The present invention relates to display racks and tables and more particularly to an apparatus for moving a display rack, such as a clothes rack, display tables, and merchandise fixtures.
Conventional clothes and display racks are known and are typically used for displaying clothing items in commercial or consumer settings, such as in a department store, clothing store, and in the garment sales trade. These display racks may be quite long and heavy, especially when full of clothes for display purposes.
Display racks are used to display not just clothes but also accessories. Other display racks are known such as shoe displays, handbag displays, hat displays and the like. The use of the term “display rack” includes all such displays (racks, tables, fixtures and otherwise) and others known to those in the art. For example, further displays include merchandise tables or merchandise fixtures which may be used to display all types of merchandise in a retail store or other commercial establishment. Each of these types of displays are heavy even when not adorned with merchandise.
Display racks used in commercial or consumer settings must be rigid and strong, especially those in which the clothes rack is extended in a longitudinal direction, such as the conventional clothes rack used in a department store. Some conventional clothes racks may have a length exceeding 75 inches, or longer. Conventional display racks must be strong to support the clothes or other displayed items extending over such a length of 48 inches or greater. The display rack is typically comprised of a metal such as steel and thus are very heavy. In addition to being required to support the weight of the clothes or other displayed items, the display rack must be heavy so as to be stable and not easily moved when the consumer is removing a specific displayed item or even falling into the display rack itself. Further, when shopping with children it is quite common for the children to run into the middle open section of the display rack and be surrounded by clothes or other displayed items, as if in a cave of clothes. The child or children will move aside the displayed items and sometimes even hang on the bar used to hold hangers for the clothes or other displayed items. Thus the display rack is typically long and heavy and very hard to move, for safety and stability purposes.
While such strength and weight is needed for the characteristics described above, they are impediments when the store manager wishes to relocate a display rack, especially a display rack which has displayed items thereon. The conventional display rack has legs which are not movable and are set to be stable on the floor. The legs of the display rack are configured to anchor the display rack when in use. Thus the display rack is typically moved via brute force by a number of persons pulling and pushing together to move the heavy display rack. Such movement requires a large number of persons engaged in a coordinated action. Further, such movement commonly results in damaged floors where the legs, or other support means, of the display rack are dragged across the floor. Damage may include scraped floors, divots, holes and other damage. Such methods to move a display rack may also result in harm or injury to the persons moving the display rack. Injuries may include bumps, bruises, strained muscles, broken bones, and even injury to extremities such as the leg of a display rack crushing a person's toe.
In one example, retail staff may presently transport clothing racks around within the stores with the racks full of merchandise. This greatly adds to the difficulty and weight of the racks with some racks weighing up to 400 lbs. This makes transportation extremely time consuming and difficult. These racks are often dragged from location to location, which often results in damage to the retail locations floor.
While certain display racks have been developed including wheels on the legs or support means, such display racks are typically limited in length and the wheels result in less stability when the display rack, is stagnant. Thus the sturdiness and stability needed to support the displayed items and to prevent movement when a customer is removing displayed items, along with the aforementioned children playing in or on the display racks, contradicts the use of wheels or other moveable supports on a display rack itself.
Certain dollies or devices are known which may mechanically lift a display rack but such devices are time consuming to use, expensive, require an energy source such as electricity or gasoline, large to store when not in use, and/or require multiple persons to lift the display rack manually onto such devices.
Thus, a need exists for an apparatus which may be connected to a display rack for the purpose of moving the display rack, including when the display rack is partially or full of displayed items. A further need exists for an apparatus to move a display rack while reducing or eliminating damage to the surface over which the display rack is moved. Another need exists for an apparatus to move a display rack while reducing or eliminating injury to the person engaged in moving the display rack. A further need exists for an apparatus to move a display rack which is easy to store and does not take up space while in storage, which storage space is typically at a premium in a retail store or elsewhere since merchandise for sale takes priority. A further need exists for a cheaper apparatus to move a dis play rack.
Merchandise fixtures are also rigid and heavy so as to be sturdy to support the merchandise thereon and to prevent movement of the fixture, such as but not including a table or display or hanging fixture, and merchandise when bumped into by a person, such as a shopper. Moving a merchandise fixture conventionally is done by a plurality of persons physically pushing and pulling the table or fixture, resulting in damaged floors and strains, even possible injury, to the persons. A need exists for an apparatus which may be connected to a merchandise table or merchandise fixture for the purpose of moving the merchandise table or merchandise fixture. A further need exists for an apparatus to move a merchandise table or merchandise fixture while reducing or eliminating damage to the surface over which the merchandise table is moved. Another need exists for an apparatus to move a merchandise table or merchandise fixture while reducing or eliminating injury to the person engaged in moving the merchandise table or merchandise fixture.
Other advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description and appended claims.
