US20100088799A1 - Load Bearing Tactical Vest - Google Patents

Load Bearing Tactical Vest Download PDF

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Publication number
US20100088799A1
US20100088799A1 US12/559,076 US55907609A US2010088799A1 US 20100088799 A1 US20100088799 A1 US 20100088799A1 US 55907609 A US55907609 A US 55907609A US 2010088799 A1 US2010088799 A1 US 2010088799A1
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United States
Prior art keywords
carrier
load bearing
webbing
yoke
technology
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Abandoned
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US12/559,076
Inventor
Paul Carter
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Archangel Armor LLC
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Archangel Armor LLC
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Archangel Armor LLC filed Critical Archangel Armor LLC
Priority to US12/559,076 priority Critical patent/US20100088799A1/en
Publication of US20100088799A1 publication Critical patent/US20100088799A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41HARMOUR; ARMOURED TURRETS; ARMOURED OR ARMED VEHICLES; MEANS OF ATTACK OR DEFENCE, e.g. CAMOUFLAGE, IN GENERAL
    • F41H1/00Personal protection gear
    • F41H1/02Armoured or projectile- or missile-resistant garments; Composite protection fabrics

Definitions

  • the technology relates to antiballistic systems, and more particularly to a versatile human body torso guard, that is light weight, modular in design which allows full range of motion and articulation of the shoulders and neck, including an internal frame which supports the natural spinal alignment and disperses weight placed on it (as a load bearing system).
  • the technology benefits individual soldiers, policemen and like personnel.
  • FIGS. 1-19 illustrates embodiments of the present technology.
  • the technology relates to the carrier for the ballistic material, which is an outer shell or carrier of abrasion-, moisture- and flame-resistant pliable materials.
  • the outer shell or carrier is provided with a series of straps and fasteners for anchoring to the torso and securing the carrier to an internal frame.
  • the outside of the carrier shall have attached to an internal frame.
  • the outside of the carrier shall have attached various webbing and fasteners to attach tactical gear.
  • the outer cover provides surface area for equipment, and the internal frame allows dispersion of this weight safely off of the shoulders and back and back onto the hips.
  • the plate carrier rest on the front inside of the MOLLE panel, and on the back webbed onto the rear of the carrier.
  • the technology includes a carrier for ballistic material.
  • Pliable ballistic material can be inserted into the outer carrier and is anchored with the appropriate attachment devices.
  • This outer carrier is two pieces, a front and a back.
  • the back section has a set of MOLLE or other attachment devices that anchors the internal frame in place.
  • the attachment devices are placed so that by the wearer's choice of anchors, the user can fit a medium or large sized torso.
  • Webbing and attachment devices are placed on the outside of the “back” allowing placement of individual gear.
  • the front cover attaches to the frame by means of load bearing buckles at each shoulder and kept streamline to the torso by means of side release buckles on each flank. These are adjustable so that the carrier will fit a multitude of different abdominal girths without being cumbersome.
  • Frame includes there assemblies 1) Yoke, 2) Core, 3) Waist Belt Assembly.
  • Yoke consists of a), shoulder pads, b) main frame assembly, c) back vest drop, d) drag handle and leg straps, e) load bearing extension.
  • shoulder pads are generally S-shaped pad fixed to the yoke at the tope lateral portion. The pads extends downward and join with 1 ′′ webbing using a mega duck—latter lock (tension lock buckle). The section is a control for tension placed on the shoulder pads.
  • the bottom anchors include the above 1′′ webbing sewn onto the outer surface of the waist belt just forward of the position of the anterior iliac crest.
  • main frame assembly includes a core—which is the central platform of this core.
  • a plastic frame is made from a sheet of heavy weight plastic shaped like a big key. This provides the form and rigidity and structural support of the top of the telescoping assembly. 3 ⁇ 8′′ carbon stays are sewn onto the lateral portion of the top to provide structural and load bearing support.
  • the waist belt anchors behind the lumbar pad, and the core slides into it.
  • Taped carbon and recycled PET provides the guide for the shape of the belt, covered by padded foam and enveloped by an outer sheet of 5 ⁇ 8′′ urethane and aerospacer as a breathable coating.
