1. Field of the Invention
The invention is related to wine stands or buckets, and more specifically to devices used to chill wine bottles and similar beverage containers and keep them cool while simultaneously providing ambience and entertainment.
2. Description of Related Art
It is common for a person enjoying a bottle of wine or sparkling wine to desire to have the wine kept cool and maintained at a cool temperature suitable for drinking. Whether in a restaurant or at home, a wine drinker will typically have pre-chilled the wine and then, while enjoying the wine, keep the bottle in a bucket filled with ice water. As another alternative, the wine drinker may pour some wine and return the wine bottle to a refrigerator until another serving of wine is desired. Other beverages such as vodka or gin are also sometimes desired to be consumed at ice cold temperatures at a bar or party. However, other than leaving the bottle in a bucket of ice, it is difficult to keep the beverage remaining in the bottle ice cold.
These methods are somewhat effective, however they suffer from several drawbacks. First, if the wine or other beverage bottle is in a bucket of ice water, the ice and/or the bucket itself partially or completely obscure the label of the wine bottle or block the label from view. Should the wine be returned to the refrigerator, it is, of course, completely hidden from view. Should one of the wine drinkers wish to see the bottle, e.g., to see what she is drinking or to learn more about the wine, she would have to remove it from the ice bucket or refrigerator. If from the former, the ice water will drip from the wine bottle and make a fair amount of mess. If from the latter, the interested party must get up and go to the refrigerator, an act that may be considered rude at someone else's home and may be impossible at a restaurant. Similarly, a party host or bar-goer may wish to show off or display a particularly expensive brand of wine, vodka, or the like. One cannot display a bottle adequately inside an ice bucket. There are artistic stands that display one or more bottles of wine, however these do so in open air and have no cooling or chilling function whatsoever. Placing a bottle that is in the process of being consumed on such a conventional stand will cause it to warm to room temperature rapidly.
The invention is a beverage bottle display stand with an active cooling function. The display stand includes a hollow housing having an opening into which a wine bottle or similar beverage container may be inserted. A reservoir for containing ice water or another cooling medium is disposed inside the hollow housing. A pump, in fluid communication with the reservoir, recirculates the cooling medium from the reservoir through a fluid passageway and out of a spray jet, preferably disposed at the top portion of the housing. The spray jet is aimed at an upper region of the bottle, preferably the shoulder of the bottle, the portion of the bottle where the neck and the main body meet. The inventive bottle display stand causes cooling medium to travel down the body of the bottle substantially in a thin film that does not obscure the bottle or its label and yet creates a waterfall- or fountain-type effect that is extremely aesthetically pleasing without splashing, dripping, or a similar mess. Simultaneously, the thin film of cooling medium chills the beverage and keeps it cold.
Preferably, the top portion of the inventive display stand includes a hook for receiving the neck of a bottle so that the bottle is held in a substantially upright position when the base of the bottle is sitting within the opening of the housing. More preferably, the hook is hollow and has the spray jet disposed in fluid communication therewith; in this embodiment, the cooling medium is conducted up the housing, through the hook, out of the spray jet, and onto the shoulder of the wine bottle. The hook is preferably pivotably attached to the top portion of the housing so as to accommodate wine bottles of different sizes. More specifically, the hook is adapted to accommodate bottles of different lengths having different shoulder heights. The hook may optionally be provided with a no-slip surface and/or adhesive for better securement of the bottle.
The inventive bottle stand may further include a rounded base disposed within the housing adapted to engage a punt of a bottle. The base may be removable. Optionally, the base may be at least partially light transmissible and further include at least one light source disposed within the base adapted to illuminate a bottle placed thereon. Additional lights may be disposed in various locations on the device.
Preferably, the inventive display stand may include a cooling unit in thermal communication with the reservoir, adapted to remove heat from the cooling medium. The cooling unit preferably includes a thermoelectric chip having a cold side and a hot side, the cold side being in thermal communication with the reservoir. If the punt-engaging base is provided, the cold side may at least partially be disposed within the base and is also at least partially in thermal communication with the wine bottle disposed on the base. Optionally, the current applied to the thermoelectric chip may be selectively reversed, thereby causing the hot side to be in thermal communication with the reservoir and/or bottle and thus warm the reservoir and bottle.
