This application is a U.S. National Phase application of PCT International Application No. PCT/ES2006/000279, filed May 24, 2006.
The present invention generally relates to an awning case assembly provided with a housing wherein a winding bar for winding the canvas is housed, a load bar to which a front edge of the canvas is fixed, and a pair of foldable arms connected at one end to the housing and at the other end to the load bar. In a folded awning situation, the load bar closes the housing with the wound canvas and the folded arms therein.
A type of awning is well known comprising a canvas, a winding tube on which said canvas is wound, a load bar joined to a front end of the canvas, and extensible articulated arms connected to the load bar and elastically pushed to extend the canvas as it is unwound and to keep the canvas taut. A manual or motor-driven mechanism allows rotation of the winding tube so as to extend or draw in the canvas of the awning. It is also known to incorporate the canvas winding tube inside a case which can be closed to protect it. This case is generally formed by an elongated housing provided with a front longitudinal opening through which the canvas passes and by a load bar configured to close said longitudinal opening in a folded awning situation, wherein the arms are folded and housed inside the housing. The housing is closed at both side ends by end plates, each of which is rotatably coupled to a respective support part fixed in relation to a wall or another structure. Adjustment means allow adjusting and fixing the angular position of the end plates, and therefore of the case, with respect to the support parts. Positioning parts fixed inside the load bar collaborate in the correct positioning of the foldable arms inside the case in the closed case situation.
European patent EP 0593389 discloses a support device with adjustable inclination for an awning case having the features described above. Given that the load bar is supported by the foldable arms, and that the path of the movement of the load bar during a closing operation of the case is determined by the folding movement of the foldable arms, the coupling of the load bar with the front side of the housing during the last stage of the closing operation is inaccurate and the degree of tightness achieved is low. In an exemplary embodiment, the awning case housing includes an outer wall surrounding the winding bar and the canvas at the upper, lower and rear sides thereof, and an auxiliary part attached to the outer wall and forming a partition wall surrounding the winding bar and the canvas at the front side thereof except in the area of the longitudinal opening allowing the passage of the canvas. In the closed situation, said partition wall is interposed between the wound canvas and the forded arms without contact with the load bar.
Document NL 1006038 discloses an awning case comprising a housing for a winding bar with a canvas wound thereon and a load bar having a longitudinal fixing configuration to which a front end of the canvas is attached. The load bar is shaped so as to close a longitudinal opening of the housing in a closed situation. The opening of the housing is delimited by lower and upper longitudinal coupling edges, and the load bar comprises lower and upper coupling configurations arranged to couple with the lower and upper longitudinal coupling edges of the housing, respectively. From the figures can be deduced that, during a last stage of the closing operation, first the lower coupling configuration of the load bar is coupled to the lower coupling edge of the housing forming a fulcrum line about which the load bar can rotate under the pulling action of the canvas until the upper coupling configuration of the load bar is coupled to the upper coupling edge of the housing. However, a drawback with this construction is that the upper coupling configuration of the load bar is necessarily placed at a highest level than the longitudinal fixing configuration of the load bar to which the canvas is attached, and thus an upper portion of the load bar protrudes upwards from the canvas providing an obstacle susceptible to build-up rainwater, dust and other debris when the awning is open.
The present invention contributes to overcoming the previous and other drawbacks by providing an awning case assembly comprising a housing adapted to house a winding tube with a canvas wound thereon, said housing having a longitudinal opening allowing the passage of said canvas; and a load bar having a longitudinal fixing configuration to which a front edge of said canvas is fixed. The mentioned load bar is hingedly connected to distal ends of foldable arms having proximal ends hingedly connected to the housing. The load bar is adapted to be coupled to the housing in a folded awning situation, closing said longitudinal opening and covering said foldable arms. To that end, the load bar comprises a first longitudinal coupling configuration adjacent to said longitudinal fixing configuration and adapted to be coupled to a first longitudinal coupling edge of the housing, and a second longitudinal coupling configuration arranged at a distance from said first coupling configuration and adapted to be coupled to a second longitudinal coupling edge of the housing. Said first and second coupling configurations and said first and second coupling edges are arranged such that during a closing operation of the case by winding the canvas, the second coupling configuration of the load bar is first coupled to the second coupling edge of the housing, such as to form a fulcrum line about which the load bar can rotate under the action of a pulling force exerted by the canvas on the fixing configuration until the first coupling configuration is coupled to the first coupling edge of the housing.
