Child safety seat
US-2018370392-A1 · Dec 27, 2018 · US
US10315539B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10315539-B2 |
| Application number | US-201815975028-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | May 9, 2018 |
| Priority date | May 9, 2017 |
| Publication date | Jun 11, 2019 |
| Grant date | Jun 11, 2019 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A child restraint is adapted to set on a passenger seat in a vehicle. The child restraint includes a seat bottom and a seat back. The child restraint can be anchored to the vehicle using a LATCH belt. A vehicle seat belt can also be used to anchor the child restraint to the vehicle.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A child restraint comprising a juvenile vehicle seat including a variable-height shell formed to include a child-receiving space that can be expanded and contracted in size at the option of a caregiver, the variable-height shell including a frame having a seat bottom and an upright torso-section support arranged to extend upwardly from the seat bottom and a slidable torso section mounted for up-and-down sliding movement on the upright torso-section support to establish one of a booster mode of the variable-height shell in which the slidable torso section is retained in an elevated position on the upright torso-section support above the seat bottom to expose a lap-belt-receiver gap between the seat bottom and the slidable torso section on each side of the variable-height shell to allow a caregiver to pass a lap belt of a vehicle seat belt through both lap-belt-receiver gaps while the variable-height shell is positioned on a passenger seat in a vehicle associated with the vehicle seat belt so that the variable-height shell is anchored in place on the passenger seat of the vehicle and a convertible-car-seat mode in which the slidable torso section is retained in a lowered position on the torso-section support that is relatively closer to the seat bottom to close both of the lap-belt-receiver gaps so that the lap belt-receiver gaps are hidden. 2. The child restraint of claim 1 , wherein the seat bottom of the frame includes a first armrest, a second armrest arranged to lie in laterally spaced-apart relation to the first armrest, and a seat pad located between the first and second armrests, the slidable torso section includes a first side wing arranged extend in a forward direction away from the upright torso-section support and to lie above and in alignment with the first armrest during up-and-down movement of the torso-section support on the torso-support section relative to the upright torso-section support and the seat bottom and a second side wing arranged to lie in laterally spaced-apart relation to the first side wing and to extend in a forward direction away from the upright torso-section support and to lie above and in alignment with the second armrest during up-and-down movement of the slidable torso section relative to the upright torso-section support and the seat bottom, a first of the lap-belt-receiver gaps is exposed and formed between a lower end of the first side wing and a rear end of the first armrest when the slidable torso section is retained in the elevated position to receive a portion of a lap belt of a vehicle seat belt therein, a second of the lap-belt-receiver gaps is exposed and formed between a lower end of the second side wing and a rear end of the second armrest when the slidable torso section is retained in the elevated position to receive another portion of a lap belt of a vehicle seat belt therein and to cooperate with the first of the lap-belt-receiver gaps to establish a booster-mode lap belt path over the seat pad when the slidable torso section is retained in the elevated position, the lower end of the first side wing lies in close proximity to the rear end of the first armrest to close the first of the lap-belt-receiver gaps when the slidable torso section is retained in the lowered position to block reception of a portion of a lap belt of a vehicle seat belt between the first armrest and the first side wing, and the lower end of the second side wing lies in close proximity to the rear end of the second armrest to close the second of the lap-belt-receiver gaps when the slidable torso section is retained in the lowered position to block reception of another portion of a lap belt of a vehicle seat belt between the second armrest and the second side wing. 3. The child restraint of claim 2 , wherein the juvenile vehicle seat further includes a torso-section lock coupled to the frame and to the slidable torso section and configured to retain the slidable torso section temporarily in the elevated position on the upright torso-section support to establish a relatively larger child-receiving space in the variable-height shell and to open both of the lap-belt-receiver gaps to establish the booster-mode lap belt path over the seat pad and alternatively to retain the slidable torso section in the lowered position on the upright torso-section support to establish a relatively smaller child-receiving space in the variable-height shell and to close both of the lap-belt-receiver gaps to disable the booster-mode lap belt path over the seat pad. 4. The child restraint of claim 3 , wherein the slidable torso section and the upright torso-section support cooperate to form a seat back that is arranged to extend upwardly from the seat bottom. 5. The child restraint of claim 1 , wherein the juvenile vehicle seat further includes torso-section lock means coupled to the variable-height shell for retaining the slidable torso section in the lowered position on the upright torso-support section to close the lap-belt-receiver gaps provided between the seat bottom and the slidable torso section to discourage a caregiver from trying to anchor the variable-height shell of the juvenile vehicle seat in place on the passenger seat of the vehicle using lap belts of a vehicle seat belt associated with the vehicle. 6. The child restraint of claim 1 , wherein the slidable torso section is formed to include a shoulder-belt-receiver channel that is sized to receive a portion of a shoulder belt of a vehicle seat belt in the booster mode of the variable-height shell while lap-belt-receiver gaps between the seat bottom and the slidable torso section are exposed to receive portions of the lap belt of the vehicle seat belt in the booster mode of the variable-height shell, the slidable torso section is also formed to include a shoulder-belt entry channel having an inlet at one end to receive a portion of the shoulder belt of the vehicle seat belt and an outlet at an opposite end opening into the shoulder-belt-receiver channel to transfer a portion of the shoulder belt moving downwardly in the shoulder-belt entry channel toward the seat bottom into the shoulder-belt-receiver channel in the booster mode of the variable-height shell to establish a diagonally extending booster-mode shoulder belt path on the juvenile vehicle seat, and the upright torso-section support is formed to include a shield that surrounds a portion of the slidable torso section and that is sized to uncover and expose the shoulder-belt-receiver channel formed in the slidable torso section when the variable-height shell is in the booster mode and to cover and hide the shoulder-belt-receiver channel formed in the slidable torso section when the variable-height shell is in the convertible-car-seat mode to encourage a caregiver to use a separate latch belt linked to the variable-height shell to anchor the variable-height shell in place on the passenger seat of the vehicle instead of a shoulder belt of a vehicle seat belt. 7. The child restraint of claim 6 , wherein the juvenile vehicle seat further includes a movable headrest mounted for up-and-down movement on the upright torso-section support of the frame relative to the slidable torso section and to the shoulder-belt-receiver channel formed in the slidable torso section to allow the movable headrest to move independently of the slidable torso section. 8. The child restraint of claim 6 , wherein the slidable torso section is configured to provide means for retaining the portion of the shoulder belt received in the shoulder-belt-receiver channel during up-and-down movement of the slidable torso section on the upright torso-section support. 9. The child restraint of claim 1 , wherein the slidable torso section and the upright torso-sect
vertically slidable · CPC title
booster cushions, e.g. to lift a child to allow proper use of the conventional safety belts · CPC title
Fixation to a transversal anchorage bar, e.g. isofix · CPC title
Operations & Transport · mapped topic
for securing the child seat to the vehicle · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.