GB2228663A - Safety belt clamping mechanism - Google Patents

Safety belt clamping mechanism Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2228663A
GB2228663A GB8922789A GB8922789A GB2228663A GB 2228663 A GB2228663 A GB 2228663A GB 8922789 A GB8922789 A GB 8922789A GB 8922789 A GB8922789 A GB 8922789A GB 2228663 A GB2228663 A GB 2228663A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
web
reel
locking
members
mechanism according
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB8922789A
Other versions
GB2228663B (en
GB8922789D0 (en
Inventor
Harry Hanna
William Edward Heaney
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.)
EUROP COMPONENTS CORP
European Components Corp
Original Assignee
EUROP COMPONENTS CORP
European Components Corp
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 EUROP COMPONENTS CORP, European Components Corp filed Critical EUROP COMPONENTS CORP
Publication of GB8922789D0 publication Critical patent/GB8922789D0/en
Priority to DE69013938T priority Critical patent/DE69013938T2/en
Priority to ES90301467T priority patent/ES2066965T3/en
Priority to EP90301467A priority patent/EP0383520B1/en
Priority to US07/480,159 priority patent/US5039025A/en
Priority to JP2035076A priority patent/JP2525265B2/en
Publication of GB2228663A publication Critical patent/GB2228663A/en
Priority to US07/710,537 priority patent/US5115990A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2228663B publication Critical patent/GB2228663B/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

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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
    • B60R22/34Belt retractors, e.g. reels
    • B60R22/36Belt retractors, e.g. reels self-locking in an emergency
    • B60R22/42Belt retractors, e.g. reels self-locking in an emergency having means for acting directly upon the belt, e.g. by clamping or friction

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

Abstract

A retainer mechanism for a safety belt includes a retraction reel (2) on which the safety belt web (B) is wound and first and second locking members (20, 22) mounted adjacent the reel and movable towards or away from one another to clamp the web itself or allow the web to move. Relative displacement of the locking members may be caused e.g. by an inertia mechanism on the reel and/or by an acceleration/deceleration sensitive mechanism and/or by a projection adjacent the end of the web. The locking members and reel are mounted on a common frame (4) and the locking members are spring biased by spring (24) (32) away from their clamping position until the actuation mechanism comes into effect, which is sufficient to act against spring (24), (32). <IMAGE>

