[0001] The present invention refers to a device for fastening or unfastening (unhooking)
the visor from the cap (shell) of a helmet for motorcycling or for other sports use
of the type comprising a front opening and two side devices for rotating the visor
with respect to the front opening.
[0002] In motorcycle helmets, and particularly in crash-helmets (or full helmets) in which
the cap completely protects the user's head apart from a front opening over the nose
and eyes, it is common practice to provide a pair of side devices for rotating the
visor to which are respectively fixed the rear ends of the visor itself, so that it
can rotate from a position where it intercepts the front opening to a raised position.
These rotating devices usually present a support integral with the cap, which may
be simply a seat created in the cap itself or a structural detail connected to it,
on which the visor is hinged and fixed by means of mechanical catches of various kinds.
[0003] To unfasten the visor from the helmet rotating devices in order to clean it or, in
case of wear or scratching, to replace it with a new one, these mechanical catches
must be expressly deactivated by the user by means of suitable tools.
[0004] However this solution, while guaranteeing considerable simplicity and economy, is
not very practical in situations where the user does not have the suitable tool to
deactivate the mechanical catch or when the visor has to be replaced quickly, for
example during competitive use.
[0005] In the application for a French patent FR 2.785.505 A1 in the name of SHARK S.A.,
it has been proposed to make a hole of suitable dimensions in each of the two rear
ends of the visor and to engage these holes on pins protruding laterally from opposite
parts of the cap. In turn, each pin presents retractable transverse catches, in particular
spheres which, depending on their position, block or release the visor with respect
to the pin. These catches are controlled by an elastic button which, when pressed,
causes retraction of the catches and release of the visor.
[0006] This solution does not require the use of specific tools and seems to be able to
allow a considerable speed in the manoeuvres to be performed to unfasten the visor,
but the mechanism adopted is structurally complex, thus entailing a possible unreliability
of the device, a certain difficulty in production and poor economy.
[0007] Moreover the SHARK device enables the visor to be unfastened even when it is in its
normal position of use, that is when it intercepts the front opening of the helmet.
In fact, the mechanism is not provided with safety blocks which, with the visor in
closed position, would prevent the elastic button from being shifted for any reason,
determining the consequent retraction of the spherical catches and the subsequent
possible release of the visor.
[0008] In the most modern crash-helmets, the rotating visor, in its normal using position
where it intercepts the front opening of the helmet, is set in so that it is flush
with the helmet itself. This precaution, as well as being aesthetically pleasing,
has proved to be particularly useful for obtaining an efficient aerodynamic configuration
of the helmet and thus favouring the forward movement of the rider in the air at high
speeds and reducing the corresponding aerodynamic rustling.
[0009] In these last realisations, to allow the visor to assume the inset position protecting
the helmet opening and the raised position in which the visor is turned away from
the cap and rotated so as not to intercept the opening, the rotation devices on the
sides of the helmet contemplate both a lifting support which, connected to the visor,
may be manoeuvred by the user so that it lifts with respect to the cap, moving the
visor away from the same, and a rotating body integral with the visor and constrained
in rotation to the lifting support.
[0010] When the user wants to lift the visor, allowing the air flow to enter the opening,
he must extract the visor, thanks to the lifting support, and then rotate it, together
with the rotating body, with respect to the cap.
[0011] In this type of helmet too it is frequently necessary to unfasten the visor from
the rotating device in order to clean it or replace it with a new one if it is worn
or scratched.
[0012] For this purpose it is common practice to provide, for each rotating device, a visor
release device composed of a button, or cursor, sliding axially with respect to the
support and fitting into a corresponding retaining hole situated in a rear end of
the visor. Each button is engaged in the hole in the visor by an elastic element,
such as a flat spring, and it may be pressed by the user so as to release it from
the hole in the visor and thus free the visor from the rotating device.
