The present invention relates to a built-in refrigerator comprising a carcass, in the lower rear area of which a machine compartment is formed. Since, if the carcass is incorporated into a cabinet niche, this machine compartment is countersunk deep into the niche, it is problematical to ensure adequate cooling of the units accommodated in the machine compartment by exchanging air with the environment.
One conventional approach to solving this problem is to embody a flue between a rear wall of the carcass and a rear wall of the cabinet niche, in which flue heated air can rise in the machine compartment, as a result of which cooling air is fed from below into the machine compartment. Such a solution is unsatisfactory since it takes up considerable space in the machine compartment such that the proportion of useable cooling chamber inside the carcass drops marginally by comparison with the volume of the cabinet niche.
DE 199 33 603A1 discloses the provision of a ventilator for forcedly ventilating the machine compartment. As a result, a flue for discharging the warm air is superfluous. A base region of the cabinet receiving the refrigerator, which is separated from the built-in niche by means of a base plate, is subdivided by a longitudinal wall into two flow channels, which extend between a front side of the cabinet and openings functioning as an inlet or, as the case may be, outlet opening for the machine compartment, said openings being cut into the base plate. The two openings and the separating wall require the cabinet to be extensively adjusted to the refrigerator to be built-in, so that aside from the all the purchasing costs of the refrigerator, the consumer is also subjected to labor costs for the installation thereof which are not yet negligible.
There is thus a demand for a built-in refrigerator with a machine compartment formed in the lower rear region of the carcass, the assembly of which into a cabinet requires minimal adjustment outlay.
The object is achieved on the one hand in that the machine compartment is at least partially closed by a rear wall, which delimits a first air passage of the machine compartment at the level of a support area of the carcass.
This delimitation suffices with a single opening in the base plate of the cabinet niche, through which both the inflow and also the outflow of cooling air for the machine compartment, the one via the passage delimited by the rear wall and the other outside the passage, can pass. It also allows the rear wall belonging to the carcass and independent of the cabinet to embody the flow channel for the cooling air at the level of the machine compartment with minimal projections and this to keep the flow resistance thereof as minimal as possible.
To achieve an effective air recirculation in the machine compartment, the rear wall is preferably part of a housing, in which a compressor and/or a condenser is accommodated and a ventilator is arranged on a second air passage of the housing.
From a flow-specific point of view, a condenser with a coolant tube coiled around a longitudinal axis is preferred, said coolant tube being accommodated in a tubular section of the housing which is concentric in respect of the longitudinal axis.
A tray which is separated from the carcass preferably belongs to the refrigerator, said tray then being assemblable below the carcass on an underside of the rear wall in order to lengthen the flow channel delimited by the rear wall below the carcass.
To achieve an adequately sealed connection of the tray, this preferably has a flange which protrudes beyond the support area of the carcass. This expediently rests on an exterior of the rear wall so that it is possible to insert the carcass of the refrigerator from one open front side of the cabinet niche, while the tray is already assembled.
A simple and quicker assembly of the tray is enabled by means of guide rails, which can be assembled on an underside of the base plate of the niche in order to hold the tray to said underside.
An extensible tubular support of the tray can elongate the flow channel up to an opening formed in a front wall of the base region, without the dimensions of the tray having to be adjusted precisely to the depth of the base region. Flow channels for supply and discharged air can be guided in a precisely separate fashion up to this opening in the front wall.
The tray can be used to evaporate the condensate in the refrigerator, if a condensate drainage passes from the carcass into the tray.
If the carcass of the refrigerator is accommodated in a niche of a cabinet and the tray is accommodated in a base section of the cabinet, a gap is preferably provided between a base plate and a rear wall of the niche, via which the base section communicates with the niche and in which the first air passage and a second air passage are delimited from one another by means of the rear wall of the carcass. Only one single gap, instead of several separate openings in the base plate is thus needed to ventilate the machine compartment. This simplifies the adjustment of the cabinet to the refrigerator and is additionally advantageous in that a cabinet niche, which has already been used to accommodate a conventional refrigerator which is ventilated through the base region and via a flue on the rear side of the carcass, can essentially be used without the need for adjustment in order also to accommodate the inventive device.
Further features and advantages of the invention result from the description below of exemplary embodiments with reference to the appended Figures, in which;
Two holding clamps 9 of carrier sections which are concealed below the base plate 7 engage with the rear edge of the base plate 7 and, between the holding clamps 9, a rear section 10 of a tray 11 shown in detail in
As shown in
If the tray 11 is mounted and fastened in this way to the base section 5, the cabinet can be positioned in front of a wall of a building in order then to assemble a refrigerator carcass in the niche 3.
A compressor 23 is accommodated in the downstream section 21 of the machine compartment. A tubular housing part 24 connects to an opening in the separating wall 18, in which housing part 24 a condenser 25 and ventilator 26 are accommodated.
As shown in detail in
A drainage line 30, by way of which condensate flows away from the interior 31 of the refrigerator, crosses the downstream section 21 of the machine compartment and ends at the level of the air outlet section 22, so that water leaving the drainage line 30 drops into the tray 11. Provided the ventilator 26 is operating, said draining line is thus exposed here to an intensive current of air which is heated at the condenser and compressor and thus dried, which effectively condenses the condensate in the tray 11.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2006 005 547 U | Apr 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/052293 | 3/12/2007 | WO | 00 | 10/3/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2007/115878 | 10/18/2007 | WO | A |
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20090272140 A1 | Nov 2009 | US |