This disclosure relates generally to refrigerators, and, more particularly, to refrigerators, methods and apparatus to pass electrical signals through refrigerator liners.
Many appliances include lighting to assist in the viewing of items present, placed or stored in an appliance.
Example refrigerators, methods and apparatus to pass electrical signals through refrigerator liners are disclosed. An example apparatus to pass an electrical signal within a refrigerator having an external cabinet, a liner at least partially defining an interior compartment within the cabinet and having an opening defined therethrough, and a moveable member within the compartment, includes first and second members not passable through the opening when the apparatus is positioned at a first rotational orientation, where at least one of the first and second members is passable through the opening when the apparatus is positioned at a second rotational orientation; a planar third member between the first and second members, and dimensioned and shaped corresponding to the opening and fitting in the opening when the apparatus is positioned at the first rotational orientation; an electrically conductive contact disposed together with the first member or a fourth member extending inward from the first member to conduct the electrical signal to the moveable member when the moveable member is at a predetermined position relative to the apparatus; and a electrical conductor electrically coupled to the contact and passing through the first, second and third members to the exterior of the liner to conduct the electrical signal from the exterior of the liner to the contact.
An example refrigerator includes a cabinet, a liner at least partially defining an interior compartment within the cabinet, a liner pass through partially passing through and assembled to the liner, the liner pass through including a first electrically conductive contact within the compartment and a second electrically conductive contact outside the compartment, a selectively moveable member having an electronic component, and a third electrically conductive contact to electrically couple the electronic component to the first contact, and a spring member to bias the first and third contacts into electrical coupling when the moveable member is at a predetermined position
For ease of discussion, the examples disclosed herein are described in the context of a refrigerating compartment of a refrigerator. It should be understood that the examples disclosed herein are also applicable to a freezing compartment of a refrigerator, an icemaker, a wine cooler or refrigerator, a freezer, etc. Moreover, the examples disclosed herein may be used in connection with any other appliance, structure or device including, but not limited to, a washing machine, a dryer, a stove, a microwave, a dishwasher, a refresher, a cabinet, a storage unit, a shelf, a closet, a wall, or any other structure, device or appliance having a surface, a liner, a wall, or any other member or structure through which conducting an electrical signal is desired and/or needed.
As used herein, a refrigerator liner defines an interior or user accessible compartment or cavity within a refrigerator into which items may be placed for refrigeration. Further, the inside or interior side of the liner refers to the side of the liner facing the interior compartment; and the outside or exterior side of the liner refers to the side of the liner opposite the interior compartment and is typically exposed to components of the refrigerator generally not intended for user access or exposure to a user. Further still, inward refers to a direction generally toward the interior compartment or generally toward a middle of the interior compartment. In some refrigerators, rigid foam, insulating material, structural material, etc. is formed between the outside of the liner and a metal exterior housing or cabinet of the refrigerator, with wires and/or tubing encompassed by, or routed within or through such material(s). A refrigerator liner may be formed of one or more pieces, which are typically plastic.
As used herein, electrical coupling (or variants thereof) refers to the connecting of, for example, two devices so that an electrical signal may be conducted, conveyed, transported, passed or otherwise moved between the two devices. Electrical signals include an electric current, an electromagnetic field, etc.; may be constant and/or varying; and may be conducted over a physical conductor (e.g., a wire) and/or wirelessly. Despite the above, persons of ordinary skill in the art readily understand what an electrical signal is, and what is electrical coupling. Electrical signals may be used to provide for example, a power source, a communication signal, a user interface signal, a sensor signal, etc. to an electronic component. However, for ease of discussion, the examples disclosed herein will be described with reference to passing a power signal through a refrigerator liner.
Lighting in a refrigerator can radiate from, for example, bulbs or light emitting diodes (LEDs), which may be combined with covers or lenses. The light sources can be placed at different locations within the interior compartment of a refrigerator. For example, liner-dwelling light sources may be placed in a ceiling liner, a left-side wall liner wall and/or a right-side wall liner. Additional example locations of light sources include surfaces or structures that result in illumination beneath shelves or inside crisper drawers, pantry drawers, bins, baskets, etc. However, for ease of discussion, the examples disclosed herein will be described with reference to light sources associated with shelves.
