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The present disclosure is in the field of storage of small items. More particularly, the present disclosure provides systems and methods positioning shelving to more efficiently store such items using adjustable supports below shelves.
Traditional cabinets, frames, bookcases and racks do not efficiently use shelf space. Shelves cannot be precisely located such that valuable space above shelved items but below an immediately above shelf may be wasted. The total number of shelves is also limited. The user must settle for available shelf positions built into the item of furniture. Users are also limited by the overall dimensions of the cabinet or frame itself and cannot exceed the height of the cabinet.
Systems and methods described herein provide for a plurality of shelves atop each other in a shelving system to be individually positioned vertically using adjustable supports. Each corner of a shelf is supported and held in place by a vertical support below the shelf that is telescoping in structure. Each support may be extended or retracted as needed to achieve the desired amount of space between shelves.
Vertical distance between shelves may be changed via adjusting height of supports by extending or retracting supports as needed. The telescoping feature of the supports provides the user choices in setting the vertical distances between shelves. Each support contains a locking mechanism for securing the support's configured height and enabling the support and its three fellow supports to bear the weight of the shelves above as well as contribute to the stability of the overall structure.
Each shelf has at its four corners a connector, a vertical protrusion that functions as a base for the telescoping support that is situated at the particular corner. The connector contributes to the stability of the structure.
In an embodiment, some or all the shelves may not be level and may instead may be angled or sloped downward toward the user. The rear pair of supports below a shelf that the user wishes to be angled may be longer, i.e. vertically taller, than the front pair of supports. Angling of the shelves downward toward the user may improve the user's view of the items on the shelf, particularly when the shelf is above the user's eye level.
Flanging or non-skid surfacing may be placed on an angled shelf to prevent objects on the shelf from sliding. When the user wishes to store, for example, shoes on an angled shelf, such flanges or other surfacing may allow the shoes to remain on the angled shelf without sliding forward.
Connectors on angled shelves may be flexible to provide secure seating of telescoping supports resting on the angled shelves. The base components of telescoping supports may also be flexible to join tightly with the connectors on such non-level surfaces.
Turning to the figures,
In an embodiment, the shelf 102 may be about 40 inches wide, about twelve inches deep, and about one centimeter in height. In an embodiment, shelves 102 may have a maximum vertical distance of 21 inches between them. In other embodiments, each of these dimensions may be less than or greater than these specified dimensions.
The lengths of the sections 306a-c as shown in
In an embodiment, section 306a may be two inches in height, section 306b may be five inches in height, section 306c may be five inches in height, and section 306d may be nine inches in height. These may be maximum heights when the telescoping support 104 is fully extended. In other embodiments, each of these dimensions may be less than or greater than these specified dimensions.
While not shown in
As noted, the connectors 410 may be flexibly attached to the shelf 402 to promote firm attachment and seating of the telescoping support 104 to the shelf 102 when the shelf 102 is angled. The connector 410 may be adjustable in its own angle to the shelf 102 to accommodate such angling. In another embodiment, some shelves 102 may be available with connectors 410 at fixed angles that are not 90° to accommodate such angling of shelf 102. Base sections of telescoping supports 104 may be flexibly attached such that such base sections may be adjustable vis a vis the main section of the telescoping support to accommodate such angling. Top sections of telescoping supports 104 may similarly be flexibly angled to support angling of a supported shelf 102.
System 400 also includes a safety latch 412 extending from a back edge of the shelf. The safety latch 412 may be used to attach the entire system to a wall or other fixed surface to prevent the system from being accidentally pulled forward or tipping forward if the system is improperly loaded.
Systems and methods provided herein are directed to individually adjusting the supports below shelves such that shelves may be of nearly any level. Whether telescoping supports are used or the tubes discussed above, each of the four supports below a shelf is individually adjust to whatever height the user deems is best for supporting a shelf to meet his or her storage needs.
In embodiments and as variously noted, bottom ends or base sections of telescoping supports 104 or legs abut the upper surfaces of shelves 102 and are affixed in place via a coupling of the telescoping supports 104 to connectors 410 that are located at each corner of the upper surfaces of the shelves. The connectors 410 are flexible and can be adjusted to receive the telescoping supports 104 or legs in a vertical upright manner even though the shelf 102 itself upon which the telescoping support 104 rests may be angled. The flexibility or bendability of the connectors 410 permits the connectors 410 to adjust to telescoping supports 104 or legs resting in vertical upright manner on angled shelves 102.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20200337454 A1 | Oct 2020 | US |