The present invention relates generally to furniture, and, more particularly, to extendable tables.
During the warm months, it is often desirable to sit under a large outdoor umbrella (sometimes called a “patio umbrella”) when seated outdoors. As a result, many outdoor tables are adapted for such umbrellas by including an umbrella mounting hole that passes through the tables near their centers. With such a mounting hole, a user is able to pass the pole of the outdoor umbrella through a table and anchor it into a heavy base that sits on the ground beneath the table.
Even so, it has always been difficult to accommodate an umbrella mounting hole in an extendable table. An extendable table typically includes two slidable table top portions that may be abutted against one another in order to close or contract the table, and separated from each other in order to make room for one or more additional table leaves. Accordingly, it is desirable that the slidable table tops have cutouts that collectively define a mounting hole for an outdoor umbrella when the table is contracted. Nevertheless, it is equally undesirable that the slidable table tops have these same cutouts when the table is extended. When the table is extended, the cutouts merely create extraneous and unsightly openings in the extended table top.
For the foregoing reasons, there is a need for new extendable table designs better adapted to accommodate outdoor umbrellas.
Embodiments of the present invention address the above-identified need by providing extendable table designs adapted to accommodate outdoor umbrellas without suffering from extraneous and unsightly openings in the tables when the tables are extended.
In accordance with an aspect of the invention, an extendable table comprises a frame, a table top portion, and a cutout filling mechanism. The table top portion is slidably attached to the frame and defines a cutout. The cutout filling mechanism is attached to the table top portion and comprises a filler portion. In use, the cutout filling mechanism is operative to place at least a portion of the filler portion into the cutout when the cutout is not occupied by another object. The cutout filling mechanism is also operative to place the filler portion outside the cutout when the cutout is occupied by another object.
Advantageously, the above-identified embodiments of the invention work to fill-in or “erase” the cutouts in the table top portions of an extendable table when they are not needed to accommodate a central pipe member or umbrella pole.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings where:
The present invention will be described with reference to illustrative embodiments. For this reason, numerous modifications can be made to these embodiments and the results will still come within the scope of the invention. No limitations with respect to the specific embodiments described herein are intended or should be inferred.
The extendable table 100 comprises two table top portions 105 and 110, a frame 115, four legs 120, and a pipe member 125. The two table top portions 105, 110 are slidably mounted to the frame 115 so that they can be positioned so they abut one another (contracted state) and so they are separated by a substantial gap (extended state). The pipe member 125, in turn, is formed by a vertically oriented cylindrical tube that is attached to the frame 115 by a pair of support brackets 130 (observable in
The means by which the table top portions 105, 110 are slidably attached to the frame 115 are best seen in
Again referring to
In the present illustrative embodiment, the filling of the cutouts 150, 155 in the table top portions 105, 110 when the extendable table 100 is extended is accomplished by two cutout filling mechanisms 200 and 205. As indicated above, the cutout filling mechanisms 200, 205 allow the pipe member 125 to occupy the cutouts 150, 155 in the table top portions 105, 110 when the extendable table 100 is contracted, and to cause the filler portions 160, 165 to occupy the cutouts 150, 155 when the extendable table 100 is extended. These cutout filling mechanisms 200, 205 are located under the table top portions 105, 110 proximate to the cutouts 150, 155, as indicated by the dashed lines in
In addition to the filler portion 165, the cutout filling mechanism 205 comprises three sidewalls 210, 215, and 220; two springs 225; and three brackets 230. The filler portion 165 comprises a raised region that substantially conforms to the shape of the cutout 155 (in this particular example, a semicircle). The filler portion 165 is able to occupy two positions in the cutout filling mechanism 205: a retracted position (
The movement of the filler portion 165 between these two positions is directed by a set of substantially identical tracks 235 in the opposed sidewalls 210, 220 that act as guides (see
The forward and rearward movement (leftward and rightward movement, respectively, in
Notably, an alternative extendable table in accordance with aspects of the invention may forego the pipe member 125 altogether and simply allow a conventional umbrella pole to actuate the cutout filling mechanisms 200, 205. An extendable table 100′ in accordance with a second illustrative embodiment of the invention is shown in partially cutaway plan view in
As configured as shown in
In this manner, both the extendable table 100 and the extendable table 100′ are similarly operative to place portions of the filler portions 160, 165 into the cutouts 150, 155 when the cutouts 150, 155 are not occupied by another object, namely, the pipe member 125 or the umbrella pole 300, and to place the filler portions 160, 165 outside the cutouts 150, 155 when the cutouts 150, 155 are occupied by the pipe member 125 or the umbrella pole 300. Accordingly, in both embodiments, the cutouts 150, 155 are filled-in or “erased” when they are not needed to accommodate the central pipe member 125 or the umbrella pole 300.