[0013] More particularly, in recent realisations of the prior art, each rear end of the
visor, engaging in each rotating device, slides on guides provided on a rotating body,
secured in turn in a rotating manner on the support, and is held in the guides, preventing
free sliding, by the engaging of the elastic button in the hole in the end of the
visor. The button, as described above, is made elastic by a suitable elastic flat
spring which, connected to the same button and bent when the latter is pressed, is
deformed in such a way as to allow the button to translate by a sufficient distance
to be released from the helmet. Moreover, in these devices the button can move (translate)
with respect to the flat spring in a direction parallel to that of the guides in which
the visor slides so as to allow optimum regulation of the positioning of the visor
with respect to the cap. When the visor is in the normal using position in which it
intercepts the front opening of the helmet and is inset so as to be flush with the
cap, the button and its elastic element cannot be deformed by bending to such an extent
as to allow the release of the visor thanks to the presence, in the mechanism itself
and in the side rotating and lifting devices connected to it, of suitable rests, strikers
and interposed parts which limit the effects of any pressure exerted, for any cause,
on the button. Such a mechanism is described, for example, in the application for
a patent EP 1.057.418 A1 in the name of OPTICOS S.r.l.
[0014] So, to unfasten the visor, the user must first open the visor by activating the lifting
system which, moving away from the side areas of the cap, causes the release of the
safety blocks that control the elastic element; then press the two buttons that engage
the holes in the ends of the visor itself to as to release the latter from the rotation
devices and subsequently free it from the guides provided in the rotating body.
[0015] The unfastening device described above is extremely rapid to operate and ensures
that in the normal using position of the visor, that is when it is intercepting the
front opening of the helmet, the visor cannot be released, but its structure is very
complex so it is not simple to make. Moreover, the force needed to cause the necessary
bending of the flat spring and the extent of the spring deformation are variable according
to the position of the button with respect to the spring, which means that there is
a certain heterogeneity in the response of the unfastening device and it is necessary
for this device to be oversized in order to prevent certain relative positions of
the button with respect to the flat spring from causing axial sliding of the button
which is insufficient to free the visor from the same device.
[0016] An aim of the present invention is to provide a device for unfastening the visor
from the cap of a full helmet (or crash-helmet) which does not present the inconvenient
aspects of the prior art and which is therefore extremely rapid to operate and, at
the same time, particularly reliable.
[0017] Another aim of the present invention is to provide a device for unfastening the visor
which does not allow the visor to be unfastened when it is intercepting the front
opening of the helmet during use, and which is particularly efficient while being
structurally simple.
[0018] These and other aims are achieved by the device in the present invention, as claimed
in the first independent claim and in the subsequent dependent claims.
[0019] According to the present invention, the device for fastening/unfastening the visor
from the cap of a helmet of the type with front opening and two side devices for rotating
the visor from an operative position of interception of the front opening to a raised
position of the visor itself comprises, for each rotating device, an elastic cursor
fitted in such a way that it can be turned and can slide axially in a seat in the
same rotation device. This elastic cursor, in its relative movement with respect to
the seat, can move from an engaged to a disengaged position with a retaining hole
made in a rear end of the visor. The device further comprises means for allowing the
axial sliding of the elastic cursor with respect to the seat exclusively in one or
more predefined angular positions assumed by the same cursor with respect to the seat.
Preferably these means for allowing sliding of the cursor act by interposition of
parts.
[0020] The elastic cursor of the device for fastening and unfastening the helmet, according
to a preferred aspect of the present invention, can rotate together with the visor
and the angular positions in which the cursor can slide axially with respect to the
seat of the rotating device coincide with the angular position assumed by the cursor
when the visor is in a raised position.
[0021] According to a particular aspect of the present invention, the cursor comprises projecting
parts which, during its rotation with respect to the seat, rest and slide on a surface
of the support itself. This sliding surface comprises housings in which these projecting
parts can be engaged to allow the traverse movement of the cursor with respect to
the seat of the rotating device.
[0022] According to another aspect of the present invention, the cursor is rendered elastic
by a helical spring inserted operatively between the abovementioned seat and the cursor
itself.
