The invention relates to a domestic appliance having a muffle in which is arranged a removable holding device for a cooking-product support, which device is embodied having a depth stop which in a depth direction delimits withdrawing of the holding device from the muffle and engages behind a fronting wall in the muffle.
What is to be understood by a cooking-product support is, for example, a baking tray, a support grille, a cast-metal roaster, or any other support for food items being cooked or baked. With no restrictions thereto, a baking tray is below for simplicity's sake taken as an example of a cooking-product support.
Modern baking-oven muffles that operate by means of circulating air frequently have on their rear wall a fan wheel of a radial fan that is screened from the muffle's interior by a fronting wall. Said fan is driven by an electric driving motor outside the muffle. The rear baking-oven wall is thus embodied at least in part as double-walled, with a space between the rear wall and fronting wall. Removable holding devices for cooking-product supports are known from the prior art. Thanks to the muffle's retrofitting capability and the fact that neither securing means for insertable baking trays nor special wall designs have to be provided in the muffle, the same muffle shape can be produced, with no appreciable modifications, both for baking ovens that are provided for the catalysis process and for baking ovens that are provided for the pyrolysis process. That is because the cooking-product support can be inserted subsequently in keeping with the specific requirements. Heed is therein paid to its being possible to perform said retrofitting with a few, simple manual operations.
Known from EP 0 811 807 A2 is a movable holding device for a baking tray, which device includes a parallelogram linkage having an arm oriented in a fixed position relative to the baking-oven muffle and a movable mounting arm. The baking tray is rested upon the movable mounting arm and can be moved from a position inserted into the muffle to a withdrawn position in which it protrudes from the baking-oven muffle. The arm oriented in a fixed position has a rearward mounting end by means of which the holding device is removably mounted on a rear baking-oven wall through positive engagement. Embodied for that purpose on the mounting end is a hook that engages in a cutout in a fronting wall in front of the muffle's actual rear wall. Located in the vicinity of the hook is furthermore a projection that interacts with a face-wall counterpart in such a way that an upward movement is prevented. What has proved disadvantageous about that design is that mounting on the fronting wall in the depth of the baking-oven muffle is laborious. That is because a certain dexterity is required to engage the hooks into the associated cutouts in the fronting wall and cause the projections to interact with the corresponding counterparts.
The object of the present invention is therefore to make a domestic appliance available having a removable holding device that is made easier to mount in a domestic-appliance muffle.
Said object is achieved by means of a domestic appliance having the features of claim 1 or, as the case may be, by means of a holding device having the features of claim 15. According to the characterizing features of claim 1, a depth stop of the holding device engages in the installed condition on the outside behind a fronting wall on the muffle's rear-wall side. The fronting wall can according to a simple embodiment variant be embodied as a partition wall separating a fan chamber from the muffle's cooking space.
The invention departs from a design in which the holding device's supporting and/or securing means are/is arranged on a visible surface of the fronting wall. Rather it follows the principle of having the securing means engage into position on a non-visible rear side of the fronting wall. The advantage thereof is that the fronting wall will not need any cutouts or openings whose production entails an additional expense and which could impair the fronting wall's visual impact. Frequent use of the known holding device and in particular repeated mounting thereof can furthermore cause said cutouts very quickly to be rendered unsightly through signs of wear and detract from the cooking device's visual impression. Those disadvantages can be obviated when the inventive securing means engage on the fronting wall's non-visible rear side. Any signs of use and even wear will then remain concealed from an observer looking into the baking oven; what will instead be seen will be of high caliber.
The securing means can for engaging behind the fronting wall have any elements by means of which said means will engage into the space between the muffle's rear wall and the fronting wall. Said elements must, though, divert a tractive force with which the holding device could be pulled from the muffle reliably to the muffle. According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention the securing means therefore includes at least one peg that engages behind the fronting wall. A peg constitutes a simple securing option that is easy to manufacture, will make mounting of the holding device easy to understand, and still reliably transfer the undesired tractive force. The securing means preferably has two pegs because that will make a defined rest position possible while avoiding titling moments. Pegs further offer the advantage of being able to be dimensioned sufficiently small in size to be barely noticeable. They can also engage into small spaces between the muffle's rear wall and the fronting wall and can furthermore be easily guided in the depth of the baking-oven muffle and when that is poorly lit.
Since the fronting wall does not entirely cover the baking-oven muffle's rear wall but leaves a broad edge free both laterally and above and below, numerous options are basically available to a securing means for engaging behind the fronting wall. According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention the pegs engage into the fronting wall from its underside. The holding device will thereby be rendered easier to mount because a favorable starting position for mounting can be for the holding device to be placed upon the floor of the muffle. The pegs can from said starting position be conveniently directed to their operating position without the user having at the same time to bear the holding device's weight.
According to a further advantageous embodiment of the invention the holding device includes longitudinal rails and transverse rails or longitudinal and transverse bars that form a closed frame, with the longitudinal bars serving essentially to support a baking tray and the back transverse bar having the securing means. The holding device will through the embodiment of a closed frame acquire particular stability so that it cannot become distorted in particular during mounting and will not be rendered more difficult to handle as a result.
