The present invention relates to a door for a domestic appliance, especially a refrigeration or freezer appliance, comprising a door that is equipped with an outer wall, an inner wall, an upper and a lower closing element that delimit an inner hollow space of the door. Such a domestic appliance is known for example from DE 103 02 797 A1 and from DE 102 59 749 A1.
When the hollow space in the door is filled with foam, the expanding foam material exerts pressure on the walls and the closure elements. In order to prevent said elements being driven apart and foam escaping between them, the pressure must be contained at least until such time as the foam has set. Conventionally this is done by the upper and lower edges of the outer wall each being inserted into a groove of the closing elements, so that the rib of the closing element which delimits the groove outwards takes up the pressure acting from within. A consequence of this construction is that the rib always projects beyond the outer wall. The closure element is thus clearly visible on the finished door and where the outer wall enters into the groove of the closing element, the rib of the door forms a small step on which dirt can collect.
It is thus desirable both from an aesthetic standpoint and also in respect of ease of cleaning to further develop the domestic appliance with the door described at the start so that an escape of foam between the outer wall and the closing element can be securely avoided, without a rib projecting beyond the outer wall being required on the closing element for this purpose.
The object is inventively achieved, for a domestic appliance comprising a door that is equipped with an outer wall, an inner wall, an upper and a lower closing element which delimit an inner hollow space of the door, with the outer wall forming a front panel and two side flanks adjoining the front panel and the side flanks bearing edge bars engaging behind the front panel, by a locking element being inserted into a corner of the inner hollow space formed by at least one of the side flanks, one of the edge bars and one of the closing elements. This locking element bears at least a part of the force which acts on the outer wall during foam filling and thus prevents a movement of the outer wall forwards away from the closing element, also without a front rib of the closing element enclosing the edge of the outer wall.
Instead of the outer rib, an inner rib is preferably provided on the closing element which extends along a horizontal edge of the outer wall. The outer wall is preferably held tensioned by the locking element on this rib, so that no foam can penetrate between the outer wall and the rib. In order to achieve an even pressure force over the entire length of the rib, it is further useful for rib and outer wall to exhibit a curvature.
An anchoring of the locking element is expediently able to be realized by the locking element being fitted together positively in a direction parallel to the front panel with a contour of the closing element. A force acting during foam filling perpendicular to the front panel cannot then dislodge the locking element from its positive fit with the closing element.
The positive fit can expediently be made by a—conventionally mostly present on the closing elements—door mounting bush engaging in a sleeve of the locking element.
Such a door mounting bush can simultaneously serve as an injection opening for injection of insulation material into the inner hollow space of the door or it can accept a venting valve through which air can escape when the door is being filled with foam.
Furthermore the contour of the closing element can include ribs resting against the outer wall and the inner wall between which the locking element engages.
To secure the locking element in its position, above all when it is not yet held in its position by the insulating foam during the assembly of the door before foam filling, the locking element can expediently be latched onto the closing element.
As a further measure to guard against the escape of foam, the outer wall can bear a bar angled backwards towards the inner wall along at least one of its horizontal edges, and the closing element can feature a groove open to the outer side of the door into which the bar engages.
In order to ensure on the one hand that the bar clamps into the groove and on the other hand that the force required to push the bar into the groove is not too great, the groove is expediently wider than the bar engaging within it, and the bar is clamped by ribs projecting from a side wall of the groove. Preferably the side wall bearing the ribs is that side wall of the two side walls of the groove which faces away from the foam, so that the bar rests tightly against the foam-side side wall and performs an additional sealing effect there.
Because the bar forms an upper or lower closure of the side wall respectively, the option is created of letting the closing element pass behind the front side of the door, whereby the closing element is largely hidden from view to an observer and a front side free of any dirt which might possibly accumulate can be obtained.
For fixing the outer wall to the closing element it is expedient for the closing element to bear two lugs resting against the outside of the side flanks These prevent the side flanks from bending away from each other when the front panel of the outer wall is under tensile load.
Preferably the side flank is fixed between the locking element and the lug so that it cannot deviate outwards or inwards into the interior of the door.
To establish and maintain the tension in the outer wall, it is last but not least advantageous for the outer wall to form a hollow rib in each case between side flank and edge bar and for the locking element to feature a projection engaging in the hollow space of the rib.
Further features and advantages of the invention emerge from the description of exemplary embodiments given below which refer to the enclosed figures.
The figures show
The outer wall 1 can be seen in
The outer wall 1 forms a hollow rib 7 in each case between the side flanks 5 and the edge bars 6.
At the upper and lower edges of the outer wall 1 a bar 8 is angled in a horizontal direction in each case. The width of the bar 8 is respectively larger in a center section 9 than at its two ends 10.
In the assembled state of the door, the groove 16 accepts the upper of the two bars 8 of the outer wall 1, with the bar 8 being clamped between the ribs 14 and the base plate 11. When the bar 8 is introduced correctly into the groove 13, the inner side of the front panel 4 is supported on the bar 16. Since the bar 16 protrudes beyond the front edge 15 of the base plate, the front panel 4 resting against the bar 16 also does this, so that an easy-to-clean door front side free of projections or steps will be produced.
Two angled lugs 17 projecting from the longitudinal ends of the closing element 2 are provided in order, in the assembled state as shown in
A vertically-oriented groove 19 extending along a rear edge 18 of the base plate 11 is provided to accept an upper edge of the inner wall and to fix it.
Two openings 20 of the base plate visible in
The outer wall 1 and the closing element 2 can be formed so that solely by fitting the locking elements 22 to both ends of the closing element 2 the outer wall is placed under tension and is held pressed against the bar 16. Because of the curvature of the bar 16, the outer wall 1 then rests tightly over the entire length of the bar 16 against the latter and will also not be forced away from the bar 16 by the force acting during foam filling from inside against the front panel 4. Such a tensile force can be established especially easily if the mounting bush 21 and the sleeve accommodating it 31 have a slightly conical shape. This drives the locking element 22 further outwards and against the side flanks 5 the further it is pushed onto the mounting bush.
It is however not absolutely necessary to place the outer wall and attention at the point at which the locking element 22 is being attached. Even if at this point the outer wall 1 remains under no tension, the clamping of the side flanks between the locking elements 22 and the lugs 17 as well as the engagement of the projections 30 into the hollow ribs 7 prevent the outer wall yielding to the force acting from within during foam filling. If foam still gets between the front panel 4 and the bar 16 this cannot pass between the bar 8 and the second plate 12 so that a foam-tight seal is still guaranteed.
A further advantage of the locking bar 22 is that it reinforces the mounting bush 21 so that a loadable door suspension is able to be realized even with a relatively small wall thickness of the closing element 2.
The lower closing element 3, as indicated in
Formed on the base plate 11 is a vertical rear wall 38. Formed in the rear wall 38 and the base plate 11 are cutouts 39 open to the back and to the top which are provided for receiving an arm projecting from the body of the refrigeration appliance not shown the diagram which bears at its end a support pin engaging into an opening 20 on the floor of the cutouts 39 in order in this way to hide the arm from an observer standing in front of the appliance. As with the closing element 2, the opening 20 belongs to a mounting bush 21 projecting into the inside of the door.
A definitive anchoring is obtained by a locking element 22′ shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2007 007 321.6 | May 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP08/55927 | 5/14/2008 | WO | 00 | 11/18/2009 |