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YOUR 4-door CAR or SUV MAY KILL YOUR CHILD! INVENTION HELPS REDUCE THE RISK |
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IF ANYONE YOU KNOW HAS EVER BEEN TRAPPED IN A CAR AFTER AN ACCIDENT
BE SURE TO TELL THEM OR THEIR LAWYER ABOUT THIS INVENTION |
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U.S. Patent No. 5,894,906 Issued: April 20, 1999 Inventor: Harold J. Weber Org.File No. 08/747,163 Date: 11/8/96 Includes 20 Claims and 8 drawing Figures
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CHILD LOCKS CREATE DANGER
Imagine Yourself Locked Into the Back Seat of an Automobile during and
immediately after encountering an accident such as a collision with another
car. As a result of the accident, the front seat passenger(s) are most
likely injured. You are at least confused, if not near shock or also
injured. You "need" to get-out of the car as quickly as you
can
but you can not. The door is locked. The door latch
Won't Work!
"Climbing over the Seat" and getting out through the front door, if it is still openable, is usually difficult if not next to impossible. In
In many accident settings, another car may hit your car after the original crash, resulting in further injury to yourself and any other back seat passengers. As a further problem, your damaged car may be leaking fuel, or otherwise be at risk for fire. With the child-locks "set", what do you do? Wait! There is No Escape. " You can imagine the rest of the story. Recognize that "IF" Your auto maker had included the intent of this invention in your cars rear-door latch design, you could have simply opened your rear door and walked away with no further concern for additional risk of injury. For any vehicle maker to NOT include this safety feature in your New 4-door Automobile or SUV may be Willful Negligence. Public information about the problem is now well known and a solution to the problem is available. Read on for more details. |
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| BEWARE OF REAR SEAT ENTRAPMENT |
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| IN CARS THAT PRETEND TO BE SAFE |
| NOTICE: The following material is substantially identical to the published patent which is available online from the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office, Alexandria, VA 22313-1450 USA. |
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enables immediate post-accident unlatchability of the motor vehicle's
rear door by an occupant of the motor vehicle and allow unencumbered
egress from the motor vehicle. The result is reduced risk particularly
for automobile rest-seat passengers including children and adults who
might otherwise remain dangerously entrapped within a wrecked vehicle
and suffering risk for further post-accident physical or psychological
trauma or even death due to bodily entrapment, fire or explosion which
may follow an accident.
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Mountaineer, and minivans such as the Chevrolet Venture and Chrysler
Caravan a lockset ordinarily secures the rear lift-back door and sliding
side-doors, in the case of certain minivans.
lock" (viz "CHILD LOCK") which is a separate class of anti-egress blocking
arrangement that thwarts operation of a door latch handle from the inside
of a vehicle by a rear-seat passenger, such as a child. This sort of
blocking device is not a key operated lock in a usual sense like that of
all of the other heretofore mentioned vehicle locks. It does not lock the
vehicle from the outside. It does not prevent unauthorized entry into or
use of the vehicle, which is the central intent of all of the keylocks and
door locks which I have cited. Instead, the anti-egress CHILD LOCK is
singularly intended as an anti-egress safety device solely intended to
block unauthorized exit from the rear-seat position of the vehicle.
a rear seat passenger prior to an accident. Once the accident occurs, the
CHILD LOCK equipped with my instant invention is promptly and
automatically released thereby returning full control of the interior door
latch to the rear seat occupant. The CHILD LOCK release enables immediate
door unlatching and opening subsequent to the accident, thereby exposing
an unencumbered exit portal for the rear seat passenger.
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forces, the CHILD LOCK device is automatically and immediately unset.
