The invention concerns an arrangement comprising a drawer and an extension guide for the drawer, wherein the drawer has a drawer container and a front panel connectable to the drawer container and the drawer can be releasably fixed to the extension guide by way of a fixing device and the extension guide has at least a first and a second latching position for fixing the drawer. The invention further concerns an article of furniture comprising a furniture carcass, at least two extension guides fixed in mutually superposed relationship to the furniture carcass, and at least a first and a second drawer latchable to the respective extension guides by way of a fixing device, wherein the at least two drawers respectively have a drawer container and a front panel connectable to the container. Arrangements of this kind are disclosed for example in DE 20 2005 018 788 U1 or in DE 20 2005 005 489 U1.
To assemble articles of furniture the manufacturers of the articles of furniture or fitments supply generally standardised components which can then be relatively quickly and easily assembled by the fitter on site. Thus in most cases uniform extension guides for drawers are made available, which are fitted to the furniture carcass. A pre-drilled drilling pattern is generally already provided on the furniture carcass to permit positioning of the extension guide to correspond to drawers which are to be later fitted. In that respect in the state of the art it is always necessary to take account of the kind of drawer which is later to be fitted to the extension guide. In other words, when a front pull-out arrangement is used, in which the front panel butts against the furniture carcass in the closed position, the extension guide must be fitted to the furniture carcass at a further forward position. Otherwise, when fitting the drawer to the pre-mounted extension guide, the problem would arise that an extension guide which is disposed completely in the closed position could no longer be reached at all by the drawer together with the front panel as the front panel already butts against the furniture carcass before reaching the fixing position of the drawer on the extension guide. It is only if the fitter of the extension guides precisely knows beforehand, what kind the drawers to be fitted are, that he can suitably position the extension guides further forwardly or rearwardly.
Thus an object of the invention is to be able to position extension guides on the furniture carcass in uniform fashion irrespective of knowledge about the drawers which can be later fitted.
A further problem arises in particular if the arrangement of the drawers is to be subsequently altered. More specifically then the individual drawers no longer match together with the positions of the extension guides and the extension guides would have to be subsequently removed and re-fitted at a suitable location.
A further object of the invention is therefore that of permitting simple and matched fitment of drawers in extension guides. In particular the invention seeks to provide that the individual drawers can be fitted to the extension guides independently of the fixing positions of the guides. The invention seeks to provide that there is no need for subsequent and complicated re-fitting of extension guides.
According to the present invention that is achieved by the features recited in independent claims 1, 8 and 12. Accordingly it is provided that the first and/or second latching position is established automatically in dependence on an abutment which can be removed or moved and which can be arranged on the drawer, wherein the position of the abutment is established in dependence on the type of the front panel of the drawer, that is connected to the drawer container.
In particular, the dependency of the latching position on the type of front panel means that it is possible even subsequently for an internal pull-out arrangement—in which the front panel does not butt against the furniture carcass and thus extends further into the article of furniture—to be exchanged for a drawer with a front pull-out arrangement.
It is preferably provided that the removable abutment is arranged on the front panel. That abutment is thus arranged on the front panel itself according to a front panel type, whereby so-to-speak the latching position is controlled by the front panel.
It can quite particularly preferably be provided that the front panel has a pre-mounted connecting element, by way of which the front panel is connectable to the drawer container, wherein the removable abutment is arranged on the connecting element. Thus the drawer without front panel can be easily fixed to the extension guide in a first latching position. When then the front panel is fitted, in the case of a front panel type in the form of an internal pull-out arrangement, the latching position is released and the drawer can then be pushed into a further rearwardly disposed second latching position.
Accordingly it can particularly preferably be provided that upon fixing of the drawer to the extension guide the removable abutment butts directly against a limiting extension of the extension guide and latches the drawer in the first latching position of the extension guide. In other words, when fitting the drawer, the abutment butts against the extension guide so that the drawer latches in a first latching position.
Alternatively it can also be provided that a transmission device is arranged at the floor of the drawer container, preferably at a container rail, and has a displacement element as an indirectly actuable abutment with the limiting extension which is movable from a first position into a second position by contact with the abutment of the front panel, wherein the displacement element butts against the limiting extension of the extension guide only in the first position upon fixing of the drawer. If now the displacement element is moved into the second position upon fitting of the front panel to the drawer container the displacement element no longer butts against the limiting extension and the entire drawer can be further moved into the article of furniture. It can also be provided that the displacement element is mounted movably to the side wall of the drawer, wherein it is moved into the first or second position in dependence on the front panel which is inserted into the side wall. For example it can be provided that, in dependence on a front panel which is inserted into a side wall of the drawer, an abutment moves out, preferably downwardly, and accordingly ‘enforces’ drawer positioning further forwardly.
As soon as the front panel is removed or interchanged, the abutment moves back into the interior of the side wall again and the drawer can be positioned again entirely rearwardly on the extension guide and fixed in position there.
In other words, there are basically two variants for establishing the abutment. The first variant is the configuration with an indirectly movable abutment which can be reciprocated by way of a displacement element between two different positions in dependence on the front panel. The second variant provides that an abutment arranged on the front panel directly establishes the latching position. Accordingly the first and/or second latching position is established automatically in dependence on a movable or removable abutment which can be arranged on the drawer. In the case of the first variant the abutment is movable between two positions. In the case of the second variant sometimes a direct abutment is present and sometimes it is absent (that is to say removed).
