The present invention relates to a fastening element for fastening an object on a wall which is thin or does not have a high load-bearing capability, and to an arrangement in which such a fastening element is used.
The problem of having to fasten objects on such a wall arises, inter alia, in refrigerator construction. The housings of modern refrigerators are generally constructed from an outer wall made of sheet metal or plastic and an inner container which is thermoformed in one piece from a plastic blank, the outer wall and inner container bounding between them a cavity which is filled with thermally insulating foam material. Internals of such a refrigerator have to be fastened or supported on the inner container, this posing the problem of introducing the load of these internals into the basic housing structure, comprising the inner container, heat-insulation layer and outer cladding, such that the inner container is not overloaded and damaged as a result.
Telescopic pull-out means for article supports have to be fastened on such an inner container such that it is not possible for them to be accidentally pulled all the way out and, in the pulled-out state, to tip forward. This is possible, for example, by the telescopic pull-out means being screwed to the walls of the inner container with the aid of heat-insulation-side backing-parts. Since the entire load of the article supports on the screws has to be transmitted to the wall, the result is locally high loading. Overloading of the article supports may thus result in damage to the inner container which is difficult to repair cost-effectively.
In order to reduce the risk of damage to the inner container, suspension means for telescopic rails have been developed with the aim of distributing the loading to better effect over the wall of the inner container. Such suspension means have a multiplicity of parts and involve high outlay to install.
The object of the present invention is to provide a fastening element which makes it possible to support heavy loads on a wall with low load-bearing capability and which can be produced straightforwardly and inexpensively with a small number of parts and is quick to install.
The object is achieved by a fastening element having the features of claim 1.
The fastening element according to the invention can be installed by its head being plugged through a non-round aperture in the wall until the skirt butts against a first side of the wall, and then being rotated about its axis so that the protrusions of the head engage laterally beyond the aperture and butt against the second side of the wall. In this way, the wall is clamped in between the protrusions of the head on one side and the skirt on the other side. The larger the diameter of the head, i.e. the greater the spacing between the protrusions, the greater is also the maximum leverage to which the fastening element can be subjected before the wall is damaged.
The skirt is preferably elastic, with the result that, even in the case of differing wall thicknesses, the support can be fixed.
If the skirt completely covers the aperture, a sealing action is achieved at the same time. This is particularly advantageous if the wall is the inner container of a refrigerator since it is then possible, when the housing of the refrigerator is filled with foam, for the skirt to prevent the foam from passing through into the interior of the same.
A suspension means for the object which is to be fastened is preferably fitted on the head engaging through the aperture, i.e. the fastening element is installed from that side of the wall which is located opposite the side on which the object which is to be suspended is to be installed. This is also advantageous in the case of refrigerator construction since the fastening element can be installed from the more accessible outer side of the inner container.
The skirt of the fastening element may be formed integrally with the head. If the foot of the fastening element is formed in two parts from a core and a housing which covers over the core, the skirt may also be fitted on the housing, or both the core and the housing may have a skirt.
The core and the housing are preferably latched to one another. In this case, the core preferably has at least one latching arm which engages through an opening in a rear wall of the housing. In order to achieve satisfactory sealing of the opening in the latched state, a shoulder is preferably integrally formed on the latching arm, this shoulder blocking the opening in the latched state.
Telescopic rails for use in refrigerators usually have two fastening hooks on their rear side, a vertically oriented one for anchoring in a region of the side wall of an inner container which is in the vicinity of the door and a horizontal one for anchoring in a region of the side wall which is adjacent to the rear wall. In order for it to be possible to fasten such telescopic rails on the fastening arrangement according to the invention, the head of such a fastening element is preferably provided with an introduction opening for the introduction of such a hook.
The introduction opening of the head of the fastening element, in particular of the fastening element for the vertical hook, is expediently bounded laterally by a locking body which can be displaced elastically into the interior of the head. This locking body, upon introduction of the hook, is first of all forced back into the head, but springs back into its original position as soon as the hook has reached its target position, and thus prevents undesirable release of the hook from the head.
The locking body is preferably connected to the head by a hairpin-like spring, of which the two legs extend essentially parallel to the axis, i.e. perpendicularly to the wall in which the fastening element is installed. Such a spring can easily be formed integrally with the head and the locking body by injection molding.
Further features and advantages of the present invention can be gathered from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached Figs., in which:
A first part 10 of the fastening element 2, referred to hereinbelow as the inner part, which is provided for fitting in the aperture 7 which is located at the front in
The head 10a, level with the end wall 12, bears, on its cylindrical circumference, two crosspiece-like protrusions 13 projecting radially from the outer wall 11. The protrusions 13 have an outer contour in the form of a circle arc, the radius of the outer contour corresponding to the larger of the two radii of the aperture 7, with the result that the head 10a can be plugged through the aperture 7 in an orientation in which it is rotated through 90° in relation to the orientation shown in
The core 10c bears a conical skirt 14 extending around the outer wall 11. The base of the cone is directed toward the protrusions 13. The skirt 14 is thin-walled, with the result that, in contrast to the outer wall 11 and the protrusions 13, it can be elastically deformed to a certain extent. The spacing between the protrusions 13 and the skirt 14, i.e. the length of the neck 10b, is slightly smaller than the thickness of the wall 6, with the result that, when the head 10a is plugged through the aperture 7, the skirt 14 has to be pressed flat elastically before the protrusions 13 reach the inside of the wall 6 and, by rotation of the head 10a, can be brought into engagement thereon.
In order to make it easier for the head 10a to be guided through counter to the resilient force of the skirt 14, it is possible, as is shown in
The end wall 12 contains an accommodating opening 17 which is provided in order to latch the front fastening hook 8 of the telescopic rail 4 therein. The accommodating opening 17 is only free in its bottom region, a top region being occupied by a locking body 18, the function of which will be explained at a later stage in the text.
Two latching arms 19 are integrally formed on the rear side of the core 10c, only one of these latching arms being visible in
In
The structure of the housing and its connection to the core are illustrated by way of example in
The housing 23, like the core 10 has a cylindrical outer wall 25 which, with a rear wall 26, forms a cup shape. The cylindrical outer wall 25 of the housing 23, rather than being supported directly on the side wall 6 (not illustrated), terminates at the root of the skirt 14 of the core 10. In order for the housing 23 likewise to be supported on the side wall 6, an encircling conical, elastic skirt 30 is, in turn, integrally formed on the outer wall 25, the large base surface of this skirt butting against the side wall 6. The two skirts 14, 30 thus ensure an elastic and liquid-tight clamping action of the fastening element 2 on the wall 6 which is tolerant to fluctuations in the thickness of the wall 6 and moreover, as can be seen in
The cups of the core 10 and housing 23, which are plugged one inside the other in each case with their open sides in the front, enclose a cavity 27. This cavity 27 is provided in order to accommodate the front fastening hook 8 of the telescopic rail 4.
The result is shown in
In order for the hook 8 to be released again from the position shown in
The rear wall 26 of the housing 23 contains two openings 33 for the through-passage of the latching arms 19. The openings are bounded at a border in each case by crosspieces 31 (see
The significant difference between this configuration and that described above is that, in this case, there is no skirt on the inner part 10′. The fastening element is retained merely by the clamping force between the skirt 30′ of the housing 23′ and the protrusions on the head of the inner part 10′ (these protrusions not being visible in the figure).
The protrusions of the inner part 10′ may be configured in the same way as those shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10233217.7 | Jul 2002 | DE | national |
PCT/EP03/07832 | Jul 2003 | WO | international |