At least one positioning rib is preferably provided, projecting from an interior of the housing below the rim of the opening, adapted to space the bottle away from the rim. By keeping the bottle a distance away from the rim of the opening, cooling medium flowing down the bottle will not flow down along the outside of (and thus exit) the housing. Alternatively or in addition, a positioning flange may be provided disposed within the housing below a rim of the opening, adapted to space the bottle away from the rim so as to prevent the cooling medium flowing down the bottle from exiting the housing. The positioning flange may preferably further include at least one drainage hole, wherein cooling medium flowing down the bottle is at least partially collected within the positioning flange, exits the positioning flange via the at least one drainage hole, and returns to the reservoir. Optionally, the positioning flange is angled towards the at least one drainage hole so that cooling medium collected in the flange flows downward in the flange towards the drainage hole.
Description of the invention will now be given with reference to
The inventive bottle stand 10 includes a main housing 20 which is substantially hollow. As shown in
Since many wine bottles 100 include a punt 101 (the concave portion in the base of the bottle shown in
As mentioned above, one preferred cooling medium is water, optionally ice water. However, as the device is being used and the water is sprayed onto a bottle, heat is transferred into the water (or other cooling medium) and the ice will melt. Eventually, all of the ice will melt and the temperature of the water will rise to room temperature, thereby failing to cool the bottle. One solution would be to keep adding ice to the reservoir and drain some liquid out periodically via drain hole 50. A preferred solution, however, is to employ a cooling unit 90 (see
The preferred embodiment of the cooling unit 90 utilizes a thermoelectric or Peltier device so as to provide a very compact and quiet way to remove heat from the reservoir. (Alternatively, the cooling unit may take the form of a compressor as in a conventional refrigerator.) A perspective view of one configuration of cooling unit 90 is shown in
On the other side of thermoelectric chip 91, fins 96 draw heat from hot side 93, and fan 97 blows air onto fins 96 to help remove heat therefrom. As shown in
One of the advantages of using a thermoelectric chip is that the relative temperatures of the sides of the chip can be reversed simply by reversing the current applied thereto. As such, by simply switching the current, cold plate 95, 95′ could act as a hot plate to maintain a bottle and the contents of reservoir 24 (“warming medium”) at a warm temperature. This warming feature is suitable for beverages such as apple cider (hard or otherwise), Irish coffee, some rum-based drinks, and the like. Optionally, a temperature sensor (not shown) may be provided coupled to a current controller which controls the current applied to the thermoelectric chip to maintain the cooling medium in equilibrium at a desired temperature. For example, if the temperature of the reservoir drops below a threshold during cooling, or above a threshold during warming, the current across the thermoelectric chip will be reversed so as to change the functioning of the thermoelectric chip from cooling to warming or vice versa. The temperature sensor may optionally cause the current controller to simply cut off the current supply to the thermoelectric chip, rather than actively reverse its function, when the temperature is determined to be too high or too low.
An optional lighting package 70 may be provided within the housing for purposes decoratively illuminating the bottle and other functions. For example, if base 26 is made translucent or transparent, LEDs 72 may be provided within base 26 to illuminate the bottle from underneath. The colors or brightness of the lights may be selected to indicate any or all of the following: the current temperature of the bottle (if a temperature sensor is also employed); how long the bottle has been chilled in the current cycle and/or how much time is left; etc. Other lights may be disposed in and around the housing as well, for example, on the front of housing 20, on wall 23, on or along the top portion 40 (described below), etc. Any or all of these lights may be adjustable in brightness, or made to flicker, etc.
