Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a case or a bag having a lid element that can be opened with one hand. The case or bag contains a basic body that is defined by wall elements, a floor element and has an opening that can be closed by a lid element that is disposed on the basic body and can be moved out of an open position into a closed position.
Cases, bags and other storage containers for items have long been known and are commercially available, for example in the form of attache cases, suitcases and briefcases, as well as bags for video cameras or schoolbags and boxes for suspension files or for laptops and the like.
The problem with the storage containers listed above, which, for the sake of simplicity, are referred to as cases and bags hereinbelow, is that they can usually only be opened with both hands, and, particularly with respect to cases having a hard basic body, for example made of hard plastic or the like, a large amount of space is needed to open them, so the user is not normally able to open the case with one hand, for example during a car journey, in order specifically to remove a desired item from the case with the same hand.
In addition, with respect to attache cases, which can only be opened from one side, the standing strength of the opened case is very limited because an additional torque is exerted on the case owing to the distance between the side walls and the floor surface when the case is opened, which can easily cause the case to collapse, particularly if heavy items are stored in the opened lid of the case.
Briefcases made of soft material are usually completely lacking in such standing strength, so a solid base, such as a table or chair, is always needed to enable items to be removed from the bag with just one hand.
Finally, other bags made of soft material, such as shoulder bags for video cameras—referred to hereinbelow as camcorder bags—have the problem that they usually have a zip fastener which, in a camcorder bag hung on the shoulder, experience shows can only be opened with two hands, the camcorder bag being held with one hand and the zip fastener being opened with the other, in order then to be able to remove the video camera from the bag. In the same way, it is likewise very awkward and time-consuming putting the video camera back in the bag after use because, to do this, working in the opposite direction, the bag again has to be held with one hand and, after the camera is placed inside, the zip fastener has to be closed with the other.
In this context, a hard-sided case in the form of a pilot case is known from international patent disclosure WO 03/007748 A1, corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 7,086,511, in which the lid element for closing the case is formed of a number of segments connected together in an articulated manner, which are guided, by their end sections, into associated slide rails disposed on either side of the basic body of the case. Apart from the fact that, because of their articulated connection, the segments tend to become easily jammed in the associated guide rails, it is always necessary, because of the segments used, for the case to have a shape that is rounded in cross section in order to guarantee the smooth and easy operation of the segments. Accordingly, segment construction is unsuitable for use in slim cases, such as briefcases. Furthermore, the construction described offers only limited protection against access from outside because, owing to their small width, the segments have only a very limited rigidity and can therefore easily be pushed out of the guides, giving access to the contents of the case.
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a case or a bag having a lid element that overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages of the prior art devices of this general type.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a case or bag for holding items. The case or bag contains a basic body having wall elements and a floor element. The basic body has an opening formed therein. Interacting guide elements are disposed on the basic body. A lid element for closing the opening is disposed on the basic body. The lid element can be moved out of an open position into a closed position of the opening. The lid element is configured in one piece and has inherent rigidity. The lid element is moved out of the closed position into the open position by the interacting guide elements disposed on the basic body and on the lid element through a combined pivoting and displacing movement.
According to the invention, a case or a bag, which is to be understood as including all of the cases and bags referred to in the introduction to the description, contains a basic body for holding items, which is defined by a floor element and preferably four wall elements connected to the latter. The basic body has here, in a known way, on its side lying opposite the floor element, an opening that can be closed by a lid element that, for this purpose, can be moved out of an open position, in which unobstructed access to the interior of the basic body is possible from outside, into a closed position, in which the lid element closes the opening of the basic body.
The case according to the invention, or the bag according to the invention, is characterized in that the lid element is configured as a shaped body or element with inherent rigidity, which retains its structure if the lid element is moved, in a combined pivoting and displacing movement according to the invention, out of the closed position into the open position and back again along guide elements disposed on the basic body, in particular in the form of guide rails into which slide guide pins disposed in the lid element engage.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the guide rails are disposed on the insides of the two lateral wall elements and preferably run directly underneath the edge of the side wall elements, a guide pin or guide roller, which ensures the play-free and easy guiding of the lid element and is disposed on the lower floor-element-side edge of the lid element, and a guide pin or guide roller, which ensures the play-free and easy guiding of the lid element and is disposed on the upper opening-side edge of the lid element, engaging in each guide rail.
The case according to the invention or the bag according to the invention offers the advantage that, owing to the two-point bearing of the lid element in each guide rail irrespective of the chosen shape of the case and lid element, a precise guiding of the lid element is ensured through the combined pivoting and displacing movement, allowing the lid element to pivot away from the basic body over the front wall element of the basic body, giving good access to the interior thereof.
Using the principle underlying the case according to the invention, it is possible, in a case or a bag having wall elements that are disposed upright in relation to the floor element, in particular perpendicular wall elements, to use both a curved, rounded shape and a rectilinear shape for the section between the front wall element and the rear wall element, thus opening up numerous new possibilities for the external configuration of the basic body.
