The present invention relates to a connecting member for a clothes airer, in particular, but not exclusively, a tower airer.
Clothes airers come in a variety of shapes and sizes and are primarily focused with providing maximum drying capacity whilst keeping the size of the airer to a minimum. Typically, clothes ariers have a collapsed position whereby they are folded in upon themselves to allow them to be stored away in a space saving fashion, and an expanded position in which they provide a frame work to which garments can be hung for drying purposes.
One such clothes airer is known as a tower airer. Conventional tower airers are typically comprised of four frame elements connected at their respective ends to a connecting member. The connecting member is usually comprised of a central hollow tube for receiving the end of a frame element at either end of the tube, and two additional hollow tubes pivotally mounted on either side of the central tube. The pivotally mounted tubes usually have two extreme positions, one in which the tube is parallel to the central tube and the other in which the tube is perpendicular to the hollow tube. However, the use of such a connecting member gives rise to a tower airer that can only be collapsed to a thickness of three tubes which limits the number of units that can be distributed at any one time and takes up excessive storage space in the home. To maximise the number of units that can be transported and distributed around the globe and to minimise the amount of storage space taken by a tower airer, it is desirable to keep the thickness of the unit in a collapsed state to a minimum.
Embodiments of the present invention have been made in consideration of the abovementioned problems.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a connecting member for connecting a plurality of frame elements, the connecting member comprising a core section having a width and two supporting members for supporting frame elements extending in different directions from the connecting member, the connecting member having at least one additional member for supporting a further frame element, the or each additional supporting member being pivotally connected to the core section and moveable between a first position in which the additional supporting member lies within the width of the core section and a second position in which a frame element supported by the additional support will extend in a direction generally perpendicular to a frame element supported by a supporting element of the core section.
Advantageously, a tower airer made with a connecting member according to the present invention can be collapsed to an overall thickness of approximately two frame elements as opposed to the conventional three. Thus, 50% more units than normal can be packed into a given space and transported by, for instance, a lorry for distribution purposes. Furthermore, a home user requires less space to store such a tower airer thus freeing up more space for other items.
Preferably there are two additional supporting members. More preferably, one additional supporting member is pivotally mounted to one side of the core section and the other additional supporting member is pivotally mounted to the opposite side of the core section.
Preferably, the additional members are arranged to support frame elements in substantially parallel spaced apart directions. Preferably, the supporting members of the core section are arranged to support frame elements in substantially parallel, spaced apart directions.
Preferably, the support members comprise fittings arranged to connect to a frame element. More preferably, the support members comprise hollow tubes. The support members may be arranged to support elongate frame elements. Preferably, the hollow tubes have an internal diameter which is substantially equivalent to the external diameter of an elongate frame element that is intended to be supported by the connecting member.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a clothes airer comprising a connecting member according to the first aspect of the present invention.
Preferably, there are two connecting members and four frame elements respectively connected to a supporting member of each connecting member. Preferably, two frame elements are fixed to a corresponding supporting member of each connecting member and two frame elements are releasably attached to a corresponding supporting member of each connecting member. More preferably, two frame elements are fixed to supporting members at the same end of each connecting member and the other two frame elements are releasably attached to supporting members at the opposite end of each connecting member.
At least one support is preferably attached to the two frame elements that are supported by a supporting member of the core section at the same corresponding point along each frame element. The clothes airer preferably comprises at least one shelf. Preferably the shelf is rectangular and pivotally mounted at two adjacent corners to a pair of supports. At least one retention clip is preferably attached to the two frame elements that are supported by the pivotally mounted supporting members at the same corresponding points along each frame element as the supports. The retention clip preferably has a recess that is sized and configured to receive a longitudinal edge of a shelf.
In order that the invention may be more clearly understood embodiments thereof will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to
Attached at spaced apart intervals along the upright length of each fixed frame element 2, 3 are four moulded plastic supports 8 which act as means for supporting one or more shelves 10. Attached at the same corresponding points along the upright length of each releasable frame element 4, 5 are four moulded plastic retention means 9 in the form of clips which serve to receive an edge of a shelf. Two rectangular shelves 10 are independently pivotally connected at two adjacent corners to a pair of opposed supports 8.
A moulded plastic wheel 11 is pivotally connected to the lower corner of each frame element 2, 3, 4 and 5 via a moulded plastic clip which is secured to the frame of the clothes airer. The wheels 11 enable the entire upright clothes airer to be easily manoeuvred when in the expanded state as shown in
Each frame element 2, 3, 4, 5 is formed from two L-shaped portions connected together at the end of their respective longest lengths to form a C-shape. Each L-shaped portion is comprised of an elongate hollow tubular member, typically made from mild steel, which has been bent at a point along its length in such a way as to give a curved corner. The two lengths of each L-shaped portion are therefore substantially perpendicular to one another.
