The present invention relates to product display hooks, such as typically are mounted on perforated panel boards, mounting bars, grids or the like. The display hooks support a plurality of items of merchandise, which can be extracted individually by customers and replenished with new merchandise when the hook is emptied or depleted. In particular, the invention relates to product display hooks that are designed to support bottled or otherwise packaged products by engaging a neck, flange, cap or the like, at the top of the bottle or other package.
For certain types of products, including but not limited to bottled or packaged products having a cap the top, it may be desirable and more convenient to display the products for sale by suspending them from their caps, flanges or other elements at the top of the package. A variety of display devices are available for this purpose. Examples of these are the Kinseley U.S. Pat. No. 4,863,131, Gollob et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,785,189, Spammer et al U.S. Pat. No. 5,865,326, and Hartwall U.S. Pat. No. 6,394,288. A shortcoming of these devices is that they all require front loading, meaning that new products must always be loaded from the front of the device. When displaying food products, or other products having a limited shelf life, it is very important that the display hooks be loaded properly, with new items always being placed at the back of the display, and older items be being moved to the front of the display, where they will be removed first by the customers. In order to assure that the merchandise on a front-loading display device is as fresh as practicable, one must either allow the display hook to be fully depleted before reloading, or remove any unsold products, load new products onto the back of the display, and then replace the unsold products at the front of the hook. This sometimes may not done properly, because of the extra time and effort required of the store employee.
The shortcomings of the front-loading arrangements described in the foregoing paragraph are partly resolved in display mechanisms represented by the Spamer et al U.S. Pat. No. 5,586,678, and Trulaske U.S. Pat. No. 6,523,719. These devices allow back loading of the display. However, the loading must be in the direction of the axis of the display, which requires that open space be provided behind the display to allow a product to be positioned behind the display for loading. Moreover, these back-loading displays require special support structure in order to provide for the necessary space behind the display device.
Another form of display that permits loading of product at the rear of the display is that shown in the Merl U.S. Pat. No. 4,310,097. In that device, product bottles, which are supported by their necks, are loaded downwardly into the back of the display through a large open space at the back of the display. While this makes it possible for products to be back-loaded into the display, the Merl display device makes the process somewhat cumbersome, in that products are loaded from above the display. This requires the entire bottle to be gripped by its neck or top, lowered into the display and then moved forward until the neck of the bottle is engaged by spaced apart supports. A “catch basin” is provided to enable bottles, dropped during loading, to be retrieved.
The present invention is directed to a novel form of back-loading display hook which is both greatly improved and greatly simplified in comparison to available display devices. The device of the invention can be constructed in an economical manner, of wire rod material commonly utilized in the manufacture of display hooks, and can be loaded from the back of the hook, by moving the product upward into a loading position at the back of the hook and then forward until the cap, neck or other part of the top structure of the product or container is fully supported by forwardly extending portions of the display hook. Loading from underneath is significantly easier and more efficient than loading from above or from behind.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the display hook is formed from a single length of wire rod. The wire rod is shaped and formed to provide a section of parallel wires spaced to engage and support the cap of a product package or container. A loading position is provided at the back of the hook, where the wires are spaced farther apart, forming a wider space, sufficient to allow the cap of the product package to be inserted upwardly between the wires. The product package is then moved forwardly until the cap is supported by the more narrowly spaced forward portions of the wires. If desired, as in the preferred and illustrated embodiment of the invention, the forward portions of the support wires may be tilted downward to provide for an automatic forward feeding of the products by the action of gravity.
After a product package has been position on the forward portions of the support wires, it is prevented from being accidentally moved rearwardly, back into the loading position, by means of a displaceable stop element. The stop element, which normally blocks rearward entry of a package into the loading position, is displaceable upwardly by the product package, when the product is being inserted upwardly into the loading position, and returns to it's normal stop position, as soon as the product is moved forward from the loading position. An advantageous form of stop element is a flat, flexible element, which extends forwardly from a mounting base of the hook and is upwardly displaceable by the package when a product package is loaded onto the hook. As soon as a product package moves forward from the loading position, the stop element automatically returns to its normal position to prevent the product from re-entering the loading position if pushed rearwardly from the front.
