LUGGAGE WITH DETACHABLE AND STACKABLE COMPARTMENTS, INVERTIBLE SEPARATOR, AND AIR PACKS TO OCCUPY EMPTY SPACE AND SECURE CONTENTS
20240381988 ยท 2024-11-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
A45C7/0045
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A45C7/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A45C13/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A suitcase for travel that can be separated into two stackable compartments. To allow for the top compartment to be stacked into the bottom compartment, its wheels are detachable and its support pegs are housed in a recess and are retractable. Each compartment may be packed and unpacked by different person at the same time in two different locations. One or both the compartments have inflatable air packs that can be inflated from outside the luggage using a standard air pump. The air packs secure content from moving during travel and handling. Each compartment has a separator that can fully enclose the contents of the compartment when zipped. The separator is extendable both inward and outward to accommodate larger objects or to accommodate more contents at the expense of the space in the other compartment. The separators of both the compartments may be extended inward to create a large cavity within the luggage to accommodate large objects or create a further separated space.
Claims
1. A travel luggage for personal use comprising of a container with two distinct compartments and a joining mechanism; wherein when the compartments are brought together, they fully enclose all contents within, and each compartment individually can contain at least 33 percent of the contents within it; and the compartments are connected to each other on one side by a hinge like joining mechanism explicitly designed to allow separation and connection of the compartments without additional tools and in three or less simple motions; and the compartments are shaped such that one can be stacked into the other fully; and the total height of the stacked compartments when the opening of the compartments are facing up and stacked one into the other is at least 33 percent smaller than the combined height of the unstacked compartments.
2. The travel luggage in claim 1, wherein compartments are made stackable by allowing for one or more of the wheels to be detachable.
3. The travel luggage in claim 1, where the compartment that slides inside the other compartment is made stackable by housing one more of the support pegs in a recess and making the support pegs retractable.
4. A travel luggage for personal use comprising of a container, one or more inflatable device, and one or more air valve; wherein the inflatable device is housed inside the container but is connected to the exterior of the container such that a valve with an opening to insert and release air into the device is accessible from outside the luggage; and the device when inflated is designed to provide support to the contents of the luggage to prevent them from moving and to occupy empty space in the luggage.
5. A travel luggage for personal use comprising of a container with two distinct compartments joined to each other on one side by a hinge like mechanism, a layer covering at least one of the compartments, and the compartment with the said layer housing inflatable device connected to a valve reachable from the outside of the compartment to insert air into, or release air from, the inflatable device; wherein when the compartments are brought together, they fully enclose the covering and all of the contents within, and each compartment individually can contain at least 33 percent of the contents within it; and the said layer designed to act as the sixth side of the compartment to provide a surface against which the contents can press under pressure form inflated air packs to prevent the contents from moving; and the said layer can be readily opened or closed, a majority part of it being expandable both inward and outward to accommodate varying volume of the contents of the luggage in each of the two compartments at different stages of travel.
6. The travel luggage in claim 5, wherein the expandable portion of the layer has a flap that can be opened and closed readily to provide access to the contents of the covered compartment of the luggage.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0020] The following detailed description in combination with the figures is provided to assist in understanding the teachings herein. The discussion focuses on specific implementations and embodiments to assist in describing the teachings. This focus should not be interpreted as a limitation on the scope or the applicability of the teachings.
[0021] To simplify demonstration standard elements of luggage have not been shown in the figures. These elements include telescopic handle, regular handles, detachable wheels, lock, and latch, among others. One or more of these elements may be included on one or both the compartments.
[0022] The teachings of the present invention can be applied to both the hardcase and soft case luggage.
[0023]
[0024] A small hand operated pump can be included as a part of the luggage with a slot designed in the luggage to hold it. However, it is not essential to demonstrate the working of the present invention, and therefore such slot or the pump have not been shown in the figures.
[0025] To ensure that the air packs support the contents of the luggage in the entire compartment, it may have several pockets [7] instead of just one pillow-like shape. The benefits of pockets in inflatables are well-known. The figure only shows a simple flat version of the air pack. However, the air packs can have several arms protruding away from the outer shell towards the center of the luggage to occupy all empty space and support contents, when inflated.
