The present invention relates to a built-in household appliance comprising a door on which at least on one of its horizontal sections is arranged an adjusting rail for securing a trim panel to a door.
Such an adjusting rail is used to facilitate securing of a trim panel to the door of a built-in household appliance, such as a built-in refrigeration unit, exactly flush with adjacent unit fronts provided with stylistically matching trim panels, by establishing a connection between the door and the trim panel which makes it possible to move and align the trim panel in small, precisely controllable steps.
The built-in appliance in question is one which is arranged in a recess in an item of kitchen furniture or is an inherently freestanding unit on which a trim panel is simply superimposed in order to achieve an appearance which is uniform with adjacent fronts of furniture items or other household appliances.
For aesthetic and technical reasons the trim panels are generally manufactured with a maximum width of 60 cm. They are therefore not suitable for cladding unit housings whose width exceeds this maximum width.
The object of the invention is to create a technique which makes it possible also to clad door fronts whose width is greater than said maximum width of the trim panels.
The object is achieved by a built-in household appliance comprising a door on which at least on one of its horizontal sections is arranged an adjusting rail for securing a trim panel, which has a base panel arranged between the trim panel and the door, and on which a depression extending transversely over the base panel is formed on one side of the base panel facing the trim panel.
The depression is provided on a household appliance equipped with such an adjusting rail in order to accommodate a strip of flat material therein, by means of which two trim panels are joined to form a composite panel. The depression in the base panel enables the two trim panels joined by the strip of flat material to be handled as a unit and allows both to be secured together in the same manner to the adjusting rail according to the invention, as happens with a single trim panel on a conventional adjusting rail having no depression.
In this manner, units can be clad whose width is greater than the currently usual maximum width of trim panels of 60 cm.
The depression is preferably located halfway along the base panel in order to enable two trim panels of equal width to be joined.
In order to be able to give the strip of flat material an adequate thickness and thus rigidity the depression preferably has a depth of 0.5 to 1.5 mm. The width of the depression should be several centimeters in order that a connection between the strip of flat material and the trim panels, particularly a screwed connection, can be made at an adequate distance from the edges of the latter in order to minimize the danger of the edges of the trim panels splitting.
By preference, a basic body for the adjusting rail is formed in a single piece from a flat material, particularly a sheet material, and is provided with a reinforcing rib extending in the longitudinal direction for stiffening purposes. In order that an apex surface of the reinforcing rib facing the housing can be used as a stop surface on the housing, the depth offset between the apex surface and edge areas of the basic body surrounding the reinforcing rib is preferably greater than the depth offset between the edge areas and said depression.
On one side of the basic body opposite the depression, projecting lugs are preferably formed which can be mounted butted against the housing of the household appliance and thus brace the trim panels against them. Since the weight to be supported by these lugs can be considerable, the reinforcing rib preferably extends right into the lugs in order to stiffen them.
Instead of the one-piece base panel described above, it is also possible to provide a multi-part base panel formed from a carrier panel and two spacer plates separated from one another by the depression.
The adjusting rail can naturally also be used in order to clad a household appliance housing with a single trim panel if the latter has the requisite width. In this case, the depression in the adjusting rail can be filled with a spacer piece.
Further features and advantages of the invention are set down in the following description of embodiments with reference to the attached figures. In the drawings:
Narrow extensions 9 of the rib 5 extend right into the angled lugs 4 and thereby reinforce the right-angle which the latter form with respect to the basic body 2. Two holes 11 are punched into the lugs 4 in each case on different sides of the extension 9.
A depression 10 extends vertically centered above the basic body 2. This depression 10 is provided in order to accommodate a connecting sheet of a trim panel composed of two individual panels which is described in the following with reference to
The body 16 of the refrigeration unit has at the upper edge of its front frame two recesses 17, one of which accommodates a multi-joined hinge 18, which carries the door 12. If necessary, the multi-joined hinge 18 can also be mounted in the empty recess 17 in order to change the door hinge.
In a next step, the adjusting rail 1 is screwed to the upper profile bars 21 of this composite trim panel, whereby the sheet metal strip 22 comes to lie in the depression 10, with the result that the upper profile bars 21 contact the edge area 6 of the basic body 2 over a large area. The lugs 4 are then attached onto the upper edge 15 of the door and the composite trim panel is secured to the door 12 in a manner known per se.
The adjusting rail 1 is indeed advantageous particularly when a composite trim panel which is wider than the maximum available width of the individual trim panels 19 needs to be assembled from two individual trim panels 19. It may however be desirable for aesthetic reasons to put together a unit front, which could actually be produced using a single trim panel, using two narrow trim panels mounted side by side. The adjusting rail 1 can then for example have a length of just under 60 cm, which enables two 30 cm wide trim panels joined to one another to be mounted. Such an adjusting rail 1 could naturally also be used for mounting a conventional single 60 cm wide front panel. In this case, although the depression 10 in the adjusting rail 1 is not required, it is not however a hindrance unless adjusting rail and front panel are to be screwed to one another at the height of the depression 10. If the latter is the case, it is possible, as shown in
An alternative embodiment of the adjusting rail is shown in
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 2005 021 563.7 | May 2005 | DE | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/EP2006/061140 | 3/29/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/10/2007 |