Commercial establishments of all sorts and types use signs and displays for various purposes. These range from simple permanent displays of the company's identification to advertisements of differing permanency promoting different items on limited-time specials. Further, seasonal preferences also induce limited-time displays; ice cream sells better in the summer.
The problem arises as to how to make use of changeable displays or signs without the hardware and the signs themselves looking cheap and impermanent which can only have a deleterious effect on the image of the establishment. Thus, signs with internal lighting and changeable messages have seen very substantial use. Examples of these include U.S. Pat. No. 7,308,769 to L. Labedz, and U.S. patent application publication US 2008/0236005 of I. Isayev et al. Separately, U.S. patent application publications US 2005/0229453 of D. U. Hillstrom, 2006/0010741 of A. K. Simson et al. and U.S. patents 3,374,566 to R. R. Snediker, 4,483,311 to R. E. Hosey et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,592,530 to J. R. Seely et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 7,107,713 to A. K. Simson et al. show a holder that allows for the attachment of sign boards, possibly lighted, to the top of the usual, possibly internally lighted, signs and gas pumps, for example at a restaurant or gas station.
More recently, changeable signs employing coroplast (in effect, corrugated plastic) have found substantial use for changeable signs. With the desired display printed on sheets of the coroplast, the panels simply hang from a frame where the can undergo changing when the proprietor desires. However, signs made from coroplast suffer the drawbacks that they may appear less than substantial and may not survive adverse weather conditions. In fact, they can fold and “kink”, becoming unsightly in the process. Thus, the search continues for signs that undergo facile replacement yet prove simple to use, attractive, and durable.
A magnetic sign with replaceable messages includes first a substantially smooth, substantially rigid, substantially flat surface of ferromagnetic material of a specific, generally two-dimensional size and shape. A holding device holds the ferromagnetic surface at a substantially fixed location and orientation. A substantially flexible, magnetic, substantially two-dimensional sheet magnetically affixes to the flat ferromagnetic surface. Providing the magnetic sheet with substantially the two dimensional size and shape of the ferromagnetic surface provides an easily changeable yet attractive sign for commercial and other purposes.
Alternately, the holding device may have a substantially flat bottom surface. This will allow for the placing and retaining of the ferromagnetic surface on a substantially flat, horizontal retaining surface. As a result, the sign find use on the ground or at almost any location which has a flat surface.
As a further possibility and alternative, a securing device may permanently attach the ferromagnetic surface at a substantially fixed location and orientation relative to a structure having an elevation above the surrounding generally horizontal surface. This may serve, for example, to place and hold the magnetic on top of the usual, lighted sign at a drive-through location.
A method of displaying a sign includes first placing a holding device in contact with a surface. The holding device should have a substantially fixed location and orientation relative to that surface. A substantially smooth, substantially rigid, substantially flat surface of ferromagnetic material of a specific, generally two-dimensional size and shape is affixed to that holding device. Lastly, the process involves magnetically attaching a substantially flexible, magnetic, substantially two-dimensional sheet having substantially the two dimensional size and shape of the ferromagnetic surface to that surface.
Instead of the magnetic sheet having the size and shape of the ferromagnetic surface, the method may involve placing and retaining a supporting device having s substantially flat bottom in contact with a substantially flat surface and at a substantially fixed location and orientation relative to the surface. This will allow the proprietor to place the magnetic sign at a location suitable for his or her establishment. Further, when the establishment closes for the night, the proprietor may actually take the magnetic sign into a building for safe storage.
Or, the supporting device may be placed and retained in contact with a structure having an elevation relative to the surrounding generally horizontal surface. This will allow the placement of the magnetic sign, in particular, on top of the usual, back lighted display for further, timely information.
The magnetic sign, seen generally at 21 in
To support the ferromagnetic plate 23 and thus the magnetic displays 22, the sign 22 includes the two posts 27 and 28 rigidly affixed to the plate 23. To assist in its attachment to the posts 27 and 28, the plate 23 includes the two bent edges 33 and 34, seen in
To support the sign 21 in an upright orientation, the posts 27 and 28, each having a hollow interior as seen in
In turn, the base 41 may sit on any convenient flat surface. Thus, the proprietor may place the sign near the driveway during business hours and then bring it inside when the establishment closes for the night.
