The present invention relates to a domestic appliance with a first and a second housing, which are arranged with their sidewalls adjacent to each other and are fastened to each other (side-by-side arrangement).
Side-by-side arrangements of domestic appliances have long been known. Electrical appliances and kitchen furniture are manufactured nowadays so that they are able to be joined together, built in and combined to guarantee a smooth workflow in the kitchen area. This building-block concept additionally gives the manufacturer the opportunity of being able to satisfy the customer's individual design requirements at no extra cost.
The current particular favorite is side-by-side-arrangement of a refrigerator and a freezer. This reflects the increasingly changing shopping, cooking and eating habits prevailing in kitchen design. This means that numerous finished products which must be stored in various refrigeration zones are purchased in few shopping trips.
DE 202 09 516 U1 discloses a refrigerator and freezer appliance of this type, consisting of a square refrigerator part and a freezer part which can be set up side-by-side into from one unit. An airtight seal seals-off the space between the two units. This prevents moisture-laden air, which is cooler by comparison with the surrounding air, entering the space between the refrigerator and freezer part in which the moisture condenses on the side surfaces of the refrigerator and freezer part. Attachment rails are attached to the front to prevent the appliances moving apart from each other.
In this layout however it can occur that, because of careless movement during or after the setting up of the appliances, the gap between the wall surfaces facing each other widens out towards the rear of the refrigeration appliance and thus renders the surrounding seal ineffective. In addition it has been shown that in difficult installation situations when the housing is being moved into the “required position” the sensitive seals can be damaged.
The object of the invention is to create a domestic appliance which features two housings with sidewalls facing each other, in which the housings are able to be installed in a simple manner and form a structure which is stable in its shape once installed.
The object is achieved in accordance with claim 1 by attaching to one edge of the sidewalls of the housing facing each other in each case a hinge which forms a hinged connection for the housings and by attaching to the housings at a distance from this edge a connection element which blocks the freedom of movement of the hinge. The hinge makes it possible to join the housings by a rotational movement and thus simplifies the installation of the housing on site since the attachment of the housings to each other can be undertaken in a first step without the housings having to be aligned completely in parallel to one another. This significantly shortens the installation time since, as a result of the weight and the size of the housings, the tedious and tiring “moving backwards and forwards” of the housings until they are aligned flush with each other at the front and at the back is dispensed with entirely.
In this case the hinge parts can be connected at any angle. The pivoting movement defined precisely by the hinge prevents the seal being damaged when the devices are joined together. It is slowly compressed in protective manner as the gap is closed. The blocking connection element prevents the housings moving apart after installation so that the surrounding seal can have its full effect.
To make easy access to the hinges possible and thus a simple installation of the hinges on site and at the same time to avoid disruptive elements in the area of the housings visible to the customer after installation the hinge is accommodated at the rear edge of the sidewalls facing each other
In this case it is especially advantageous for a recess to be formed at a corner of each housing at which the facing sidewalls and a rear wall of each housing meet and for the axis of the hinge to run in the recess. This embodiment variant prevents the hinge protruding beyond the rear wall of the housing and forming a projection which would get in the way if the domestic appliance were installed against a wall or were mounted in a frame provided for it.
Preferably the hinge, as the connecting joint between the housing parts, consists in each case of a part attached to the first and the second housing respectively, with the parts engaging to form a close fit in the direction of the pivot axis of the hinge.
To obtain a stable hanging of the hinges on the housings, in a preferred embodiment the hinge includes a part attached to the first or second housing respectively, with the parts being attached to cover a corner of first or second housing respectively.
So that the hinge parts can be manufactured in large volumes and thereby at low cost, the hinge includes a part attached to the first or second housing which is formed identically. The hinge parts are shaped so that they engage with each other and that there is a close fit between the parts in the direction of the pivot axis of the hinge, to make possible a transmission of vertical forces from one housing to the other. In addition the installation effort is reduced if only a few different installation parts are need for installation of the domestic appliance.
The installation concept is developed in a preferred embodiment of the invention by the hinge featuring a removable pivot pin. After the housings have been brought together in the appropriate manner and the hinge parts engage with each other, the pivot pin is simply pushed through the hinge parts to form the pivot axis.
Inventively the joining element, which is accommodated at some distance from the hinge on the housings described above in their edge area is provided with two brackets each attached to one of the two facing sidewalls and together delimiting a locking channel. It also includes a bolt which fits into the locking channel.