[0023] A preferred embodiment of the present invention will now be illustrated, purely as
an example without limitation, with the aid of the enclosed figures, in which:
figures 1a, 1 b are schematic side views of a crash-helmet of the type in which the
visor may be set in flush with the cap, on which it is possible to fit a device according
to the present invention;
figure 2 is an exploded view of a rotating device comprising a device for unfastening
the visor of a full helmet in a preferential embodiment of the present invention;
figure 3 is a top plan view of a lifting support of the embodiment in figure 2;
figure 4 is a top plan view of a rotating body of the embodiment illustrated in figure
2;
figure 5 is a side section view of a cursor of the visor unfastening device in figure
2;
figure 6 is a side section view of an intermediate plate of the embodiment in figure
2;
figure 7 is a side section view of the rotating device and of the visor unfastening
device assembled and in a position in which the visor is raised with respect to the
cap of the helmet;
figure 8 is a top plan view of the embodiment in figure 7.
[0024] Figures 1a, 1b show two side views, respectively with the visor raised and with the
visor closed, of a crash-helmet 101 of the type in which the visor 105 intercepts
the front opening 106 of the helmet 101 in an inset position flush with the cap 107.
The helmet 101 presents laterally, on opposite sides, two devices 102 suited for engaging
with the rear ends 103 of the visor 105.
[0025] Figure 2 illustrates, in an exploded view, a device 102 for rotating the visor 105
which may be applied on a full helmet of the type shown figures 1a and 1b. In these
helmets, when the visor 105 is in its inset position intercepting the front opening
106 (figure 1b) and the user wants to turn it, the rotating devices 102 situated on
the sides of the cap 107 must first move the visor 105 away from the cap itself, so
that the visor 105 is no longer embedded in the opening 106 of the helmet, and only
later allow the rotation of the visor 105 into a raised position (figure 1a).
[0026] For this purpose, the rotating device in figure 2 comprises an assembly 2 for lifting
and moving forward the visor 105 and a rotating body 4, constrained to the assembly
2 so as to be able to turn in relation to the latter, on which is connected the rear
end 103 of the visor 105.
[0027] More particularly, the assembly 2 is composed of a base 22, fixed firmly to the cap
107, and of elastic means 23 suited for retaining the visor in two stable positions,
as well as a lifting support 1, connected to the visor 105, which allows it to be
extracted from the opening 106 and lifted with respect to the cap 107.
[0028] The support 1 is provided with bottom surfaces coupled in a sliding manner to sloping
slides, of a wedge shape, with their higher portion facing towards the front of the
helmet, present on the base 22, and it is retained in a position of stable equilibrium
by the means 23. The relative sliding of the lifting support 1 with respect to the
base 22 on the slides determines the moving of the visor 105 away from the cap 107
in a lateral direction and forward in a longitudinal direction. Moreover, the means
23 allow the support 1 to remain in a stable position whether it is raised or close
to the base 22. This solution for the extraction of the visor 105, described briefly
above, is the object of an application for a patent deposited at the same time by
the Applicant and is not a part of the present invention.
[0029] In the embodiment in figure 2, moreover, the rotating body 4 is coupled to the support
1 by means of a bush 7 and a rivet 8 which define the axis of rotation around which
said body 4 is free to turn with respect to the support 1. The body 4 is also secured
to one of the rear ends 103 of the visor 105 and rotates together with said visor
105. The device illustrated therefore allows the visor 105 to be extracted, moving
it away from the front opening 106 and forward with respect to the cap 107, thanks
to the lifting support 1, and then turned, thanks to the rotating body 4.
[0030] The device illustrated also comprises an elastic cursor 3, fitted in an elastic fashion,
sliding and turning on the body 4, an intermediate plate 6, the function of which
will be described below, and a helical spring 5 inserted between the plate 6 and the
cursor 3. The cursor 3, the spring 5 and the support 1 are part of the device for
fastening/unfastening the visor in the present invention.
[0031] More generally, the device according to the present invention comprises a support
1 for the rotating device, which may be simply a fixed seat made in the cap 107, to
which is connected, in such a way as to be able to turn and slide relatively, an elastic
cursor 3 suited for engaging in a corresponding retaining hole 104 located in the
rear end 103 of the visor 105. The elastic cursor 3, in its axial movement with respect
to the support 1, is also able to translate axially from a raised position, in which
it is engaged in the hole 104 in the visor 105, to a lowered position, in which it
is disengaged from the hole 104, only when corresponding to predefined angular positions
reached by the same cursor 3 with respect to the support 1. For this purpose means
are provided, preferably of the type with interfering parts, suited for allowing sliding
of the cursor 3 with respect to the support 1 exclusively in these predefined angular
positions.
