The present invention relates to an ice/liquid dispensing bay for a domestic refrigeration device, comprising a drip tray defining a lower end of the bay and a drip plate covering the drip tray. It is particularly desirable to improve the operational reliability of such a bay.
This object is inventively achieved for an ice/liquid dispensing bay of the type mentioned in the introduction by an edge of the drip plate (4) having at least one locking recess (25) into which a locking projection biased by a spring (9) engages in the locked position.
The stability of the drip plate is further improved if it has two locking recesses disposed as mirror images of one another on opposite edges.
The at least one locking recess is preferably constituted by a open-edge cutout on the edge of the drip plate.
As the circumferential edge of the drip plate engages at least in sections in a slot in the bay, it is retained in a non-tipping manner
In order to achieve, with minimal material costs, a high degree of wear resistance for the repeatedly inserted and removed drip plate, the spring is preferably made of plastic, but the spring-loaded locking projection is a metal component.
The metal component is preferably retained in a pocket of the spring which extends transversely to the excursion direction of the spring. Therefore, when the locking projection is engaged and disengaged, restoring forces acting in the excursion direction of the spring cause no displacement or loosening of the metal component in the pocket.
The spring preferably comprises a displaceable first leg which delimits the slot accommodating the drip plate on at least one side. The spring therefore not only serves to lock the drip plate in the displacement direction, i.e. horizontally, but it at the same time limits the freedom of movement of the drip plate in the vertical direction.
An at least approximately U-shaped cross-section of the spring enables a particularly compact design to be implemented.
Of the two legs of the U-shaped cross-section, one leg preferably contains the locking projection, while the other leg is used to fasten the spring to the bay.
The spring is preferably protected and concealed from the user behind a back wall panel of the bay.
A lower edge of the back wall panel preferably defines the upper limit of the slot accommodating the drip plate.
The back wall panel is expediently curved in horizontal cross-section so that the drip plate can engage in the slot along as much of its edge as possible.
The lower limit of the slot accommodating the drip plate can be expediently defined by the drip tray itself.
The top of the drip tray can be provided with a grid supporting the drip plate.
The drip tray can preferably be removed from the bay to pour away the liquid collected therein, instead of having to wipe it out.
A lower end section of the bay preferably comprises a recess accommodating the drip tray, and a push-in mount for the spring. Such an end section concealed by the back wall panel and the drip plate during use can be inexpensively molded from plastic like the drip tray itself.
For mounting the spring, on the lower end section a pocket can be formed which accepts a fixed leg of the spring. The pocket can be formed in particular by two grooves facing one another, each accommodating a side edge of the fixed leg of the spring. In order not to impair the freedom of movement of the spring by the push-fit connection to the lower end section, the fixed leg of the spring is preferably wider than the elastically displaceable one, and the fixed leg's edges projecting in each case beyond the edge of the elastically displaceable leg engage in the grooves of the push-in mount.
Other developments of the invention are set forth in the sub-claims.
Additional features and advantages of the invention and/or development will emerge from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The visible back of the bay is clad with a back wall panel 3 bent in a trough-shaped manner. A stainless steel drip plate shown separately in
The drip plate can be removed from the bay horizontally forward; the bay without the drip plate is shown in
As can be seen, the lower end section 6 has, extending upward beyond the drip tray 7, a curved back wall 10 which, in the assembled state, braces, in its central area, the back wall panel 3 against pressure forces acting into the bay. The lateral flanks of the back wall 10 run spaced apart from the back wall panel 3 (not shown in
The springs 9 are shown in detail in the perspective views of
The tubular section 14 is provided in order to accommodate a preferably stainless steel metal pin 15 shown in
The outer leg 11 is much wider than the inner leg 12 and has edge regions 19 extending beyond same on both sides. At its free end, the inner leg 12 is widened by angled supports 20 on both sides of the tubular section 14. As can be seen particularly in
Again referring to
The tip of the metal pin 15 projects beyond the lower end of the inner leg 12.
As shown more clearly in
Adjacent to the section 24 there is formed on the drip plate 4 an open-edge cutout 25 in which the metal pin 15 is engaged in the assembled state. A projection 26 bordering the cutout 25 deflects the metal pins 15 sideways when the drip plate 4 is inserted. The force required for engaging and disengaging the drip plate 4 can be defined by the shape of the projection, i.e. by its extent in the lateral direction and the orientation of its flanks 27, 28 relative to the insertion direction. The rubbing wear during engagement and disengagement of the drip plate 4 is low, as the rubbing parts forced against one another, namely the projection 26 and the pin 15, are both made of metal, particularly steel.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 028 585.4 | Jun 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP09/57400 | 6/16/2009 | WO | 00 | 12/9/2010 |