The guide rails can also easily be divided into two partial sections here, where the first partial section of each rail can, for example, extend horizontally, and the second partial section preferably extends along the front wall element, for example vertically.
In the same way, it is possible for the guide rails to be configured to drop away in an arc toward the rear wall element in the area of the side wall elements, so that, for opening the lid element, the latter is first lifted in a kind of lifting movement upward from the opening or away from the floor element and then, in the course of the further movement, pivoted outward away from the rear wall element and at the same time displaced downward toward the floor element.
The kind of combined lifting, pivoting and displacing movement described above offers the advantage that, making optimum use of the space in cases or bags having generally rectangular basic bodies, the opening is also partly accessible from the front in the area of the front wall element—which is preferably lower than the rear wall element here—when the lid element is pushed right down, as a result of which flat items, such as files, brochures or envelopes and the like, contained inside the case can easily be recognized by the writing on the front and do not—as with cases that can only be opened at the top—have to be identified solely by their sometimes narrow edges or spines.
As a result, the flat items desired are therefore, according to the invention, much easier to identify and, because of the partial access through the front, are also much easier to get hold of and remove from the interior of the basic body.
A further advantage of the combined lifting and pivoting movement in connection with a curved or a rectilinear lid element is that the lid element can be provided with lateral projections that extend like wings over the side wall elements in the area of the opening and can preferably join flush with the outsides of the side wall elements, as a result of which the penetration of moisture from above can be prevented very effectively.
In this context, it is also conceivable, owing to the combined lifting and pivoting movement, to arrange, on the inside of the projections, seals that lie on the edges of the side wall elements when the lid element is closed and as a result effectively prevent liquid getting in from outside.
According to a further embodiment of the invention, a section made out of a longitudinally variable material, such as a rubber or textile material or the like folded like bellows, can be inserted between the floor element and the bottom edge, or the lower edge, of the lid element, which material compensates for the change in distance between the floor element and the bottom edge of the lid element arising when the lid element is displaced and pivoted.
Although it is conceivable to fill the area between the floor element and the lower edge of the lid element in the manner described above exclusively by a section of a longitudinally variable material, this area is, in a preferred embodiment of the invention, advantageously closed by a front wall element, likewise made out of a material having inherent rigidity but of smaller surface area, which forms an inherently rigid basic body with the rear wall element, the side wall elements and the floor element, for example made of hard plastic or metal.
According to a further embodiment of the invention, the case according to the invention or the bag according to the invention has a handle that is preferably disposed directly on the lid element so that it can pivot. The advantage of this is that the locking mechanism for locking the lid element to the basic body in the closed position can be configured as a push button that is disposed centrally in the area of the handle and can be actuated ergonomically with one hand.
The push button is preferably positioned here under the handle so that the push button can be pushed toward the handle using one or two fingers of the same hand, which is also used to hold the basic body by the handle.
The advantage of this is that the case or the bag according to the invention can be held by the handle and quickly opened, without changing one's grip, simply by putting the case down on a surface and pulling the lid element down by the handle, in order, with the other hand, to remove a brochure or another item from the interior of the case.
The lid element can then be closed by pulling the handle up, again without changing hands, while, for example, the item or the brochure can easily be held in the other hand.
This advantageous one-handed operation according to the invention of the case according to the invention, which also similarly applies to bags, saves valuable seconds, particularly in sales discussions or product presentations, which are otherwise wasted opening the lid element with two hands, taking the desired item out, putting it down, raising the lid with both hands and closing the lid with both hands.
According to the preferred embodiment of the invention, the locking mechanism contains two angle levers pivotably disposed on the lid element, each having a first and a second arm disposed at an angle of preferably 90°, a tooth-like projection or a lug being provided on the first arm, which, in the closed position, engages into a designated projection or a designated edge of the basic body in order to lock the lid element in the closed position. The second arm of the angle levers interacts here with the preferably displaceable push button, by which the second arm to be displaced is actuated by a compressive force which pivots each of the angle levers about its respective pivot axis and hereby releases the engagement between the tooth-like projection of the respective angle lever and the designated projection or the edge of the basic body, so that the lid element can be displaced along the guides.
In this embodiment of the invention, the second arms of the angle levers preferably engage in designated, in particular rectilinear, recesses in the displaceable push button, which recesses have a slightly greater width than the arms, so that the ends of the second arms can carry out a partial rotational movement in the recesses when the push button is actuated. The push button is actuated here, in particular, by a coil spring having an elastic force, which forces the push button out of an associated guide in the lid, the tooth-like projections on the first arms of the angle levers necessarily also being moved into their engagement position, in order to lock the lid element in the closed position, through the engagement of the second arms into the recesses.
