The present invention relates to the field of structures used to support mailboxes, and more particularly to cross-member type mailbox posts.
Mailbox posts of the type having a vertical support member and a horizontal cross-member are in widespread use in rural and semi-rural areas. Thus mailbox posts are typically located immediately adjacent to a road or street, so that the mail delivery person in a vehicle can open the mailbox and collect and/or insert mail without getting out of the delivery vehicle. In order to facilitate this mail delivery procedure, U.S. Postal Service guidelines require that the mailbox be positioned at a height of 41 to 45 inches above the road/street surface.
Because of the proximity of the mailbox and post to the road, they are often damaged or detached by snowplowing—either by direct impact or by the pressure of snow pushed against them. During snow storms, therefore, it is useful to be able to adjust the mailbox post so that the mailbox is more out of the way of plows and roadside snow piles. The patent literature describes several types of post structure that can rotate horizontal or vertically to displace the mailbox from the path of snowplows. These designs have the disadvantage, however, of making the mailbox, after such displacement, inaccessible from the postal delivery vehicle.
The adjustable mailbox post of the present invention, on the other hand, allows the mailbox to be raised and lowered by a person seated in a motor vehicle at the roadside without getting out of the vehicle. During a snowstorm, the owner of the mailbox seated in his/her vehicle can raise its height out of the way of snowplows. After the snowplows have passed, the mail delivery person can lower the mailbox back to the proper height without leaving their vehicle.
The mailbox post of the present invention comprises a vertical support member rotatably attached at a transverse axis to a cross-member by one or more axial pins or rods. The cross-member extends through a transverse channel in the support member, such that a forward arm of the cross-member extends from the forward side of the support member, and a rear arm of the cross-member extends from the rear side of the support member. The forward arm supports a mailbox platform, to which a mailbox can be attached. The support member comprises a branched upper post, through which the transverse channel passes, and a lower post below the transverse channel.
A spring mechanism, which can be either a coil spring or a pneumatic spring, extends diagonally between the cross-member and the support member. The spring mechanism is configured so as to generate a lifting torque about the transverse axis, which torque tends to lift the forward arm of the cross member when the cross member is horizontally aligned.
Referring to
A releasable latch mechanism connects the cross-member and the support member so as to maintain the cross-member in a horizontal position, in which the mailbox platform is at the height prescribed by applicable postal regulations. The latch mechanism can be in the form of a striker and cooperating striker plate, or it can be an adjustable-length strut.
When the latch mechanism is released, the lifting torque generated by the spring mechanism causes the forward arm of the cross-member to rotate upward and backward toward the upper post so that the cross-member assumes an elevated position, in which the raised mailbox platform is safely removed from a zone of potential impacts.
Optionally, a releasable second latch mechanism can be used to secure the cross-member in the elevated position. Alternately, the adjustable-length strut can have one or more spring-button locking pins to maintain its length corresponding to either the horizontal position or the elevated position of the cross-member. In yet another alternative, the tubular strut can be used alone, without the spring mechanism, to secure the cross-member in either the horizontal or elevated position. For the latter alternative, the tubular strut can be in any one of the four positions depicted in
Optionally, suspended from the lower surface of the mailbox platform is a pull-down cord, by which the forward arm of the cross-member can be pulled down and forward from the elevated position into the horizontal position.
The foregoing summarizes the general design features of the present invention. In the following sections, specific embodiment of the present invention will be described in some detail. These specific embodiments are intended to demonstrate the feasibility of implementing the present invention in accordance with the general design features discussed above. Therefore, the detailed descriptions of these embodiments are offered for illustrative and exemplary purposes only, and they are not intended to limit the scope either of the foregoing summary description or of the claims which follow.
Referring to
The forward arm 15 of the cross-member 12 supports a mailbox platform 16, which in turn can support a mailbox 17. From the front face of the support member 11 extends a striker plate 18, from the upper surface of which extends a striker 19. The striker 19 has an arched tubular structure which slidably cooperates with a latch mechanism 20 on the underside of the forward arm 15 of the cross-member 12. The striker 19 and latch mechanism 20 are preferably of the kind commonly used to secure trunks lids and hatchbacks of motor vehicles, such as is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,059,237, which is incorporated herein by reference. When the cross-member 12 is in a horizontal position, as depicted in
Between the underside of the forward arm 15 of the cross-member 12 and the front face of the support member 11 there obliquely extends a spring mechanism 21, which is compressed when the cross-member 12 is in the horizontal position, as shown in
The latch mechanism 20 is disengaged from the striker 19 by the leveraging action of a latch release retracting a release wire 23 connected to the latch mechanism 20. This disengagement of the latch mechanism 20 allows the spring mechanism 21 to expand, thereby forcing the forward arm 15 of the cross-member 12 to rotate upward and backward into an elevated position, as depicted in
Referring to
Referring to
As shown in
When the cross-member 11 is in the horizontal position, as depicted in
When the spring-button 33 is depressed and disengages the aperture 32, the spring mechanism 21 causes the strut 28 to expand, thereby lifting the forward arm 15 and causing it to rotate upward and backward toward the upper post 26 until it is in the elevated position, as depicted in
Referring to
When the cross-member 12 is in the horizontal position, as shown in
Although the preferred embodiments of the present invention have been disclosed for illustrative purposes, those skilled in the art will appreciate that many additions, modifications and substitutions are possible, without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention as defined by the accompanying claims.
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730806 | Sword | Jun 1903 | A |
3392945 | Graham | Jul 1968 | A |
3593914 | Van Orden | Jul 1971 | A |
3749342 | Perrine | Jul 1973 | A |
3802656 | Virblas | Apr 1974 | A |
4172579 | Steinman | Oct 1979 | A |
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5042716 | Robbins | Aug 1991 | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140263881 A1 | Sep 2014 | US |