The present invention relates to systems and methods for food guard systems (sometimes called “sneeze guards”) and, more particularly, to a bracket system, and method for using the same, for retrofit of a drop shield to a main viewing panel of a food guard.
The spread of viruses and other pathogens in to and among the general public is a constant concern of the food service industry, particularly in cafeteria style, salad bar, and buffet style serving applications. Consequently, there is an almost ubiquitous use of food guards, or sneeze guards, to protect food from exposure to viruses and pathogens in cafeterias and buffets and self-service applications.
All food guard systems include at least a main viewing panel positioned to optimally protect the food from exposure, usually made of glass or clear plastic so that users can view the food but, the food is somewhat shielded from airborne contaminants launched by users breathing, sneezing, talking, yawning, or coughing while viewing or self-serving the food items. Commonly, the main viewing panel may be suspended at an angle above and in front of the staged food such that a user can easily reach under the main viewing panel (“reach in” access) and self-serve or receive a food portion being passed from a cafeteria worker.
A food guard is a tried and true solution for protecting exposed food in such applications, but in times when a particular, highly contagious virus is “going around,” such as was experienced during the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, food service establishments may desire to close off for an extended amount of time, the ability for patrons to reach in and gain access beneath the main viewing panel of food guard systems.
Replacement of an entire food guard system with a system that does not provide reach in access is not cost effective or desirable when the environmental conditions necessitating the replacement will be temporary. Similarly, permanent modification of a food guard system, such as drilling holes in a main viewing panel or modifying support structure to receive additional bracketry, is also undesirable both aesthetically and financially. And so, there is a need in the art for a bracket system that can be used to retrofit a drop shield to a main viewing panel of a food guard without requiring that the main viewing panel or the support structure of the food guard be modified. Additionally, there is a need in the art for such a bracket system that positions the drop shield such that any gap between the main viewing panel and the drop shield is minimized to prevent pass through of airborne viruses or pathogens.
Exemplary embodiments of a bracket system for retrofit of a drop shield to a main viewing panel of a food guard are disclosed. Certain embodiments are configured such that an existing food guard system does not require permanent modification, or replacement, in order to close off “reach in” access to food stored beneath the food guard system. It is a further advantage of certain embodiments of the solution that any gap defined beneath the main viewing panel of the food guard and the upper edge of the drop shield is set beneath and behind the leading edge of the main viewing panel, thereby mitigating or significantly reducing the probability that airborne pathogens may find their way to food stored beneath the food guard system.
An exemplary embodiment includes a system for attaching a drop down panel to a main viewing panel of an existing food guard system. The system includes a first attachment device that is configured to be secured to main viewing panel and a second attachment device secured to the drop down panel. Further, an adjustable hinge is configured to couple the first attachment device to the second attachment device such that the main viewing panel and the drop down panel can be moved, adjusted and held at a desired angle relative to each other. Advantageously, the first attachment device attaches to the main viewing panel that is positioned over an area to be protected, without having to modify the main viewing panel and/or its support system, and the second attachment device holds the drop down panel in front of an area such that access to the area and food items is restricted.
In some embodiments, the first attachment device includes a first holder that defines a first channel for receiving the main viewing panel. One side of the first holder includes one or more apertures that allow one or more securement elements to be inserted and then forced to apply pressure against the main viewing panel and thus, biasing the main viewing panel against an opposing side of the first holder to secure the first attachment device in position.
Similarly, in some embodiments, the second attachment device includes a second holder that defines a second channel for receiving the drop down panel. One side of the second holder includes one or more apertures that allow one or more securement elements to be inserted and then forced to apply pressure against drop down panel and thus, biasing the drop down panel against an opposing side of the second holder to secure the drop down panel in position.
In some embodiments, the second attachment device is fixedly attached to the drop down panel. Such attachment can be accomplished by adhesive, bolts, clamps etc. In these embodiments the drop down panel and the attachment devices can be sold as a unitary element.
In some embodiments, the adjustable hinge includes one or more flanges on the first attachment device and one or more flanges on the second attachment device. These flanges define an aperture. To assemble the first attachment device to the second attachment device, the flanges are interleaved such that the apertures are in alignment and, a rod or pin is inserted through the apertures. The rod can then be secured in position with one or more tightening nuts, clamps, pins, etc., such that the hinge can be secured together.
