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| United States Patent | 3971569 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/3971569.html |
| Inventor(s) | Abe; Fumiyuki (Yokohama, JA);
Otani; Syuichi (Tokyo, JA) |
| Abstract | A safety seat belt device suitable for motor vehicles, railway coaches,
aeroplanes, speedboats and the like, including shoulder and lap belts
which are automatically movable between an occupant restraining position
and an easy-to-enter position in relation with closing and opening
operation of a vehicle door or operating conditions of the vehicle, and an
inflatable cushioning means which is adapted to expand between the
shoulder belts and a vehicle occupant in the event of an abnormal sudden
deceleration of the vehicle as in a collision or similar harzardous
accidents. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 3971569 |
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Safety seat belt device with an inflatable cushioning means |
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| Publication Date |
July 27, 1976 |
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| Filing Date |
February 19, 1974 |
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| Priority Data |
Feb 21, 1973[JA]48-20188 |
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Title Information  |
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| Market Size |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A safety seat belt device for use in a motor vehicle having a floor and
a roof cooperably defining an occupant compartment in which an occupant
seat is mounted on said floor, said safety seat belt device comprising:
a lap belt having one end secured inward of said seat to said floor and the
other end adapted to be held outward of said seat;
a yoke type shoulder belt including first and second belts, said first and
second belts respectively having upper ends thereof adapted to be held at
said roof, lower ends thereof secured to said lap belt at transversely
spaced positions;
air bag means fixedly mounted on said lap belt between the lower ends of
said first and second belts so that upon collision of said motor vehicle,
an air bag of said air bag means is expanded toward said upper ends of
said first and second belts; and
a transverse connecting strap transversely arranged between respective
lower portions of said first and second belts so that upon expansion of
said air bag of the air bag means, said transverse connecting strap
holding, in combination with said first and second belts, the expanded air
bag between said transverse connecting strap and a torso portion of a
seated occupant.
2. A safety seat belt device according to claim 1, in which the upper ends
of said first and second belts are combined into one belt which is secured
to a belt retractor movable along an elongated track longitudinally
disposed on said roof, said retractor being actuated to move between a
rearmost position and a foremost position of said track by means of
driving means.
3. A safety seat belt device according to claim 2, in which the other end
of said lap belt is secured to an anchor which is actuated to move between
a rearmost position and a foremost position on an elongated track
diagonally disposed on a door wall by means of another driving means.
4. A safety seat belt device according to claim 3, in which said driving
means adapted for moving said retractor and said another driving means
adapted for moving said anchor and actuated by means responsive to door
opening and door closing. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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This invention relates to a safety seat belt device with an inflatable
cushioning means particularly suitable for motor vehicles, railway
coaches, aeroplanes and speedboats.
It is well known in the art to provide on a vehicle seat a vehicle occupant
restraining seat belt system including shoulder and lap belts each having
one end fixed to a rigid vehicle structure and the other end movably
supported on a retractor or other suitable means for moving the belts
between an easy-to-enter position and an occupant restraining position in
relation with opening and closing of the vehicle body door. It is also
known in the art to provide an inflatable device such as an air bag at a
suitable position on the vehicle structure so that the air bag is expanded
between an interior rigid vehicle structure and the seated occupant for
giving cushioning effects on the occupant in the event of a collision or
other incidence involving a sudden deceleration as would throw the
occupant violently forwardly from his seat.
In order to give a most effective protection on a vehicle occupant under
the normal driving conditions as well as during a sudden deceleration as
in a collision, it is desirable to provide the occupant restraining seat
belt system in combination with an inflatable cushioning or
shock-absorbing means like an air bag system.
The instant invention contemplates to provide a safety seat belt device
which is combined in a suitable and advantageous manner with an inflatable
shock-absorbing device, preferably, in the form of an air bag.
In the existing air bag systems, the air bag is usually provided
independently from the restraining seat belt system and is designed to
expand in a space between an interior rigid vehicle structure and a
vehicle occupant. One of the difficulties encountered with such air bag
system is that, particularly on a motor vehicle, the space is often
limited to ensure a sufficient collision energy absorbing stroke (a
distance required by an air bag for absorbing collision energy between a
rigid interior vehicle structure and the occupant), resulting in less
protective effects on the vehicle occupant. A difficulty with existing
fixed type vehicle occupant restraining belts is that they require
troublesome fastening and unfastening operations and are therefore not
used in most cases.
It is the primary object of the present invention to provide a safety seat
belt device incorporating an inflatable cushioning means in such a manner
to give assured protective effects on a vehicle occupant in the event of a
sudden deceleration of the vehicle.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a safety seat belt
device incorporating belt driving means for automatically moving the
restraining belts between an easy-to-enter position and an occupant
restraining position in relation with opening and closing operation of a
vehicle body door.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide a safety
seat belt device employing an air bag which is expanded between yoke type
shoulder belts and chest portions of a vehicle occupant in the event of an
abnormal sudden deceleration of the vehicle.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a safety seat
belt device which is secure in operation and operative automatically
without requiring efforts on the part of the vehicle occupant.