  • the lateral portions of the belt are held by a flap that slides from the belt into the rear carrier to anchor it in place.
  • the lumbar pad includes an open cell foam 81 ⁇ 2′′ tall and 51 ⁇ 2 7′′ wide and 1′′ thick. This is the bottom portion of the frame—proximal to the curve of the lumbar spine. PP 1 ⁇ 2 locks keep tension on the waist belt to the core—the pads are maintained in place.
  • the back vest drop attaches the rear ballistic carrier attached to the adjustable yoke. It is a flap about the size of a business card located on the top medial portion of the yoke, and holds the top of the ballistic carrier in place.
  • drag handle and leg straps is a long piece of tube webbing, attached to the top portion of the yoke with a loop at the top medial potion, but is sewn to the lateral portions of the yoke, and runs freely over the bottom portion of the yoke. The ends of the strap hang freely from the lumbar portion of the main assembly to be used as anchoring points for a leg harness similar to a civilian rappel harness. In preferred embodiments, this entire section is composed of one strong piece of tube webbing with no gaps seams or joints since it is designed to be load bearing.
  • load bearing extension consists of 60/1 000 plastic frame sheets—re-enforced with 3 ⁇ 8′′ carbon stays which runs the entire length of the yoke through the stay tube. 1′′ webbing is attached with the loose end anchoring the load bearing straps and attachment buckles (Cobra type) over each shoulder.
  • Rear Ballistics Carrier consists of an 1) inner, and 2) outer pieces sewn together.
  • 1) Inner portion of the rear carrier has material sewn to both of its sides, front and back. The piece is more centric, or closer to the body of the wearer.
  • a plastic spade with mounted loop anchors the rear ballistic carrier to the frame.
  • the cut of the inner carrier is slight smaller than the outer portion of the rear carrier to allow the pieces to have a tubular effect and wrap around the wearer.
  • a hook and loop envelope flap placed horizontally along the middle 1 ⁇ 3 of the bottom of the panel allows access to the inside of the ballistic carrier through this face.
  • Outer portion of the rear carrier is a single piece of fabric with 9 ⁇ I′′ webbing placed laterally configured to accept MOLLE type pouches. The inside face of this piece holds the Suspension system for the plate carrier. 2′′ webbing runs vertically from top to bottom spaced approximately at 1 ⁇ 3 marks of the face. I′′ webbing is sewn every inch at a 90* anchor with bar tacks on the ends to allow a MOLLE friendly type system to hang the plates onto this suspension system at the top and bottom of the plate pouch.
  • Front Ballistic Carrier consists of an inner and outer piece sewn together.
  • the outer portion of the front ballistic carrier is a large face holding 7 ⁇ III webbing straps sewn horizontally with bar tacks on the face side to accept MOLLE friend type equipment.
  • the lateral wings hold diagonal elastic straps to engage and stabilize the side SAPls.
  • 2′′ loop is sewn horizontally across the top of the face to access name tapes or unit designators.
  • I′′ webbing is attached to the top lateral portion of the font and extends upwards vertically off the panel to act as the load bearing straps, connecting to the frame be means of the COBRA type quick release buckles.
  • the inner face of the pieces contains an identical suspension system to the outer face of the rear ballistic carrier described above.
  • the inside portion of the front ballistic carrier contains the hoop and loop envelop flap at the bottom horizontal access for access to the inside of the carrier.
  • Groin Drop is a sheet that attaches by anchoring the top of the drop to the bottom of the front ballistic carrier using a hook and loop tunnel and flap. Collar is the same size and shape as the currently used IOTVs. It straddles the top seam, anchoring to the top loop normally used for identifiers to pull the device into a curve and keep the fabric from contact with the skin.
  • Plate Pouches are a simple form fit bag to allow the ceramics SAPI plates to slide into.
  • One face is covered in 1′′ horizontal aligned webbing for engagement with MOLLE type devices.
  • the other face contains the 1′′ MOLLE and snap array to attach to the suspension system designed into the front and rear ballistic carriers, and onto the frame for plate carrier configurations.
  • I′′ webbing extends from the top lateral positions for use as load bearing straps in plate carrier configurations, and 1′′ webbing extends from each lower lateral position to act as stabilizing straps in the same configuration.

Abstract

A load-bearing vest comprising a yoke, a core, attached to the yoke and comprising a telescoping assembly, and a waist belt, attached to the core.

