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| United States Patent | 5205337 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5205337.html |
| Inventor(s) | Bozzo; Romolo T. (775 King Street East, Hamilton, Ontario, CA) |
| Abstract | A flexible transverse-L cross-section support structure is capable of being
mounted around curved edges of, for example, window frames, bed-head
frames and table tops. The structure is specially suitable to receive one
component of a flexible two component loop and hook fastening system which
it is required will remain in a flat plane while the other arm of the
support is bent in a curved plane. The first arm which carries the tape on
its outer face is provided on its inner face, preferably about midway
along its length, with a short relatively thick third arm extending
parallel to the second arm to form a channel between them. It is now
possible to bend a support so that the second surface is curved without
unacceptable bending or buckling of the first arm and the supported tape
out of the original flat plane. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5205337 |
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Structure for hanging curtain on curved frame |
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| Publication Date |
April 27, 1993 |
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| Filing Date |
September 4, 1991 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What I claim is:
1. In a frame having an arched surface and a support structure attached to
the frame for hanging a curtain therefrom, the improvement in which the
support structure is made of flexible plastics material and the structure
comprises:
a support arm having two ends and an inner and an outer face, the outer
face having means to support the curtain;
a mounting arm disposed substantially at right angles to the support arm at
one end thereof and adapted to receive fastenings for mounting the
mounting arm to said arched surface and whereby said mounting arm is bent
to conform to said arched surface; and
a stabilizing arm extending from the inner face of the support arm and
substantially parallel to the mounting arm, the stabilizing arm being
shorter than the mounting arm and of thickness, length and spacing from
the mounting arm to maintain the support arm substantially in a flat plane
without perceptible buckling when the mounting arm is bent to a curved
configuration.
2. A support structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein the length of the
stabilizing arm is between one third and two thirds the length of the
support arm.
3. A support structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein the stabilizing arm
is disposed between one third and two thirds of the length of the support
arm from the mounting arm.
4. A support structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein a thin flexible tape
is attached to the outer face of the support arm, the tape being one
component of a two component hook and fastening system for attaching the
curtain to said support arm.
5. In a frame having an arched surface defining a curved edge substantially
at right angles to a planar surface and a support structure attached to
the frame for hanging a curtain therefrom, the improvement in which the
support structure is made of flexible plastics material and the structure
comprises:
a support arm having two ends and an inner and an outer face, the outer
face having means to support the curtain and the inner face disposed
adjacent the planar surface of said frame;
a mounting arm disposed substantially at right angles to the support arm at
one end thereof and adapted to receive fastenings for mounting the
mounting arm to said arched surface and whereby said mounting arm is bent
to conform to said arched surface; and
a stabilizing arm extending from the inner face of the support arm between
the planar surface of said frame and the support arm, and substantially
parallel to the mounting arm, the stabilizing arm being shorter than the
mounting arm and of thickness, length and spacing from the mounting arm to
maintain the support arm substantially in a flat plane without perceptible
buckling when the mounting arm is bent to a curved configuration.
6. A support structure as claimed in claim 5, wherein the length of the
stabilizing arm is between one third and two thirds the length of the
support arm.
7. A support structure as claimed in claim 5, wherein the stabilizing arm
is disposed between one third and two thirds of the length of the support
arm from the mounting arm.
8. A support structure as claimed in claim 5, wherein a thin flexible tape
is attached to the outer face of the support arm, the tape being one
component of a two component hook and fastening system for attaching the
curtain to said support arm. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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FIELD OF INVENTION
This invention is concerned with a new flexible support structure of
transverse-L cross-section adapted, for example, to support flexible
elongated tape that is one component of a two-component hook and loop
fastening system.
REVIEW OF THE PRIOR ART
Hook and loop fastening systems, such as that sold under the trade mark
"VELCRO", are now extensively used for fastening sheet materials to a
support. Examples of such use as the fastening of a decorative removable
skirt to the edge of a table, the fastening of curtains to the edge of a
window frame, and the attachment of a decorative fabric facing to the edge
of a bed headboard. For ease of application the loop component, in the
form of an elongated flexible tape, preferably is pre-fastened to an
external face of one arm of a plastic support strip of transverse-L
cross-section, which is then fastened to the receiving edge using
fasteners that pass through the other unoccupied arm of the strip.