Thereafter the rear seat occupants can utilize the interior door handles
to unlatch the rear doors and egress from the vehicle so as to escape
entrapment. Of course they may, if of adequate physical build, attempt to
extricate the front seat victims, if necessary.
| DOOR LOCK |
CHILD LOCK |
INGRESS INTO |
EGRESS OUT-OF |
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| UNSET SET UNSET SET |
SET UNSET NO YES |
UNSET SET YES NO |
SET SET NO NO |
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| VIEW Drawings |
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door jamb 42-3 with the portion between panel 42-2 and jamb offset 42-3
being lower or indented relative with the portion between the offset 42-3
and the panel 42-1. Usually, this drop is about 3/4 to 11/2 inch in common
motor vehicle configurations. This representative door section 40 also
includes a door latch 44 which corresponds with an unshown bolt ordinarily
situated in the motor vehicles corresponding body pillar area. In other
words, the door latch 44 receives the bolt and holds the door securely
shut, as is extremely well known and understood in the art.
are open (or in a highly impeded state). Upon accident occurrence and in
view of resulting high "G-force" shocks the collision sensor at least
momentarily produces a state of closure (or a high conductance state)
through the represented contacts, thereby introducing DC power on line
72-2 that couples through a resistor (say 820 ohms) to a thyristor 76 gate
element. As a result, the thyristor 76 (which might be a silicon
controlled rectifier or SCR, as schematically symbolized) goes into full
conduction producing substantial current flow through relay coil 78 which
acts upon a normally closed (NC) contact set 58 to produce interruption of
DC power flow through the electromagnet 56. The thyristor ordinarily
exhibits a latching characteristic, that is once it is triggered by the
collision sensor, current flow through the thyristor is maintained until
DC power flow through the ignition switch or through the CHILD LOCK
control switch 54 is interrupted.
illustrate how this fully mechanical operation may be retained, freeing
the CHILD LOCK unsetter from vehicle battery power dependence. After all,
the battery may be among the first components of the vehicle's engine
compartment to be destroyed in a collision.
through the elliptical mass 180, creating the shear zones 184-1, 184-2
which surround the shear rod 128-4, 128-5. The non-symmetrical balance of
the egg shaped mass 180 introduces "twisting" forces and shearing forces
from just about every important angle of impact. For example, impact
direction coincident with the axis of the shear rod 128-4 delivers side
shear forces as depicted by the curved shape of the inertial mass forces
186 due to the off-center "center of gravity" or "ineritial mass center"
of the sensor mass 180.
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| VIEW Drawings |
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| VIEW Drawings |
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| VIEW Drawings |
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| VIEW Drawings |
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| U.S. Class: | 180/274; 180/281 |
| Intern'l Class: | B60K 28/10 |
| Field of Search: | 180/274, 271, 180/281 |
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| References Cited | |||
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| U.S. Patent Documents: | |||
| 2,714,521 | May 1955 | Graham | 180/281 |
| 4,381,829 | May 1983 | Montaron | 180/274 |
| 4,785,907 | Nov. 1988 | Aoki et al | 180/274 |
| 5,574,315 | Nov. 1996 | Weber | 307/10.1 |
Other Documents: |
| BMW Product Brochure OLY2-596-200, p.35, col.2, (©1996, BMW of North America, Inc., PO Box 5090, North Branch, NJ 08876) | |||
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Primary Examiner: Kenneth R. Rice |
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Child Locks are definitely a Safety Issue.
After an Accident Your Children could be |
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| Burned Alive |
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Trapped in a Wrecked Car
by Rear Door "Child Locks" |
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| CONTACT THE NHTSA TODAY |
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You May CONTACT the NHTSA by sending an E-Mail to:
webmaster@nhtsa.dot.gov and leave a message expressing your Concerns. Make sure you include "Child Safety" as part of the Subject. You may also call the DOT Auto Safety HotLine at 1-888-327-4236 (1-888-DASH-2-DOT) and a NHTSA representative will record your report. You may also FAX your concern to 1-202-366-7882. The regular mail address is:
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Office of Defects Investigation NSA-10.01 400 7th Street, SW Washington, DC 20590 |
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SAFETY IS AN UPHILL BATTLE
Your chances of success in drawing the safety related child lock problem to a manufacturer's attention is small On the other hand, if you can get your message through to a private group, a government organization or "the media" which includes people truly concerned with Child Safety something might be done about this long ignored problem. |
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