The present invention relates to guides for sliding-style doors.
In the furniture industry and in home construction it is commonplace to construct generally planar doors and to mount them in a manner which permits same to be moved along a horizontal axis, parallel to the plane of the door. Doors of this general type are commonly termed “sliding doors” or “sliders”, although, for smooth movement, particularly in the context of relatively massive doors, wheels or rollers can be provided, such that same are more correctly described as sliding-style doors. A typical construction includes a doorway or opening, a door of similar size, and upper and lower tracks upon which the door rides for movement between open and closed positions.
A system for use with a wall and a door forms one aspect of the invention. The wall has a longitudinal length, a height and a lateral thickness and the door has a width, a height and a thickness. The system comprises a support assembly and a support. The support assembly includes a first portion and a second portion. The first portion is secured, in use, to said wall, to define a longitudinal axis. The second portion, in use, is secured to said door and mounted to the first portion in a manner to support said door, when said door is supported otherwise than by the second portion at least as against pivotal movement about the axis, for longitudinal movement between a retracted position whereat a portion of said door is disposed laterally from the wall and an extended position whereat said portion projects longitudinally beyond and in cantilevered relation to said wall. The support operatively mounts said door to said wall in use to support said door at least against pivotal movement about the axis while permitting said longitudinal movement of the door.
A system for use with a planar wall and a planar door forms another aspect of the invention. The wall has a longitudinal length, a height and a lateral thickness and the door has a width, a height and a thickness. The system comprises a support assembly and a support. The support assembly includes a guide bar and a housing. One of the guide bar and the housing is secured, in use, to said wall, to define a longitudinal axis. The other of the guide bar and the housing is secured, in use, to said door. In use, the guide bar and the housing are mounted to one another to support the door, when the door is orientated parallel to said wall, for longitudinal movement between a retracted position whereat a portion of said door is disposed laterally from the wall and an extended position whereat said portion projects longitudinally beyond and in cantilevered relation to said wall. The support is rigidly secured, in use, to one of said door and said wall, above the support assembly, to support the door parallel to said wall while permitting said longitudinal movement of the door.
A system for selectively dividing a space into two portions forms another aspect of the invention. The system comprises a panel, a door, a support assembly and a support. The panel is positionable, in use, to define a wall dividing said space into said two portions, said two portions being communicable with one another by a doorway, and, in use, has a longitudinal length, a height and a lateral thickness. The door has a width, a height and a thickness. The support assembly and the support, in use, support the door for longitudinal movement between a retracted position whereat a portion of said door is disposed laterally from the wall and an extended portion whereat said portion projects longitudinally beyond and in cantilevered relation to said wall to occlude said doorway. The support assembly includes a guide bar and a housing. One of the guide bar and the housing is secured, in use, to said wall, to define a longitudinal axis. The other of the guide bar and the housing is secured, in use, to said door. The guide bar and the housing are mounted to one another for reciprocation. The support is rigidly secured, in use, to one of the wall and the door, above the support assembly, and is adapted to support the door against pivotal movement about the axis while permitting said longitudinal movement of the door.
The system provides for the mounting of a door for movement in the manner of a sliding-style door which is characterized by the absence of tracks spanning the doorway. The absence of tracks traversing the doorway improves aesthetics and functionality. Notably, this construction avoids the trip hazard associated with a lower track and the head clearance problems associated with an upper track.
Other advantages, features and characteristics of the present invention, as well as methods of operation and functions of the related elements of the structure, and the combination of parts and economies of manufacture, will become more apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description and the appended claims with reference to the accompanying drawings, the latter being briefly described hereinafter.
An exemplary system for selectively dividing a space into two portions is shown in
The system 20 comprises a panel 22, a door 24, a support 69 and a support assembly 28.
The panel 22 in use, has a longitudinal length B, a height H and a lateral thickness T and is positionable, as shown, to define a planar wall 30 dividing said space into said two portions 32 and 34, said two portions 32 and 34 being communicable with one another by a doorway 36, which in the embodiment illustrated is defined by the space between panel 22 and a secondary panel 25 which also forms part of the exemplary wall 30. The panel 22 illustrated in
With reference to
The support assembly 28 includes: a first portion, in this embodiment taking the form of a housing 50; a second portion, in this embodiment taking the form of an elongate guide bar 52; a guide bar support 54 and an open sleeve rolling bearing 56.