Description

SAFETY BELT MECHANISM This invention relates to safety belts such as are used as passenger restraints in vehicles. It is particularly concerned with a retaining mechanism of such safety belts.
The use of inertia reel safety belts has become widespread in road vehicles. In these, a spindle carrying the belt web is provided with a locking retractor mechanism which comprises a return spring to wind the web onto the spindle and a locking means that prevents web being drawn off if the wearer of the belt is thrown forwards, so as to restrain him in a crash.
According to the present invention, there is provided a retainer mechanism for a safety belt comprising a frame, and mounted on the frame, a retraction reel for the belt web and means for locking the web to prevent it from being paid out from the reel, the locking means for the web comprising a pair of members having opposed faces between which the web extends, the members being resiliently biassed to a position in which the opposed faces are spaced apart to provide a free travel path for the web, and means to cause relative displacement of the members against said bias, to move said faces relatively towards one another, to clamp the web between them, and to retain the web clamped while it is held under tension.
Such a structure can act very quickly to clamp the belt and restrain the driver or passenger, that is rather more quickly than the conventional reel or frame locking mechanism. Furthermore, it can be made less expensively as the reel can be constructed of plastics material.
Preferably the means for locking the web are placed adjacent the reel. To protect a safety belt against damage when the web has been unreeled from the spindle, it is required to ensure that the belt tension cannot put too great a strain on the spindle through the end of the web that remains attached to it.
To achieve this, the means to cause said relative displacement of the members against the bias comprise a transversely projecting element on the web, engageable with one of said locking members to move it relative to the other.
Alternatively or additionally the means to cause relative displacement of the members against said bias include, means sensitive to the speed of rotation of said reel whereby when the speed exceeds a certain value, said members are moved relatively towards one another.
These means sensitive to the speed of rotation of the reel may comprise an inertia mass and a ratchet wheel held together by clips which permit them to rotate relatively to each other about the axis of the reel, a torsion spring attached to the ratchet wheel and the inertia mass to constrain relative motion therebetween, a sensing disc attached to the reel, a sensing pawl pivotally mounted on the sensing disc, a control disc freely rotatable about the axis of the reel, ratchet teeth opposed to the pawl and a spring biasing the pawl out of engagement with the ratchet teeth, whereby when the inertia mass is moved, due to sufficient speed of rotation of the reel, the pawl is pivoted, against the action of said spring, so that it engages the ratchet teeth and causes the control wheel to rotate, rotation of the control wheel causing movement of one of said locking members relative to the other.
Again, alternatively or additionally the means to cause relative displacement of said members against said bias comprise a ratchet wheel carried by said reel, a pivotally mounted lever, a detent carried by said lever and engageable with the teeth of said ratchet wheel, a cage, a ball moveable in said cage upon acceleration, deceleration or cornering of the vehicle in which the mechanism is mounted, to move said detent into engagement with said ratchet teeth to prevent rotation thereof, whereafter any unreeling of the web will cause the inertia mass to continue to rotate and engage the pawl in the control disc thereby to move one of the locking members relative to the other.
By way of example, an embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Fig. 1 is an exploded view of the main components of one embodiment of safety belt retainer mechanism according to the invention, Figs. 2 and 3 illustrate the locking mechanism for the belt web in its unlocked and locked states respectively, Figs. 4 and 5 are detail views illustrating the inertia locking mechanism in its unlocked and locked states, Figs. 6 and 7 are a further pair of illustrations ofthe mechanisms in the locked and unlocked states and show the interaction of the inertia locking mechanism with the web locking mechanism, Fig. 8 illustrates the operation of the vehicle sensing means on the locking mechanisms, and Fig. 9 illustrates the operation of the locking means to grip the fully paid-out web.
The retraction mechanism comprises a spindle 2 on which the belt web B is wound. The spindle 2 is located between side faces of a frame 4 on which it is held between a spring cassette 6 and a mechanism cassette 8. These cassettes are secured to opposite sides of the frame and each has a hub 10,12 respectively. The hubs, which are engaged by opposite ends of the spindle 2, rotate with the spindle.
Located between the side walls 18 of the frame 4 is a locking mechanism for the run of the web from the spool. This has first and second locking members 20,22 between which the web passes and a spring 24 holding the members in place. The first member 20 has an arcuate top face 26 that seats into a corresponding arcuate cradle 28 which is integral with the frame and extends between its side walls. The member 20 is held against the cradle by the spring 24 which has two U-shaped central portions 24a joined by a bridge 24b engaging the curved outer face of the cradle 28. Projecting from opposite sides of the first locking member 20, are integral pins 30 mounted coaxially with the arcuate bearing surface of the cradle 28.Extensions of the two spring U-shaped central portion 24a of the spring lie on each side of the locking members, in the form of angled limbs 32 in the bends 34 of which the pins 30 of the first member are seated.
The bottom face 36 of the first locking member has a concave shape and opposed to it is a complementary top face 38 of the main body of the second member 22,.which rests on bottom wall 40 of the frame. To each side of the main body the second member 22 has flanks with inclined faces 42 that are engaged by integral spigots 44 that extend downwards from the first member 20. Pins 46 project from the sides of the flanks of the lower member 22 to engage the lower extremities of the spring limbs 32. The second member 22 is thus held between the spigots 44 of the first member and the spring limbs 32 so that, in an equilibrium position of the two members, the gap between them is greater than the web thickness. In this state the web B can move freely through the locking mechanism, and in particular is kept clear of gripping teeth 48 on the bottom face 36 of the first locking member because of the concave form of that face, and in particular its front nose 50.