In one preferred form of the invention, there is provided a safety seat
belt device which is suitable for use on a vehicle including a vehicle
body interiorly having an occupant compartment and an occupant seat
mounted on a floor of the occupant compartment and accessible through a
vehicle body opening which is selectively opened and closed by a vehicle
body door. The safety seat belt device essentially comprises in
combination yoke type shoulder belts having upper ends thereof secured to
a belt retractor which is movable along a longitudinal track on a roof of
said occupant compartments; a lap belt having one end secured to said
vehicle compartment floor at an inner side of said occupant seat and the
other end secured to an anchor which is movable along a diagonally
disposed track on an inner wall of said vehicle body door; lower ends of
said shoulder belts being secured to said lap belt at a space from each
other; a first driving means mounted on said vehicle compartment roof for
moving said retractor between a rearmost position and a foremost position
on said longitudinal track; a second driving means mounted on said vehicle
body door for moving said anchor between a rearmost position and a
foremost position on said diagonally disposed track; a door switch
connected to said first and second driving means for actuating the same to
move in forward and reverse directions in relation with opening and
closing operations of said vehicle body door thereby to bring said
shoulder and lap belts to an easy-to-center positions upon opening of said
vehicle body door and to an occupant restraining positions upon closing
said vehicle body door; and an air bag means fixedly mounted on said lap
belts between the lower ends of said shoulder belts and actuatable upon
detection of an abnormal deceleration by means of a sensor mounted on a
vehicle body structure.
The above and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will
become apparent from the following description and the appended claims,
taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings which show by way of
example a preferred embodiment of the invention and wherein:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic front view of a portion of a vehicle incorporating
the safety seat belt device according to the present invention with the
shoulder and lap belts and the cushioning means shown in the respective
occupant restraining and cushioning positions;
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic side view showing the same device as shown in FIG.
1;
FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic perspective view of a portion of the vehicle with
the belts held in the occupant restraining positions by means of
respective belt driving means;
FIG. 4 is a view similar to FIG. 3 but with vehicle body door and the belts
in open and closed positions, respectively.
Referring to the drawings, a vehicle which is generally indicated at 10
includes a usual vehicle body with a conventional vehicle body floor 11
with a transmission tunnel 12, a vehicle body roof 13 and a vehicle body
door 14, defining an occupant compartment 15. A vehicle seat 16 is mounted
within the occupant compartment 15 in the conventional manner. Access to
the occupant compartment is had by way of a vehicle body door opening
which is opened and closed by the vehicle body door 14.
As shown in FIG. 1, a vehicle occupant 17 is restrained in the seated
position by means of a safety seat belt device according to the present
invention which includes yoke type shoulder belts 18 and 19 extending
longitudinally along the chest of the occupant on opposite sides of his
head for restraining his upper body portions.
The upper ends of the shoulder belts 18 and 19 are fixed together to a belt
retractor 20 which is mounted on the vehicle body roof 13 movably along a
longitudinal track or rail 21. The shoulder belts 18 and 19 on the chest
of the occupant 17 is connected at a suitable space from each other by
means of a transverse connecting strap 22. The spaced lower ends of the
shoulder belts 18 and 19 are secured to a lap belts 23 which extends taut
across the lap of the occupant 17 in the occupant restraining position as
shown in FIGS. 1 and 2. One end of the lap belt 23 is fixed by a bracket
or other suitable means to the vehicle body floor 11. The other or outer
end of the lap belt 23 is fixedly supported on an anchor 24 which is
movable along a diagonally disposed track or rail 25 on the inner wall
surface of the vehicle body door 14, the rear end of the track or rail 25
terminating at a level lower than the fore end thereof.
Fixedly mounted on the lap belt 23 between the spaced lower ends of the
shoulder belts 18 and 19 is an inflatable cushioning means 26 which may be
an air bag of the conventional construction and which has normally a
reduced volume as shown by a solid line but is adapted to be expanded into
a larger volume as indicated by hatching 27 in FIGS. 1 and 2 in response
to a control signal from a deceleration sensor 28 detecting an abnormal
deceleration in the event, for example, of a vehicle collision.
Normally, in the absence of an abnormal deceleration, the vehicle occupant
17 is restrained in the seated position as shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 by means
of the shoulder and lap belts 18, 19 and 23 with the air bag 26 in a
deflated condition.
In case of the vehicle 10 experiencing a sudden deceleration as in a
collision, this is detected by the sensor 28 to ignite a gas-generating
agent in gas generator (not shown) of the inflatable means 26 for
expanding the same between the safety belt system and the occupant as
shown by hatching 27 in FIGS. 1 and 2.
