The present invention relates to a high-level built-in cooking appliance having at least one muffle that delimits a cooking chamber and has a muffle opening on its base side, and a base door for closing the muffle opening.
Generic high-level built-in cooking appliances are known for example from U.S. Pat. No. 2,944,540, WO 98/04871, DE 100 59 652 or DE 101 64 239.
Also known for cookers having hotplates made of glass ceramic is the use of decor patterns to demarcate the hotplates.
With high-level built-in cooking appliances it is disadvantageous in contrast to other types of cooking appliances that when the base door is moved upward—e.g. for the purpose of closing the cooking appliance for an oven mode of operation—cookware that projects beyond the edge of the cooking chamber or muffle can become jammed or can be overturned. In order to avoid damage due to objects being jammed in the closing direction, anti-jamming protection devices are known, e.g. from DE 101 64 239, in which after the jamming situation has occurred the base door is halted and its movement reversed. In this case, however, the jamming situation is not prevented, with the result that although serious damage due to the jamming incident is avoided, accidents such as, for example, cooking dishes or baking pans being overturned or foods placed directly on the surface being crushed are not.
It is therefore the object of the present invention to provide a means of avoiding objects becoming jammed on the top side of the base door.
The present object is achieved by means of the high-level built-in cooking appliance as claimed in claim 1. Advantageous embodiments may be derived from the dependent claims either individually or in combination.
For this purpose the high-level built-in cooking appliance is furnished on the top side of the base door with a delimiting decor pattern which essentially, i.e. without nature-modifying deviations, indicates the limits of the cooking chamber—corresponding to the rest position of the muffle—on the base door. By means of said delimiting decor pattern it is possible for a user to check the position of objects on the base door prior to the closing movement in order to determine whether they will move into the muffle without colliding or jamming.
In order to utilize the maximum space for placing objects on the base door it is advantageous if the outer contour of the delimiting decor pattern corresponds to the limits of the cooking chamber.
Since full utilization of the limits of the cooking chamber permits no tolerance for error on the part of the user (e.g. not taking into account pot edges, imprecise positioning in particular in the case of larger objects, poor vision, haste, etc.), it can be advantageous if the outer contour of the delimiting decor pattern corresponds to the limits of the cooking chamber except for a clearance. Said clearance allows a corresponding exceeding of the delimiting decor pattern for the purpose of an orderly closing movement.
For typical cooking appliances it has proved a good compromise between adequate safety clearance and maximum utilization of the limits of the cooking chamber if the clearance is less than 3.5 cm, in particular less than 2 cm, especially less than 1 cm.
Since objects usually cannot be positioned so precisely in respect of the rear edge of the delimiting decor pattern due to the poorer perspective recognition and a possible concealing of the boundary, it is advantageous if the clearance is greater at a rear edge of the delimiting decor pattern than the clearance at a front edge of the delimiting decor pattern and/or than the clearance at side edges of the delimiting decor pattern. In this case it has proven favorable in particular if the clearance at the front edge and the clearance at the side edges is less than 2 cm, in particular less than 1 cm, and the clearance at the rear edge more than 1 cm, in particular more than 2 cm, and less than 4 cm.
Since corner limits are comparatively more difficult to observe by a user, it is advantageous if the corners of the delimiting decor pattern are rounded.
The invention is described below with reference to the attached schematic figures, in which:
In the interests of providing a better illustration of the individual elements the figures are not drawn to scale.
It can be seen from
In the exemplary embodiment shown, the heating elements 16, 17, 18 are embodied as radiant heating elements covered by a glass ceramic plate 19. The glass ceramic plate 19 has approximately the same dimensions as the top side of the base door 7. The glass ceramic plate 19 is furthermore fitted with mounting openings (not shown) through which protrude bases for fixing securing parts 20 for supports 21 for items being cooked, as also shown in
With the aid of a control knob provided in the operating panel 12 the high-level built-in cooking appliance can be switched to a hotplate operating mode or a bottom-heat operating mode, which are explained below.
In the hotplate operating mode the hotplate heating elements 16, 17 can be controlled individually via the control circuit 13 by means of control elements 11 provided in the operating panel 12, while the panel heating element 18 remains in the non-operating state. The hotplate operating mode can be used with the base door 7 lowered, as is shown in
In the bottom-heat operating mode not only the hotplate heating elements 16, 17 but also the panel heating element 18 are controlled by the control device 13.
In order to achieve maximally even browning of items being cooked during the bottom-heat mode it is critical that the cooking matrix 15 providing the bottom heat should distribute the heating output evenly across the surface of the cooking matrix 15, even though the heating elements 16, 17, 18 have different nominal outputs. The heating elements 16, 17, 18 are therefore preferably not switched to continuous operation by the control circuit 13; instead, the power supply to the heating elements 16, 17, 18 is clocked. The different nominal heat outputs of the heating elements 16, 17, 18 are therein reduced individually in such a way that the heating elements 16, 17, 18 will distribute the heating output evenly across the surface of the cooking matrix 15.
The operating panel 12 is normally arranged at the front of the base door 7. Other arrangements are alternatively also conceivable, for example at the front of the housing 1, distributed over different partial panels, and/or in part on side surfaces of the cooking appliance. Further embodiments are possible. The control elements 11 are not limited in their structural design and can include, for example, control knobs, toggle switches, pushbuttons, and plastic membrane keys that include display elements 14, for example LED, LCD and/or touchscreen displays.
In the closed state the muffle rests on the surface of the base door 7, the base door 7 thereby forming a side of the cooking chamber. The limits 25 of the cooking chamber due to the muffle resting thereon are shown by the dotted line. In this embodiment, a delimiting decor pattern 26 applied to the surface of the base door 7 has—except for the corner areas—a constant clearance d=1 cm from the limits of the cooking chamber 25, i.e. the same clearance for dv for a front edge 26a of the delimiting decor pattern 26, as well as ds and dh for the side edges 26b and the rear edge 26c, respectively, of the delimiting decor pattern 26. The clearances dv, ds and dh can also be different from one another in suitable combinations; this also applies to the respective two side clearances ds.
The surface of the base door 7 also has a decor pattern 27 to delimit the heating zone as well as a decor pattern 28 for the two hotplates that are present in this case.
In other embodiments it is possible for example for only one decor pattern 27 for delimiting the heating zone to be present, e.g. if the heating zone has no hotplate function, but only a warming and bottom-heat function. Also, the base door does not need to have its own heating elements and in that case serves only as a cover for the cooking chamber.
The design of the delimiting decor pattern 26 is left to the discretion of the person skilled in the art and can include, for example, different line shapes, depths, densities, colors, etc.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102005044693.0 | Sep 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/066435 | 9/18/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/28/2009 |