If the second locking member 22 is moved forwards (direction A of pay-out of the belt) against the force of the spring limbs 32, the web becomes clamped between the members. Some forward pivoting of the first locking member in its cradle will also occur, bringing the teeth 46 into full engagement with the belt. It is a characteristic of the manner in which the first and second locking members 20,22 are mounted that their complementary arcuate surfaces align themselves automatically with each other when they grip the belt so that an effective clamping action is ensured. This clamping action can be maintained by the belt tension, even if the second member 22 is otherwise free to return to the original equilibrium position. Once the tension in the belt is released, of course, the spring 24 urges the locking members 20,22 towards their original positions to release the web.To achieve this the spring 24 urges the pins 46 to the right (Figs. 2, 3 and 6 to 9), and the inclined faces 42 act on spigots 44, to tilt first locking member 20 anticlockwise.
Within the mechanism cassette 8, to effect the locking of the belt, there are mechanisms responsive to the rate of withdrawal of the web from the spool and to the acceleration or deceleration of the vehicle in which the safety belt is being used, when any of these parameters exceeds predetermined limits.
The mechanism reacting to an increased rate of withdrawal of the web comprises a sensing disc 52 (Fig. 4) splined to the spindle 2. On a pivot 54 on the disc 52 is a sensing pawl 56 biased into an inoperative end position (Fig. 4) by a compression spring 58, the ends of which are mounted on respective projecting 60,62 on the disc and on an inner face of the pawl. Concentric with the sensing disc and freely rotatable with respect thereto about the hub axis is a control disc 64 having ratchet teeth 66 opposed to the pawl.A further concentrically mounted sub-assembly comprising an inertia mass 73,77 and a ratchet wheel 72 is held together by clips 74 which permit them to rotate relative to each other about the hub axis, this rotation being constrained, however, by a torsion spring 76 attached by its opposite ends to respective hooks 78,80 on the ratchet wheel and the inertia. mass respectively. The inertia mass sub-assembly is held on the sensing disc 52 by clips 82 that allow relative rotation of the sensing disc.
Such rotation of the inertia mass sub-assembly relative the sensing disc is normally blocked by a projection 84 of the inertia mass which engages an oblique face 86 of the sensing pawl 56.
If the web is drawn out (arrow A) from the spindle 2 at a relatively low speed without jerking (i.e. under a low G force), the inertia mass sub-assembly will rotate with the sensing disc 52, being carried round by the engagement of the inertia mass projection 84 with the pawl 56. When the web is subjected to higher G forces, because of the resistance of the inertia mass to acceleration, the reaction force of the projection 84 on the pawl can increase to produce a moment on the pawl which causes the compression spring 58 to buckle elastically and the pawl is snapped over to engage its tip 88 in the toothed control disc 64.
The spindle 2, sensing disc 52 and control disc 64 are then locked to rotate together. An outer stirrup 90 (Fig. 6) integral with the control disc 64 surrounds a pin 92 projecting laterally from an extension arm 94 of the second locking member 22. As the control disc 64 rotates with the sensing disc 52, it therefore displaces the pin 92 and with it the second locking member 22, forwards. As already described, the two locking members are thereby brought together to clamp the web. To allow for dimensional; variations in manufacturing, the stirrup is wide enough to provide some lost motion between the control disc 64 and the second locking member 22.When the tension is reduced sufficiently to free the web, the locking members 20,22 are moved apart causing the control disc to return to its original position and hence, due to the action of the compression spring, to release the pawl 56.
In a further aspect of the invention a mechanism is provided which will cause the web to be locked as a result of excessively sharp acceleration or deceleration or of excessive tilting of the vehicle, in particular about a fore and aft axis. The mechanism comprises a ball 102 movably held in a cage 104 fixed within the mechanism cassette. The ball rests in a conical seating (not shown) in the bottom wall 104a of the cage (the complete retainer mechanism being oriented with the wall 104a substantially horizontal and lowermost). A lever plate 106 mounted on a horizontal pivot 108 has a hollow conical face resting on the top of the ball as so retains the ball within the cage.
If a sufficient inertia force acts in any horizontal direction the ball will be displaced from its rest position and, because of the conical form of the faces engaging it above and below, will swing the lever plate 106 upwards.
This pivoting of the lever plate can occur therefore by the ball rolling due to a sudden acceleration or deceleration of the vehicle or due to the vehicle tilting excessively to one side or the other. A detent 110 projects from the lever plate 106 to be engageable with teeth 112 in the ratchet wheel 72 if such movement of the ball occurs.
The effect is then to arrest the ratchet wheel coupled to the inertia mass so that if the spindle tries to rotate to pay out web, i.e. because the wearer of the belt has swayed forwards or sideways on account of the movement of the vehicle, the inertia mass continues to rotate against the torsion spring 76, engaging the pawl 56 in the control disc 64 and operating the locking mechanism through the pin 92 of the second locking member 22 as previously described.
The locking members 20,22 may also be employed as a lock for the end of the web to prevent undue strain on the spindle 2 when the web has been paid out. For this purpose, near that end of the web secured to the spindle, a projection is provided on the face of the web directed towards the first locking member 20. This projection is conveniently in the form of a small loop B' sewn into the web near its inner end and normally housed in recess 118 in the spindle. As the loop is reeled off the spindle, it abuts against the rear edge 120 of the upper member 20 as shown in Fig. 9, so forcing the member to rotate forwards in its cradle 28. The second locking member is entrained by the spigots 44 of the upper member and so the members come together to clamp the web. As before, when the tension is removed from the web the web is released.