Forward portions of the wire hook are bent upwardly to form a temporary forward limit position for loaded product packages. Above the upwardly bent portions, the wire rod elements extend divergently upward and are connected at the top, forming a “window” somewhat in the form of an inverted triangle, through which the container cap can be passed when a customer retrieves a product from the display. To advantage, a label holder is pivoted at the top of the window and normally is positioned in front of the window to provide product pricing and information. When a product is retrieved from the display hook, the label holder pivots upward to allow the product cap to pass through the window.
For a more complete understanding of the above and other features and advantages of the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention, and to the accompanying drawings.
Referring to the drawings,
In the illustrated system, the product containers 28 are in the form of soft bags, made of plastic material and containing a liquid or semi-liquid food product, such as baby foods, having a relatively limited shelf life. However, the invention is not limited to particular types of containers or to particular products. At their tops, the containers 28 are formed with narrowed neck portions 29 (
In a representative, but non-limiting example, the caps 30 may have a diameter across the bottom of about 1.35 inch. In the illustrated example the bottom dimension represents the maximum diameter of the cap. Caps of this size can be reliably supported on wire support elements 26, 27 spaced apart approximately 0.85 inch. Although the invention is designed specifically for the support of products of the general type illustrated, it should be understood that neither the products nor the packages themselves form a part of the invention. Moreover, it should be understood that, unless the context indicates otherwise, the terms “product”, “package”, and “container” may be used interchangeably herein to refer to the item or items supported by the display device of the invention.
In accordance with an aspect of the invention, the spacing between the wire support elements 26, 27 is enlarged at the innermost ends 31, 32 of the wires, immediately adjacent to the mounting base 21, to form a product loading position 33. The enlarged spacing between the wire elements 31, 32 may be approximately 1.38 inch, which is equal to or slightly greater than the diameter of the container caps 30, although less than the width of the container bodies. The length of the loading position 33, defined by the elements 31, 32, is also slightly greater than the diameter of the caps 30, such that the cap 30 of a vertically oriented package 28 can be inserted vertically upward through the enlarged opening until the cap lies above the level of the wire support elements 26, 27, after which the package 28 may be moved forwardly until the bottom of the cap 30 is fully supported by the wire elements 26, 27. Additional product containers 28 can be loaded into the back of the display hook through the loading position 33, until the capacity of the hook has been reached.
In the illustrated device, the innermost ends 34, 35 of the wires are bent downward and fixed to the mounting base 21, typically by welding. However, various alternative arrangements can be employed for mounting of the hooks, including, for example, configuring the innermost ends of the hook to be received in openings of an apertured panel board.
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In accordance with a feature of the invention, a stop element 24 is positioned in the loading position 33 to prevent product containers, previously loaded onto the support elements 26, 27, from being displaced rearwardly back into the loading position, where they might fall through the enlarged opening. A preferred form of stop element is a normally flat but somewhat flexible tongue 42 (
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the label holder 23 (
To advantage, the label holder is configured in a way that prevents upward rotation thereof, during product removal, into or beyond a vertical position. This assures that, after removal of the product, the label holder will automatically pivot back to its normal position, in front of the product removal opening 41. As shown particularly in
The device of the invention represents a significant improvement over standard display hook arrangements in providing for a simplified and economical form of back-loading hook, in which products are easily and efficiently loaded by lifting the product or container upwardly to insert its cap into the loading position at the back of the hook and moving it forward until engaged by the support elements 26, 27. The arrangement provides for easy and highly efficient loading in a manner to assure that the oldest products are always at the front of the display, and thus maintaining a desired first in-first out inventory management. The device of the invention is of simplified construction and is economical to manufacture, yet is highly functional for the purposes intended.
It should be understood, of course, that the specific preferred embodiments of the invention illustrated and described herein are intended to be representative only, and not by way of limitation, as many variations may be made therein without departing from the clear teachings of the invention. Accordingly reference should be made to the following appended claims in determining the full scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61683484 | Aug 2012 | US |