The doors of refrigeration devices conventionally have a multi-layer structure comprising an external wall and an internal wall which enclose a heat-insulating layer therebetween. In free-standing refrigerating devices, the external wall is freely visible over its entire area whereas in built-in devices it is covered by a furniture panel which is added by the manufacturer of the kitchen furniture into which the device is built.
The furniture panel behind which the refrigerating device is located cannot be distinguished from the outside from other closed panels, for example, forming ordinary cupboard doors.
A built-in refrigeration device would easily be identified as such if it were provided with an uncovered door usually used for free-standing devices but such a door would noticeably disturb the aesthetic overall appearance of a kitchen line into which it is built, particularly if high-quality materials such as real wood are used for the furniture fronts which are incompatible with the conventional white-painted sheet metal fronts of free-standing devices.
It is the object of the invention to provide a door for a refrigeration device which allows the refrigeration device to be built into a kitchen line without disturbing its overall aesthetic appearance and also making the refrigerating device identifiable as such.
The object is solved by a door having the features of claim 1.
A control and/or display panel for the refrigerating device can advantageously be placed on the exposed section of the door; however, for the identifiability of the device it is already sufficient if the exposed part is present, regardless of its shape. If a door handle is attached to the exposed section, the manufacturer of the refrigerating device can select this handle as aesthetically compatible with handles used on other types of kitchen appliances such as cookers or dishwashers manufactured by them.
Since the exposed section need only account for a small part of the total area of the door, it can be made of high-quality materials such as aluminium or stainless steel without considerable increased costs.
A simple and reliable fixing of the decorative panel is possible by providing an undercut at an edge of the exposed part facing the decorative panel, which can receive a tongue of the decorative panel.
In the area of the undercut an inconspicuous join can be simply made between a panel forming the exposed section of the door and a panel forming the covered section so that the panel forming the covered section, which is not visible on the device when it has been built in, can consist of a material selected purely from economic and technical aspects which does not need to satisfy any demands regarding its external appearance.
An area of the decorative panel facing away from the tongue is preferably fixed to the covered section in a covered fashion. Apart from the one exposed section, no further sections of the door thus need to remain visible when the decorative panel is mounted, i.e., differences in the appearance between the door according to the invention with mounted decorative panel and neighbouring furniture doors are exclusively limited to the one exposed section.
The covered section is preferably set back compared with the exposed section of the external wall so that the front of the decorative panel when mounted on the covered section is flush with the exposed section or only projects slightly thereover.
Since in this case, the heat-insulating layer projects further behind the exposed section that behind the covered section, a recess can be provided on the internal wall of the door behind the exposed part which enlarges the interior of the relevant refrigerating device without adversely affecting the insulating capacity.
The subject matter of the invention is also a refrigerating device with a door of the type defined above.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention is explained hereinafter with reference to the appended figures. In the figures:
The front of the door 1 is composed of two sections which adjoin one another along a vertical edge 3. One section is an exposed part 4 of the external wall of the door embodied directly as a visible face, the other section is a covered part 11 provided with a decorative panel 5, where the decorative panel 5 is mounted subsequently over the covered part 11 of the external wall of the door 1. The decorative panel 5 is joined subsequently to the body of the door 1. This allows the door 1 to be manufactured as standard for a plurality of application surroundings and to be adapted subsequently to furniture into which the refrigerating device is to be built.
The exposed part 4 forming the side of the door facing away from the stop has a handle 6 and a display panel 7 for displaying operating parameters of the refrigerating device such as the interior temperature, any faults etc. Control elements, possibly for setting a desired temperature for the interior, for switching on a fast-freeze mode in the case of a freezer etc. can be provided here. A mark or model designation of the manufacturer can also be accommodated on the exposed part 4.
The sheet forming the exposed section 4 is bent at right angles on one side to form a side flank 12 of the door. The free edge of this side flank 12 is joined to the internal wall 9 in a foam-tight fashion. An opposite edge is bent back on itself to form a lug at the height of the edge 3 into which an edge strip 13 of the covered section 11 engages and in which said strip is held firmly by clamping, gluing, spot welding or another suitable technique.
Adjacent to the edge strip 13 is a section 14 which runs approximately perpendicular to the front into the interior of the door and adjacent to this is the flat main section 15 of the covered section 11 parallel to the front of the door. The join between the exposed part 4 and the covered part 11 forms an undercut or groove 16 along the edge 3. The undercut receives a tongue 17 of the decorative panel 5 and thus fixes its edge facing the exposed section 14. In an edge region of the decorative panel 5 facing away from this edge, covered retaining means are attached between its back and the covered section 11 of the external wall 8, which retaining means together with the undercut completely fix the decorative panel 5.
The decorative panel 5 can be made of the same material as the doors of neighbouring furniture elements and also has the same material thickness as such a furniture door for reasons of economic manufacture. It is feasible to select the width of the covered section 11 so that it fits the frame widths of all mass-produced furniture doors so that these mass-produced doors can be used as the decorative panel 5 substantially unchanged, i.e., assuming that the furniture doors are mass-produced in widths of 40, 50 and 60 cm, a width of 40 or 50 cm could be selected for the covered section 11 if the assumed width of the door of the refrigerating device 1 is 60 cm.
Since the outer surface of the exposed section 4 is substantially flush with the outer surface of the decorative panel 5 and the covered section 11 must accordingly be set back with respect to the exposed section 4 by the thickness of the decorative panel 5, different thicknesses of the insulating foam layer between the internal wall and the exposed section 4 on the one hand and between the internal wall and the covered section 11 on the other hand would be obtained if the internal wall is assumed to be flat, where the overthickness of the insulation behind the exposed section would contribute only little to the insulating effect of the door.
Thus a recess 18 is provided on the internal wall 9 in the area located behind the exposed section 4, which recess reduces the thickness of the foam layer at that point to approximately the same amount as that behind the covered section 11. This recess 18 enlarges the available interior of the refrigerating device and can be used advantageously if a bottle storage container, for example, is mounted on the internal wall 9 in order to accommodate bottles of overlarge diameter in the area of the recess 18 which can only be accommodated with difficulty in conventional storage boxes whose width remains the same.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 22 974.4 | May 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/05441 | 5/19/2004 | WO | 10/27/2005 |