Claims (10)

1. A retainer mechanism for a safety belt comprising a frame, and mounted on the frame, a retraction reel for the belt web and means for locking the web to prevent it from being paid out from the reel, the locking means for the web comprising a pair of members having opposed faces between which the web extends, the members being resiliently biassed to a position in which the opposed faces are spaced apart to provide a free travel path for the web, and means to cause relative displacement of the members against said bias, to move said faces relatively towards one another, to clamp the web between them, and to retain the web clamped while it is held under tension.
2. A mechanism according to claim 1, wherein said means for locking the web are placed adjacent the reel.
3. A mechanism according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the means to cause relative displacement of the members against said bias include, means sensitive to the speed of rotation of said reel whereby when the speed exceeds a certain value, said members are moved relatively towards one another.
4. A mechanism according to claim 3, wherein said means sensitive to the speed of rotation of the reel comprise an inertia mass and a ratchet wheel held together by clips which permit them to rotate relatively to each other about the axis of the reel, a torsion spring attached to the ratchet wheel and the inertia mass to constrain relative motion therebetween, a sensing disc attached to the reel, a sensing pawl pivotally mounted on the sensing disc, a control disc freely rotatable about the axis of the reel, ratchet teeth opposed to the pawl and a spring biasing the pawl out of engagement with the ratchet teeth, whereby when the inertia mass is moved, due to sufficient speed of rotation of the reel, the pawl is pivoted, against the action of said spring, so that it engages the ratchet teeth and causes the control wheel to rotate, rotation of the control wheel causing movement of one of said locking members relative to the other.
5. A mechanism according to any preceding claim, wherein said means to cause relative displacement of said members against said bias comprise a ratchet wheel carried by said reel, a pivotally mounted lever, a detent carried by said lever and engageable with the teeth of said ratchet wheel, a cage, a ball moveable in said cage upon acceleration, deceleration or cornering of the vehicle in which the mechanism is mounted, to move said detent into engagement with said ratchet teeth to prevent rotation thereof, whereafter any unreeling of the web will cause the inertia mass to continue to rotate and engage the pawl in the control disc thereby to move one of the locking members relative to the other.
6. A mechanism according to any preceding claim, wherein said means to cause said relative displacement of the members against the bias comprise a transversely projecting element on the web, engageable with one of said locking members to move it relative to the other.
7. A mechanism according to any preceding claim, wherein said locking members have complementary curved concave and convex opposing faces.
8. A mechanism according to claim 7, wherein the first locking member is pivotally mounted on the frame and includes the concave face, wherein the second locking member is axially slidable on the frame and wherein the means to cause relative displacement of said locking members comprise means to move said second locking member axially, thereby to cause said first locking member to pivot so that its concave face is brought closer to the convex face of the first locking member.
9. A mechanism according to claim 8, wherein the second locking member is resiliently biassed by a spring axially urging said second member and wherein a spigot on the first member engages an inclined face on the second member to maintain said concave and convex faces normally spaced by a distance greater than the thickness of the web.
10. A retainer mechanism for a safety belt substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to, and. as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
GB8922789A 1989-02-16 1989-10-10 Safety belt mechanism Expired - Fee Related GB2228663B (en)

