouse or other input device. It has been suggested that the use of such wrist rest assemblies can restrict damage to wrists from prolonged use of such devices. Heretofore, however, known wrist rest assemblies have been formed with layers of cushioning material that do not provide the quality of support for the wrists that may be desired.
The present invention provides a wrist rest assembly for use along the front edge of a device to be operated by a person's hands or fingers, such as in front of a computer key board, computer mouse or other input device, which wrist rest assembly provides a layer of cushioning material that can provide better support for the wrists than has heretofore been provided, and further affords a degree of movement of the supported wrist relative to the surface on which the wrist rest is supported that has not been provided by known prior art wrist rest assemblies.
According to the present invention there is provided a wrist rest assembly comprising (1) a base having an upper pad support surface, which base has a bottom or supported surface adapted to be supported on a horizontal surface along the front edge of the device; and (2) a pad comprising a layer of gel. A bottom surface of the elongate pad is supported on the upper pad support surface of the base, and the pad has a sufficient width between its edges and thickness between its top and bottom surfaces (e.g., a thickness in the range of about ⅛ inch to 5 inches and a width in the range of about ½ to 10 inches with the larger widths providing both wrist and fore arm support) to afford supporting a users wrists on the top surface to help keep the wrists in a neutral position with a portion of the layer of gel beneath and conforming to the supported wrists to distribute the weight of the wrists over a wide area and affording significant motion of the top surface of the pad with the supported wrists relative to the bottom surface in a plane generally parallel to the upper surface of the base.
Preferably the gel is a stable elastomeric block polymer gel similar to the gel described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,676,387, (the content whereof is hereby incorporated herein by reference) and preferably is the gel described in Example No. 3 of British Patent No. GB 1,268,431 (the content whereof is hereby incorporated herein by reference) except that the ratio of oil to block copolymer is in the range of 4 to 1 to 10 to 1 rather than being 5 to 1 as is described in that Example No. 3. That gel is quite similar to the gel in the pad commercially available from Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company, St. Paul, Minn., under the trade designation “Reston (T.M.) Flotation Pad”, which pad for many years has been used in beds, wheel chairs and the like to prevent pressure points. Also, preferably the gel has a covering comprising an elongate tubular layer of flexible polymeric material (e.g., polyurethane) around the gel, which tubular layer has sealed ends to retain the gel and provides a flexible barrier to the escape of mineral oil from within the gel. The pad assembly can further include an outer layer over the top surface of the pad of a soft conformable material adapted for comfortable contact with a users wrists.
Preferably the base comprises a top portion having the upper pad support surface supporting the bottom surface of the elongate pad; a bottom portion having the bottom supported surface adapted to be supported on a horizontal surface; and means for supporting the top portion on the bottom portion with the elongate pad at a predetermined one of several different distances above the supported surface. That means is provided by the top portion of the base comprising longitudinally extending rails projecting outwardly in opposite directions generally parallel to its upper pad support surface, and the bottom portion including generally parallel spaced vertically upwardly projecting support portions having opposed surfaces defining sets of grooves parallel to the supported surface and vertically spaced along the support portions, each of which sets of grooves is adapted to receive the rails to support the top portion with the top surface of the elongate pad at a different distance above the supported surface depending on which set of grooves the rails are engaged in.
While there might be advantages for some applications in allowing the top portion to reciprocate along the grooves of the bottom portion, thereby affording large transverse movements of the wrists with the top portion without relocating the wrists along the top surface of the pad; as illustrated the assembly includes means for releasably fixing the top portion relative to the bottom portions with corresponding ends of the top and bottom portions generally in alignment.
While the wrist rest assembly including its base is very useful, the base is not a necessity to using the pad. Thus generally the method according to the present invention for supporting the wrists of a person operating a device such as a computer keyboard, computer mouse or other input device comprises: (1) providing a pad comprising a layer of gel, which pad has opposite top and bottom surfaces, and opposite longitudinally extending edges; (2) supporting the pad along the front edge of the device; and (3) supporting the users wrists along the top surface of pad; the pad having a sufficient thickness between the top and bottom surfaces and width between the edges to have a portion of the layer of gel beneath and conforming to the supported wrists and to afford significant motion of the top surface of the pad with the supported wrists relative to the bottom surface in a horizontal plane.
The present invention will be further described with reference to the accompanying drawing wherein like reference numerals refer to like parts in the several views, and wherein:
Referring now to
Generally, the wrist rest assembly 10 comprises (1) an elongate base 14 having an elongate upper pad support surface 15 (see
The covering 18 of the pad 17, best seen in
As is illustrated in
That outer layer 26 can, for example, be made of a soft conformable non-woven polyurethane material, or of other materials such as leather, vinyl, or the material commercially designated “Dacron” (T.M.) sold by DuPont, Wilmington, Del., or the material commercially designated “Ultrilure” (R.T.M.).
The wrist rest assembly 10 tensions the outer layer 26 over the top surface 20 of the pad 17. As is best seen in
Means are also provided for retaining the end portions 38 of the sleeve or outer layer 26 around the ends 24 of the pad 17 (see
The support plate 28 and the retaining member 40 together provide a top portion 54 for the base 14 that has the upper pad support surface 15 supporting the bottom surface 21 of the elongate pad 17. The base 14 also includes a bottom portion 56 having the bottom supported surface 16 adapted to be supported on a horizontal surface; and, as is best seen in
As can be seen in
With either or both of the end covers 62 removed, the top portion 54 can reciprocate along the bottom portion 56 by sliding movement of the rails 58 in the surfaces defining the grooves 60a, 60b or 60c with which they are engaged which affords removing the top portion 54 from the bottom portion 56 and re-engaging it with the rails 58 in a different set of grooves 60a, 60b or 60c to change the distance between the top surface 20 of the pad and the supported surface 16. Such reciprocation afforded by removing one or both of the end covers 62 might also provide advantages for some uses of the assembly 10 to affording large transverse movements of the wrists with the top portion 54 without relocating the wrists along the top surface 20 of the pad 17 (e.g., to move one hand from the typing keys to the numerical pad of a computer keyboard without lifting the wrists from the pad 17).
The present invention has now been described with reference to one embodiment thereof. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that many changes can be made in the embodiment described without departing from the scope of the present invention. For example: the wrist rest assembly can be made any length; the pad support surface of the base could have shapes other than generally planar such as being arcuate around a longitudinal axis to make it, for example, cylindrically convex or concave, or could have transverse recesses below where a users wrists would normally be supported; the bottom portion 56 of the base could have more or less than three sets of grooves to provide larger or smaller ranges of adjustment; and the wrist rest assembly could further include a base plate attached along and having a portion projecting from the supported surface 16 of base, which projecting portion is adapted to support the device, such as those base plates 70, 71 or 72 illustrated in
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/647,865, filed Aug. 25, 2003, now allowed, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/494,665, issued as U.S. Patent No. 6,626,403, which is a continuation of U.S. application No. Ser. 08/253,510, now abandoned.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09494665 | Jan 2000 | US |
Child | 10647865 | Aug 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10647865 | Aug 2003 | US |
Child | 11010470 | Dec 2004 | US |
Parent | 08253510 | Jun 1994 | US |
Child | 09494665 | Jan 2000 | US |