According to a further concept underlying the invention, the lid element can be moved along the guide rails from its closed position into the locked position by use of a motor, and preferably back too, for which purpose an electric drive motor or electromagnet or other drive can be disposed on the basic body or on the lid element, this drive, for example, acting through a rack and a pinion, a toothed belt or some other traction mechanism on the lid element or the locking mechanism.
This embodiment of the invention is particularly advantageous if an electric motor can be activated from outside by remote radio control, so that, to save time, the user of the case can open the lid element from a relatively large distance in order to remove a desired item.
According to a further embodiment of the invention, the basic body, which may be formed, for example, of a rigid plastic material or of metal, particularly aluminum, has closeable compartments for storing items in the area of the rear wall and/or the side walls, which are configured to be foldable or extendable depending on the kind of items to be kept inside. The construction according to the invention advantageously allows the additional holding compartments to be disposed both laterally and in the area of the rear wall or even on the outside of the lid element or in the lid element, which opens up numerous possible configurations and provides ergonomic handling suitable for the respective use of the case or bag.
In order to prevent any unintentional unfolding of the additional storage or holding compartments in the closed position, according to a further embodiment of the invention, it has proved advantageous if the extendable and/or foldable holding compartments are provided with known push-magnet spring-loaded catches, which can be attached to the basic body and, with the aid of a magnet contained therein and a locking mechanism, unlock the closed holding compartment on first pressure applied to the outside of the latter, the respective compartment being moved separately by an elastic force exerted by the magnet out of its closed position into a semi-open position from which it can then be moved by hand into the fully open position. The holding compartment can then be pivoted or displaced by light pressure on its outside back into the closed position in which the locking device contained in the push-magnet spring-loaded catch locks the holding or storage compartment.
According to a further embodiment of the invention, which, in cases having a known, generally square or box-shaped basic body, can also alternatively be used without the lid that is pivotable and displaceable in guides according to the invention, a holding compartment is included in the rear wall of the basic body or else in the side walls thereof, which holding compartment can preferably be pulled out away from the floor element perpendicularly upward from the basic body or the side or rear wall.
The extendable holding compartment, which is particularly suitable for holding pens or business cards, preferably contains an insert which, in the removal position in which the holding compartment is pulled almost completely out of the basic body, can be tilted toward the opening for easier removal of items.
For this purpose, the insert may be disposed pivotably on a rear wall of the extendable holding compartment and, in the removal position, may be supported on an edge or a projection of the basic body or a lateral projection of the holding compartment, which can preferably be guided in corresponding guides disposed in the area of the rear wall of the basic body or on the narrow sides of the holding compartment. As a result, the tilting angle of the insert is limited to a desired degree effectively and by simple measures.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a case or a bag having a lid element that can be opened with one hand, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the figures of the drawing in detail and first, particularly, to
As may be seen from the illustration in
As a result of the inherently rigid shape of the lid element 14 and the bearing thereof at certain points through the guide journals or guide pins 16a, 16b in the guide rails 18, 20, the lid element 14 may be of any desired shape that corresponds to the desired shape of the case in the area of the opening, without this limiting the movement of the lid element 14.
According to the illustration in
In addition to the arc of the rails 18 and 20 shown, for example, in
The curved arc-shape of the guide rails falling away toward the rear wall element 10 offers the advantage that the lid element 14 first carries out a lifting movement when moving out of the closed position, which enables the lid element 14, the side wall elements 6a, 6b—as shown in
In the embodiment of the invention shown in
According to a further embodiment of the invention, the case or bag 1 according to the invention contains a handle 26, which is preferably disposed pivotably on the lid element 14, and a push button or an actuating element 28 of a locking mechanism 30 is located right next to it, which push button or actuating element 28 is shown in detail in
The push button 28 is preferably configured here as a longitudinally displaceable bar which is disposed directly under the handle 26 such that the push button 28 can be displaced when holding the case by the handle 26, preferably by two fingers in the direction of the arrow 32 shown in
The locking mechanism 30 contains here two angle levers 40a, 40b pivotable about a pivot axis 38a, 38b, each of which contains a first arm 42a, 42b on which a tooth-like projection 44a, 44b is disposed, which, in the closed position, is in engagement with a designated projection or an edge 46a, 46b of the basic body 2, in order to lock the lid element 14 in the closed position.
As can also be seen in
As can be seen in
According to the illustration in
As is shown in
According to the illustration in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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DE 102005007498.7 | Feb 2005 | DE | national |
This is a continuing application, under 35 U.S.C. § 120, of copending international application PCT/EP2006/001141, filed Feb. 9, 2006, which designated the United States; this application also claims the priority, under 35 U.S.C. § 119, of German patent application DE 10 2005 007 498.7, filed Feb. 17, 2005; the prior applications are herewith incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2006/001141 | Feb 2006 | US |
Child | 11840258 | Aug 2007 | US |