[0032] Preferably, the cursor 3 rotates together with the visor 105 and the angular positions
in which the cursor 3 can slide with respect to the support 1 to free the visor 105,
disengaging from the hole 104, correspond to the above-mentioned raised position of
the same visor 105 (figure 1a).
[0033] It must be observed that the device in the present invention, as it will be clear
to a technician of the sector, cannot be applied only to the extraction assembly 2
described above, but may also be generally used with visor extraction mechanisms of
the prior art (for example the one described in the application for a patent EP 1.057.419
- A1 in the name of OPTICOS S.r.l.) or even with helmets in which the visor is not
inset and therefore said extraction assembly 2 is not present. In the latter case,
the support 1 and the base 22 coincide and the rotating body 4 can therefore rotate
with respect to the cap 107.
[0034] Now with reference to the figures 3-8, the preferred realisation of the present invention
illustrated in figure 2 will be described in detail.
[0035] Figure 3 shows a support 1, according to a preferred aspect of the present invention,
which comprises a base surface 11 surrounded by a frame 9 within which the rotating
body 4 may be engaged in rotation, and a hole 13 in which is inserted, for assembly,
the rivet 8. The surface 11 presents a plurality of grooves or holes 12 and the frame
9 is provided with two slots 10a, 10b, diametrically opposite each other, which constitute
interruptions in the same frame 9.
[0036] The rotating body 4, with reference in particular to figure 4, comprises a lower
cylindrical portion, or cup, suited for engaging with the support 1 and provided with
a hole 17 for engaging with the bush 7 and the rivet 8, two through openings 15a,
15b diametrically opposite and other two openings 16a, 16b offset at a 90° angle with
respect to the first ones. The upper portion of the body 4 is also provided with two
parallel guides 18a, 18b within which may be inserted, by sliding, the rear end portion
103 of the visor 105.
[0037] The bush 7 and the rivet 8 perform the function of a hinge for the body 4 with respect
to the support 1 and may obviously be substituted with any other constraint able to
hold together the body 4 and the support 1 in a relatively rotating manner.
[0038] The elastic cursor 3 comprises, as shown in figure 5, two shaped projecting parts
19a, 19b and is shaped in order to engage by catching in the retaining hole 104 in
the rear end 103 in the visor 105. The cursor 3 is kept away from the rotating body
4, and therefore from the support 1, thanks to the helical spring 5 which exerts a
pushing action on the internal surface of the cursor 3 and on the intermediate plate
6.
[0039] During use, therefore, the visor 105 is inserted in a removable fashion between the
guides 18a, 18b, arranged on a plane at a right angle to the axis of rotation of the
body 4, which allow the integral rotation of the visor 105 with the same body 4, and
it is kept integral with the entire rotating device by the engaging of the elastic
cursor 3 in the hole 104 thanks to the pushing action of the spring 5.
[0040] The projecting parts 19a, 19b of the cursor 3 engage in the through openings aperture
15a, 15b of the rotating body 4 and are shaped so that they guarantee that the same
cursor 3 can rotate together with the body 4 and at the same time can travel with
respect to the latter, in a direction coinciding with the axis of rotation, for a
stroke of a given length.
[0041] The bottom ends of the projecting parts 19a, 19b, moreover, rest on the top surface
of the frame 9 present on the support 1 and can slide on it during the relative rotation
of the rotating body 4, and therefore of the cursor 3, with respect to the same support
1. The rotation of the body 4 therefore leads the projecting parts 19a, 19b to slide
resting on the frame 9, until these projecting parts 19a, 19b are in the angular position
corresponding to the housings (slots) 10a, 10b.
[0042] The possible engaging of the projecting parts 19a, 19b in the housings 10a, 10b,
which is obtained by exerting force on the cursor 3 sufficient to overcome the thrust
of the spring 5, allows the axial sliding of the same cursor 3 with respect to the
body 4 and to the support 1.
[0043] The projecting parts 19a, 19b of the cursor 3, the housings 10a, 10b and the frame
9 of the support 1, together with the helical spring 5, in this particular embodiment
of the present invention, constitute the means for allowing the axial sliding of the
cursor exclusively in predefined angular positions of the same cursor 3 with respect
to the support 1.