[0026] The embodiment in
[0027] To connect compartments [1] and [2] the sides of each compartment with hinge components are brought close to each other. The first socket of [1] is aligned with the first pin of [2] and inserted in the appropriate recess [18]. Thereafter the user can slide the knob in the direction of the lever while holding the compartment together to make sure that the motion of the knob causes the pins to insert in the appropriate sockets [12].
[0028] To detach the compartments, the knob is slid back to the original position shown in
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[0032] Finally, the separator has an extension that is managed using a zipper [25]. This extension is like the extension that is standard in expandable luggage. The difference is that it is used with a separator instead of the exterior part of the luggage. Also, it can protrude in either direction, inward or outward. One of the extensions is used to expand the capacity of one compartment, while at the same time it is used to shrink the volume of the other to accommodate the extra contents of the first one.
[0033] In
[0034] In
[0035] In
[0036] In
[0037] In
[0038] In another embodiment of the luggage the entire separator may be extendable with no or negligible part non-extendable.
[0039] In
[0040] In
[0041] Other considerations to facilitate smooth handling of the luggage involve placement of support pegs on the outer shell [3] on the side with hinge components in a manner such that when the luggage is stood erect with such side facing the ground, no component of the hinge meets the ground. The pegs will protect the hinge components from damage while also providing stability to the luggage when placed on the ground on its side. The pegs may be foldable or removable to facilitate operation of the hinge, as needed.
[0042] In another embodiment the edge of the outer shell [3] of each compartment may have a sturdy band surrounding it to strengthen and stabilize the shape. The band will also serve a protecting role and it may hold other components like the handle and lock.
[0043] In order to avoid accidental detachment of the wheels from the luggage during handling, detaching wheels may require motion in two different directions simultaneously to ensure that such motions are intentional.
[0044] To ensure that the support pegs do not detract when accidentally bumped into, they may also be designed to require motion in two different directions to slide them into their recess. In another embodiment, instead of multiple support pegs, a luggage may have one wide support peg that simply slides up and down, instead of the angular motion shown by arrow 37 in
[0045] In another embodiment, the base of the support peg touching the ground when employed, may have an L shape thereby providing more stability. The support peg may be situated in the corner of the luggage such that the peg is aligned with the side of the bag when deployed. This will allow the support peg to support the weight of the luggage and its contents better. The peg when retracted may sit in the recess along two sides of the edge of the compartment to accommodate the L-shape of the peg.
Problems being Addressed: [0046] 1. At the beginning of the journey the user may have consumables. As they get consumed, the user has more empty space in the bag. Empty space causes contents to move around, wrinkle, cause imbalance, and possibly break. The luggage itself may break when other heavy objects are put over it during handling by airlines or somebody else. [0047] 2. A family may put belongings of two kids in the same luggage. The kids may not coordinate both during packing and use during travel. The kids may fight to get access to the bag first. [0048] 3. In hotels, the rooms may be small and a luggage may occupy very valuable space. [0049] 4. When empty, the luggage itself occupies space at home also. [0050] 5. Currently luggage occupies a lot of space during transportation from manufacturer to store shelf. [0051] 6. Empty space in the luggage post manufacturing results in higher usage of packing material. [0052] 7. When opened, the width of the luggage doubles. The front end of the top compartment ends up being furthest from the user. While packing, if the user is sitting, it becomes difficult to reach this far end. [0053] 8. At the start of a journey the user of the luggage has clean clothes. Over time the user has used clothes. The user does not want to mix the two. He does not want the odor to transfer from used to clean clothes. Though it is a standard practice to have two compartments in the luggage separated by a zipper-enabled layer, the real issue is that the size of the compartment is fixed. The user will not always have the same quantity of used and unused clothes during travel. It will keep varying. [0054] 9. There is a possibility that checked luggage may be lost in transit. Therefore, critical items must be transported as carry-on luggage but there is size constraint due to overhead bin size in airplanes. This is further exacerbated by spinner wheels accounting for almost 10% of usable volume. [0055] 10. Bags are often damaged during handling by airline bag handlers or on conveyer belts at the airport due to entanglement of items protruding from the bag, such as wheels. If even one wheel is damaged, the entire luggage becomes useless.
