The present invention relates to a disk cartridge and storage assembly, and in particular to a cartridge and storage system for small-format optical disks.
A new generation of optical disks will be smaller than the usual CDs and will probably have a diameter in the range of 20-40 mm, i.e. small enough to carry it, for example, in a pocket. In order to protect such a small disk, it is housed in a housing to form a cartridge so that it is protected against scratches and dust. One of the main applications of these small disks is the use in portable devices such as mobile phones, PDAs, notebooks, and the like. In view of this application, there is a need for means to store and transport one or more of said disk cartridges.
The object of the present invention is therefore to provide such a disk cartridge and storage assembly.
To achieve this object the present invention provides a disk cartridge and storage assembly which comprises:
a disk having two sides, at least one of the sides being adapted to contain readable data thereon;
a housing in which the disk is rotatably accommodated and which has an opening to provide access to the disk, the housing being adapted to be inserted into a disk drive together with the disk;
wherein the cartridge comprises at least a first coupling member on the housing, and the assembly is provided with a link element to couple the cartridge to a storage support, said link element comprising a second coupling member adapted to be removably coupled to the first coupling member.
This link element renders it possible to couple the cartridge to a storage support. This storage support may be adapted to couple one disk cartridge or several disk cartridges thereto. The storage support may be, for example, a key fob adapted to carry one disk cartridge. Another embodiment of the storage support is a container adapted to contain several cartridges in a coupled manner.
In one embodiment of the assembly, the first coupling member on the cartridge is at least one hole, for example a through-hole, made in a part of the housing outside the circumference of the disk. If the shape of the housing is such that at least a protruding area thereof projects beyond the circumference of the disk, e.g. if the cartridge is rectangular, the first coupling member is positioned in the protruding area, which may have a smaller thickness than the remainder of the housing.
The second coupling member formed on the link element may comprise a clamping mechanism, for example with two resilient legs having, at the sides facing each other, oppositely directed protrusions that fit into the hole of the first coupling member from two sides of the housing, the legs being spaced from each other at the position of the protrusions by a distance substantially corresponding to or smaller than the thickness of the housing at the position of the first coupling member. This creates a system with which the link element can be quickly and easily be coupled and uncoupled to and from the disk cartridge. If the link element is made from metal, such as spring steel, for example, the legs can be made very thin. If the thickness of the cartridge in the area around the first coupling member is smaller than the thickness of the remainder of the cartridge, the dimensions can be made such that the legs of the link element do not protrude beyond the surface of the disk cartridge.
In an alternative embodiment of the link element, the clamping mechanism of the link element comprises two legs having a protrusion on one leg that fits through the through-hole of the first coupling member on the cartridge housing, and having an opening on the other leg that fits, and preferably snaps, around the protrusion on the other leg.
This creates a kind of locking mechanism securely holding the cartridge to the link element.
A combination of the embodiments of the clamping mechanism is also conceivable.
As was mentioned above, the storage support may be a storage container, and this storage container has a support member pivotally connecting at least one cartridge to the container through the link element. In one possible embodiment, the storage container is adapted to accommodate a plurality of disk cartridges connected to parallel support members supporting the cartridges such that it is possible to leaf through the cartridges. This makes it easy to select a cartridge from the container.
In an alternative embodiment, the support member is an element provided at the circumference of a (rotatable) column, wherein a plurality of support members is spaced around the circumference of the column in order to suspend a plurality of cartridges pivotally around the column through the link elements so as to form a Rolodex® type of storage facility. Such a storage support is mainly intended for stationary use.
The invention also relates to a storage system for storing a plurality of disk cartridges, a link element for connecting a housing of a disk cartridge to a support member, a disk cartridge, and a method of manufacturing a plurality of link elements. All these aspects of the invention are defined in the set of claims.
The invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the drawings showing exemplary embodiments of the invention in a very schematic way.
In this description, the term cartridge is used for a combination of a disk and a housing in which the disk is accommodated, in this example irremovably accommodated. In use, the disk is inserted into the disk drive unit together with the housing. The disk will be exposed at least partially to a reading/writing head in the disk drive unit.
The cartridge according to the invention comprises a disk 1. The disk 1 is preferably an optical disk, but may also contain data which is readable or writable in another manner such as magnetically or the like. Disk 1 has two sides of which at least one side contains readable data thereon, or has at least one side comprising an area on which data can be written.
The disk 1 is contained in a housing 2 in which the disk 1 is rotatably accommodated and which has a (closable) access opening 3 to provide access to the disk, for example for a head of a disk drive into which the cartridge housing 2 can be inserted. The cartridge housing 2 is slightly larger than the diameter of the disk 1 therein. For example, the diameter of the disk 1 is ca. 30 mm, whereas the size of the (square) housing is ca. 32 mm.
Because of the shape of the housing 2, there is at least one corner area 4 where the housing 2 extends substantially beyond the circumference of the disk 1. The housing is square in the embodiment shown, and there are four corner areas 4. In these corner areas 4 are created first coupling members 5, in this case each shaped as a through-hole extending perpendicularly to the main plane of the housing 2. As an alternative the hole may be blind or may be interrupted, whereby two blind holes are created on opposite sides of the housing 2. Other embodiments of the first coupling members are obviously possible. The drawing does not show that the thickness of the housing 2 in the corner areas 4 may be slightly smaller than the thickness in the remaining area of the cartridge housing 2. The coupling members 5 may also be used to position a disk cartridge within a disk drive unit.
In this embodiment, the link element 6 comprises two resilient legs 8 having a second coupling member 9 adapted to co-operate with the first coupling member 5 on the cartridge housing 2 at one end. In this case, the second coupling member 9 is constructed as two oppositely directed protrusions formed at one end of the link element 6 on the sides of the legs 8 that face each other. The protrusions 9 fit into the hole of the first coupling member 5 on the cartridge housing 2 from two sides thereof. Furthermore, the legs 8 of the link element 6 are spaced from each other at the position of the protrusions 9 by a distance substantially corresponding to or smaller than the thickness of the housing 2 in the corner areas 4. In this way, the housing 2 can be clamped between the legs 8 of the link element 6 with the protrusions 9 engaged in the hole 5, thereby coupling the link element 6 to the cartridge housing 2. Opening the legs 8 against a spring force of the legs 8 allows the link element 6 to be removed from the cartridge housing 2. To obtain a convenient resiliency in the legs 8 of the link element 6 and to create a link element 6 having a small thickness, it is preferred to manufacture the link element 6 from metal, such as spring steel.
In the embodiment shown, the legs 8 of the link element 6 are interconnected by a connecting part 10 which is shaped so as to be clamped around a diminished portion of the cylindrical rod that acts as the support member 7. If two link elements 6 are used to connect the cartridge housing 2 to the support member 7, the housing will only be pivotable about the axis of the support member 7.
It will be clear from the forgoing description that the invention provides a disk cartridge and storage assembly which is simple and which allows a convenient storage/transport of one or more disk cartridges. The coupling members enable a quick connection/disconnection of the cartridge with respect to the link element/storage support.
The invention is not restricted to the above embodiment shown in the drawing, which can be varied in several ways without departing from the scope of the invention. Embodiments shown or described may be combined, and separate features of the invention may be used in different combinations of features. For example, the shape of the cartridge housing may be varied, e.g. may be partly circular, and partly non-circular, such that a protruding area is formed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02079391.5 | Oct 2002 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/04433 | 10/6/2003 | WO | 4/19/2005 |