While the liner-located sources project light into the refrigerator interior, they may also project light toward the consumer, which may result in observable bright spots. In some examples, a limited number of liner-dwelling illumination sources are used to reduce costs. The result is that overall interior illumination may be uneven. An example solution is to place light sources under shelves, where the light sources and bright spots can more easily be hidden from view. Additionally, more evenly distributed light intensity may be obtained by placing a greater number of relatively low-power light sources under a shelf. By way of example, this more even light intensity may be obtained using one or more printed circuit board (PCB) strips onto which are mounted multiple LEDs.
It is understood that the routing of power to light sources placed under a shelf requires electrical conductors or power paths from an electrical power supply to the shelf. These power supplies are typically located outside of the interior compartment. Some prior solutions use the electrical conductivity of shelf mounting hardware, also known as ladders or standards, and removable shelf brackets, to provide power to a shelf. However, such solutions are not applicable to refrigerators that do not have electrically conductive standards and brackets. For example, some refrigerators have shelves that rest on non-conductive plastic studs or ribs that protrude inward. The non-conductive studs or ribs do not provide a power routing path. Alternate power routing solutions include plugs and sockets, which require slack lengths of cable(s) and fine-motor human skills to mate connectors, and as such may not be desirable to users or robust to cable damage and bent conductors. Further, the small conductor surfaces and small mating connection spaces in such solutions may, for example, become contaminated by inadvertent food contact.
It is further understood that shelves in a refrigerator are typically removable for cleaning and/or repositionable for storage of varied height items that reside on the shelves. Other example moveable members include drawers, crispers, bins, baskets, etc. Additionally, the dimensions between left and right side liner walls, and the planar flatness of liner surfaces may vary due to manufacturing processes, temperature-induced expansion and contraction, etc.
Example refrigerators, methods and apparatus to provide electrical signals through refrigerator liners that overcome at least these problems are disclosed. The disclosed example refrigerators, methods and apparatus allow for the selective interruption of electrical signal conduction while facilitating easy shelf removal, shelf installation, and shelf repositioning. The disclosed examples are robust to inadvertent food contact, to environmental corrosion, to temperature effects, to repeated cycles of removal and installation, etc. Further, the disclosed examples accommodate dimensional and/or flatness variations.
This disclosure provides examples of routing electrical signals from outside a liner to electronic devices or components placed on, within, near, or under a moveable member within an interior compartment. Moreover, the examples disclosed herein can be used to pass electrical signals to any number of electrical components or devices, examples of which are lighting units, sensors, resistance heaters, thermoelectric devices, displays, annunciators, control circuitry, etc. Additionally or alternatively, the refrigerators, methods and apparatus disclosed herein may be used to pass any number and/or type(s) of other electrical signals between a signal source and a device that could, for example, utilize the signal, modify the signal, and/or return a signal. Example signals include a varied current signal, a varied voltage level signal, signals having different frequencies, etc. That is, the examples disclosed herein may be used to pass any number and/or type(s) of electrical signals through a refrigerator liner between any number, type(s) and/or combination(s) of electronic components.
Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of this disclosure, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The embodiments are described below by referring to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements. Here, configurations of an example refrigerator according to this disclosure will be described with reference to
In the front of the example freezing compartment door 5 is formed a dispenser 6 having a dispensing part 7 that is typically recessed to accommodate a container to receive, for example, water and ice, for consumption by a person or animal, for example. The dispensing part 7 includes a discharging lever 8 to be operated for obtaining, for example, ice and water. The discharging lever 8 is, for example, rotatable forward and backward inside the dispensing part 7. Alternatively, a user interface 9 may be used to obtain ice and water. The user interface 9 may, additionally or alternatively, be used to implement any number and/or type(s) of additional or alternative functions. An example user interface 9 includes a capacitive touch area, although other types of user interface elements may of course be used. While in the example of
The contact 201 may be substantially stationary relative to the extending member 202, may be compressible, may move relative to the extending member 202 in response to, for example, a spring 501 (
As shown in
Returning to
In the example of
In some examples, such as a dishwasher or oven, it may be preferable to install the liner pass through 200 from inside the liner 800, with the shape and dimensions of the member 204 selected so the opening 801 is covered by the member 204 when the liner pass through 200 is assembled to the liner 800. In such examples, the member 204 may include a seal against water and/or heat disposed on the side of the member 204 facing the liner 800.