The use of such a support strip is limited strictly to its application to a
straight edge, since any attempt to bend the strip around a curve of
sufficiently small radius, e.g. as is employed in the examples quoted
above, causes buckling of one or both of the arms. The arm by which the
support strip is attached to the supporting frame can be made flat by such
attachment, but the free arm carrying the fastener component will then
buckle out of the desired flat plane to an extent that it is unusable. The
provision of a support structure of transverse-L cross-section that can be
bent to these relatively small radii is therefore of considerable
commercial value, owing for example to ease of application and the saving
in time in applying the support strip and its pre-attached fastener
component to the curved edge.
DEFINITION OF THE INVENTION
It is therefore the principal object of the invention to provide a new
flexible support structure of transverse-L cross-section that can be bent
so that one of its arms is curved to a relatively small radius without
unacceptable buckling of the other arm out of the flat plane.
It is another object to provide such a support structure particularly
suited for the support of one component of a flexible two component hook
and loop fastening system.
In accordance with the present invention there is provided an elongate
support structure of a flexible plastics material for hanging a curtain on
a frame having a curved, substantially planar surface and a curved edge
substantially at right angles to the planar surface, the support structure
comprising:
a support arm having an outer face for supporting the curtain and an inner
face disposed in use adjacent the planar surface of said frame;
a mounting arm disposed substantially at right angles to the support arm
having an inner face disposed in use adjacent the curved edge of said
frame, the mounting arm being adapted to receive fastenings for mounting
the structure to said curved edge; and
a stabilizing arm protruding from the inner face of the support arm
extending in use between the planar surface of said frame and the support
arm, and substantially parallel to the mounting arm, the stabilizing arm
being shorter than the mounting arm and of thickness, length and spacing
from the mounting arm to maintain the support arm substantially in a plane
without perceptible buckling when the structure is bent to a curved
confirguration and attached to said frame.
A first portion of the support arm between the mounting and stabilizing
arms may be thicker than a second portion thereof beyond the stabilizing
arm, while the first portion of the support arm may taper to increase in
thickness from the mounting arm to the stabilizing arm.
The support arm may taper outwardly from the stabilizing arm; the mounting
arm may taper outwardly from its junction with the support arm; and the
stabilizing arm may taper outwardly from its junction with the support
arm, in the last-mentioned case the face of the stabilizing arm facing the
mounting arm may be parallel to the mounting arm inner face and the taper
of the stabilizing arm may be produced by inclination of the other face of
the stabilizing arm.
The stabilizing arm may be disposed between one third and two thirds of the
length of the support arm from the mounting arm, and preferably is
disposed approximately half way of the length of the support arm from the
mounting arm.
The length of the stabilizing arm may be between one third and two thirds
the length of the support arm, and preferably is approximately one half of
the length of the support arm.
The support arm may have a shallow recess in its outer face for receipt of
a thin tape supported thereby.
Preferably the support structure as defined in the preceding paragraphs is
used in combination with a thin flexible tape attached to the outer face
of the support arm and comprising one component of a two component hook
and fastening system.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Particular preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described, by
way of example, with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings,
wherein:-
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a support structure of the invention in
straight configuration;
FIG. 2 is a perspective view of the support structure of FIG. 1 in bent,
configuration applied to a curved edge; and
FIG. 3 is a transverse cross-section of the structure of FIG. 2 taken on
the line 3--3 in FIG. 2.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The support structure comprises an elongated strip 10 of plastics material,
e.g. a filled PVC, having a first arm 12 for supporting a curtain 24 and a
second arm 14 for mounting the strip 10, the two arms being disposed at
right angles to one another. The first arm 12 is provided across its full
width at its outer face 16 with a shallow recess 18 in which is mounted,
e.g. by glueing, a tape 20 constituting a component of a two component
hook and loop fastening system. This component is usually the hook portion
of the system, the other component comprising a loop-carrying tape 22
attached, for example to the piece of curtain material 24 that is to be
fastened in place by the system. The first arm 12 has outer and inner
faces 16 and 28 respectively, while the second arm 14 has outer and inner
faces 30 and 32 respectively; with a transverse-L configuration the two
outer faces 16 and 30 may be regarded as being on the convex side while
the two inner faces 16 and 32 are regarded as being on the concave side.