The housing 50 is an extruded elongate aluminum cylindrical tube having a longitudinal opening 58, defining an axis X-X and secured, in use, lengthwise along and to the wall 30, adjacent the lowermost connector 40. Inwardly-directed lips 60 are formed on edges of said cylindrical tube which define said longitudinal opening 58.
The guide bar 52 is an iron bar ground to have an outer cylindrical surface 61 and is provided with a set of radial threaded dead end holes (not shown).
The guide bar support 54 is a further aluminum extrusion which supports the guide bar 52 over its overall length in order to prevent inflection and, therefore, guidance inaccuracy and is provided with a tapered portion 62 which is straddled by the housing 50 and which ends in a surface which mates with the surface 61 of the guide bar 52. The guide bar support 54 is provided with a plurality of through holes 64 which, in assembly, are aligned with the radial threaded dead end holes of guide bar 52 and through which fastening bolts (not shown) extend, to secure the guide bar 52 to the guide bar support 54. The guide bar support 54, in turn, is secured to the lower periphery of the door 24 by a plurality of screws 66. So mounted, the guide bar 52 extends widthwise and across substantially the entirety of the width b of the door 24.
The open sleeve rolling bearing 56 is of a type employing recirculating balls (not shown) and is disposed in the housing 50 such that the ball bearings thereof are disposed in rolling relationship between the outer cylindrical surface 61 of the guide bar 52 and an inner cylindrical surface 68 of the housing 50, with the lips 60 preventing rotation of the open sleeve rolling bearing 56 with respect to the cylindrical tube housing 50. The guide bar 52 is thus mounted to the housing 50 for smooth, axial reciprocation.
The support 69 illustrated in
The support assembly 28 and support 69, in use, support the door 24 substantially parallel to the plane of the wall 30 for longitudinal, i.e. axial movement. In use, the support assembly 28 supports the mass of the door 24 for smooth movement via the bearing 56. The support 69 supports the door against rotation about the axis X-X, with the pads 74 of the abutment portions 72 and the frame 48 of the door 24 engaging one another in a relatively friction-free manner so as to not to add unduly to sliding friction.
The door 24 is thus manually movable between a retracted position whereat substantially the entirety of the door 24 is disposed laterally from wall 30 (i.e. outside the doorway) and an extended position whereat a portion of door 24 projects longitudinally beyond said wall 30 and in cantilevered relation thereto to occlude said doorway 36.
In the context of the illustrated structure, it has been found to be advantageous, to minimize binding, to provide the door 24 with a width b that is at least 1.5 times the width a of the doorway 36, that is, the longitudinal distance by which the door 24 extends beyond the wall 30 in the extended position. Similarly, the length c of the portion of the support assembly secured to the wall, in this exemplary embodiment, the housing 50, measured axially, will advantageously be adjusted to be equal to the difference between b and a. Generally, the width a of the doorway should be about 1 meter, to provide an adequate walking clearance, and the heights H,h of the wall 30 and door 24 should be less than 2 meters.
A further exemplary embodiment of the system is shown in
Whereas but two embodiments are herein shown and described by way of example, it should be understood that various modifications thereto are contemplated.
For example, whereas the illustrated door is disposed in a generally outboard relation to the wall/panel, it should be understood that the door could be deployed in an interior relation to the wall, i.e. in the manner of a pocket door.
Similarly, whereas specific constructions of the door and panel are herein shown, it will be understood that the support assemblies of the present invention could be deployed in use with doors and panels of widely varying configuration.
Additionally, whereas pads of polytetrafluorethylene self-lubricating material are suggested for the support, it will be evident that other plastics and materials could be utilized, and indeed, altogether different arrangements for the support could be utilized A pair of wheels, for example, could be arranged on opposites sides of the door for support against pivotal movement. Yet further, a second guide bar/housing combination could be provided for the support.
Further, whereas the panel 22 of
Accordingly, it should be understood that the invention is to be limited only by the claims appended hereto, purposively construed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2,599,045 | Aug 2007 | CA | national |