The present invention relates to hangers for supporting objects on a wall and, more particularly, to a hanger having a hook portion and an anchor portion, for attachment to hollow walls, such as wallboards which typically comprise a relatively thick layer of gypsum sandwiched between paper layers.
There are various wall anchors available on the market, including plastic inserts which are hammered in a hole previously defined in a wall, wherein a fastener, such as a screw, is then engaged in the plastic insert, causing it to expand such that the assembly of the insert and the fastener is set firmly in the wall.
Toggle bolts also exist, wherein rotation of a bolt causes wings to deploy behind the wall and to ultimately abut the inside of the wall thereby firmly anchoring the bolt to the wall.
Both these types of anchors necessitate that a hole be previously drilled in the wall. On the other hand, there exists wall anchors defining a pointed cutting end and large threads, which are adapted to, in a single step, be rotatively driven in the wall thereby drilling their own hole in the wall with the large threads of the anchor compacting the gypsum and becoming firmly set therein. These types of anchors must be installed by way of a screwdriver and typically by a power driven screwdriver bit.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,641,344 issued on Nov. 4, 2003 to Weiss discloses an anchoring device for hollow walls such that a fixture can be hanged from the wall. The anchoring device has an elongated body including a curvilinear portion and a pointed distal end. The device includes a fixture portion coupled to and extending from the elongated body and adapted to remain on the visible side of the wall for allowing the fixture to be hung therefrom.
In spite of these various devices, there remains a need for a wall-mounted hanger of the type described hereinafter.
It is therefore an aim of the present invention to provide a novel hanger for hollow structures, such as hollow walls.
It is also an aim of the present invention to provide a novel hanger for hollow walls, which can be installed by hand.
Therefore, in accordance with the present invention, there is provided an anchoring system for use with hollow panels, comprising an anchor member and a separate fixture, which are adapted to be mounted together, the anchor member including an elongated element adapted to be inserted into and partly through a hollow panel and to bear against a rear surface of the panel, the fixture being adapted to bear against a front surface of the panel thereby securing the anchoring system to the panel.
Also in accordance with the present invention, there is provided an anchoring system for use with hollow panels, comprising an anchor member and a fixture, the anchor member including upper and lower elongated elements adapted to be inserted into a hollow panel, the upper elongated element being adapted to extend past the panel and to bear against a rear surface of the panel, the fixture being adapted to bear against a front surface of the panel thereby securing the anchoring system to the panel.
Other objects, advantages and features of the present invention will become more apparent upon reading of the following non-restrictive description of embodiments thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, showing by way of illustration an illustrative embodiment of the present invention, and in which:
Turning to the figures of the appended drawings, there are shown a number of anchoring systems or hangers, each comprising an anchor member adapted to be secured to a hollow structure, and a fixture (such a hook) adapted to be mounted to the anchor member. Such anchoring systems or hangers can be used on hollow walls, hollow doors, etc.
First, there is disclosed herein a hanger H for installation to hollow structures, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention will be described. The hanger H is made of two components that are assembled together, namely an anchor member 10 and a hook member 12. The anchor member 10 comprises a formed wire having an upper pointed distal end 14, a curved portion 16, a hook-engaging portion 18, and a lower wall-engaging end pin or spike 20 adapted to engage the wall W.
The hook member 12, which is herein made of a plastics material, although other materials are suitable, defines a rear plane surface 22, a front hook 24 for suspending an item/fixture therefrom, and a groove 26 that follows the contour of the hook member 12, generally forwardly of the rear surface 24 and between upper and lower ends 28 and 30, respectively, of the hook member 12. The moulded profiled hook member 12 provides stability and a large flat contact surface 22 with the mounting surface, i.e. the visible surface of the hollow wall W.
The groove 26 of the hook member 12 and the hook-engaging portion 18 of the anchor member 10 generally coincide and appear in broken lines in
The end spike 20 of the anchor member 10 extends rearwardly behind the rear surface 22 of the hook member 12 generally opposite the lower end 30, as seen in
The hook member 12 also defines an upper spike 32 that extends rearwardly from the plane surface 22 generally opposite the upper end 28, as again best seen in
To install the hanger H to the wall W, the hanger H is substantially positioned upside-down with respect to its position illustrated in
Indeed, at the end of the rotation movement of the hanger H, during the insertion of the curved portion 16 of the anchor member 10, the lower pin or spike 20 of the anchor member 10 will bite into the drywall, thus rotationally stabilising the assembly of the hanger H in the wall W and providing additional holding power as the load will now be distributed on the two spikes 20 and 32, and not only on the spike 32 of the hook member 12 (in addition to the load being also assumed by the section of the curved portion 16, which is lodged in the wall W).
The additional support provided by the spike 32 of the hook member 12 increases the supporting surface resting on the wall W and reinforces the wire anchor member 10 at the stress concentration point.
Now turning to a variant hanger H′, which is shown in isolation in
The main differences between hangers H and H′ are as follows. The hanger H′ of
A more significant difference lies in that the shape of the anchor member 10′ of hanger H′, which is located upwardly and rearwardly of the upper end 28 of the hook member 12 is different than the shape of the corresponding curved portion 16 defined on the anchor member 10 of the hanger H of
Once installed in the wall W, as seen in
In hanger H′, the anchor member 10′ is snap fitted around the hook member 12 into the calibrated groove 26, and this is seen in
The hanger H′, once installed, bears against the wall material via inter alia the lower end spike 20 (lodged in the wall W), the first section 42′ of the wall-engaging upper portion 16′ of the anchor member 10′ (also lodged in the wall W), the third section 46′ of the wall-engaging upper portion 16′ (which is applied against the rear surface R of the wall W), and the rear surface 22 of the hook member 12 (which bears against the visible surface V of the wall W). This arrangement provides significant holding power as the load is distributed on various surfaces of the hanger H′ interacting with the wall W.
The hanger H″ is installed to the wall in a way similar as hanger H′ (
In
The wall-engaging portion 110 includes, as in hanger H′, a first substantially straight section 116 that is substantially horizontal, a second curved section 118, and a third straight section 120 that is close to being vertical and merges with the distal end 112. This allows the anchor member 102 to be mounted to the wall in a way similar to hanger H′ of
Referring to
As seen in
The anchor member 102 can be installed to the wall prior to the hook member 104 being slidably engaged to the support plate 106. Alternatively, the anchor member 102 and the hook member 104 can be engaged together before this assembly is mounted to the wall.
All of the hangers herein described can typically be installed by hand and do not produce much damage to the wall.
Although the present invention has been described hereinabove by way of embodiments thereof, it may be modified, without departing from the nature and teachings of the subject invention as described herein.
This Application is a 371 National Phase filing from International Application No. PCT/CA2009/001669 filed on Nov. 18, 2009, which claims priority on U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/193,331 filed on Nov. 18, 2008, which is herein incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CA2009/001669 | 11/18/2009 | WO | 00 | 9/19/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/057306 | 5/27/2010 | WO | A |
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