To even further illustrate aspects of the invention,
Like the filler portion 165, the filler portion 400 is able to occupy two positions in the cutout filling mechanism 405: a retracted position (
The cutout filling mechanism 405 is attached to the bottom of the table top portion 110 via several brackets 410. The movement of the filler portion 400 between the forward and retracted positions is directed by a rotation pin 415 with its associated washer 420 and nut 425, and a track 430 built into a sidewall 435. A pin 440 protruding from the side of the filler portion 400 occupies the track 430 and restricts the manner in which the filler portion 400 can move. When transitioning from the retracted position to the forward position, for example, the rotation pin 415 causes the filler portion 400 to rotate relative to the table top portion 110 while, at the same time, the track 430 causes the filler portion 400 to move upward. When transitioning in the opposite direction, the filler portion 400 rotates rearward while the track 430 causes the filler portion 400 to move downward.
The forward and rearward movement of the filler portion 400 is driven or actuated by the pipe member 125 itself in combination with a first spring 445 and a second spring 450. The first spring 445 biases the filler portion upward on the rotation pin 415, while the second spring 450 biases the filler portion 400 in the forward direction. When the extendable table 100″ is contracted and the pipe member 125 enters the cutout 155, the pipe member 125 contacts the filler portion 400 and pushes it rearward. This causes the first spring 445 to compress and the second spring 450 to expand. When the extendable table 100″ is extended and the pipe member 125 leaves the cutout 155, the first spring 445 pushes the filler portion 400 upward and the second spring 450 pulls the filler portion 400 forward again. In this manner, the cutout filling mechanism 405 is operative to place at least a portion of the filler portion 400 into the cutout 155 when the cutout 155 is not occupied by another object, and the cutout filling mechanism 405 is operative to place the filler portion outside the cutout 155 when the cutout is occupied by another object. In the present embodiment, that object is the pipe member 125, but it may also be an umbrella pole like the umbrella pole 300 in the manner of extendable table 100′.
Again returning to
It should again be emphasized that the above-described embodiments of the invention are intended to be illustrative only. Other embodiments can use different types and arrangements of elements for implementing the described functionality. For example, only a very rudimentary system for slidably attaching the table top portions 105, 110 to the frame 115 of the extendable tables 100, 100′, 100″ is described herein, and numerous alternative embodiments within the scope of the appended claims for accomplishing this function will be apparent to one skilled in the art. Moreover, the above-described embodiments assume that one or more additional table leaves are manually added to the extendable tables 100, 100′, 100″ when the tables are extended. Nevertheless, it is contemplated that designs within the scope of the invention might utilize mechanisms that automatically insert the additional leaves into the extendable tables by, for example, lifting the leaves from a position below the extendable tables as their table top portions are moved. Lastly, the means for supporting the outdoor umbrella in the above-described extendable tables 100, 100″ is simply a cylindrical tube that allows an umbrella pole to pass through it (i.e., the pipe member 125). In alternative embodiments, the umbrella support may be any apparatus on which an umbrella pole may be vertically mounted including, but not limited to, a vertically mounted cylindrical tube with a closed or partially closed lowermost end on which the pole of the umbrella may rest. An optional set-screw threaded through the cylindrical tube and exerting compressional force on the umbrella pole within the tube may further add stability to the umbrella. The need for a conventional umbrella base that sits under the extendable table like the umbrella base 305 in
Again, these numerous alternative embodiments within the scope of the appended claims will be apparent to one skilled in the art. Moreover, all the features disclosed herein may be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent, or similar purposes, unless expressly stated otherwise. Thus, unless expressly stated otherwise, each feature disclosed is one example only of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61384977 | Sep 2010 | US |