Priority Applications (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE69013938T DE69013938T2 (en) 1989-02-16 1990-02-12 Seat belt device.
ES90301467T ES2066965T3 (en) 1989-02-16 1990-02-12 MECHANISM FOR SEAT BELTS.
EP90301467A EP0383520B1 (en) 1989-02-16 1990-02-12 Safety belt mechanism
US07/480,159 US5039025A (en) 1989-02-16 1990-02-14 Safety belt mechanism
JP2035076A JP2525265B2 (en) 1989-02-16 1990-02-15 Safety belt holding mechanism
US07/710,537 US5115990A (en) 1989-02-16 1991-06-05 Safety belt mechanism

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB898903570A GB8903570D0 (en) 1989-02-16 1989-02-16 Safety belt mechanism

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB8922789D0 GB8922789D0 (en) 1989-11-22
GB2228663A true GB2228663A (en) 1990-09-05
GB2228663B GB2228663B (en) 1993-05-26

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Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB898903570A Pending GB8903570D0 (en) 1989-02-16 1989-02-16 Safety belt mechanism
GB8922789A Expired - Fee Related GB2228663B (en) 1989-02-16 1989-10-10 Safety belt mechanism

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB898903570A Pending GB8903570D0 (en) 1989-02-16 1989-02-16 Safety belt mechanism

Country Status (1)

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GB (2) GB8903570D0 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2236662A (en) * 1989-09-27 1991-04-17 Takata Corp Seat belt retractor with locking means
GB2340459A (en) * 1998-08-14 2000-02-23 Daimler Chrysler Ag Roof arrangement
GB2390063A (en) * 2001-03-28 2003-12-31 Martin Baker Aircraft Co Ltd Payout arrangement having an inertia reel and locking means to engage a tether line remote from the inertia reel

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1497750A (en) * 1974-07-09 1978-01-12 Adomeit H Device for clamping a safety belt to prevent it being unwound from a reel
US4243185A (en) * 1978-03-28 1981-01-06 Toyota Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Locking device for seatbelt systems
GB2064943A (en) * 1979-12-14 1981-06-24 Repa Feinstanzwerk Gmbh Belt feed control device
US4371126A (en) * 1979-10-04 1983-02-01 Toyota Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Webbing lock device
US4422593A (en) * 1981-05-29 1983-12-27 Juichiro Takada Belt clamps for vehicle occupant restraint belt systems
US4470617A (en) * 1981-07-27 1984-09-11 Toyota Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Webbing lock device

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1497750A (en) * 1974-07-09 1978-01-12 Adomeit H Device for clamping a safety belt to prevent it being unwound from a reel
US4243185A (en) * 1978-03-28 1981-01-06 Toyota Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Locking device for seatbelt systems
US4371126A (en) * 1979-10-04 1983-02-01 Toyota Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Webbing lock device
GB2064943A (en) * 1979-12-14 1981-06-24 Repa Feinstanzwerk Gmbh Belt feed control device
US4422593A (en) * 1981-05-29 1983-12-27 Juichiro Takada Belt clamps for vehicle occupant restraint belt systems
US4470617A (en) * 1981-07-27 1984-09-11 Toyota Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Webbing lock device

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2236662A (en) * 1989-09-27 1991-04-17 Takata Corp Seat belt retractor with locking means
GB2340459A (en) * 1998-08-14 2000-02-23 Daimler Chrysler Ag Roof arrangement
GB2340459B (en) * 1998-08-14 2000-08-09 Daimler Chrysler Ag Roof arrangement
US6382714B1 (en) 1998-08-14 2002-05-07 Daimlerchrysler Ag Roof arrangement
GB2390063A (en) * 2001-03-28 2003-12-31 Martin Baker Aircraft Co Ltd Payout arrangement having an inertia reel and locking means to engage a tether line remote from the inertia reel
GB2373762B (en) * 2001-03-28 2004-02-11 Martin Baker Aircraft Co Ltd A harness arrangement for a seat and an inertia reel arrangement
GB2390063B (en) * 2001-03-28 2004-03-10 Martin Baker Aircraft Co Ltd Improvements in or relating to harnesses and inertia reels
US6742848B2 (en) 2001-03-28 2004-06-01 Martin-Baker Aircraft Company, Limited Harnesses and inertia reels
US6860566B2 (en) 2001-03-28 2005-03-01 Martin-Baker Aircraft Company, Limited Harnesses and inertia reels

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB8903570D0 (en) 1989-04-05
GB2228663B (en) 1993-05-26
GB8922789D0 (en) 1989-11-22

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20041010