The present invention is related to cabinet brackets used to join one or more cabinet panels to form a cabinet assembly.
Most ground-level cabinets include a toe kick panel mounted to a front face of the cabinet below the doors. The toe kick panel adds stability to the cabinet assembly. The toe kick panel is often covered with a skin or veneer of decorative material and provides a more aesthetically pleasing appearance by closing off the space below the cabinet's bottom surface. Typically, toe kick panels are attached to the cabinet with a bracket or wooden cleat. These brackets and cleats require the use of separate fasteners and many place the toe kick panel in a position in which it protrudes beyond the front edge of the bottom side panel of the cabinet, making it difficult to install the veneer.
A toe kick panel bracket includes integral fastening features that can be used to join a toe kick panel to a cabinet. The toe kick bracket may be used to position the toe kick panel flush with the front edge of the side panel of the cabinet. The toe kick panel bracket may cooperate with a toe kick receiving groove in a bottom panel of the cabinet to locate the toe kick panel with respect to the cabinet.
Further features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description made with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The Detailed Description of the Invention merely describes embodiments of the invention and is not intended to limit the scope of the claims in any way. Indeed, the invention as described is broader than and unlimited by the preferred embodiments, and the terms used have their full ordinary meaning.
A cabinet panel bracket is provided that mounts a first cabinet panel to a second cabinet panel. The first cabinet panel includes front and back surfaces and a side edge. The cabinet panel bracket includes a substantially planar base portion that has first and second surfaces. The first surface faces the side edge of the first cabinet panel. The bracket also includes at least one fastener that is integral to the base portion and protrudes from the base portion second surface. The fastener engages the second cabinet panel to fix the first cabinet panel to the second cabinet panel. In some embodiments, the base portion and fastener are integrally molded of the same material.
The fastener may be, for example, a generally cylindrical protrusion having a generally circular front face and a cylindrical outer perimeter. The generally cylindrical protrusion includes knurls about its outer perimeter and the front face includes a tapered edge such that the diameter of the front face is smaller than the diameter of the generally cylindrical protrusion. It should be apparent to others skilled in the art that the shape, size, and style of the fastener may vary in the practice of the invention.
The bracket may include spaced first and second bracket flanges extending perpendicularly from the base portion first surface and parallel to one another to form a substantially U-shaped bracket that defines a channel into which the first cabinet panel side edge is inserted. The first and second bracket flanges include a rounded corner at a termination of an edge distal from the base portion. The first and second bracket flanges may also have an outwardly tapered interior end surface to assist in installing a cabinet panel in the bracket. It should be apparent to others skilled in the art that the shape, size, and style of the bracket flanges may vary in the practice of the invention.
In some embodiments, a panel retaining barb protrudes from at least one of the base portion first surface and an inner surface of the first and second bracket flanges. The panel retaining barb may be conical in shape, however, it should be apparent to others skilled in the art that the shape, size, and style of the barb may vary in the practice of the invention.
A cabinet assembly that utilizes a toe kick panel bracket normally includes a pair of spaced side cabinet panels each having a front surface and a bottom cabinet panel that spans between the spaced side cabinet panels. The bottom cabinet panel has an upper surface that forms a cabinet bottom interior surface and a lower surface that forms a cabinet bottom exterior surface. The bottom cabinet panel spans the side cabinet panels at an intermediate position on the side panels to create a clearance cavity defined by the lower surface of the bottom cabinet panel, a floor upon which the cabinet rests, and the interior surface of the side cabinet panels. The lower surface of the bottom cabinet panel includes a groove that spans between the spaced side cabinet panels and has a front edge that is substantially coplanar with the front surface of the side cabinet panels. The cabinet also includes a toe kick panel that has a top edge inserted into the groove and side edges that each terminate at the interior surface of the side cabinet panels to substantially cover the front space of the clearance cavity. A toe kick panel bracket fixes a side edge of the toe kick panel to one of the side cabinet panels. The toe kick panel bracket includes a substantially planar base portion that has a base portion first surface that faces the side edge of the toe kick panel and at least one fastener that is integral to the base portion and protrudes from a base portion second surface. The at least one fastener engages the side cabinet panel to fix the toe kick panel to the side cabinet panel.
The cabinet assembly may also feature a side panel interior surface that has an engaging feature that cooperates with the toe kick bracket fastener to fix the toe kick panel to the side panel. The engaging feature may be, for example, a hole or depression sized to frictionally engage an outer surface of the toe kick bracket fastener.
A method is provided for fixing a first cabinet panel to a second cabinet panel. In this method, a cabinet panel bracket that is fixed onto the first cabinet panel is then fixed to the second cabinet panel. The cabinet panel bracket includes a substantially planar base portion that has a first surface that faces a side edge of the first cabinet panel. At least one fastener that is integral to the base portion and protrudes from a second surface of the base portion engages the second cabinet panel. Thus, the cabinet panel bracket and the first cabinet panel are fixed to the second cabinet panel. The side edge of the first cabinet panel is placed against the first surface of the base portion.
A third cabinet panel which forms the bottom of the cabinet may be grooved. In this embodiment, a top edge of the first cabinet panel may be inserted into the groove in the third cabinet panel and the fasteners are then pressed into engaging features in the second cabinet panel. A fourth cabinet panel may be used for the second side of the cabinet. The first cabinet panel is fixed to this fourth cabinet panel by a second cabinet panel bracket in the same fashion that the second cabinet panel is fixed to the first cabinet panel.
The toe kick panel bracket 16 includes one or more integral fasteners 27 with which it is fixed to the side panel. As can be seen best in
In some embodiments, the toe kick panel bracket 16 includes conically shaped panel retention barbs 41 (
In
While various aspects of the invention are described and illustrated herein as embodied in combination in the exemplary embodiments, these various aspects may be realized in many alternative embodiments not shown, either individually or in various combinations and sub-combinations thereof. Unless expressly excluded herein all such combinations and sub-combinations are intended to be within the scope of the present invention. Still further, while various alternative embodiments as to the various aspects and features of the invention, such as alternative materials, structures, configurations, methods, devices, and so on may be described herein, such descriptions are not intended to be a complete or exhaustive list of available alternative embodiments, whether presently known or later developed. Those skilled in the art may readily adopt one or more of the aspects, concepts or features of the invention into additional embodiments within the scope of the present invention even if such embodiments are not expressly disclosed herein. Additionally, even though some features, concepts or aspects of the invention may be described herein as being a preferred arrangement or method, such description is not intended to suggest that such feature is required or necessary unless expressly so stated. Still further, exemplary or representative values and ranges may be included to assist in understanding the present invention however; such values and ranges are not to be construed in a limiting sense and are intended to be critical values or ranges only if so expressly stated.