The present invention relates to a cabinet with cabinet body that has at least one vertical stack of storage compartments situated one above another that are divided by means of compartment bottoms and are opened and closed by means of compartment doors hinge-mounted to the cabinet body.
The known cabinets of this type require a considerable number of parts and a considerable amount of assembly effort for affixing the compartment bottoms in the cabinet body and for attaching the compartment doors to the cabinet body in pivoting fashion. This is further complicated when the storage compartments must be of different heights.
The object of the present invention, therefore, is to embody a cabinet of the type mentioned at the beginning in such a way that the number of parts and amount of assembly effort required for affixing the compartment bottoms in the cabinet body and for hinge-mounting the compartment bottoms to the cabinet body are significantly reduced without losing the possibility for creating storage compartments of different heights.
This object is attained according to the present invention by virtue of the fact that each vertical stack of storage compartments is associated with a hinge rod extending over the height of the cabinet body; the compartment bottoms are guided by means of a shoulder in the hinge region and are vertically mounted onto the hinge rod with flange bushings that protrude beyond the upper and/or lower side of the compartment bottoms and their shoulders; the compartment doors, which are matched to the heights of the storage compartments, have recesses for the flange bushings on their back sides in the hinge region, which can be covered by means of a cover; and with their recesses oriented toward the storage compartments the compartment doors can be placed onto the flange bushings and be attached to the flange bushings in a pivoting fashion by means of the covers that are then mounted onto the compartment doors.
The flange bushings thus perform not only the function of affixing the compartment bottoms, but simultaneously also serve as hinge elements for the compartment doors. This eliminates the need for numerous functional parts on the cabinet body and the compartment bottoms. In addition, it simplifies and facilitates the hinge-mounting of the compartment doors to the cabinet body.
According to a preferred embodiment, the hinge rod is mounted spaced apart from the front side of a wall of the cabinet body or a vertical dividing wall of the cabinet body; it is fastened by means of support elements to the front side of the bottom wall and top wall of the cabinet body. This makes the hinge locations of the compartment doors easily accessible.
According to one embodiment, the connection between the compartment bottoms and the flange bushings is carried out so that the flange bushings are inserted snugly and in nonrotating fashion into openings in the shoulders of the compartment bottoms and the flange bushings have a through bore for the hinge rod.
If the through bore of the flange bushings and the outer diameter of the hinge rod are also matched to produce a press fit and the flange bushings are thus secured to the hinge rod in nonrotating fashion, then the compartment door can be easily pivoted on the hinge rod. It is also not difficult when constructing the cabinet to adapt the storage compartments to different heights and close these with correspondingly adapted compartment doors.
The compartment doors can be structurally designed in any number of ways: the compartment doors can be embodied in the form of solid doors with recesses on the back for the flange bushings or the compartment doors can be embodied in the form of basic boxes that are open at the back, with filling plates inserted into the back sides.
According to one modification, in order to close the storage compartments, the compartment doors have a closing element on the vertical side oriented away from the hinge side and when the compartment doors are closed, these closing elements come in contact with counterpart closing elements that are attached to a vertical wall of the cabinet body or a vertical dividing wall of the cabinet body. An extremely wide variety of closing elements and counterpart closing elements can be used, which, in addition to the pure closing function, can also perform safety functions.
The alignment and adjustment of the compartment doors in relation to the storage compartments is achieved by simple means in that the compartment doors and/or the covers are provided with fastener recesses embodied in the form of horizontal slots. It is thus possible to move and therefore adjust the compartment doors to a limited degree in the horizontal direction.
After the connection between the compartment doors and the double-walled cover is produced, access to the fastening points can be prevented by means of stoppers or the like.
The invention will be explained in detail in conjunction with an exemplary embodiment shown in the drawings.
The cabinet shown in a perspective, partial front view in
Spaced apart from the front side of the wall 11, a hinge rod 20 extending over the entire height of the cabinet body 10 is provided, which is attached spaced apart from the front side of the wall 11. To that end, securing elements are fastened to the bottom wall and top wall. Depending on the desired number and height, compartment bottoms 13 divide the space between the wall 11 and the dividing wall 12.
As the perspective partial view according to
As is already clear from
This is shown in the view in
It should also be mentioned that the cover 29 can be embodied in the form of a profile section that can be embodied as double-walled (31, 32). As is clear from
This type of hinge-mounting of the compartment doors 25.1 and 25.2 has the advantage that the hinge rod 20 and the compartment bottoms 13 can already be assembled and aligned before the hinge-mounting of the compartment doors 25.1 and 25.2. The subsequent hinge-mounting of the compartment doors 25.1 and 25.2 onto the flange bushings 16 and 17 already affixed to the hinge rod 20 and the compartment bottoms 13 can then be carried out with little assembly effort.
As can also be inferred from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 016 239.5 | Apr 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2005/001607 | 2/17/2005 | WO | 00 | 9/26/2008 |