For some embodiments, the rod includes one or more nuts that can be tightened to secure the hinge in a particular position. Further, the second panel can be adjusted relative to the first panel by loosening the one or more nuts, pivoting the hinge to a new position, then re-tightening the nuts.
In some embodiments, the hinge may include a spring configured to bias the first attachment device towards a first position but still allow the first attachment device to be moved towards a second position.
Likewise, in some embodiments, the hinge may include a spring configured to bias the second attachment device towards a first position but still allow the second attachment device to be moved towards a second position.
In yet other embodiments, the hinge may include two springs. A first spring is configured to bias the first attachment device towards a first position but still allow the second attachment device to be moved towards a second position. Further, a second spring is configured to bias the second attachment device towards a third position but still allow the second attachment device to be moved towards a fourth position.
These and other embodiments are presented in more detail in the following drawings and accompanying detailed description.
Various embodiments, aspects and features of the present invention encompass a bracket system for enabling the addition of a drop shield to a main viewing panel of a food guard.
In this description, the terms sanitizing and disinfecting, and their conjugants, are used interchangeably to refer to the functional goal of embodiments of the solution, namely, to mitigate exposure of food beneath a food guard system to harmful virus, pathogens debris or other forms of contamination.
In this description, the term “pathogen” refers to any bacterium, virus, contaminate or other microorganism that can cause disease to humans.
In this description, the terms “food guard,” “food guard system,” “sneeze guard” and the like are used interchangeably and refer to any system configured to present a barrier between the general public or consumers and food, drinks or other items staged on a serving table, bar or buffet.
In the illustrated embodiment, the first attachment device 102 includes a slot, channel, chamber or cavity (referred to generally as a channel) 106 for receiving a first panel. The second attachment device includes a slot, channel, chamber or cavity (referred to generally as a channel) 108 for receiving a second panel. As best illustrated in the second attachment device, one or more clamping, securement or pressure devices 120 can be utilized to secure the a panel to the second attachment device. In the illustrated embodiment, the panel (not illustrated) can be slid into channel 108 and then secured in place by tightening the one or more securement devices 120. In a general embodiment, the securement devices 120 may be threaded elements that can be tightened such that an end of the threaded element can apply pressure against the inserted panel and thus forcing the panel against the interior wall 109 of the chamber 108. Once tightened, the panel is secured in position within the channel 108. Alternatively, the panel may include apertures through which the threaded element can pass through to secure the second panel in position with the channel 108. The same mechanism may also be utilized to secure the first panel within channel 106 of the first attachment device 102.
Using the illustrated securement device 200 with the bracket 100, a panel, such as a glass panel, framed glass panel, panel with glass ports, etc. can be slid into the channel (such as channel 106 or 108) of the attachment device (such as first attachment device 102 or second attachment device 104) and then held in place by friction caused by tightening of the securement device 200 such that the securement pad 206 is pressed against the panel and the panel is pressed against an interior wall of the channel (such as interior wall 109 in channel 108) and thus held in position. In other embodiments, apertures may extend through the panel and the securement device 200 may then be tightened against the back wall of the channel (such as interior wall 109 in channel 108) thus holding the panel in position.
It should be appreciated that other mechanisms may be used to secure a panel within a channel of a securement device. Pins rather than threaded devices, clamps, protrusions and detents, glue, adhesives, using securement devices on opposing ends of a panel and connecting the securement devices with a rod or other mechanism, etc. These and other embodiments are also anticipated to be used in various embodiments of the no-access guard panel shield system.