The awning case assembly of the present invention is characterized in that the housing comprises an outer wall surrounding the winding tube and the canvas at the upper, lower and rear sides, and a partition wall surrounding the winding tube and the canvas at the front side except in the area of the longitudinal opening, said partition wall being placed between the canvas wound on the winding tube and the foldable arms in the folded awning situation, and the first coupling edge of the housing is formed at a free upper edge of said partition wall close to an upper front edge of said outer wall and separated therefrom by said longitudinal opening, and the second coupling edge of the housing is formed at a lower front edge of said outer wall.
With this construction, as the first longitudinal coupling edge of the housing is placed at the free upper end of the partition wall, below the longitudinal opening through which the canvas passes, the first longitudinal coupling configuration of the load bar is at a lower level than the longitudinal fixing configuration to which the canvas is attached. This enables to place the longitudinal fixing configuration at the uppermost level of the load bar thus avoiding or minimizing the possibility of building-up rainwater, dust and other debris when the awning is open.
The mentioned rotation of the load bar about said fulcrum line, which is feasible by a certain elasticity of the materials, is of a very small magnitude but is enough to ensure an accurate coupling and a relatively tight closing.
The previous and other advantages and features will be better understood from the following detailed description of an exemplary embodiment with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
With reference first to
The housing 41 is adapted to house a winding tube 25 with the canvas 26 wound thereon (see also
The housing 41 comprises an outer wall 55 surrounding the winding tube 25 and the canvas 26 at the upper, lower and rear sides, and a partition wall 56 surrounding the winding tube 25 and the canvas 26 at the front side except in the area of the mentioned longitudinal opening 50. The outer wall 55 of the housing 41 is advantageously formed by two extruded profiles 41a, 41b of a lightweight metal material, such as an aluminium alloy. In this case, the extruded profiles 41a, 41b are longitudinally connected to one another along a connecting line 71. However, the outer wall 55 of the housing 41 could be formed from a single profile with an equivalent result. One part of the outer wall 55 is a double wall forming one or more chambers 57 therein which, apart from offering additional protection for the case, form important reinforcing and stiffening elements against bending and torsion. Inner surfaces of said outer wall 55 and of said partition wall 56 define a substantially cylindrical surface facing the canvas 26 wound on the winding tube 25 and they preferably include a coating 44 of plastic material with a low friction coefficient. In a folded awning situation (
As shown more clearly in
The load bar 42 is adapted to be coupled to the housing 41 in said folded awning situation, closing the longitudinal opening 50 and covering the foldable arms 24. To that end, as shown more clearly in
Although its use is not very common, in an exemplary embodiment not shown the case 40 has a reverse construction, such that the longitudinal opening for the passage of the canvas is located at the lower region of the housing and the arms are located above the canvas.
Several positions in a final stage of the closing operation of the case are shown in the sequence of views of
End covers 68 provided with contours 69 facing the housing 41 are fixed at the ends of the load bar 42, and the end plates 2 comprise on their inner side, i.e. on the side opposite to the support part 1, in addition to a projection (not shown) with which the corresponding proximal end of the foldable arm is articulated, ramps 67 adapted to cooperate with said contours 69 of the end covers 68 of the load bar, such that in the final stage of the closing operation of the housing 40 shown in
A person skilled in the art will think of several variations and modifications in the exemplary embodiment shown and described without departing from the scope of the present invention as it is defined in the attached claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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200501397 | Jun 2005 | ES | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/ES2006/000279 | 5/24/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/13/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/131578 | 12/14/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090199974 A1 | Aug 2009 | US |