Seat heater and method of its fabrication
10538868 ยท 2020-01-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H05B2203/014
ELECTRICITY
D05B35/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
D05B23/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
International classification
D05B23/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
D05B35/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
Abstract
A seat heater includes a substrate. A formed heating wire is disposed on the substrate. A sewing thread attaches the formed heating wire to the substrate. A method of fabricating the seat heater includes forming a straight heating wire into a formed heating wire having miniature wave shape, feeding the formed heating wire onto a substrate, and attaching the formed heating wire onto the substrate by sewing a thread.
Claims
1. A seat heater comprising: a substrate; a formed heating wire including a wave shape disposed on the substrate; and a sewing thread attaching the formed heating wire to the substrate, wherein the thread is sewn in gaps between half-periods of the wave shape of the formed heating wire.
2. The seat heater of claim 1, wherein the thread is sewn two or more times per each half-period of the wave shape of the formed heating wire.
3. The seat heater of claim 1, wherein the thread is sewn at less than all of the half-periods of the wave shape of the formed heating wire.
4. The seat heater of claim 1, wherein the substrate is one selected from a group consisting of a woven fabric carrier and non-woven fabric carrier.
5. The seat heater of claim 1, wherein the wave shape is one selected from a group consisting of a sinusoidal shape, a rectangular square wave shape, a saw-tooth shape, and a zig-zag shape.
6. The seat heater of claim 1, wherein the formed heating wire is formed into its shape prior to being disposed on the substrate.
7. A method of fabricating a seat heater, the method comprising the steps of: forming a straight heating wire into a formed heating wire including a wave shape; feeding the formed heating wire onto a substrate; and attaching the formed heating wire onto the substrate by sewing a thread, wherein the thread is sewn in gaps between half-periods of the wave shape of the formed heating wire.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the thread is sewn two or more times per each half-period of the wave shape of the formed heating wire.
9. The method of claim 7, wherein the thread is sewn at less than all of the half-periods of the wave shape of the formed heating wire.
10. The method of claim 7, wherein a sewing machine is used to sew the thread according to a needle puncture pattern and a needle hit rate.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the sewing machine includes a wire-forming unit, and the wire-forming unit forms the heating wire into the wave shape prior to feeding and sewing the formed heating wire onto the substrate.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the sewing machine includes a wire-feeding conduit, and the formed heating wire is fed onto the substrate via the wire-feeding conduit.
13. The method of claim 10, wherein the sewing machine includes a wire forming unit, and the wire-forming rate of the wire-forming unit is synchronized with the needle hit rate of the sewing machine.
14. The method of claim 10, wherein one or more wire curvature sensors are located on the sewing machine, and the needle puncture pattern is regulated using the one or more wire curvature sensors.
15. The method of claim 10, wherein the needle punctures are patterned within boundaries defined by curves outlining the wire wave pattern vertexes.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(11) Referring now to the drawings in detail, numeral 110 generally indicates a seat heater in accordance with the present invention. The seat heater 110 includes a formed heating wire sewn onto a substrate and is more durable than known, conventional seat heaters.
(12) As shown in
(13) Turning to
(14) A wire feeding conduit 126 subsequently feeds the formed heating wire 112 onto the substrate 114 in front of a sewing needle 128 that sews the thread 116, thereby directing the just-processed (e.g., wavy or zig-zagged) wire into the sewing zone, which is an area in the path of the sewing needle. The wire feeding conduit 126 may be attached to a sewing head 130 of the machine that includes the needle 128. The conduit 126 may have an elongated (e.g., oval or rectangular) cross-section. After the formed heating wire 112 is dispensed onto the substrate 114, the sewing needle 128 then sews the sewing thread 116 in gaps 132 between half-periods 134 of the formed heating wire to attach the formed heating wire to the substrate.
(15) In order to properly sew the thread 116 in the gaps 132, the needle hits 136 of the sewing machine 118 (puncture points at which the sewing needle 128 pierces through the substrate 114) should be synchronized with the wire waves of the formed heating wire 112. The forming rate of the wire forming unit 120 (i.e., waves, half-waves, or zig-zags produced or dispensed per unit time (e.g., per second)) may be mechanically or electronically synchronized with the sewing machine needle hit rate (i.e., the number of needle punctures 136 in the substrate 114 per unit time and/or the number of needle punctures per each half-period 134 of the wave pattern of the formed heating wire 112). The synchronization may be achieved by making the wire forming unit 120 part of the sewing machine 118. For example, the sewing machine head 130 may be rotatable and the wire forming unit 120 may be attached to the rotatable head.
(16) Alternatively, the synchronization may be achieved by making the wire forming unit or a preformed wire dispensing reel attached to a stationary part 137 of the sewing machine rather than the rotatable head. In this alternative, the wire forming rate may be synchronized with the sewing machine needle hit rate using an adjustable delay feature. Also, in this alternative the wire feeding conduit must be flexible or articulated to couple the stationary wire forming unit (or preformed wire dispenser) with the movable (rotating/oscillating) sewing head.
(17) One or more wire curvature sensors 138 may be located in the vicinity of the sewing head 130 to guard against the sewing needle 128 hitting the formed heating wire 112 dispensed from the wire feeding conduit 126. The needle puncture pattern of the sewing needle 128 may be regulated using the one or more wire curvature sensors 138.
(18) As shown schematically in
(19) The needle hits 336 of the present invention are patterned within a strip having its boundaries defined by curves 340 that outline the wire wave pattern vertexes (peaks) 342. The curves 340 are the limits of the area in which the needle punctures the substrate and thereby define the needle puncture boundaries. The boundary outlines are schematically shown by example in
(20) In yet another alternative, the needle hits may skip an even number of half-periods such that the thread is sewn at less than all of the half-periods of the wave shape of the formed heating wire. This results in the formed heating wire being unable to slip sideways from under the stitches made by the sewing thread. For example, as shown in
(21) Although the invention has been described by reference to specific embodiments, it should be understood that numerous changes may be made within the spirit and scope of the inventive concepts described. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the described embodiments, but that it have the full scope defined by the language of the following claims.