Returning to
The hinge structure 110 includes one or more flanges 116 extending from the second attachment device 104 and one or more flanges 118L and 118R extending from the first attachment device 102. In the illustrated embodiment, there is a single flange on the second attachment device 104 and it is sandwiched or inserted between the two flanges 118L and 118R on the first attachment device 102 in such a manner that the flange 116 from the second attachment device 104 can freely rotate or pivot relative to the one or more flanges 118L and 118R extending from the first attachment device 102. A pin or rod 124 is inserted through apertures 124 that run through the flanges 116, 118L and 118R and secured with a nut 112 on one end and a nut 114 on the other end to hold hinge structure 110 in place and the first attachment device 102 and second attachment device 104 relative to each other. Rather than a rod with two nuts, the rod may be structured as a bolt, threaded on one end to receive a nut and have a mounted or integral head on the other end. The hinge structure 110 may be in the form of a barrel hinge, a piano hinge, a door hinge, etc., such that the first attachment device 106 and second attachment device 104 may be pivotally articulated relative to one another. Advantageously, utilizing hinged embodiments, the first attachment device 106 and the second attachment device 104 may be mechanically fixed to a panel, such as panel 354 and 352 respectively in
The hinge 460 may be leveraged to position the drop panel 452 into a substantially vertical orientation, thereby closing off any “reach in” access beneath the main viewing panel 454. In certain embodiments, the hinge 460 may be “free swinging” in order to allow the drop panel 452 to seek vertical via gravitational pull. In other embodiments, the hinge 460 may be configured to set and fix the lower bracket 404 at a desired angle relative to upper bracket 406 such that drop panel 452 cannot freely swing. Further, the hinge structure allows the drop panel 452 to be adjusted at an angle if necessary. For instance, if the surface 480 extends more towards to front edge of the main viewing panel 454, the drop down panel 452 may need to be angled away from the surface. Further, if the front edge of the main viewing panel 454 extends well beyond the front edge of the surface 480, a vertically oriented drop down panel 452 may result in a large gap between the front edge of the surface 480 and the drop down panel 452 such that one could reach under and contaminate the food, or air flow could cause dust and debris from the floor to enter into the food area. In such situations, the angle can be adjusted such that the drop down panel 452 is angled toward the front edge of the surface 480 to close such a gap.
Further, it is an advantage of certain embodiments of the solution that the position of the drop panel 452 is in a plane set back from the front edge of the main viewing panel 454, as can be understood from the illustrations. In this way, any gap between the upper edge of the drop panel 452 and the leading edge of the main viewing panel 454 is minimized and formed at a point well beneath the main viewing panel 454, thereby mitigating or significantly reducing any chances that airborne pathogens may find their way to food stored beneath the main viewing panel 454 and behind drop panel 452.
The embodiment of
The benefits of the embodiment illustrated in
In some embodiments, it can be appreciated that the first and second attachment devices, such as first attachment device 102 in
It should be appreciated that a hybrid approach of
Further, in the spring loaded embodiments, the hinges may also include a locking mechanism that will hold the panel into an open position. Once the locking mechanism is released, the panel returns to the resting state. The locking mechanism can be a pin used to hold the hinge a particular location or may be spring gear and cog system that automatically locks when the panel is lifted, and then unlocks again when the panel is again lifted. Those skilled in the art will be aware of this type of locking mechanism as well as many other such locking mechanisms.
In various embodiments, the attachment location of the hinge to the first and second attachment devices may vary. In the embodiments illustrated thus far, the hinge associates a top right corner of the first attachment device with the top left corner of the second attachment device. However, in other embodiments the hinge can actually be located at different locations, such as the bottom right corner of the first attachment device, bottom left corner of second attachment device, top of the second attachment device, etc.
Systems and methods for a bracket system for retrofit of a drop shield to a main viewing panel of a food guard have been described using detailed descriptions of embodiments thereof that are provided by way of example and are not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure. The described and illustrated embodiments comprise different features, not all of which are required in all embodiments of the solution. Some embodiments of the solution utilize only some of the features or possible combinations of the features. Variations of embodiments of the solution that are described and embodiments of the solution comprising different combinations of features noted in the described embodiments will occur to persons of the art.
It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that a system or method for a bracket system for retrofit of a drop shield to a main viewing panel of a food guard according to the solution is not limited by what has been particularly shown and described herein above. Rather, the scope of the disclosed solution is defined by the claims that follow.
The present application is a non-provisional application claiming the benefit of the filing date of the U.S. Provisional Applications Ser. No. 63/035,532 filed on Jun. 5, 2020 and Ser. No. 63/036,841 filed on Jun. 9, 2020, both applications of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety along with any and all exhibits and appendixes cited within these provisional applications.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63035532 | Jun 2020 | US | |
63036841 | Jun 2020 | US |