The external diameter of one end of an L-shaped member is substantially equivalent to the internal diameter of the other L-shaped member to which it is intended to be connected so that one end can be inserted into the end of the other to provide an interference fit. Alternatively, the two L-shaped elements share the same approximate internal and external diameters and are connected together by a common inner tube or fitting that engages with each element and holds them together. The two elements could alternatively be held together by a latch means. As shown in
Referring to
Two additional supporting members 16, 17 made from a hollow plastic tube, which are open at one end and closed at the opposite end, are pivotally mounted at their closed end on the central core section 13. One pivotally mounted tube 16 is mounted such that it shares the same approximate longitudinal axis as a tube 14 of the core section 13 when in the collapsed state as shown in
The two releasable frame elements 4, 5 are releasably connected to the two pivotally mounted tubes 16, 17 via a ball and socket pop catch. The catch comprises a hole (socket) in the side of each tube 16, 17 and a correspondingly sized ball which extends out from the side of each frame element and which can be depressed into the frame element. The frame elements 4, 5 are therefore connected by inserting the ends of the frame elements 4, 5 into the tubes 16, 17 and lining up the ball and the hole so that the ball extends out from the frame element and into the hole, thus holding the frame in place.
Connecting the individual C-shaped elements 2, 3, 4, 5 to a connecting member 6, 7 at either end permits the assembly of a basic clothes airer frame to which the shelves 10 can be attached. The pivoting function of the connecting members 6, 7 gives rise to a clothes airer that can be moved from a deployed position shown in
Each rectangular shelf 10 is comprised of a cylindrical elongate member, again typically made from mild steel, bent at right angles at two points along its length and along the same plane to form side arms 32, 33 and create a U-shape frame. A plurality of thin straight elongate members 34 made from mild steel extend across the length of the U-shaped frame at regularly spaced apart intervals and are welded at opposite ends to the side arms 32, 33. Referring to
Referring to
A complimentary ‘half-strut’ 21, 22 is integrally formed on either part 18, 19 of the support 8 such that they extend toward one another. The half-struts 21, 22 are arranged such that, in the closed position, they form a single strut 23 to which the looped end 24 of a shelf 10 can be mounted. One of the half-struts 21 has a central hollow core for receiving a screw via a corresponding hole in a side of the cover part 19. Referring to
Respective loop ends 24 of two shelves 10 are mounted to the half-strut 22 of the mounting part 18 when the support 8 is in the open position shown in
The moulded plastic retention clip 9 comprises a mounting portion 25 which is a partially complete cylinder and dimensioned to fit securely around the upright of a C-shaped element. The retention clip 9 further comprises a curved retention portion 26 which extends out from the mounting portion 25. A recess 28 is cut out from the part of the retention portion 26 that is furthest from the mounting portion 25 such that the recess is perpendicular to the upright length of the C-shaped element when the retention clip 9 is mounted thereon. The recess 28 has an entrance point 29 and an inner portion 30 which is dimensioned to securely seat an elongate side 27 of a shelf 10. The distance across the recess entrance 29 is less than the diameter of the elongate member from which the shelf 10 is formed and its walls are sufficiently resilient to require a degree of force to be used in order to insert (or remove) the elongate side 27 of the shelf 10 in to (or out of) the recess 28. The side walls 30 of the retention portion 26 are angled from the retention portion 26 to the recess entrance 29 so that they guide the elongate side 27 of a shelf 10, which typically extends beyond the entrance point 29 when mounted and in a horizontal plane, into the recess 28 from beneath the retention clip 9.
When mounted at either end to a pair of oppositely facing supports 8 and when the clothes airer 1 is in the deployed position, the shelf 10 can be rotated about the struts 23 of the supports 8 and secured into a corresponding retention clip 9 as shown in
The pair of supports 8 to which a shelf is pivotally mounted work in conjunction with a correspondingly positioned retention clip 9 on the adjacent frame element to provide a reliable and secure mounting procedure for a shelf in the horizontal plane. When the shelf 10 is rotated into position within the retention clip 9, the loop 24 at the two adjacent corners of the shelf prevent the shelf from being forced off the supports 8 and permits a degree of force to be exerted on the retention clip 9 by the elongate side 27 of the shelf in order to seat it within the recess 28. When the shelf 10 is removed from the retention clip 9, it can rotate downwardly about the supports 8 until it hangs from the supports 8 in a downward direction.
Referring to
In an alternative embodiment, referring to
The above embodiments are described by way of example only; many variations are possible without departing from the invention as defined by the appended claims.
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0800535.7 | Jan 2008 | GB | national |
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