The invention relates to a domestic appliance, in particular a dishwasher.
Dishwashers usually have on their front side an appliance door that can be swung open around a horizontal swiveling axis on the base side. The appliance door can have been provided with a recessed grip for opening and closing the dishwasher.
Known from DE 199 07 233 A1 is a generic dishwasher in whose appliance door an operating panel is provided in which a handle shell is embodied. The handle shell has a bottom handle-shell part that is molded onto the operating panel as a single piece therewith and a handle-shell cover that is located at the back of the operating panel and by which a grip-engagement region provided by the handle shell is enclosed.
The grip-engagement region provided by the recessed grip is partially directly delimited by the back of the operating panel, as a result of which the appliance door's appearance is adversely affected as is also the feel associated with operating the door. In the region of the handle shell it is in addition not possible to use the back of the operating panel for locating control electronics for said panel's display and control elements.
The object of the invention is to provide a domestic appliance having an appliance door whose handle shell is embodied as being stable and also appealing in terms of appearance and feel.
Said object is achieved by means of the features of the invention. Advantageous developments of the invention are disclosed in the subclaims.
The invention proceeds from a domestic appliance, in particular a dishwasher, having an appliance door that has an operating panel with a handle shell formed from at least one bottom handle-shell part and a handle-shell cover.
According to the characterizing part of claim 1, the handle-shell cover has a side wall that faces the operating panel and together with the operating panel forms a double-wall structure having an intermediately located free installation space. The double-wall structure will give a user engaging with the handle shell the impression of sound design and good quality. Engaging behind just a single thickness of plastic material as is the case with the prior art can hence advantageously be avoided.
An electronic module for the control or display elements on the operating panel can additionally be located in the free installation space between the operating panel and handle-shell cover's side wall. Directly above the handle shell's grip-engagement opening in the operating panel's front wall it is in that way possible to provide a display window for a display projecting at least partially above the grip-engagement opening in the appliance door's upward direction.
The fully assembled appliance door has a flat inside-door element that faces a useful space in the domestic appliance and can be screwed to a supporting door frame. The operating panel can have been positioned at the top edge of the appliance door on the door frame and likewise screwed to the inside-door element.
To allow the back of the operating panel to be put to favorable use in terms of structural space, the installation space in the double-wall structure can be embodied as being open toward the sides of the door in a direction parallel to the handle-shell cover's side wall or, as the case may be, to the operating panel so that a strip-shaped control module can be ducted as a single piece through the intermediate installation space across virtually the entire width of the appliance door.
The handle shell's grip-engagement opening provided in the operating panel's front wall can be delimited in the door's upward direction by a top holding bar and a bottom wall section of the operating panel, which section has been drawn upward in the shape of a dish. The holding bar and wall section form the bottom handle-shell part. The holding bar can project in the appliance door's structural-depth direction into the door's interior and join the operating panel's front wall to the handle-shell cover's side wall. The holding bar's length therefore determines the size of the double-wall structure's installation space.
The operating panel will be subjected to twisting forces when the door is opened or when the domestic appliance is lifted by its handle shell, say for transportation purposes. It is therefore of significance that the operating panel be embodied as dimensionally stable and rigid. The operating panel can against that background be roughly box- or hood-shaped in its geometry, with a front wall on the user side in which display and/or control elements are integrated and which merges into a panel covering that is bent flange-like in the structural-depth direction.
The handle-shell cover can preferably be supported on the panel covering extending along the top side or, as the case may be, on the panel roof. The handle-shell cover can for that purpose have been extended in the appliance's upward direction by at least one supporting element via which the handle-shell cover can be supported on the panel roof. The handle-shell cover or, as the case may be, its supporting element can have been dimensioned such as to be braced between the panel roof and bottom handle-shell part free from play in the mounted position. The inventive cover retention between the bottom handle-shell part and panel roof will enable the operating panel's front wall to remain free from securing elements at the back. Elements of such kind can by contrast be inventively provided on the panel roof and bottom handle-shell part. The double-wall structure's installation space will therefore likewise remain free from such securing elements.
Assembly will be made easier if the handle-shell cover can be put into its design position in a single swivel action. At least one attachment point can for that purpose have been provided on the bottom handle-shell part, possibly an open slot or an opening into which the handle-shell cover can be engaged by means of suspension hooks and then swiveled into its design position.
To secure the handle-shell cover located in its design position, the operating panel can have a securing element to prevent the handle-shell cover from being accidentally released from its design position. The securing element can preferably have been provided on the operating panel's roof. The securing element can preferably be a detent rib that engages behind the supporting element in a disassembly direction after the handle-shell cover has been swiveled into position.
If the domestic appliance is lifted by its handle shell, the handle-shell cover's supporting element will act as a force-transmitting bridge via which forces are ducted directly into the operating panel's roof without subjecting the handle-shell cover's securing elements to any strain.
Assembly will be made easier in another way if the handle-shell cover has additional lateral guide walls that can be guided along corresponding external walls of the bottom handle-shell part during installation, as a result of which the handle-shell cover will be pre-centered during installation.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is presented below with the aid of the attached figures, in which:
Front wall 7—facing the user—of operating panel 3 merges at its lateral edges situated opposite in the door-side direction x and at its top lateral edge into panel covering 13. Said covering forms a panel roof at the top door edge.
Provided below display 11 shown in
As can further be seen from
Electronic module 35 has been assigned to control and display elements 9, 11 of operating panel 3. Electronic module 35 is according to
As can further be seen from
According to
According to
It is described below with the aid of
An alternative implementation of bottom handle-shell part 19 is shown in
In each case the laterally outer shaft walls 38 of supporting elements 37 are according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 055 029 | Dec 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/066013 | 11/30/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/2/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/069738 | 6/24/2010 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5174618 | Kropf | Dec 1992 | A |
20030168080 | Raches | Sep 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1382950 | Dec 2002 | CN |
1746601 | Mar 2006 | CN |
1804523 | Jul 2006 | CN |
19907233 | Aug 2000 | DE |
10133766 | Jan 2003 | DE |
Entry |
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International Search Report PCT/EP2009/066013. |
National Search Report DE 10 2008 055 029.9. |
Report of Examination Including National Search Report CN 200980151155.2 dated Nov. 30, 2012. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110247276 A1 | Oct 2011 | US |