The same ferromagnetic plate 23, magnetic signs 22, posts 27 and 28, and bottom rail 36 used in the sign 21 of
The use of the spike strips 51 and 52 starts with placing them at an appropriate distance apart from each other over penetrable soil. The “appropriate distance,” of course, means the distance that separates the posts 27 and 28 attached to the ferromagnetic plate 23. With the proper distance established between the posts 51 and 52, they are placed tightly into the soil. The posts 27 and 28 then fit over and onto the stubs 61 and 70 respectively. The nuts 43 and 44 pass through the posts 27 and 28, respectively, and into the stubs 61 and 70, respectively (with the nut also passing through the opening 72 of the latter stub 70) to hold the sign together. The spike strips 51 and 52 simply represent an alternative structure to hold a magnetic sign in the desired configuration such as upright.
A further alternative structure which includes the flat runner strips, designated generally 75 and 76, for holding a magnetic sign upright for display appears in
In the same fashion, the strip 76 includes the flat runner 88 to which attaches the stub 90. The rubber feet 92 and 94 are affixed to the strip 88 by the nuts 96 and 98, respectively.
To complete the sign, the hollow posts 27 and 28 fit over and into the hollow stubs 79 and 90. The nuts 43 and 44, respectively, pass the openings in the posts 27 and 28 and the through openings in the stubs 79 and 90, respectively, and keep the entire sign intact. In this form, the sign 76 may then be placed on the ground 99 which may take the form of a hard surface.
If desired, the posts 43 and 44 may be removed from the stubs 79 and 90 of
However, the separation between the posts 107 and 108 virtually equals that between the posts 27 and 28 of
Second, an individual or business owning and using the smaller sign 21 of
The sign indicated generally at 115 in
To achieve this result and as seen in
Providing the second pivot point for the ferromagnetic plate 133, the pin 120 attaches to the top of that plate 133 as seen in
Placing the plate 133 into the frame 117 involves removing the locking pin 146 from the larger pivot pin 120. The plate 133 is then maneuvered so that the pivot pin 120 enters the bottom of and then through the opening 148 at the middle (and thus the uppermost point) of the upper cross member 122. With the locking pin 146 removed from the upper pivot pin 120, the top 149 of the plate 133 may actually abut against the upper cross member 122 (with the upper pivot pin 120 in the opening 148). When this happens, the magnetic 133 plate sits high enough for the lower pivot pin 121 to enter the opening 138 in the lower cross member 123 of the frame 117. Lowering the plate 133 causes the lower pivot pin 121 to seat securely in the opening 138 in the lower cross member 123 and leaves the upper pivot pin 120 in the upper cross member 122. Then, replacing the locking pin 146 into the upper pivot pin 120 prevents the plate from rising to the point that the lower pivot pin 121 could come free from the lower frame cross member 123. This accordingly and rotatingly attaches the plate 116 to the frame 117.
The job of controlling the rotation of the ferromagnetic plate 133 within the frame 117 falls to the two identical spring-loaded control pin assemblies 127 and 128. The latter appears in an exploded view in
Meanwhile, the spring 161 sits on the control pin 128 between the metal piece 155 and the washer 158, which, as stated above, is permanently attached to the stem of the pin 154. With these components, the assembly of the control pin 154 with its spring 161 and the attached washer 158 is inserted into the opening 156 until the end of the pin 154 exits through the smaller opening 157 on the inside of the member 130. Welding the plate 155 to the outside of the upright post 130 then traps the washer 158 and the spring 161, on the pin 154, between the outside opening 156 and the inside opening 157 of the post 130.
The spring 161 pushes against both the washer 158 and the metal piece 155, forcing them apart. Pulling on the knob 154 will overcome the force of the spring 161, allow the knob 154 to move outward from the upright post, and retract the end 165 of the pin 154 away from the opening 170 in the flange 172 and into the post 130.
With this structure, the operation of the rotation of the signboard 116 submits to facile understanding. As shown in
After the board has rotated 180 degrees, the pins 154 and 164 are carefully released so that the springs 161 and 167 will force the ends 165 and 166, respectively, of the control pins 154 and 164, back outward and into the openings 170 and 169, respectively, in the flanges 172 and 170 to keep the board 116 in its new orientation. This, of course, brings the former backside of the signboard 116 into view.
As seen in the exploded view of
The sign 115 of
The present application constitutes a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/013,644, filed on Jan. 25, 2011, which claims the benefit of the filing of the U.S. provisional patent application No. 61/301,922 on Feb. 5, 2010.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61301922 | Feb 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 13013644 | Jan 2011 | US |
Child | 13200665 | US |