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07/26/07 - USPTO Class 297 |  92 views | #20070170760 | Prev - Next | About this Page  297 rss/xml feed  monitor keywords

Chair stabilizing device

USPTO Application #: 20070170760
Title: Chair stabilizing device
Abstract: A device for preventing tipping over of a chair that includes individual legs, in general four. The device comprises a leg member, a support foot attached at an angle to the leg member, and clamps to secure the device on the back legs of the chair with individual legs. The support foot includes a flat bottom, which will be slightly higher than the bottom of the chair's legs and also maintains an angle sloping downward towards the chair when the device is secured on the chair's back leg. After two of these devices are secured to the two back legs and when the chair is tilted back, the entire bottom portion of the support foot will be firmly on the ground, thereby preventing the chair from tipping over. (end of abstract)



Agent: Edwin Tarver - Encino, CA, US
Inventor: Richard A. Peterson
USPTO Applicaton #: 20070170760 - Class: 297310000 (USPTO)

Chair stabilizing device description/claims


The Patent Description & Claims data below is from USPTO Patent Application 20070170760, Chair stabilizing device.

Brief Patent Description - Full Patent Description - Patent Application Claims
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STATEMENT REGARDING COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL

[0001] Portions of the disclosure of this patent document contain material that 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 file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright rights whatsoever.

BACKGROUND

[0002] The present invention relates in general to chairs with individual legs, and more particularly, to a device that prevents a chair with individual legs from tipping over. The device can be easily installed, secured to, and removed from the back legs of the chair.

[0003] The stability of chairs with individual legs is of concern especially since users have a tendency, where possible, to lean backwards while sitting on it. This leaning can cause the chair to easily tip over and may result in a potential injury to an occupant. In addition, when an occupied chair is slid backward, the back legs have a tendency to catch on an uneven surface and cause the chair to tip over. Even though new chair designs have been developed in the recent years, for instance including office chairs with rotating seat and height-adjustable features, chairs with individual legs are still suitable and used more often in many situations. For example: dining room chairs, kitchen chairs, and patio chairs still include vertical individual legs.

[0004] Several devices to improve stability of chairs or the like are known in the art. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,022,417 to Hunt discloses a chair that includes a seat connected to legs, which extend upwardly through the seat and are flush on their top surfaces with adjacent areas of the seat. To prevent the legs from being driven upwardly through the seat due to excessive wear or forces, support stretchers are connected between pairs of the legs and the underside of the seat. Additionally, the stretchers provide mutual, lateral support between the front and rear legs and provide horizontal support to the seat for greater weight bearing ability. However, the supporting features of this chair are substantially different from the present invention.

[0005] U.S. Pub. No. 20050151037 to Oxley discloses a self-stabilizing support for a structure, for example, a chair. The structure includes a first and a second pair of legs and a bearing acting between the first and the second pair of legs. The bearing allows the second pair of legs to pivot with respect to the first pair of legs about an axis such that the four legs of the first and second pair can be firmly planted on an uneven surface to support the the structure. This can be achieved by suitably pivoting the second pair of legs with respect to the first pair. The bearing is damped so that it does resist sudden movement between the first and the second legs about the bearing, but a sustained force causes pivoting movement of the second pair of legs about the bearing. However, the operation, structure, and mechanism involved in this device are different from the present invention.

[0006] In U.S. Pub. No. 20050073182 to Brown a stool with leg supports, which may be used as a footrest, a table, or a chair is disclosed. The stool has a flat wooden platform, a cushion that is disposed upon the platform, and either three or four legs depending from the platform. Each leg includes a post and padding is wrapped around the post. A second end of each leg is affixed to a shoe to provide a broader base for the stool, and thereby increase the stool's stability. Although this device provides additional stability, the means used to provide this additional stability by using a shoe is different from the present invention.

[0007] Although devices such as the above have been developed for increasing the stability of the chairs, the problem of tipping over of existing chairs with individual leg members still needs to be addressed.

[0008] Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to provide a device that facilitates in stabilizing a chair with individual leg members, thereby making the chair less likely to tip over when leaning backwards or moving it.

[0009] A further object is to provide a chair-stabilizing device, which can be removably retrofitted to any existing type of chairs with individual legs, such as kitchen chairs, dining room chairs, high chairs, patio chairs, or the like.

[0010] A further object is to provide a chair-stabilizing device, which provides firm grip while stabilizing or supporting the tilted chair.

[0011] Finally, it is an object of the present invention to provide a chair-stabilizing device, which can be retrofitted to any type of chair's legs that have different cross-sections, such as cylindrical, quadrilateral, triangular, or the like. These and other objects of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the appended Summary, Description, and Claims.

SUMMARY

[0012] The present invention is directed to a device to prevent chairs with individual legs from tipping over, especially when the chair leans in a backward direction while sitting on it. The device includes a leg member, a support foot attached at an angle to a first end of the leg member, and two clamps for removably securing the device to the back leg of the chair. Four bolts and nuts can be used with the clamps to secure the device. Two of these devices are secured to the two back legs of the chair that includes four individual legs. A bottom portion of the support foot will be slightly higher than the bottom of the chair's legs when the device is secured. The bottom portion of the support foot also maintains an angle sloping downward towards the chair such that the entire bottom portion of the support foot will be firmly on the ground when the chair is tilted back, thereby providing support and preventing the chair from tipping over.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

[0013] FIGS. 1 is an illustration of the top view of the clamps portion of the chair-stabilizing device in accordance with the present invention.

[0014] FIG. 2 is an illustration of a side view of the chair-stabilizing device secured to a back leg of a chair with four individual legs.

[0015] FIG. 3 is an illustration of a top view of the chair-stabilizing device.

[0016] FIG. 4 is an illustration of a side view of the chair-stabilizing device being secured to the back leg of the chair with four individual legs.

[0017] FIG. 5 is an illustration of a side view of the chair in its tilted position with the chair-stabilizing device secured to its back leg.

FIGURES--REFERENCE NUMERALS

[0018] 10 . . . Chair-stabilizing Device [0019] 11 . . . Leg Member [0020] 12 . . . Support Foot [0021] 13A . . . Back Leg of the Chair [0022] 13B . . . Front Leg of the Chair [0023] 14A . . . Clamp [0024] 14B . . . Clamp [0025] 15 . . . Rubber Insert [0026] 16 . . . Bolt [0027] 17 . . . Nut [0028] 18 . . . Chair [0029] 19 . . . Bottom Surface of the Support Foot [0030] 20 . . . Rubber Coating or Base [0031] 21 . . . Seat of the Chair [0032] 22 . . . Hole [0033] 23 . . . Ground

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

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