Method of assembling and packing an automotive airbag
09682677 ยท 2017-06-20
Assignee
Inventors
- Srinivasan Sundararajan (Ann Arbor, MI, US)
- Derek Board (Ferndale, MI, US)
- Edward J. Desmet (Canton, MI, US)
- Kevin Pline (Plymouth, MI, US)
Cpc classification
Y10T156/1062
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B60R21/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60R21/231
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60R2021/23107
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2255/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B37/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B37/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60R21/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60R21/231
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B37/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B38/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B37/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An airbag assembly for a seatbelt restraint such that the deflated airbag lays flat when it is stacked and secured to a webbing of the seatbelt. The airbag is assembled from a plurality of material strips. The strips are edge joint welded together so that the joints lay flat between the individual strips comprising the airbag.
Claims
1. An automotive airbag assembly comprising: at least four material strips weldably secured into an inflatable bag such that, at weld joints between adjacent ones of the strips, a first strip lays flat on top of a second strip; the strips stacked in an accordion stack; first edges of a top and a bottom strip welded together; the bag mounted within a sleeve of a seatbelt webbing.
2. The assembly of claim 1 wherein the seat belt webbing is a chest strap in a three-point vehicle occupant seat.
3. The assembly of claim 1 wherein the welding includes edge joint welding pairs of first edges of the strips and edge joint welding opposed pairs of second edges of the strips staggered from the pairs of the first edges.
4. An automotive airbag assembly comprising: flat stacked material strips having first and second edges, with pairs of first edges welded together and pairs of second edges welded together, the pairs of second edges being staggered from the pairs of first edges to form an accordion stack; top and bottom strips of the stack welded together to form a tube that defines an inflatable bag; the bag secured to a seatbelt webbing.
5. The assembly of claim 4 wherein the strips have first and second faces and the strips are arranged such that the first faces are outside the bag when the bag is inflated, and wherein the first face is coated.
6. The assembly of claim 4 wherein the welds are edge joint welds.
7. The assembly of claim 4 wherein the strips have a first face and the strips are stacked vertically with the first face alternating between facing a first direction and a second opposite direction.
8. The assembly of claim 4 wherein the welds forming the stack are on non-intersecting lines.
9. The assembly of claim 4 wherein the material is woven nylon fabric.
10. The assembly of claim 4 wherein the seatbelt webbing is used in a three-point vehicle occupant seatbelt.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(8) The intermediate strips 30 are welded together in accordance with a weld pattern. In the weld pattern, a first edge 38 of a first strip 36 is edge joint welded to a first edge 42 of a second strip 44. A second edge 40 of the first strip 36 is edge joint welded to a second edge 46 of a third strip 48. The second strip 44 and the third strip 48 are on opposite sides of the first strip 36. Neither the first edge 38 nor the second edge 40 of the first strip 36 are welded to both the second strip 44 and the third strip 48. The weld pattern results in the edge joint welds of the intermediate strips 30 being staggered between the first and second edges. The airbag 28 may be assembled by sequentially stacking and edge joint welding adjacent strips. Alternatively, the airbag 28 may be assembled by stacking all the strips and then, after stacking, edge joint welding the strips. In either case, the result is an accordion (bellows) shape.
(9) Assembly of the airbag 28 uses edge joint welds. As understood by one skilled in the art, an edge joint weld involves laying a first substrate flat on a second parallel, or nearly parallel, substrate and welding a contact area between the first and second substrates along an edge. The edge joint weld allows the two substrates to be retained parallel and flat against each other. As used for the airbag 28, the edge joint weld permits an upper strip to lay flat on top of a lower strip, including at a joint between the upper and lower strips. By using the edge joint weld, the intermediate strips 30 stack flat between the top strip 32 and the bottom strip 34. In the weld pattern, the use of the edge joint weld allows the first strip 36, the second strip 44, and the third strip 48 to stack flat.
(10) The top strip 32 has a first edge 50 and a second edge 52. The bottom strip 34 has a first edge 54 and a second edge 56. The top most intermediate strip 30 is a top transition strip 58. The top transition strip 58 has a first edge 60 and a second edge 62. The first edge 60 of the top transition strip 58 is edge joint welded to the first edge 50 of the top strip 32. The second edge 62 is edge joint welded in accordance with the weld pattern. The bottom most intermediate strip 30 is a bottom transition strip 64. The bottom transition strip 64 has a first edge 66 and a second edge 68. The first edge 66 of the bottom transition strip 64 is edge joint welded to the first edge 54 of the bottom strip 34. The second edge 68 is edge joint welded in accordance with the weld pattern. The second edge 52 of the top strip 32 is welded to the second edge 56 of the bottom strip 34.
(11) The intermediate strips 30, top strip 32, and bottom strip 34 have a first face 70. The first face 70 alternates between facing upward and downward in the intermediate strips 30. The first face 70 of the top strip 32 faces opposite the orientation of the first face 70 of the top transition strip 58 and the first face 70 of the bottom strip 34 faces opposite the orientation of the first face 70 of the bottom transition strip 64. This puts the first face 70 outside the volume of the airbag 28 when the airbag 28 inflates. The first face 70 may be coated. For example, the first face 70 may be coated with a silicone coating to retain an inflation gas longer when the airbag 28 is inflated.
(12) Fabrication of the intermediate strips 30, top strip 32, and bottom strip 34 allows for measurement tolerances. The material strips may be cut from a double layer of material. This results in paired upper and lower strips. An upper strip matches the size of its corresponding lower strip. When the pairs of upper and lower strips are located, an equal number of strips from the center of the intermediate strips 30, the summed tolerance of the upper strips will be offset by the summed opposite tolerance of the lower strips.
(13) In a direction perpendicular to a weld of the weld pattern, the top strip 32 and bottom strip 34 have a greater dimension than the intermediate strips 30. This allows the second edge 52 of the top strip 32 to reach the second edge 56 of the bottom strip 34 for welding. Further, first and second edges of the intermediate strips 30, top strip 32, and bottom strip 34 are on non-intersecting lines. The edge joint weld may be made by any suitable welding technique known to one skilled in the art. For example, the welds may be ultrasonic.
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(17) A top strip 132 extends beyond a top weld 190 and a bottom strip 134 extends beyond a bottom weld 192. Beyond welds 190 and 192, the top and bottom strips 132 and 134, respectively, are joined by a rip stitch 194. The rip stitch 194 allows the top and bottom strips 132 and 134, respectively, to unstitch when airbag 128 inflates.
(18) The top and bottom strips 132 and 134, respectively, contain the airbag 28 without needing the sleeve 88 illustrated in
(19) The top and bottom strips 132 and 134, respectively, are sewn at a joint 196 to a seatbelt webbing 116 by a stitch 198. Alternatively, the top and bottom strips 132 and 134, respectively, may be seatbelt webbing.
(20) While certain embodiments of the present invention have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this invention relates will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the invention as defined by the following claims.