Mounting of the holding device in the muffle is furthermore made easier through the embodiment of stops that define and maintain the holding device's correct operating position inside the muffle. The holding device's position inside the muffle basically has to be defined in terms of the three dimensions, namely on the one hand in a horizontal longitudinal direction corresponding to a slide-in and pull-out direction of the baking tray, in a transverse direction perpendicular thereto, and in a vertical direction. A stop for the vertical direction is significant particularly in preventing the holding device from tilting when a baking tray is withdrawn only partly from the baking muffle. According to a further advantageous embodiment of the invention, the back transverse bar can for defining the holding device's position in the muffle therefore be situated in its longitudinal direction against the muffle's rear wall. It will in that way be possible to dispense with a separate stop in the slide-in direction since a stop will already have been formed by the bottom transverse bar.
The same advantage can be achieved also for defining the holding device's position in the transverse direction through the longitudinal bars' being situated according to a further advantageous embodiment of the invention against the muffle's side walls.
The back transverse bar can for defining the holding device's position in a transverse direction alternatively have a projection that engages into a cutout in the fronting wall or, as the case may be, a cutout into which the fronting wall engages. Since the fronting wall, as already explained above, does not entirely cover the surface of the muffle's rear wall, the fronting wall's vertical limiting edges can in that way be used as stops for defining the holding device's position.
The distance between the fronting wall and the rear wall of the muffle can also be used for a vertical stop. According to a further advantageous embodiment of the invention, the back transverse bar can for defining the holding device's position in the vertical direction come to rest with its top side against an offset bottom transverse metal sheet of the fronting wall. Existing component edges can thereby also be advantageously used additionally for establishing the holding device's position.
The holding device can be varied in its structure depending on the specific requirements and intended purpose. According to an advantageous embodiment of the invention the longitudinal bars, for example, are therefore embodied as telescopic rails for withdrawing the baking tray from the muffle. The baking tray attached within the holding device can as a result be conveniently withdrawn from the baking muffle and, in its withdrawn position, will be easier to remove from the holding device. The holding device can alternatively have a plurality of longitudinal bars so that a plurality of baking trays can be arranged one above the other in the baking muffle. The longitudinal bars can be arranged in the form of a frame and hence embodied as able to be withdrawn jointly, or they can themselves each be embodied as telescopic rails and so able to be withdrawn separately.
As a further way to facilitate operation the front transverse bar is according to an advantageous embodiment of the invention embodied as a gripping strip for withdrawing the holding device. The front transverse bar thus serves on the one hand to stabilize the holding device as a constituent part of the closed frame and, on the other, as a convenient operating element of the holding device.
According to a further advantageous embodiment of the invention the holding device is embodied for the use of an additional heating means above the muffle floor and between the longitudinal bars. Said additional heating means, which would be expedient when, for example, a cast-metal roaster is used, can advantageously occupy the space between the longitudinal bars. It is thus subject to virtually no limitations in its physical design and specific embodiment. It can there deliver its heat unimpededly and directly to the underside of the cast-metal roaster. The principle of the invention is explained in yet more detail below with the aid of the drawings by way of example. These show:
The removable holding device 1 includes a front transverse bar 21, a back transverse bar 22 arranged parallel thereto, and two parallel longitudinal bars 23 and 24. The bars 21, 22, 23, 24 of the holding device 1 together form a stable closed frame. The longitudinal bars 23, 24 have support rails 25 upon which a baking tray can be rested. They are furthermore embodied as telescopic rails so that a baking tray resting upon the support rails 25 can be conveniently withdrawn from the muffle 2 through the opening 7. The baking tray is furthermore made easier to withdraw by the front transverse bar 21, which is embodied as a gripping strip.
So that the removable holding device 1 can be put into the desired operating position while being mounted, its functionally correct positioning in the direction of its width, depth, and height must have been precisely defined. Its vertical height position inside the baking muffle 2 is defined by its being placed with its longitudinal bars 24, 25 and the back transverse bar 22 on the floor 5 of the baking muffle 2. Its horizontal position in the transverse direction inside the muffle 2 is established by the fact that the longitudinal bars 23, 24 run parallel to the side walls 4 and directly rest flat against them. So that they will fit snugly, the longitudinal bars 23, 24 have a cross-section that is matched to the curvature at the transition between the side walls 4 and the floor 5 of the muffle 2 (not shown). A transverse movement of the holding device 1 inside the muffle 2 is precluded thereby.
In particular while the holding device 1 is being operated, for example when the baking tray is being withdrawn from the baking muffle 2, horizontal longitudinal forces can act on the holding device 1 that can displace it in a direction through the opening 7 from inside the baking muffle 2. The holding device 1 needs to be secured against said displacing. The back transverse bar 22 has for that purpose two vertical pegs 26 that slightly project beyond the back transverse bar 22. They engage into cutouts 13 in the bottom transverse metal sheet 11 of the fronting wall 8 from below so that from the space 15 between the rear wall 6 and the fronting wall 8 they are, as it were, supported from behind against the rear side of the fronting wall 8. The back transverse bar 22 is hence clearly established in its appropriate position. These conditions can be seen more clearly in
The holding device 1 is furthermore additionally fixed in position in the transverse direction through a gradation 29 which the back transverse bar 22 has on its top side. The depressed part of the gradation 29, which part is formed by the top narrow side 28 of the transverse bar 22, is dimensioned as being as long as the width of the fronting wall 8, at least in the bottom section thereof shown. The transverse bar 22 encloses, with the gradation 29, at least the bottom transverse metal sheet 11 of the fronting wall 8 on three sides. The horizontal position of the holding device 1 is hence also clearly defined in the transverse direction solely through resting of the transverse bar 22 against the fronting wall 8.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 030 392.7 | Jun 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/060544 | 3/8/2006 | WO | 00 | 6/9/2009 |