Turning to
While a square shaped is shown in
Returning to
Wiring harnesses are often provided as a subassembly by a harness supplier to a refrigerator manufacturer. Thus, in some examples, the liner pass through 200 is electrically coupled to a system wiring harness when received by a refrigerator manufacturer. This harness is typically assembled to the refrigerator 100 in the space between liner 800 and the metal cabinet 1. This subassembly allows the liner pass through 200 to be installed into the square-shaped hole 801 in the liner 800, as described above, with electrical couplings already robustly made by the harness supplier, thus reducing the chance for errors in electrical couplings that may arise in a refrigerator manufacturing environment.
When the liner pass throughs 200A, B are positioned substantially opposite each other (e.g., as shown in
An advantage is obtained as the spring-force contacts 901A, B deflect and rub across the surface of the contact 201 of the liner pass throughs 200A, B during movement in and out of electrical coupling. This relative rubbing action of mating electrical contact surfaces acts to break thru any surface oxides, corrosion, or build up of contaminants that could prevent the completion of electric circuits.
Any spring elements may be used to achieve the force and desired behaviors described above, examples of which include leaf springs, compression springs, extension springs, elastic material elements, etc. It is understood that the embodiment disclosed herein that utilize a leaf spring contact have an advantage by providing a spring force and a relatively large surface contact area. Moreover, leaf springs reduce the potential for contacts catching on each other as they come into electrical contact. Additionally or alternatively to a leaf spring on the moveable member 900, the liner pass through 200 (e.g., within the member 202) may include a spring-force member 501 that applies a force 502 to the contact 201 (
Turning to
Any number and/or type(s) of liner pass throughs may be associated with a particular moveable member. For example, a first liner pass through may be associated with a first position of a moveable member (e.g., drawer fully closed) and a second liner pass through associated with a second position (e.g., drawer opened). Further, a moveable member may implement an elongated electrically conductive contact to enable an electrical signal to be conducted for a range of positions. Moreover, the liner pass throughs disclosed herein may be assembled to any number and/or place(s) locations including, but not limited to, side walls, back walls, on drawer mounting brackets, etc.
Any terms such as, but not limited to, approximately, substantially, generally, etc. used herein to indicate that a precise value, structure, feature, etc. is not required, need not be specified, etc. For example, a first value being approximately a second value means that from a practical implementation perspective they can be considered as if equal, a generally planar member will be understood to have manufacturing variability, etc. As used herein, such terms will have ready and instant meaning to one of ordinary skill in the art. Further, it will also be understood that practical devices implemented in accordance with this disclosure may have tolerances in their dimensions. However, such tolerances do not impact the applicability of the claims of this patent. Further still, unless expressly indicated as critical, any dimension or size disclosed herein is to not be considered as critical. Moreover, it should be understood that, at least, use of shapes different from those described herein fairly fall within the scope of the claims of this patent.
In this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” an and the do not exclude the plural reference unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Further, conjunctions such as “and,” “or,” and “and/or” used in this specification and the appended claims are inclusive unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. For example, “A and/or B” includes A alone, B alone, and A with B; “A or B” includes A with B, and “A and B” includes A alone, and B alone, Further still, connecting lines, or connectors shown in the various figures presented are intended to represent exemple functional relationships and/or physical or logical couplings between the various elements. It should be noted that many alternative or additional functional relationships, physical connections or logical connections may be present in a practical device. Moreover, no item or component is essential to the practice of the embodiments disclosed herein unless the element is specifically described as “essential” or “critical”.
Although certain examples have been described herein, the scope of coverage of this patent is not limited thereto. On the contrary, this patent covers all methods, apparatus and articles of manufacture fairly falling within the scope of the claims of this patent.
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3506325 | Horvay | Apr 1970 | A |
5238299 | McKinney | Aug 1993 | A |
5772469 | Polgar | Jun 1998 | A |
5888093 | Polgar | Mar 1999 | A |
6150622 | Malnati | Nov 2000 | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160086747 A1 | Mar 2016 | US |