Description

    CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • The present application claims the priority benefit of pending U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/096,658 titled “Load Bearing Tactical Vest,” filed Sep. 12, 2008 (the “Provisional Application”). The complete disclosure of the Provisional Application is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
  • BACKGROUND
  • The technology relates to antiballistic systems, and more particularly to a versatile human body torso guard, that is light weight, modular in design which allows full range of motion and articulation of the shoulders and neck, including an internal frame which supports the natural spinal alignment and disperses weight placed on it (as a load bearing system). The technology benefits individual soldiers, policemen and like personnel.
  • The modern battlefield is more dangerous than ever. Improved munitions have dramatically increased the probability of multiple injuries to combatants. These munitions increase the number and severity of the injuries. Typical tactical vest systems are built to carry all of the soldiers equipment weight directly on the shoulders and neck of the soldiers. One effect of this is decreased range of motion, mobility, of the entire upper body as well as early fatigue, exhaustion, lack of agility, mobility and maneuverability. In summary, the heavy load the American warfighter is required to carry, while equipping him, may actually decrease his combat effectiveness. Military medical treatment shows an increasing number of injuries to soldiers originating from long term spinal load bearing, many of which have long term debilitating injuries which have caused many soldiers to be placed on limited duty, permanent profiles and even medically discharged from the army.
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • Twenty-one (21) figures of embodiments of the technology accompany this description.
  • FIGS. 1-19 illustrates embodiments of the present technology.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION
  • Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the technology. Each example is provided by way of explanation of the technology only, not as a limitation of the technology. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the present technology without departing from the scope or spirit of the technology. For instance, features described as part of one embodiment can be used on another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment. Thus, it is intended that the present technology cover such modifications and variations that come within the scope of the technology. It is to be understood that the disclosed features and embodiments are merely exemplary of the technology that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale, and some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein, and any particular combination of these details, are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the technology.
  • The technology relates to the carrier for the ballistic material, which is an outer shell or carrier of abrasion-, moisture- and flame-resistant pliable materials. The outer shell or carrier is provided with a series of straps and fasteners for anchoring to the torso and securing the carrier to an internal frame. The outside of the carrier shall have attached to an internal frame. The outside of the carrier shall have attached various webbing and fasteners to attach tactical gear.
  • The outer cover provides surface area for equipment, and the internal frame allows dispersion of this weight safely off of the shoulders and back and back onto the hips. The plate carrier rest on the front inside of the MOLLE panel, and on the back webbed onto the rear of the carrier. These components are modular in design to allow desirable placement for the user.
  • The technology includes a carrier for ballistic material. Pliable ballistic material can be inserted into the outer carrier and is anchored with the appropriate attachment devices. This outer carrier is two pieces, a front and a back. The back section has a set of MOLLE or other attachment devices that anchors the internal frame in place. The attachment devices are placed so that by the wearer's choice of anchors, the user can fit a medium or large sized torso.
  • Webbing and attachment devices are placed on the outside of the “back” allowing placement of individual gear. The front cover attaches to the frame by means of load bearing buckles at each shoulder and kept streamline to the torso by means of side release buckles on each flank. These are adjustable so that the carrier will fit a multitude of different abdominal girths without being cumbersome.
  • Frame includes there assemblies 1) Yoke, 2) Core, 3) Waist Belt Assembly.
  • 1) Yoke consists of a), shoulder pads, b) main frame assembly, c) back vest drop, d) drag handle and leg straps, e) load bearing extension. 1a) shoulder pads are generally S-shaped pad fixed to the yoke at the tope lateral portion. The pads extends downward and join with 1″ webbing using a mega duck—latter lock (tension lock buckle). The section is a control for tension placed on the shoulder pads. The bottom anchors include the above 1″ webbing sewn onto the outer surface of the waist belt just forward of the position of the anterior iliac crest. 1b) main frame assembly includes a core—which is the central platform of this core. A plastic frame is made from a sheet of heavy weight plastic shaped like a big key. This provides the form and rigidity and structural support of the top of the telescoping assembly. ⅜″ carbon stays are sewn onto the lateral portion of the top to provide structural and load bearing support.
