This application relates to a bathroom accessory wall mount, wherein a detent ensures there will be feedback to an installer when the accessory is properly mounted.
Walls are often provided with accessory holding structures. As an example, towel bars, clips, etc. are often mounted to a wall. The attachment of these mounts has raised challenges in that, for aesthetic reasons, it is desirable not to have fasteners visible from a forward face of the wall mount. Thus, the attachment members and fasteners are often concealed.
In one known type of accessory mount, a clip is bolted to a wall. The clip has fingers received in slots in a rear face of the wall accessory. The clip is secured to the wall, and the slots are then moved over the fingers. The accessory is thus mounted to the wall.
However, in practice, the slots have not always been fully mounted on the fingers, and thus there has sometimes been less than optimal attachment.
In a disclosed embodiment of this invention, fingers are received within slots in one of a clip and a wall accessory. The clip is secured to an underlying wall, and the slots are mounted on the fingers to hold the wall accessory to the clip. A detent is provided between the slots and the fingers such that there is feedback provided to an installer that installation has been successfully completed. In one embodiment, this includes a detent that snaps into a groove.
These and other features of the present invention can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
A wall accessory mounting system 20 is illustrated in
A clip 32 includes openings 34 to receive fasteners to secure the clip to an underlying wall. Fingers 36 are also formed on the clip. A groove 38 is formed in the fingers 36.
As shown in
The fingers 36 are shown received within the slots 30. As can be seen, detents 40 on the slots 30 snap into the groove 38.
As shown in
Although an embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.