Aircraft seat with occupant weight sensing mechanism to adjust tilt-recline force

US9738388B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9738388-B2
Application numberUS-201514695179-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateApr 24, 2015
Priority dateApr 24, 2014
Publication dateAug 22, 2017
Grant dateAug 22, 2017

How to read this patent

A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.

  1. Title

    What the patent document calls the invention.

  2. Abstract

    A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.

  3. Assignees and inventors

    Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.

  4. Key dates

    Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.

  5. First independent claim

    The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.

  6. CPC / IPC classifications

    Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.

  7. Citations and related patents

    Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.

Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A weight sensing mechanism for an aircraft seat pan configured to adjust seat pan recline force and including a gas spring arranged between a fixed seat frame member and a movable seat pan member, the gas spring arranged to compress as the seat pan reclines in response to a load on the seat pan, and unloads upon removal of the load on the seat pan to assist in returning the seat pan to upright, and a helper spring positioned forward of and coaxially with the gas spring arranged to deflect under any load on the seat pan. A recline-capable seat pan assembly including a passenger body weight sensing mechanism.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. An aircraft passenger seat, comprising: a base member configured for coupling to floor of an aircraft cabin; a frame member pivotally attached to the base member, wherein the frame member is configured to pivotably adjust a tilt-recline positioning angle between a seat pan and the base member; and a tilt-recline force adjusting apparatus configured for tilt-recline positioning of the frame member including a first spring configured to urge the seat pan from a first operative position corresponding to a recline seating position of the aircraft passenger seat into a second operative position corresponding to an upright seating position of the aircraft passenger seat, the first spring being arranged to compress as the seat pan is reclined in response to application of a passenger body weight load, a helper spring arranged to assist or counteract the first spring, an adjustment mechanism coupled to the helper spring to increase or decrease a force exerted by the helper spring to assist or counteract the first spring, and a weight sensing mechanism coupled to the adjustment mechanism and operable to actuate the adjustment mechanism in direct proportion to a sensed weight of a seated passenger, whereby the force exerted by the helper spring is greater for a heavier seated passenger. 2. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 1 , wherein the frame member is configured to: pivotably adjust the tilt-recline positioning angle between the seat pan and the base member in a downward direction in response to an increasing passenger weight; and pivotably adjust the tilt-recline positioning angle between the seat pan and the base member in an upward direction in response to a decreasing passenger weight. 3. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 1 , wherein the frame member comprises a forward transverse member and an aft transverse member disposed between left and right structural members of the base member. 4. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 3 , wherein downward adjustment of the tilt-recline positioning angle between the seat pan and the base member drives horizontal translation of a first of the forward and aft transverse members toward a second of the forward and aft transverse members, causing compression of the first spring. 5. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 3 , wherein upward adjustment of the tilt-recline positioning angle between the frame member and the base member causes an unloading of the first spring that drives horizontal translation of a first of the forward and aft transverse members away from a second of the forward and aft transverse members. 6. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 1 , wherein weight sensing mechanism comprises a plate coupled to a pivoting member. 7. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 6 , wherein the plate is affixed to a surface of the seat pan. 8. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 6 , wherein the weight sensing mechanism comprises a cable attached at one end to the pivoting member and at an opposite end to the adjustment mechanism to trigger adjustment of the force exerted by the helper spring. 9. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 8 , wherein the sensed weight of the seated passenger causes downward rotation of the pivoting member, the downward rotation of the pivoting member pulling the cable by the amount proportional to the sensed weight of the seated passenger. 10. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 1 , wherein: the first spring is a gas spring comprising an outer cylinder including at least one aperture; and the adjustment mechanism comprises a chain having at least one lateral projection; wherein, upon actuation by the weight sensing mechanism, the adjustment mechanism moves the chain to align the lateral projection with a first aperture of the at least one aperture such that the lateral projection extends through the opening to limit compression of the helper spring. 11. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 10 , wherein the weight sensing mechanism comprises: a rail; and a bracket configured to slide along the rail, wherein the chain is attached to the bracket. 12. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 11 , wherein the weight sensing mechanism comprises a return spring configured to return the chain to a neutral position in response to a reduction in the sensed weight of the seated passenger. 13. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 1 , wherein the helper spring is mounted forward of and coaxially with the first spring. 14. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 1 , wherein an amount of adjustment of the tilt-recline positioning angle between the seat pan and the base member in the downward direction is directly proportional to the sensed weight of the seated passenger. 15. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 14 , wherein the amount of adjustment of the tilt-recline positioning angle the seat pan and the base member in the downward direction causes a proportional amount of compression of the first spring of the tilt-recline force adjusting apparatus. 16. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 1 , wherein an amount of helper spring deflection is directly proportional to the sensed weight of the seated passenger. 17. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 16 , wherein a sensed weight of a heavier seated passenger causes earlier engagement of the helper spring than a sensed weight of a lighter seated passenger. 18. An aircraft passenger seat comprising: a seat pan; a base member configured for coupling to floor of an aircraft cabin; a frame member pivotally attached to the base member, wherein the frame member is configured to pivotably adjust a tilt-recline positioning angle between the seat pan and the base member; means for sensing a weight of a seated passenger; a first spring configured to urge the seat pan from a first operative position corresponding to a recline seating position of the aircraft passenger seat into a second operative position corresponding to an upright seating position of the aircraft passenger seat, the first spring being arranged to compress as the seat pan is reclined in response to application of a passenger body weight load; a helper spring arranged to assist or counteract the first spring; and means for adjusting a force exerted by the helper spring in response to the weight sensed by the means for sensing, whereby the force exerted by the helper spring is greater for a heavier seated passenger. 19. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 18 , wherein the means for sensing comprises a plate coupled to a pivoting member. 20. The aircraft passenger seat of claim 18 , wherein: the first spring is a gas spring comprising an outer cylinder including at least one aperture; and the means for adjusting is configured to cause alignment between a lateral projection and a first aperture of the at least one aperture in the outer cylinder of the gas spring such that the lateral projection extends through the opening to limit compression of the helper spring.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • B64D11/064Primary

    Adjustable inclination or position of seats · CPC title

  • Seats provided with an occupancy detection means mounted therein or thereon (detection means responsive to presence or absence of children B60N2/266) · CPC title

  • Operations & Transport · mapped topic

  • Operations & Transport · mapped topic

  • mounted on the frame · CPC title

Patent family

Related publications grouped by family.

External sources

Frequently asked questions

Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.

What does patent US9738388B2 cover?
A weight sensing mechanism for an aircraft seat pan configured to adjust seat pan recline force and including a gas spring arranged between a fixed seat frame member and a movable seat pan member, the gas spring arranged to compress as the seat pan reclines in response to a load on the seat pan, and unloads upon removal of the load on the seat pan to assist in returning the seat pan to upright,…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Be Aerospace Inc
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification B64D11/064. Mapped technology areas include Operations & Transport.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Aug 22 2017 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 4 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).