  • They are sewn onto the lateral portion of the fiberglass stay tube, which provides a guide for the yoke and provides stability. The waist belt anchors behind the lumbar pad, and the core slides into it. Taped carbon and recycled PET provides the guide for the shape of the belt, covered by padded foam and enveloped by an outer sheet of ⅝″ urethane and aerospacer as a breathable coating. The lateral portions of the belt are held by a flap that slides from the belt into the rear carrier to anchor it in place. The lumbar pad includes an open cell foam 8½″ tall and 5½ 7″ wide and 1″ thick. This is the bottom portion of the frame—proximal to the curve of the lumbar spine. PP ½ locks keep tension on the waist belt to the core—the pads are maintained in place.
  • 1c) The back vest drop attaches the rear ballistic carrier attached to the adjustable yoke. It is a flap about the size of a business card located on the top medial portion of the yoke, and holds the top of the ballistic carrier in place. 1d) drag handle and leg straps is a long piece of tube webbing, attached to the top portion of the yoke with a loop at the top medial potion, but is sewn to the lateral portions of the yoke, and runs freely over the bottom portion of the yoke. The ends of the strap hang freely from the lumbar portion of the main assembly to be used as anchoring points for a leg harness similar to a civilian rappel harness. In preferred embodiments, this entire section is composed of one strong piece of tube webbing with no gaps seams or joints since it is designed to be load bearing.
  • 1e) load bearing extension consists of 60/1 000 plastic frame sheets—re-enforced with ⅜″ carbon stays which runs the entire length of the yoke through the stay tube. 1″ webbing is attached with the loose end anchoring the load bearing straps and attachment buckles (Cobra type) over each shoulder.
  • Rear Ballistics Carrier consists of an 1) inner, and 2) outer pieces sewn together. 1) Inner portion of the rear carrier has material sewn to both of its sides, front and back. The piece is more centric, or closer to the body of the wearer. A plastic spade with mounted loop anchors the rear ballistic carrier to the frame. There are 2 hook and loop pockets at the lateral wings to attach to the lateral wings of the rear carrier to the waist belt. This provides tension and keeps the carrier tight and streamlined. The cut of the inner carrier is slight smaller than the outer portion of the rear carrier to allow the pieces to have a tubular effect and wrap around the wearer. A hook and loop envelope flap placed horizontally along the middle ⅓ of the bottom of the panel allows access to the inside of the ballistic carrier through this face.
  • 2) Outer portion of the rear carrier is a single piece of fabric with 9×I″ webbing placed laterally configured to accept MOLLE type pouches. The inside face of this piece holds the Suspension system for the plate carrier. 2″ webbing runs vertically from top to bottom spaced approximately at ⅓ marks of the face. I″ webbing is sewn every inch at a 90* anchor with bar tacks on the ends to allow a MOLLE friendly type system to hang the plates onto this suspension system at the top and bottom of the plate pouch.
  • Front Ballistic Carrier consists of an inner and outer piece sewn together. 1) the outer portion of the front ballistic carrier is a large face holding 7×III webbing straps sewn horizontally with bar tacks on the face side to accept MOLLE friend type equipment. The lateral wings hold diagonal elastic straps to engage and stabilize the side SAPls. 2″ loop is sewn horizontally across the top of the face to access name tapes or unit designators. I″ webbing is attached to the top lateral portion of the font and extends upwards vertically off the panel to act as the load bearing straps, connecting to the frame be means of the COBRA type quick release buckles. The inner face of the pieces contains an identical suspension system to the outer face of the rear ballistic carrier described above. 2) The inside portion of the front ballistic carrier contains the hoop and loop envelop flap at the bottom horizontal access for access to the inside of the carrier.
  • Groin Drop is a sheet that attaches by anchoring the top of the drop to the bottom of the front ballistic carrier using a hook and loop tunnel and flap. Collar is the same size and shape as the currently used IOTVs. It straddles the top seam, anchoring to the top loop normally used for identifiers to pull the device into a curve and keep the fabric from contact with the skin.
  • Plate Pouches are a simple form fit bag to allow the ceramics SAPI plates to slide into. One face is covered in 1″ horizontal aligned webbing for engagement with MOLLE type devices. The other face contains the 1″ MOLLE and snap array to attach to the suspension system designed into the front and rear ballistic carriers, and onto the frame for plate carrier configurations. I″ webbing extends from the top lateral positions for use as load bearing straps in plate carrier configurations, and 1″ webbing extends from each lower lateral position to act as stabilizing straps in the same configuration.