The air bag expanded between the shoulder belts 18, 19 and the vehicle
occupant 11 serves to prevent the shoulder belts 18 and 19 from imposing
localized pressures on the chest, shoulder and abdominal portions of the
occupant and at the same time to prevent excessive forward inclination of
the vehicle occupant's head by supporting the same on the upper end
portion of the expanded air bag.
With the conventional air bag system with the air bag mounted on and
expanded from a structural part of the vehicle, it is difficult to give
effective protection on the vehicle occupant immediately in the initial
stage of a collision when the occupant is thrown violently forwardly from
his seat. This difficulty is, however, suitably eliminated as the shoulder
belt is tensioned upon expansion of the air bag, restraining the vehicle
occupant in the seated position as early as in the initial stage of the
collision.
In order to expand as quickly as possible the conventional air bag 26 which
is mounted on a vehicle body structure, it is necessary to increase the
expansion velocity of the bag. However, the increase of the expansion
velocity imposes a serious effect on the strength of the air bag per se.
Moreover, the protective effect of the conventional air bag varies with
the body size and the posture of the seated occupant. This drawback is
absent in the present invention wherein the air bag itself is fitted on
the occupant body so that it can give assured protective effect from the
initial stage of the expansion without being influenced by the body size
or posture of the vehicle occupant.
FIGS. 3 and 4 show mechanisms for operating the belt system between the
occupant restraining position and the easy-to-enter position. In the
present invention, the shoulder and lap belts 18, 19 and 23 are held in
the occupant restraining position when the vehicle body door 14 is closed
as in FIG. 3 and in the easy-to-enter position when the vehicle body door
14 is opened as in FIG. 4, without requiring any effort on the part of the
vehicle occupant 17.
As mentioned hereinbefore, the upper ends of the shoulder belts 18 and 19
are secured to a conventional inertia retractor 20 which is movable along
the longitudinal rail 21 on the vehicle body roof 13. The retractor 20 is
moved between the rearmost position of FIG. 3 and the foremost position of
FIG. 4 by means of a rack rail which is indicated by a broken line 30 and
which is driven from a motor 31. Similarly, the outer end of the lap belt
23 is fixedly supported on an anchor 24 which is movable along the
diagonally disposed track or rail 25 on the vehicle body door 14. The
anchor 24 is moved between the rearmost position of FIG. 3 and the
foremost position of FIG. 4 by means of a rack wire which is also
indicated by a broken line at 32 and driven from a motor 33. In FIGS. 1 to
4, similar parts are designated by similar reference numerals.
In order to move the shoulder and lap belts 18, 19 and 23 to and from the
respective easy-to-enter positions of FIG. 4 and the occupant restraining
positions of FIG. 3, in relation with the opening and closing operations
of the vehicle body door 14, the motors 31 and 33 are connected to a door
switch 14 which is adapted to rotate the motors in the forward direction
to bring the retractor 20 and the anchor 24 to the respective foremost
positions of FIG. 4 upon opening the door 14 and to rotate the motors 32
and 33 in the reverse direction to bring the retractor 20 and the anchor
24 to the rearmost restraining positions of FIG. 3 upon closing the door
14.
A vehicle occupant enters the vehicle through the vehicle door opening with
the door in an open position and the shoulder and lap belts 18, 19 and 23
held in the easy-to-enter positions by mmeans of the driving means 32 and
33 as shown in FIG. 4. In this instance, the retractor 20 and the anchor
24 are also in the respective foremost positions on the rails 21 and 25.
When the occupant assumes a seated position, the occupant's head is passed
though the V-shaped loop of the shoulder belts 18 and 19 with the lap belt
23 on his lap. Upon closing the vehicle body door 14, the door switch
actuates the motors 31 and 33 rearwardly for moving the retractor 20 and
the anchor 24 to the rearmost positions of FIG. 3 from the foremost
positions of FIG. 3, respectively. Since the anchor 24 is lowered to the
rearmost position on the rail 25, it is brought into a taut condition on
the lap of the occupant 17. On the other hand, the retractor 20 in its
rearmost positions on the rail 21 on the vehicle body roof retracts the
shoulder belts 18 and 19 to maintain the same also in a taut condition.
Thus, both the lap and shoulder belts are positioned in the occupant
restraining positions of FIG. 3 without requiring any effort on the part
of the occupant.
When the occupant 17 opens the vehicle body door 14 to get off the vehicle,
the door switch actuates the motors 31 and 33 to rotate in the forward
direction for shifting the anchor 24 and the retractor 20 to the
respective easy-to-enter positions on the rails 21 and 25, respectively,
as shown in FIG. 4. The occupant is thus allowed to leave the vehicle upon
opening the vehicle body door 14.
The invention thus provides an improved safety seat belt device which is
capable of restraining a seated occupant automatically in response to
closure of the vehicle body door 14 without requiring any effort on the
side of the vehicle occupant and of protecting the vehicle occupant by
means of an air bag when a sudden deceleration occurs to the vehicle as in
a collision.
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Description  |
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