PRIOR ART
[0056] There are luggage designs that address one or more of the problems being addressed in the present invention.
[0057] There are suitcases with many compartments designed to isolate and secure specific items used during travel.
[0058] There exists a luggage that is a combination of a standard luggage and a duffle bag that is attached to the top of the luggage by a standard zipper. The duffle bag can be separated and be independently carried like a backpack.
Innovation
[0059] The present invention has the following novelties: [0060] 1. It incorporates air packs that are hidden under a layer between the outside shell and the inner liner of the luggage. One or both of the separable parts of the luggage may have the air packs. These air bags will protect the content of the luggage from breakage, movement during travel, and clothes from getting wrinkled. The air packs will also protect the luggage itself from damage during handling and transportation. [0061] 2. The top and the bottom compartment of the luggage are separable and stackable. They are connected by a hinge that can be easily connected and disconnected. This will allow for convenience in packing, storage in narrow spaces, lower costs of shipping, lower packaging costs, separation of contents, and management of family dynamics during travel. Prior innovations in luggage have primarily been about bringing together or taking apart two or more pieces of luggage during trekking or while in public transport. The present invention is about allowing separation of one luggage prior to and after the actual flight or journey and while in the hotel or home. [0062] 3. Each compartment has an extendable separator. The separator itself will allow for the contents to be supported by air packs and act as outer shell of each compartment when separated. The extensions in the separator will allow one compartment to hold more content while that of the other will act to shrink the volume so that the extra volume of the first can be accommodated. The separators will allow separation of used clothes from fresh and prevent odor transfer. [0063] 4. The luggage has detachable wheels and retractable support pegs. This ensures the stackability of compartments. It also reduces the possibility of the luggage being damaged during transit. More importantly, it increases usable space within the permitted size constraints for luggage imposed by airlines. For carryon luggage this can increase space by 10% or more. Finally, wheelability of the luggage is the most important feature to the consumers and wheels suffer the most wear and tear. Detachability of the wheels means consumers can easily replace them as and when needed to keep their luggage operating like new even after years of use.
Functions
[0064] The present invention will allow for the following: [0065] The luggage can be stored under the bed at the hotel because it can be separated into two pieces and will therefore be thinner. [0066] The user can pack and unpack each compartment individually at their own pace. [0067] Kids can take a compartment each to their individual beds or rooms for use during travel. [0068] The luggage will be stored in smaller space when not in use. [0069] Items will stay in place during transport thereby decreasing the odds of breakage of contents. It will reduce wrinkles on clothes. The luggage will have lower odds of breaking when stacked under other heavier pieces. The air packs will allow the luggage to maintain shape. [0070] The mechanism will allow to keep different types of clothes or contents separate even when the proportion of two types of contents changes during travel, while also allowing for proper maintenance of unused clothes (wrinkle free). [0071] The separated compartments will stop odor transfer. [0072] The luggage can be shipped from the manufacturer with less packaging material because the two parts will be stacked one into the other. [0073] The luggage will require less space for shipping from manufacturing to retailer because it will be stacked. [0074] Users will be able to carry more on the plane without paying additional bag fees. [0075] Tall people will be able to drag their carry-on bags without bending. This is because of the additional height of the longest side made possible due to detachable wheels. It not only increases the height off the ground due to additional 2-3 inches, but also increases space to accommodate telescopic handle of bigger length. [0076] Damage to luggage during handling by airline staff and on the conveyor belt will be reduced. [0077] From a business point of view there will be an ongoing relationship with the customer as damaged air packs will be easily replaceable. Though the air packs and the liner will be resistant to tear and piercing, air packs may deteriorate with use or be damaged while handling. [0078] Consumers care about wheelability of their luggage and wheels are among the parts of the luggage that gets damaged most often due to wear and tear. The detachability of the wheels will allow for easy replacement and wheelability of the used luggage as good as new.
REFERENCE
[0079] Maskara (2023) Method to attach and detach hard objects allowing for controlled rotation, USPTO patent #11629536