GB1601104A - Safety restraint apparatus - Google Patents

Safety restraint apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB1601104A
GB1601104A GB1135777A GB1135777A GB1601104A GB 1601104 A GB1601104 A GB 1601104A GB 1135777 A GB1135777 A GB 1135777A GB 1135777 A GB1135777 A GB 1135777A GB 1601104 A GB1601104 A GB 1601104A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
belt
loop
reel
webbing
blocking position
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
GB1135777A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
SMR Automotive Mirrors UK Ltd
Original Assignee
Britax Wingard Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Britax Wingard Ltd filed Critical Britax Wingard Ltd
Priority to GB1135777A priority Critical patent/GB1601104A/en
Priority to FR7807708A priority patent/FR2383677B3/fr
Publication of GB1601104A publication Critical patent/GB1601104A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60RVEHICLES, VEHICLE FITTINGS, OR VEHICLE PARTS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B60R22/00Safety belts or body harnesses in vehicles
    • B60R22/18Anchoring devices
    • B60R22/185Anchoring devices with stopping means for acting directly upon the belt in an emergency, e.g. by clamping or friction
    • B60R22/1855Anchoring devices with stopping means for acting directly upon the belt in an emergency, e.g. by clamping or friction the means being sensitive to belt tension

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Emergency Lowering Means (AREA)
  • Automotive Seat Belt Assembly (AREA)