In this case it is useful for there to be close fit between the interlocking brackets, just as with the hinge parts in the direction of the pivot axis of the hinge, so that a force due to weight can be transmitted via the brackets and the two housing parts can be lifted from one side as a unit in order to move them.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention the bolt has an angled end section which is supported on one of the brackets when the bolt is inserted into the locking channel. The angled end section represents a safeguard of the connection element which prevents the inserted bolt from sliding right through the locking channel.
It is useful for the end section to be supported against the bracket on just a part of its width. This ensures that when the housing is taken apart with a screwdriver or similar tool, the tool can be fitted under the part of the bolt not supported on the bracket to pull the bolt out of the locking channel and thus release the lock.
As an alternative to the preferred embodiment a screw thread is embodied in the supported end section. By screwing an appropriate screw into the thread which then presses against the bracket, the bolt can be pulled out of the locking channel.
The inventive domestic appliance is especially embodied as a refrigerator and has a seal between the sidewalls for sealing the gap and preventing the buildup of condensation.
To hide this seal from view there is provision in accordance with the invention for the gap between the facing sidewalls to be hidden at least on the front side of the appliance by a profiled cover.
The description given below serves in conjunction with the drawing to explain the invention. The figures show:
In
Conventionally the two housing parts would be pushed together until their facing sidewalls were aligned in parallel and their front sides were flush with each other in order to form a flat front area. In such case it was not uncommon for the seal to be damaged even during installation by an uneven movement of the heavy housings. Especially when the touching housings were moved in parallel to their sidewalls facing each other, frictional forces often occurred between the sidewall of the housing without sealing frame and the side of the housing equipped with sealing frame which destroyed the seal. If this defect was not discovered in good time and the seal renewed, an airtight seal from the gap between the housings could no longer be provided, so that condensation-laden air entered the gap area between fridge and freezer part which condensed on the side surfaces of the fridge and freezer part. Careless movement during or after the setting up of the domestic appliances also caused the gap between wall surfaces facing each other to widen out towards the rear of the refrigeration appliance and the surrounding seal was thus rendered ineffective.
By contrast, in the present invention the rear corners of the housings 2, 4 carrying the hinge parts 6,8 are first placed in relation to each other so that the hinge parts 6,8 engage with each other and can be connected in a way explained in more detail below. The connected hinge parts 6,8 now define a pivot axis around which the sidewalls of the housings 2, 4 can be hinged in relation to each other and in doing so compress the sealing profile 12.
For better understanding of the setup and the installation of the side-by-side appliances 2 and 4,
The hinge parts 6 and 8 are identical one-piece sheet metal parts. They each have two attachment arms 35 and 37 with two screw holes 30 in each case and a curved center section 22 joining the attachment arms in which three hoops 24, 26 and 28 are separated from each other by horizontal slots. The attachment arms 35 and 37 of hinge parts 6 or 8 are at right angles to each other to allow one to be attached to a sidewall and the other to a rear wall of the housing 2 or 4 respectively. The hinge section 6 is rotated and positioned by comparison with hinge section 8 so that a side edge labeled 38 which is aligned upwards with hinge part 6, points downwards with hinge part 8, and the opposite applies for a side edge 40.
In the perspective diagram shown in
As already mentioned in relation to
The brackets 18, 20 made of metal each have two attachment flanges with holes 30, used for screwing them to the sidewalls 10, 16 and which are connected by two curved-out ribs 62 and 64 in the case of the bracket 18 or three ribs 66, 68 and 70 in the case of the bracket 20. The width of the cutouts 60 between the ribs of a bracket 18 o. 20 is selected so that the ribs of the other bracket in each case can engage into it when the walls 10, 16 are in the position shown in
The brackets 18, 20 are placed on the walls 10, 16 so that the ribs 62, 64, 66, 68, 70 engage with each other if by pivoting in the hinge the walls 10, 16 are moved towards each other and the profiled seal 12 between them is pressed together. As shown in
It can be seen from
Alternatively the end section could be provided with a threaded hole which ends at the upper edge of the rib 66. When a screw is inserted into this threaded hole and hits the upper edge of the rib 66 it presses the end section 80 upwards and thus gradually pushes the bolt 72 out of the locking channel 74. In this way it is even possible to release the bolt if it is jammed in the channel 72.
A flexible T-profile 76 made from plastic shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2005 021 608.0 | May 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2006/061330 | 4/5/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/30/2007 |