The upper portion of the housing 20 includes a front wall 23 which is shown as sloping (but need not be sloping). Reservoir 24 is delimited at its uppermost point by ceiling 25, which also serves to provide additional structural integrity to the overall housing 20. The rear wall of housing 20 includes a fluid flow path 28 (e.g., piping), preferably integrally formed with housing 20. A pump 30 disposed within reservoir 24 draws cooling medium in from the reservoir and expels it up piping 32 and into fluid flow path 28 in the direction of the top portion 40 of device 10.
Top portion 40 preferably includes at its distal end a hook 42 for receiving and securing neck 104 of bottle 100. The proximal end of top portion 40 preferably includes a hub 44 which is pivotably secured around pivot portion 21 of housing 20. As best shown in
As best shown in
So that hook 42 can better secure the neck of a bottle, part or all of the hook inner surface 43 may be provided with a no-slip material having a higher coefficient of friction than the rest of the housing. In one embodiment, surface 43 is provided with an adhesive. In addition or in the alternative, surface 43 is provided with a non-adhesive no-slip material such as neoprene. Other no-slip or otherwise gripping or adherent materials are also contemplated, provided they retain their relevant properties when wet and/or cold (e.g., 1-5° C.).
Bottle 100 is preferably held or maintained at an angle to vertical between 65 and 80 degrees, more preferably between 70 and 75 degrees, and most preferably at 73 degrees for the embodiment shown in
An offset rib or positioner of one form or another may also be provided along at least part of an inner perimeter of opening 22 to prevent the bottle from leaning directly against the side of the housing at opening 22. By spacing the side of the bottle from the rim of the opening, the positioner prevents cooling medium from travelling down the side of the bottle and flowing outside the housing. Instead, cooling medium travels down the side of the bottle and back into reservoir 24.
Two types of bottle positioners are shown in
In
In operation, the invention works as follows. It is desired to maintain a bottle of wine or similar beverage at a chilled or cold temperature. The reservoir 24 of housing 20 is filled with ice water via opening 22. Wine bottle 100 is placed within opening 22. If the wine bottle has a punt 101, the punt is places atop convex base 26. If the wine bottle has a flat base, base 26 may be removed. Top portion 40 is positioned so that hook 42 loops around neck 104 of bottle 100, thereby maintaining the bottle 100 at an angle of preferably 70-75 degrees from vertical. Device 10 is activated by operation of control 80. In a basic embodiment, control 80 is a simple on/off switch which activates pump 30. In a more advanced embodiment, control 80 includes a timing mechanism of some sort, be it a digital timer or a spring wound timer. In another embodiment, control 80 allows the user to select different flow rates depending on the size of the bottle being kept cold. The flow rate selector may be of the continuously variable type to also allow for reduced flow rates as the bottle is emptied by those enjoying its contents. Control 80 may take the form of a knob, buttons, keypad, or any known or to-be-developed type of control or actuator. In any event, the cooling medium (preferably ice water) is pumped up fluid flow path 28 into top portion 40 and falls out of jet or nozzle 60 substantially onto shoulder 106 of bottle 100, preferably near where neck 104 meets main section 102. The cooling medium falls over a substantial portion of the bottle and keeps the contents of the bottle cool while providing an aesthetically pleasing display that does not occlude or obscure the wine bottle or its label. A cooling unit, preferably a thermoelectric cooling unit, helps maintain the cooling medium and/or the bottle at a desired temperature. Preferably, the thermoelectric cooling unit simply draws heat from the reservoir to keep the cooling medium (and thus the bottle) as cold as possible. Optionally, the cooling unit is coupled to a temperature sensor which controls the operation of the cooling unit to maintain thermal equilibrium. Lights (preferably LEDs) illuminate the bottle for aesthetic purposes and to make the bottle more visible in a typically dark party or bar environment.
Finally, combinations of any of the above configurations of jets may be employed, as shown in
Having described certain embodiments of the invention, it should be understood that the invention is not limited to the above description or the attached exemplary drawings. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by the claims appearing hereinbelow and any equivalents thereof as would be appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art.
Domestic priority is claimed from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/036,528 filed Mar. 14, 2008, entitled “Wine Bottle Stand with Active Cooling”, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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