Description

(54) SAFETY RESTRAINT APPARATUS (71) We, BRITAX (WINGARD) LIMITED formerly WINGARD LIMITED a British Company of Chandler Road, Chichester, Sussex, Pro 19 2UG, do hereby declare the invention for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us and the method by which it is to be performed to be particularly described in and by the following statement: This invention relates to safety restraint apparatus and more particularly, to a device which reduces excess pay out of a safety belt in accident conditions.
The invention may be applied, for example, to the type of safety apparatus wherein a safety belt is stored on a reel which is locked by an inertia or belt acceleration responsive device under accident conditions. In such apparatus, the belt is usually paid out from the reel against the bias of a rewinding spring. The torque exerted by the spring must not be too high as this would cause discomfort when the belt is tensioned across the user's torso. However, if the spring torque is reduced to improve comfort, it may mean that the end of the belt is not tightly stored on the reel when retracted by the spring. Even when the belt is pulled off the reel to be fastened about the wearer's torso, a certain length is retracted after the major portion has been fastened. Moreover, there is usually a length of belt stored on the reel for accommodating large body sizes. If the belt, when worn, has an end portion which is not tightly stored on the reel, then when the reel is locked, under accident conditions, the sudden tension exerted on the belt may cause a certain length (for example, 5 centimetres) to be extracted from the reel as the turns of the end portion are tightened. Moreover, the belt, which is typically made of webbing, may stretch when such tension is applied. In both cases, this leads to an excess pay out of belt which enables the belt user to move forward, under accident conditions, even when the reel is locked, and this is particularly disadvantageous in small vehicles.
The disadvantage of excess belt pay out under accident conditions may be more apparent in reel locking devices which include a mechanism for reducing the torque when the belt is worn. Moreover, the same disadvantage could apply in other forms of safety restraint apparatus which may, or may not employ locking reels.
Safety restraint apparatus, such as the socalled 'inertial locking reel' are expensive to manufacture at least, in part, because they are designed to withstand the loads imposed by a restrained passenger under accident conditions.
It would therefore be advantageous to employ a device which relieves the load imposed on the reel locking mechanism so that the mechanism may be of a less expensive design.
The present invention seeks to mitigate these problems by providing a device for reducing excess pay out of a safety belt under accident conditions, the device comprising entrainment means through which the belt can be looped and a blocking member which is displaceable into a blocking position in which the belt is secured in the entrainment means, the blocking member being held out of its blocking position by deformable means which deforms to allow the blocking member to move into its blocking position, under a predetermined belt tension, and thereafter inhibits movement of the blocking member out of its blocking position.
The invention also provides safety restraint apparatus comprising a safety belt, means for paying out the safety belt, means for preventing pay out of the safety belt under accident conditions, means for releasably securing the belt to an anchorage point and a device interposed between said belt pay out means and said belt securing means for reducing excess belt pay out under accident conditions, said device comprising entrainment means through which the belt can be looped and a blocking member which is displaceable into a blocking position in which the belt is secured in the entrainment means, the blocking member being held out of its blocking position by deformable means which deforms to allow the blocking member to move into its blocking position, under a predetermined belt tension, and thereafter inhibits movement of the blocking member out of its blocking position.
When the device for reducing excess pay out of a safety belt is interposed between, on the one hand a belt retractor such as an inertia locking reel, and on the other hand a belt fastener such as a tongue and buckle in a loop of a lap and diagonal harness, it reduces the excess belt pay out, when the reel is locked, due to tightening of the turns of the belt on the reel and stretching of the belt material. In a conventional arrangement, the inertia reel is normally mounted at, or close to the floor level of a vehicle and a length of said belt is led from the reel to a running loop, usually on the door pillar and then down to form the diagonal portion of the harness. The running loop may be modified, according to the invention, conveniently to provide the device for reducing excess belt pay out. The device therefore acts as a load sensitive belt or webbing lock at the loop wherein (a) upon sudden deceleration, the inertia reel locks, (b) the occupant starts to move forwards, (c) the combination of the locked reel and occupant movement causes tension to be exerted in the belt or webbing, and (d) the webbing tension actuates the lock at the pillar loop.
The invention may be embodied in various ways as broadly described below and more specifically described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In one embodiment, the belt is entrained about a member in the form of a sliding loop, the sliding action causing the belt to be clamped between the loop and a base frame.
The loop may be substantially U-shaped and sprung into corresponding arms or recesses in the base frame, the arrangement being such that the loop is displaced from its location in the recesses or arms so as to move towards an abutment portion of the base frame. The abutment portion is preferably in the form of a divided wall having portions attached to respective arms on the base frame. This enables the belt to be slipped between the division and entrained about the U-shaped loop which is then located by recesses and projections in the arms of said frame.
The embodiments of the invention are more specifically described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figures 1 and 2 illustrate a first embodiment with a displaceable loop member.
In the embodiment of Figures 1 and 2, a base frame 1 made of sheet metal has a pair of arms 1' which are folded across the front of the frame and which terminate in abutment faces or walls 5 separated by a space 5'. A U-shaped member in the form of a wire loop 3 has its ends turned down and each end has a raised portion 4 which projects into a hole 2 in the respective arm 1' of the frame 1. The faces 5 support a length of webbing 6 which is entrained about the wire loop 3. A pair of plastics shoulders 3' serve to guide the webbing 6 to prevent lateral movement towards the sides of the loop 3. When a predetermined tension is exceeded in the webbing 6, for example, when an inertia reel locks in an accident condition and the occupant moves forwardly off his seat due to momentum, the loop 3 is urged downwardly so that the projections 4 are cammed out of the locating holes 2. The legs of the loop 3, on which projections 4 are formed, flex inwardly (to permit deformation of the loop) to enable the projections 4 to be cammed out of holes 2. The loop 3 then moves rapidly to a blocking position where it clamps or jams the webbing between the loop and the faces 5. In this position, the loop 3 is still deformed, due to the inward flexure of its legs, and thus it acts to inhibit movement of the loop out of its blocking position. Thus, the loop 3 cannot easily be returned to its initial position and this indicates that the belt has been used in a severe accident condition. After the belt has been wedged or jammed between the loop 3 and the faces 5, the increase in the applied load is not applied to the remote end of the webbing, for example, to a storage reel, but only to the locked loop 3. Therefore, an inertia reel, or its equivalent at the remote end portion of the webbing, may be more lightly constructed than is conventionally the case.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS: 1. A device for reducing excess pay out of a safety belt under accident conditions, the device comprising entrainment means through which the belt can be looped and a blocking member which is displaceable into a blocking position in which the belt is secured in the entrainment means, the blocking member being held out of its blocking position by deformable means which deforms to allow the blocking member to move into its blocking position, under a predetermined belt tension, and thereafter inhibits movement of the blocking member out of its blocking position.