By virtue of the fact that the position of the abutment is established in dependence on the type of drawer front panel connected to the drawer container both variants enjoy the advantage that the depth of the position of the drawer on the extension guide is adapted to or is dependent on the front panel. In this respect it should be pointed out that the first and second latching positions are arranged in mutually displaced relationship in relation to the depth of the article of furniture. In other words, the latching positions form mutually different depths in terms of the drawer being pushed on the extension guide.
It can further preferably be provided that the extension guide has a drawer rail connectable to the drawer and a carcass rail for fitting the extension guide to a furniture carcass, the limiting extension of the extension guide being arranged on the drawer rail. In a further preferred variant it can be provided that the drawer has a container rail, wherein the fixing device releasably holds the container rail to the drawer rail of the extension guide. That container rail is preferably arranged at the floor of the drawer.
Protection is also claimed for an arrangement as set forth in claim 8. In that respect according to the invention it is provided that the drawer can be provided with a first type of front panel or a second type of front panel, wherein the respective drawer can be latched or fixed in the first or second latching position in dependence on the type of front panel. In that way the latching depths do not have to be established for example by hand or there is no need for manual release of a latching position for the drawer on the extension guide, but merely fitting the front panel to the rest of the drawer container directly determines the latching position of the drawer.
Preferably it can be provided in that respect that a drawer having a first front panel type is latchable in the first latching position and a drawer having a second front panel type is latchable in the second latching position. It can further be provided that only one of the two front panel types has a direct or indirect abutment. In principle the front panels do not have to have any mechanical abutment at all for altering the latching position. Rather, it can also be provided that arranged on the drawer or on the extension guide for example is a special electronic sensor means which recognises or detects the kind of front panel fitted to the drawer container. The latching position can then be mechanically established or altered in dependence on the detected type of front panel.
Protection is further claimed for an extension guide as set forth in claim 12.
For an article of furniture as set forth in claim 12 it can particularly preferably be provided that the first drawer has a front panel type for a front pull-out arrangement in the form of an increased-height front panel which covers over the second drawer provided with a front panel type for an internal pull-out arrangement, wherein the container of the second drawer is latched at the first, further inwardly disposed latching position of the one extension guide and the container of the first drawer is latched at the second, further forwardly disposed latching position of the other extension guide. In that respect cover over means that, viewed from the front, only the front panel of the front pull-out arrangement is to be seen while the front panels of the internal pull-out arrangements are concealed therebehind, so-to-speak internally.
In particular in that respect it can be preferably provided that the extension guides fixed to the furniture carcass in mutually superposed relationship are fixed to the furniture carcass in the same vertical position. In that respect the same vertical position means that the extension guides (more especially the carcass rail thereof) are arranged one above the other in non-displaced relationship on the furniture carcass. In other words this means that the individual extension guides or their carcass rails are arranged at the same horizontal spacing from the rear wall of the article of furniture or the front side of the furniture carcass thereof, in which case they do not have to be mounted to the furniture carcass in displaced relationship in accordance with drawers which can be later fitted.
Further details and advantages of the present invention are described more fully hereinafter by means of the specific description with reference to the embodiments by way of example illustrated in the drawings in which:
As shown in
As then shown in
Upon such a movement in the closing direction SR (direction of fitting on the front panel 9) the inclined surface 36 of the latching nose 24 slides along the inclined surface between the latching recesses 21 and 22 from the latching position E2 into the latching position E1. In that position (see
As can be seen from
In comparison in
Thus the present invention shows an arrangement or an article of furniture 19 in which a drawer 1, 2 can be fitted to an extension guide 3, 4 in a not entirely closed intermediate position as a lock member 25 prevents the drawer 1 or 2 from being fitted ‘entirely rearwardly’ on the drawer rail 15 and thus the drawer 1 or 2, upon being fitted for the first time (without front panel 10), can be fitted to the drawer rail 15 of the extension guide 3 or 4 only in the front end position E2. It is only with fitment of the front panel 10 that a decision is made as to whether the lock member 25 is released and thus the drawer 1 or 2 can move in relation to the drawer rail 15 into the completely closed position (end position E1). Thus the type of front panel F or I controls the latching position E1 or E2 for the drawer 1 or 2 on the extension guide 3 or 4 respectively.
To sum up it is made possible with the invention described herein for a drawer in the form of an internal pull-out arrangement or a front pull-out arrangement to be latched at a differing depth on the extension guide, in particular the drawer rail thereof. Provided for that purpose on the drawer is a so-called tab-stop which is provided directly on the front panel or in the form of an abutment actuable by the front panel. The abutment acts as a positioning aid for the drawer in latching positions at differing depths on the extension guide. In that respect the latching position is dependent on the positioning abutment of the drawer which in turn is dependent on the nature of the front panel. More especially the positioning abutment can either be provided directly on the front panel or it can be displaceable in its position indirectly by the front panel.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 145/2010 | Feb 2010 | AT | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/AT2011/000061 | Feb 2011 | US |
Child | 13561312 | US |