The present invention relates to container storage organizers and particularly to organizers made of individual organizer units wherein containers may be inserted and held and which units are mountable adjacent to each other (side-by-side) in a stack or arrayed either vertically on a wall or horizontally on a floor or table; the profile of the organizer units enabling the side-by-side orientation of several organizer units and the holding of cans for other containers securely without rattling or falling out of the organizer units regardless of their vertical or horizontal orientation. By the term “containers” as used herein is meant cans either round or square or other cross-sectional shape and whether open at an end at end thereof or closed at both ends.
While organizer units for holding cans and alike have been proposed, such organizer units are designed to hold a fixed number of cans and are not readily expandable so as to provide for organized storage (which terms include holding for display) of the cans. It is the principal feature of the present invention to provide container storage organizers in individual organizer units, which provide for sturdy holding of a plurality of cans and enable several similar organizer units, which can hold the same number or more or less containers, to be arrayed adjacent to each other and mounted either vertically on a wall, or horizontally on a floor or table surface. The storage capacity of an organizer provided by the invention is expandable by virtue of the shape of the profile of the individual organizer units.
It is another feature of the invention to provide a profile formed by a top wall having a plurality of panels at about 90° to each other, one of these panels having openings for receiving containers and the other of which assures the spacing of adjacent organizer units so that they do not interfere with each other in the storage of the containers therein, via their respective openings, whether the organizer units are arrayed horizontally or vertically.
It is a still further feature of the invention to provide a profile with sufficient taper to enable multiple organizer units to be placed in nested relationship for handling or shipment.
It is still a further feature of the invention to provide the organizer units with extensions or tabs, which when the units are arrayed adjacent to each other, extend through notches so as to be disposed in interdigited relationship. Attachment hardware such as screws may be inserted via openings in these tabs so as to firmly attach the units, whether vertically to a wall, or horizontally to a floor or table.
Briefly described, container storage organizers provided by the invention use a shell having a profile of quadrilateral shape with a top pair of sides separately meeting generally parallel sides. The top sides meet each other at an acute angle, preferably approximately 90°. The shell is open at the bottom. The generally parallel sides and the top sides are defined by panels. A larger one of the top panels had openings, and because of the angle of these openings and the orientation of the other top panel, directs containers into the shell so that they rest at the end thereof on a base to which the shell is attached and provides secure holding of the containers whether the base is horizontal or vertical. A plurality of shells of like profile may be disposed adjacent (side-by-side) to each other with their side panels in contact or closely spaced from each other, thereby providing an expandable array of shells with expandable container storage capacity.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from a reading of the following description in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to the drawings and particularly to
The larger of the top panels 16 has four openings of a diameter or shape corresponding the shape of the containers, here illustrated as round cans. The openings would be of other shapes (square or rectangular or oblong etc.) depending on the cross-section of other styles of containers. These openings 34, 36, 38 and 40 preferably have lips 42 which guide the cans into the shell.
The side panels 12 and 14 and the sides 28 and 30 of the profile meet the top panel 16 and 18 and top sides 24 and 26 of the profile at obtuse angles. For example, top sides 24 and 26 meet sides 28 and 30 at 123.98° and 154.39°, respectively, as shown in
In order to mount the shells on the base, a plurality of tabs 48 project laterally from the lower edge of the side panels. There are three tabs from the left side panel 12 and two from the right side panel 14 which tabs are offset from each other. The bottom side edges are aligned with tabs of adjoining organizer units in notches 56. When the shells are disposed side-by-side, for example as shown in
The attachment to the base may be through holes surrounded by ridges in tabs 48, which protect screws extending through the holes into the base. Access to the screws is either from the outside of the shell or through the openings 34-40.
One feature provided by the angles where the two top sides 24 and 26 meet respective sides 28 and 30, as described above, is that when multiple container organizer units are stacked in either a horizontal or vertical orientation along a base surface the containers are received in the opening 34-40 along a downwardly projecting angle which enables contents to be retained within the containers while enabling full unobstructed access to the containers. The containers in each stacked unit in their respective openings may be in a single row. Although openings 34-40 are to a cavity formed by the interior of the shell of the organizer unit and a base surface, optionally one or more of the openings 34-40 may be to an open or closed ended chamber extending on a downward angle from top wall 24 having a cross-section shape in accordance with the containers to be received therein. Such chamber may be molded with the shell providing the unit. In the case of a can, such as a used coffee can, the cross-sectional shape of the openings 34-40 (and chamber, if present) would be circular and have a slightly larger diameter than the outer diameter of the can such that each can slides into its respective opening and extends partially there from.
Referring next to
The interdigited relationship of the tabs 48 and their passageways through the slot 56 are more apparent in
From the foregoing description it will be apparent that there has been provided improved container storage units having distinctive profiles which facilitate compact arrangements of the organizer units in arrays of either one of two orthogonal orientations as well as to provide firm seating and secure holding of the cans and other containers in the container units. Dimensions and angles have been given to facilitate the understanding of the invention and not by way of limitation. The illustrated description as a whole is to be taken as illustrative and not as limiting of the scope of the invention. Such variations, modifications and extensions, which are within the scope of the invention, will undoubtedly become apparent to those skilled in the art.