2. Safety restraint apparatus comprising a safety belt, means for paying out the safety belt, means for preventing pay out of the safety belt under accident conditions, means for releasably securing the belt to an anchorage point and a device interposed between said belt pay out means and said belt securing means for reducing excess belt pay out under accident conditions, said device comprising entrainment means through which the belt can be looped and a blocking member which is displaceable into a blocking position in which the belt is secured in the entrainment means, the blocking member being held out of its blocking position by deformable means which deforms to allow the blocking member to move into its blocking position, under a predetermined belt tension, and thereafter inhibits movement of the blocking member out of its blocking position.
3. Apparatus according to claim 2 wherein said means for paying out the belt comprises a belt retractor including an inertia locking reel mechanism, and wherein said means for releasably securing the belt comprises a tongue and buckle in a loop of a lap and diagonal portion of the belt.
4. Safety restraint apparatus according to claim 3 wherein said retractor is mounted at, or
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (7)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. excess belt pay out, when the reel is locked, due to tightening of the turns of the belt on the reel and stretching of the belt material. In a conventional arrangement, the inertia reel is normally mounted at, or close to the floor level of a vehicle and a length of said belt is led from the reel to a running loop, usually on the door pillar and then down to form the diagonal portion of the harness. The running loop may be modified, according to the invention, conveniently to provide the device for reducing excess belt pay out. The device therefore acts as a load sensitive belt or webbing lock at the loop wherein (a) upon sudden deceleration, the inertia reel locks, (b) the occupant starts to move forwards, (c) the combination of the locked reel and occupant movement causes tension to be exerted in the belt or webbing, and (d) the webbing tension actuates the lock at the pillar loop. The invention may be embodied in various ways as broadly described below and more specifically described with reference to the accompanying drawings. In one embodiment, the belt is entrained about a member in the form of a sliding loop, the sliding action causing the belt to be clamped between the loop and a base frame. The loop may be substantially U-shaped and sprung into corresponding arms or recesses in the base frame, the arrangement being such that the loop is displaced from its location in the recesses or arms so as to move towards an abutment portion of the base frame. The abutment portion is preferably in the form of a divided wall having portions attached to respective arms on the base frame. This enables the belt to be slipped between the division and entrained about the U-shaped loop which is then located by recesses and projections in the arms of said frame. The embodiments of the invention are more specifically described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figures 1 and 2 illustrate a first embodiment with a displaceable loop member. In the embodiment of Figures 1 and 2, a base frame 1 made of sheet metal has a pair of arms 1' which are folded across the front of the frame and which terminate in abutment faces or walls 5 separated by a space 5'. A U-shaped member in the form of a wire loop 3 has its ends turned down and each end has a raised portion 4 which projects into a hole 2 in the respective arm 1' of the frame 1. The faces 5 support a length of webbing 6 which is entrained about the wire loop 3. A pair of plastics shoulders 3' serve to guide the webbing 6 to prevent lateral movement towards the sides of the loop 3. When a predetermined tension is exceeded in the webbing 6, for example, when an inertia reel locks in an accident condition and the occupant moves forwardly off his seat due to momentum, the loop 3 is urged downwardly so that the projections 4 are cammed out of the locating holes 2. The legs of the loop 3, on which projections 4 are formed, flex inwardly (to permit deformation of the loop) to enable the projections 4 to be cammed out of holes 2. The loop 3 then moves rapidly to a blocking position where it clamps or jams the webbing between the loop and the faces 5. In this position, the loop 3 is still deformed, due to the inward flexure of its legs, and thus it acts to inhibit movement of the loop out of its blocking position. Thus, the loop 3 cannot easily be returned to its initial position and this indicates that the belt has been used in a severe accident condition. After the belt has been wedged or jammed between the loop 3 and the faces 5, the increase in the applied load is not applied to the remote end of the webbing, for example, to a storage reel, but only to the locked loop 3. Therefore, an inertia reel, or its equivalent at the remote end portion of the webbing, may be more lightly constructed than is conventionally the case. WHAT WE CLAIM IS:
1. A device for reducing excess pay out of a safety belt under accident conditions, the device comprising entrainment means through which the belt can be looped and a blocking member which is displaceable into a blocking position in which the belt is secured in the entrainment means, the blocking member being held out of its blocking position by deformable means which deforms to allow the blocking member to move into its blocking position, under a predetermined belt tension, and thereafter inhibits movement of the blocking member out of its blocking position.
2. Safety restraint apparatus comprising a safety belt, means for paying out the safety belt, means for preventing pay out of the safety belt under accident conditions, means for releasably securing the belt to an anchorage point and a device interposed between said belt pay out means and said belt securing means for reducing excess belt pay out under accident conditions, said device comprising entrainment means through which the belt can be looped and a blocking member which is displaceable into a blocking position in which the belt is secured in the entrainment means, the blocking member being held out of its blocking position by deformable means which deforms to allow the blocking member to move into its blocking position, under a predetermined belt tension, and thereafter inhibits movement of the blocking member out of its blocking position.
3. Apparatus according to claim 2 wherein said means for paying out the belt comprises a belt retractor including an inertia locking reel mechanism, and wherein said means for releasably securing the belt comprises a tongue and buckle in a loop of a lap and diagonal portion of the belt.
4. Safety restraint apparatus according to claim 3 wherein said retractor is mounted at, or
close to the floor level of a vehicle and a length of said belt is led from the reel to said device, which is fitted to the door pillar of the vehicle, and then down to form the diagonal portion of the harness.
5. A device according to claim 1 or apparatus according to any one of claims 2-4 wherein said blocking member comprises a sliding loop mounted on a base frame, the sliding action causing the belt to be clamped between the loop and a base frame.
6. A device or apparatus according to claim 5 wherein the loop is substantially U-shaped and is sprung into corresponding arms or recesses in the base frame, the arrangement being such that the loop is displaced from its location in the recesses or arms so as to move towards an abutment portion of the base frame.
7. A device according to claim 1, or apparatus according to any one of claims 2-6, wherein said device is substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
GB1135777A 1977-03-17 1977-03-17 Safety restraint apparatus Expired GB1601104A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1135777A GB1601104A (en) 1977-03-17 1977-03-17 Safety restraint apparatus
FR7807708A FR2383677B3 (en) 1977-03-17 1978-03-16