Reference will now be made to the drawings wherein like reference numerals identify similar structural features or aspects of the subject invention. For purposes of explanation and illustration, and not limitation, exemplary embodiments of a minimally invasive surgical assembly in accordance with the invention, or aspects thereof, are shown in
In one embodiment of the inventive apparatus 100, the horizontal support member 120 has at least two vertical support members 130, 131. In this embodiment there are two legs 130, 131 (otherwise known as vertical support members) each of which is connected to a moving means, such as a wheel 140, 141. The moving means may include caster, wheels and the like. The moving means such as a pair of wheels as shown in
The caster is conventional, such as that of U.S. Pat. No. 5,745,951 whose contents are incorporated by reference. The caster 142, 143 may include a caster assembly that has a caster fork, a caster wheel 140, 141 attached to the caster fork, and a mounting shaft attached to a caster fork. The mounting shaft is shaped and sized to extend through the aperture in a frame leg when the caster assembly is in an installed position wherein the caster is adjacent to a bottom side of the frame leg and an intermediate portion of the mounting shaft is adjacent to a top side of the frame leg. The mounting shaft has an generally flat blocking surface extending along a portion of the shaft such that the blocking surface is adjacent to the aperture in the frame leg when the caster is in the installed position. The wheels 140, 141 may have a braking means 144, 145 attached such as shown in
The horizontal support member 120 of the inventive apparatus 100 includes at least one, preferably at least two, connecting means capable of connecting to or supporting a lower portion of the display rack when the apparatus is in use to move the display rack. The connecting means 150 may be a hook, Velcro metal lever or the like. Depending on the length and weight of the display rack, merchandise table or merchandise fixture being moved by the inventive apparatus 100, the connecting means 150 may include two or more means to support the lifted display rack when in use. In this embodiment of the invention 100 the connecting means are two hooks 150, 151 having a recess area to connect to and support the bottom horizontal portion of a display rack. In use a pair of apparatus is employed with each being connected to opposite ends of the display rack such that the display rack is lifted off the floor and moved via the wheels 140, 141 on each of the pair of apparatus 100.
As shown in
The apparatus 100 may be comprised of metal or rigid plastics and polymers, aluminum, carbon and the like. The apparatus 100 should be comprised of a material sufficient to support a full display rack, for instance up to about 300 pounds. With additional support and material an apparatus 100 can support up to 1,000 pounds. The apparatus is preferably made of metal more preferably either steel or aluminum.
The vertical member 110 should be of sufficient height to allow the user to easily grasp it so as to move the connected and lifted display rack. The vertical member 110 may be of a height from about 20 inches to about 80 inches, preferably from about 40 inches to about 60 inches. In a preferred embodiment the vertical member 110 is at least 24 inches.
Optionally vertical member 110 may be telescoping so that the height may be adjusted by the user depending on the height of the display rack and/or the height of the person moving the display rack via the inventive apparatus 100.
The vertical member 110 may also optionally include a means to connect an upper portion of the display rack to the apparatus 100. For instance, the connecting means may be a strap 160, such as a Velcro strap, a rope strap, a fabric strap, a bungee cord or any elastic or pliable strap which may be tied or secured to an upper position of the display rack. The strap 160 further secures the display rack to the apparatus 100 when in use so that the display rack remains upright and connected to the apparatus 100.
The vertical member 10 may also optionally include a pulling means which may be the connecting means 160 or may be some other handle or pulling means 190. In other embodiments the pulling means ay be a handle 190 as shown in
A side view of the inventive apparatus 100 is shown in
In use, at least one and preferably a pair of the inventive apparatus 100, are rolled to the location of the display rack. The method of use includes the step of a user placing the inventive apparatus 100 next to one end of the display rack with the hooks 150, 151 protruding toward the display rack. The user angles the apparatus as shown in
In yet another embodiment of the present invention as shown in
The inventive apparatus 100 is also easy to store. The inventive apparatus 100 has a relatively small footprint in that the width of the apparatus is a combination of the width of the vertical member 110, horizontal member 120, wheels 140, 141 and hooks 150, 151. Notably the hooks 150, 151 may be used to hang the inventive apparatus 100 when in storage thus further reducing the footprint of the inventive apparatus 100. The inventive apparatus 100 may be hung upside down with the hooks 150, 151 resting on top of a storage vertical frame. Thus the inventive apparatus 100 is easy to store when not in use and not bulky compared to conventional moving apparatus.
The following benefits, structure, and advantages are also contemplated by the present invention: reduced or eliminated damage to floors and other surfaces due to the movement of the display rack, reduced strain and physical exertion by the user when moving the display rack, easier handling of display racks by the user, and other benefits. The inventive apparatus 100 is also easier and cheaper to manufacture than conventional display rack movers and has the advantage of not requiring an energy source such as electricity, batteries or gasoline to lift and move the display rack(s). Further, the inventive apparatus quickly lifts and moves the display rack with minimum training of the user.
The apparatus and method of use of the present invention, as described above and shown in the drawings, provide for movement of display racks with superior properties including ease of use and operation. While the apparatus and methods of the subject invention have been shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that changes and/or modifications may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the subject invention.
This application claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 62/054,916 filed Sep. 24, 2014 and application Serial No. PCT/US2015/051,873 filed Sep. 24, 2015.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US15/51873 | 9/24/2015 | WO | 00 |