[0044] The location of the housings 10a, 10b, as already mentioned, is such that it is only
when the visor 105 is in the raised position shown in figure 1a, and therefore when
the body 4 and the cursor 3 assume the corresponding angular position with respect
to the lifting support 1, that the projecting parts 19a, 19b are arranged corresponding
to the same housings 10a, 10b. In this configuration it is therefore possible to exert
pressure on the same cursor 3 to provoke its movement towards the support 1, overcoming
the resistance of the spring 5. This movement has a sufficient stroke to free the
hole 104 in the visor 105 from the same cursor 3 and thus allow sliding of the rear
end 103 of the visor 105, which is no longer held back by the cursor, within the guides
18a, 18b of the rotating body 4.
[0045] It must be observed that, in a more essential embodiment of the present invention,
which is not illustrated, the device for rotating the visor 105 might not present
the rotating body 4 and the visor might only be held back by the cursor 3 in an integral
manner with it, without being moved away from the object of the present invention.
In this essential embodiment, the cursor 3 could be directly constrained, in rotation
and in axial movement, to the support 1.
[0046] Figure 6 shows a side section of the intermediate plate 6 which, in the embodiment
illustrated, rests on the bottom surface of the cylindrical portion of the rotating
body 4 while the spring 5 rests on the plate 6. The plate 6 comprises a central hole
20 and is provided with two teeth 21a, 21b which are inserted in the openings 16a,
16b of the body 4 and, passing through the rear wall of the latter, engage in the
grooves or holes 12 provided on the surface 11 of the support 1.
[0047] The plate 6 is therefore integral with the body 4, thanks to the insertion of the
teeth 21 a, 21 b in the openings 16a, 16b, and is elastically held in position by
the helical spring 5.
[0048] The function of the teeth 21a, 21b which engage in the grooves 12 is to provide predefined
angular positions which are substantially stable for rotating the visor. This plate
6 and the corresponding grooves 12 may be omitted without this structurally or functionally
influencing the device of the present invention.
[0049] A general view in side section of the device in figure 2 assembled and in a position
in which the lifting support is in a raised position and the cursor 3 is held back
by the spring 5 is illustrated in figures 7 and 8 (for the sake of clarity the visor
is not shown).
[0050] To unfasten the visor 105 from the rotating device illustrated, therefore, the user
must first extract the visor 105 from the front opening 106 and at the same time move
it away from the cap 107, then rotate it in a raised position and afterwards unfasten
it.
[0051] In fact it is not possible, in the full helmet 101 illustrated, to turn the visor
105 before it is extracted from the front opening 106, because of the interference
of parts between the visor 105 and the cap 107, due to the inset position flush with
the cap 107 which the visor 105 itself assumes when it is set to intercept the front
opening 106.
[0052] The preliminary operation of extracting and rotating the visor thus contemplates
that the user, if necessary using suitable means not illustrated for pushing the visor
105, should first provoke the raising and advance of the lifting support 1 with respect
to the base 22 and then the rotation of the visor 105 with respect to the cap 107
and, consequently, the rotation of the rotating body 4 and of the retaining cursor
3 with respect to the support 1 in a raised position. Due to the interference between
the teeth 21a, 21b of the plate 6 and the grooves 12 of the support 1, interference
maintained thanks to the pushing action of the spring 5, the visor 105 can be lifted
in steps in stable angular positions, identified by the geometric arrangement of the
same grooves 12.
[0053] During the rotation of the visor 105, the projecting parts 19a, 19b slide on the
top surface of the frame 9, resting on it and thus preventing, in the intermediate
positions assumed during the rotation of the cursor 3 with respect to the support
1, the possible occurrence for any reason of an axial movement of the same cursor
3 towards the support 1.
[0054] Once the visor 105 has reached the completely raised position, on the other hand,
the angular position of the projecting parts 19a, 19b with respect to the support
1 coincides with the location in which the housings 10a, 10b have been made in the
frame 9 and so the bottom ends of the projecting parts 19a, 19b are no longer resting
on the frame 9. So, in this position, any pressure of the cursor 3 that overcomes
the resistance of the helical spring 5 determines its axial sliding approaching the
support 1 and its disengagement from the retaining hole 104 in the rear end 103 of
the visor 105. With the cursor 3 pressed it is therefore possible to move the visor
105 away from the rotating device, making it slide out of the guides 18a, 18b of the
rotating body 4.
