Ford patents a head rest specifically designed to hide a travel pillow
Portage may have recently tackled a question that confounded the car business for ages: Where does one store a travel pad in an auto? On the floor? In the storage compartment? In a NPR tote sack in the rearward sitting arrangement? Not a chance. Passage needs to store a travel cushion in the head rest, obviously.
This new patent documenting by Ford shows a mystery compartment incorporated with a vehicle's head rest. There's a little entryway that when expelled uncovers a travel pad — you know, the kind that wraps around a neck and is quite recently respectably more agreeable than laying your head on a shoe.
Portage notes in the documenting that auto headrests are not intended to office an agreeable nap. They're intended to battle whiplash. Subsequently, this patent, if executed, would give an answer for travelers to rest serenely while using unused space in the vehicle.
This new patent documenting by Ford shows a mystery compartment incorporated with a vehicle's head rest. There's a little entryway that when expelled uncovers a travel pad — you know, the kind that wraps around a neck and is quite recently respectably more agreeable than laying your head on a shoe.
Portage notes in the documenting that auto headrests are not intended to office an agreeable nap. They're intended to battle whiplash. Subsequently, this patent, if executed, would give an answer for travelers to rest serenely while using unused space in the vehicle.

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