It is required that the support 10 can be fastened to a curved edge 35 of a
body 34 which is, e.g. a curved window frame, bed head frame or table top,
as by use of fastenings 36, with the second arm 14 bending smoothly in a
perspective curved plane to conform to this curvature, while the first arm
12 must remain in a flat plane without any perceptible buckling.
I have found that it is possible to provide a support structure having this
highly desirable characteristic by adding a third arm 38 to the inner face
28 of the first arm for stabilizing the first arm upon bending of the
structure, with this third arm extending therefrom a short distance spaced
from and generally paralled to the second arm. Both the first and the
second arms taper from their common junction to decrease in thickness
along their respective widths. In addition, a first portion of the first
arm between the second and third arms is thicker than a second portion
therof beyond the third arm, this first thicker portion tapering to
increase in thickness from the second arm to the third arm. The third arm
also tapers outwardly from its junction with the first arm to decrease in
thickness, and this taper is produced by the face of the third arm facing
the second arm inner face 32 being substantially parallel to that inner
face, while the other face of the third arm is suitably inclined. These
physical characteristics are at present believed to assist in the
functioning of the invention. It will be noted that with the support 10
fastened to the body 34 the end of the third arm 38 buts against the flat
surface 37 of the body to prevent inward inclination of the first arm 12.
The third arm 38 should be spaced from the second arm 14 between one and
two thirds of the length of the first arm 12, and preferably as
illustrated is spaced approximately half of the length of the first arm
from the second arm. The third arm need not be too long and is also
between one and two thirds of the length of the first arm, preferably
about half its length. The first arm cannot be too long or perceptable
buckling will begin to be obtained, whereas the length of the second arm
is much more variable since it is able to bend easily through its thin
dimension. It is found that upon bending the unsupported support strip the
angle between the two arms 12 and 14 increases a few degrees from ninety
degrees, but this small amount of "splay" is corrected when the support is
fastened securely to the right-angled rigid edge; it could be corrected if
required by making the angle between the arms slightly smaller than ninety
degrees.
It will be seen that the parallel second and third arms and the connecting
first thicker portion of the first arm form a channel, the side walls of
which formed by the second and third arms bend relatively easily in their
respective planes without the intervening bottom web buckling, and also
without buckling of the thinner portion of the first arm that protrudes
beyond the channel bottom web. Such a support structure is easily produced
commercially in whatever length is required by extrusion of suitable
plastics material through a correspondingly-shaped die.
In a particular embodiment the overall length of the first arm 12 is 13 mm
while the channel 18 is 10 mm wide and about 0.5 mm deep; the arm is 2.5
mm thick at its junction with the second arm 14 and increases in thickness
to 3.0 mm at its junction with the third arm 38, the second portion of the
first arm is only 1.5 mm thick at its junction with the third arm and
tapers down to about 1 mm at its free edge. The third arm 38 is
approximately at the centre of the first arm and is 2 mm thick at its
junction with the first arm, tapering down to about 1 mm at its free edge;
its length to the first thicker portion of the first arm is 3 mm, while
its length to the second thinner portion is 4.5 mm. In this embodiment the
second arm 14 is 22 mm long, tapering from a tickness of about 2 mm at its
junction with the first arm 12 to about 1 mm at its free edge. Suprisingly
it is found that a piece of such a support of about 100 cm length can be
bent to a radius as small as 20 cm without displaying unacceptable bending
or buckling of the first arm out of its original flat plane; the limit of
the bending curvature that can be obtained appears to be almost to the
point at which the somewhat stiff filled polyvinylchloride plastics
material will break, so that more curvature should be obtainable with a
more flexible unfilled material. It should be noted that when using the
word curtain, any commonly hung item is intended to be within its scope,
such as fabric, beads, rope, etc.
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Description  |
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