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1135777A GB1601104A (en) 1977-03-17 1977-03-17 Safety restraint apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB1601104A true GB1601104A (en) 1981-10-28

Family

ID=9984776

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB1135777A Expired GB1601104A (en) 1977-03-17 1977-03-17 Safety restraint apparatus

Country Status (2)

Country Link
FR (1) FR2383677B3 (en)
GB (1) GB1601104A (en)

Families Citing this family (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS5636356U (en) * 1979-08-31 1981-04-08
DE2943441A1 (en) * 1979-10-26 1981-04-30 Repa Feinstanzwerk Gmbh, 7071 Alfdorf BELT TAPE BRAKE DEVICE FOR SAFETY BELT SYSTEMS
DE3032170C2 (en) * 1980-08-26 1985-12-19 TRW Repa GmbH, 7071 Alfdorf Deflection device with clamping device for a seat belt
EP0056894B1 (en) * 1981-01-22 1986-01-22 American Safety Equipment Corporation Safety belt webbing emergency locking apparatus
US4544112A (en) * 1981-01-22 1985-10-01 American Safety Equipment Corporation Safety belt webbing emergency locking apparatus
US4451062A (en) * 1981-08-20 1984-05-29 American Safety Equipment Corporation Automatic locking safety belt retraction apparatus with resetting means
US4492348A (en) * 1982-01-29 1985-01-08 American Safety Equipment Corporation Protractive force responsive safety belt locking apparatus
DE3412383A1 (en) * 1984-02-25 1985-10-24 Hans-Hellmut Dipl.-Ing. 2061 Sülfeld Ernst DEFLECTION DEVICE FOR A SAFETY BELT WITH STAGE BELT CLAMPING
US4786079A (en) * 1986-11-26 1988-11-22 American Safety Corporation Web guide and emergency locking assembly
DE29510050U1 (en) * 1995-06-21 1995-08-24 Trw Repa Gmbh Deflection fitting for seat belts

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
FR2383677B3 (en) 1981-01-09
FR2383677A1 (en) 1978-10-13

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5527094A (en) Restraint and protection seat for infant
US4688849A (en) Child passenger securing apparatus for use in vehicle
JPS582859B2 (en) Chikuzashiyayokushisouchi
US4129321A (en) Seat belt utilization recorder
JP3454790B2 (en) Multi-point pretensioner system
US5211423A (en) Vehicle seat belt tensioning mechanism
US4223917A (en) Seatbelt system
GB1601104A (en) Safety restraint apparatus
US4718696A (en) Retaining structure for webbing secured to seat of vehicle
US3446533A (en) Wire-pulling means for absorbing the kinetic energy of a moving body
JPS5838186B2 (en) seat belt retractor
US5507449A (en) Seat belt retractor with noise suppression
US4343488A (en) Seat belt system with reduced spooling
US3459440A (en) Belt retracting device
GB2277494A (en) Vehicle child safety seat
US20230242063A1 (en) Automotive restraining belt and protective device therefor
KR200143429Y1 (en) A mounting structure of safety belt for a car
KR100747247B1 (en) Seat belt assist apparatus
JPH0143333Y2 (en)
KR0142251B1 (en) Load limiter of seat belt upper anchor
KR100461312B1 (en) Upper anchor plate structure of seat belt apparatus
KR200145068Y1 (en) Passenger Protection Belt
KR960012099B1 (en) Safety belt anchor
JPH0214527Y2 (en)
KR200143427Y1 (en) A mounting structure of safety belt for a car

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PS Patent sealed
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee