Lever Propelled Wheelchair

Votes: 1
Views: 12697
Medical

The first wheel based chair was developed by the Chinese in 525 AD. This was slightly crude but established the fact that people could in fact propel themselves from point A to B without the use of their legs.

King Phillip of Spain refined the chair design in 1595 using four wheels of the same diameter and a servant to handle the actual propulsion.

And finally, Herbert Everest patented a folding wheelchair resembling the modern configuration we are all familiar with today. This was designed to be easily transported in a car which is an ironic fact considering that most wheelchair owners are using the device as the result of a car accident.

The modern chair actually has six wheels. Two small diameter wheels located in front to assist with steering, two large diameter wheels in the rear to handle the weight of the owner and two outer wheels attached to the rear wheels which enable the operator to propel the main wheels.

Therein lies the problem, as propelling the outer wheels is difficult on a sloped surface and stressful on the wrists of the owner. This situation is exasperated when the chair is headed downhill or on a slippery slope.

The solution is a lever propelled wheelchair (picture attached). A picture is worth a thousand words, so I will leave it up to the viewer to ascertain the list of benefits from this design.

Voting

Voting is closed!

  • ABOUT THE ENTRANT

  • Name:
    Stu Douglass
  • Type of entry:
    individual
  • Profession:
    Business Owner/Manager
  • Number of times previously entering contest:
    never
  • Stu's favorite design and analysis tools:
    STARTED WITH SOLIDWORKS CAD, UPGRADED TO PRO/E WILDFIRE 4.0 AND NOW LOOKING AT CREO ELEMENTS/PRO 1.0
  • For managing CAD data Stu's company uses:
    SolidWorks PDMWorks
  • Stu's hobbies and activities:
    BIKING, SKIING, RACQUETBALL, WRENCHING
  • Stu belongs to these online communities:
    FACEBOOK
  • Stu is inspired by:
    WE ANALYZE EXISTING, POPULAR TECHNOLGY WHICH IS READY FOR DESIGN OPTIMIZATION AND PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENTS. OBVIOUS EXAMPLES OF THIS METHOD ARE CELL PHONES AND CORDLESS TOOLS.
  • Software used for this entry:
    Pro/E
  • Patent status:
    patented