[0055] This operation, repeated for both the lateral rotating devices on the helmet 101,
allows the rapid release of the visor 105 from the same helmet 101 and its possible
substitution. The impossibility of unfastening the helmet in positions other than
that of normal use in which it intercepts the front opening of the helmet is entrusted
to the fact that only in the raised position of the visor 105 (figure 1a) can the
cursor 3 be pressed to release (unhook) the visor 105.
[0056] The fastening of a new visor to the rotating devices of the type illustrated in the
figures is performed by repeating the above-mentioned unfastening operations in reverse
order and so, for each lateral device 102 of the helmet 101, it may be achieved by
keeping the rotating body 4 in the visor unfastening position and inserting, while
holding down the cursor 3, the rear end 103 of the new visor in the guides 18a, 18b
of the rotating body 4, until the hole 104 corresponds to the cursor 3. At this point,
to secure the visor it is sufficient to release the cursor 3 which, pushed by the
spring 5, engages with the hole 104 and thus prevents sliding of the visor 105 in
the guides 18a, 18b.
[0057] The device illustrated above, as will be clear to an expert in the field, may be
simply adapted to rotating devices which do not contemplate the prior extraction of
the visor and moreover, in a possible embodiment, the rotation of the cursor 3 may
be independent of the rotation of the visor itself.
[0058] From the above description it is clear that the new device for fastening and unfastening
the visor from the cap of a helmet is particularly effective, considering the high
speed of operation of each cursor 3, structurally simple and at the same time able
to prevent the unfastening of the visor 105 when, during normal use of the helmet,
the visor 105 is in the position of interception of the front opening 106.
1. Device for fastening/unfastening the visor from the cap of a helmet of the type with
front opening and two side devices for rotating the visor from an operative position
of interception of the front opening to a raised position of the visor, comprising,
for each rotating device, an elastic cursor fitted in such a way that it can be turned
and can slide axially in a seat in the same rotation device, the elastic cursor being
movable between an engaged and a disengaged position with a retaining hole made in
a rear end of the visor, characterised in that it comprises means to allow the axial sliding of said cursor with respect to said
seat exclusively in one or more predefined angular positions assumed by the same cursor
with respect to said seat.
2. Device according to claim 1, wherein said visor, in its operative position, may be
set in flush with the cap and wherein each of said rotating devices comprises at least
one rotating body for turning the visor with respect to the cap and said seat is a
lifting support for moving the visor away from or towards the cap.
3. Device according to either of the previous claims, characterised in that said cursor rotates together with the visor.
4. Device according to claim 3, wherein said angular positions in which the cursor can
slide axially with respect to said support coincide with the angular position assumed
by the cursor when the visor is in said raised position.
5. Device according to any one of the preceding claims, characterised in that said means for allowing axial sliding act through interference of parts.
6. Device according to claim 5, characterised in that said means for allowing axial sliding comprise one or more projecting parts integral
with said cursor and a sliding surface of said seat for said projecting parts to rest
on, said sliding surface being provided with one or more housings in which the projecting
parts can be engaged for the axial sliding of the cursor.
7. Device according to any one of the preceding claims, characterised in that it comprises a rotating body connected to said seat in such a way that it is free
to turn.
8. Device according to claim 7, characterised in that said rotating body comprises grooved guides within which said side end of the visor
may be inserted.
9. Device according to claim 7 or 8, wherein said rotating body is interposed between
said cursor and said seat, the cursor being constrained to said sliding body in an
axially sliding manner.
10. Device according to any one of the previous claims, characterised in that it comprises elastic means acting on said cursor moving away from said seat.
11. Device according to claim 9 and 10, characterised in that said elastic means are composed of a helical spring interposed between said cursor
and said rotating body.
12. Device according to claim 7, characterised in that it comprises a plate integral with said rotating body, said plate being provided
with at least one tooth that can engage removably in corresponding grooves or holes
present in said seat.