Claims (1)

1. A load-bearing vest comprising:
a yoke,
a core, attached to the yoke and comprising a telescoping assembly,
and a waist belt, attached to the core.
US12/559,076 2008-09-12 2009-09-14 Load Bearing Tactical Vest Abandoned US20100088799A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/559,076 US20100088799A1 (en) 2008-09-12 2009-09-14 Load Bearing Tactical Vest

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US9665808P 2008-09-12 2008-09-12
US9645808P 2008-09-12 2008-09-12
US12/559,076 US20100088799A1 (en) 2008-09-12 2009-09-14 Load Bearing Tactical Vest

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Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080010730A1 (en) * 2006-07-02 2008-01-17 Kata International Ltd. Personal Load-Bearing System
US20110035855A1 (en) * 2009-03-16 2011-02-17 Todd Gewant Body Armor With Support
US20120132065A1 (en) * 2010-11-30 2012-05-31 Jo Won Seuk Body armor ballistic plate carrier
WO2012168366A1 (en) * 2011-06-08 2012-12-13 Sagem Defense Securite Garment for ballistic protection and carrying equipment
US20130047320A1 (en) * 2011-08-29 2013-02-28 Paul Ryan Gleason Body armor support harness
US20150082524A1 (en) * 2013-09-26 2015-03-26 David Ben David Personal armor and backpack system
US8998053B2 (en) 2010-06-02 2015-04-07 5.11, Inc. Load bearing devices for human load bearing usages
US9109859B1 (en) * 2014-11-14 2015-08-18 John A Nittolo Spine plate vest
US9504307B1 (en) 2014-09-29 2016-11-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Articulating resistive conformable spine
US20170205204A1 (en) * 2016-01-18 2017-07-20 Spencer Tien Plate carrier
EP3766548A1 (en) * 2019-07-19 2021-01-20 Crib Gogh Limited A vest and a belt with multiple anchor points
US11123214B2 (en) 2017-09-11 2021-09-21 Peter Wilson Back-brace assistive device
KR102380553B1 (en) * 2022-01-06 2022-04-04 주식회사 엔에이치 Bulletproof clothing with tactical belt easy to attach dump pouch

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2747190A (en) * 1953-03-09 1956-05-29 Louis W Foster Armored garment
US20070107109A1 (en) * 2003-07-08 2007-05-17 Eagle Industries Unlimited, Inc. Cut away vest
US20080010730A1 (en) * 2006-07-02 2008-01-17 Kata International Ltd. Personal Load-Bearing System

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2747190A (en) * 1953-03-09 1956-05-29 Louis W Foster Armored garment
US20070107109A1 (en) * 2003-07-08 2007-05-17 Eagle Industries Unlimited, Inc. Cut away vest
US20080010730A1 (en) * 2006-07-02 2008-01-17 Kata International Ltd. Personal Load-Bearing System

Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080010730A1 (en) * 2006-07-02 2008-01-17 Kata International Ltd. Personal Load-Bearing System
US20110035855A1 (en) * 2009-03-16 2011-02-17 Todd Gewant Body Armor With Support
US8998053B2 (en) 2010-06-02 2015-04-07 5.11, Inc. Load bearing devices for human load bearing usages
US20120132065A1 (en) * 2010-11-30 2012-05-31 Jo Won Seuk Body armor ballistic plate carrier
US9222757B2 (en) * 2010-11-30 2015-12-29 Jo Won Seuk Body armor ballistic plate carrier
WO2012168366A1 (en) * 2011-06-08 2012-12-13 Sagem Defense Securite Garment for ballistic protection and carrying equipment
AU2012266385B2 (en) * 2011-06-08 2014-09-18 Sagem Defense Securite Garment for ballistic protection and carrying equipment
US8844062B2 (en) 2011-06-08 2014-09-30 Sagem Defense Securite Garment for ballistic protection and carrying equipment
FR2976351A1 (en) * 2011-06-08 2012-12-14 Sagem Defense Securite BALISTICAL PROTECTIVE CLOTHING AND MATERIAL CARRYING APPAREL
US20130047320A1 (en) * 2011-08-29 2013-02-28 Paul Ryan Gleason Body armor support harness
US9271559B2 (en) * 2011-08-29 2016-03-01 Mystery Ranch Limited Body armor support harness
US20150082524A1 (en) * 2013-09-26 2015-03-26 David Ben David Personal armor and backpack system
US9504307B1 (en) 2014-09-29 2016-11-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Articulating resistive conformable spine
US9109859B1 (en) * 2014-11-14 2015-08-18 John A Nittolo Spine plate vest
WO2016076930A1 (en) * 2014-11-14 2016-05-19 Jcj Marketing, Inc. Spine plate vest
US20170205204A1 (en) * 2016-01-18 2017-07-20 Spencer Tien Plate carrier
US10222180B2 (en) * 2016-01-18 2019-03-05 Spencer Tien Plate carrier
US11123214B2 (en) 2017-09-11 2021-09-21 Peter Wilson Back-brace assistive device
EP3766548A1 (en) * 2019-07-19 2021-01-20 Crib Gogh Limited A vest and a belt with multiple anchor points
KR102380553B1 (en) * 2022-01-06 2022-04-04 주식회사 엔에이치 Bulletproof clothing with tactical belt easy to attach dump pouch

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