This disclosure relates to the field of containers and cabinets that are configured to hold and maintain pre-cooked food product items warm and moist for later use by a kitchen or restaurant facility.
A first representative embodiment of the disclosure is provided. The first representative embodiment is a heated food storage container that includes a housing forming an open internal volume with upper and lower walls, right and left walls, and a rear wall in combination defining the internal volume accessible through an open front portion. A heater and a fan are disposed within the housing and configured to deliver a flow of heated air within the internal volume. A combined rack and ventilation assembly is provided. The assembly comprises upper and lower walls, right and left walls, and a rear wall that in combination define a second internal volume accessible through an open front portion. The assembly may be disposed within the internal volume of the housing and the assembly is configured to be removed from the internal volume of the housing without any external tools. A ventilation path within the container is formed when the assembly is positioned within the housing, the ventilation path is disposed within a first plenum defined between the respective rear walls of the assembly and housing and continuing to a second plenum defined between the respective lower walls of the assembly and housing.
A second representative embodiment of the disclosure is provided. The second representative embodiment is a container that is configured to establish an air flow curtain at an open end thereof. The container includes a housing defining an internal volume with opposed upper and lower walls, opposed right and left walls, and a rear wall opposing the open end. A heater and a fan are each disposed within the housing. An assembly is removably positioned within the internal volume of the housing and is configured to be removed from the internal volume in a single motion without any external tools. The assembly comprises a plurality of walls comprising opposed upper and lower walls, opposed right and left walls, and a rear wall opposing an open end of the assembly, the plurality of walls of the assembly defining a second internal volume accessible through the open end. When the assembly is positioned within the housing, a first plenum is defined within a space between the rear wall of the assembly and the rear wall of the housing, and a second plenum in fluid communication with the first plenum is defined within a space between the lower wall of the assembly and the rear wall of the housing. An outlet of the second plenum urges air flowing therethrough across the combined open ends of the housing and the assembly.
A third representative embodiment of the disclosure is a container for storing a heated food product within an open internal volume therein. The container includes a housing that encloses the internal volume that is accessible through an open end at a front portion thereof. A heater and fan are disposed within the housing to urge a continuous flow of heated air through the housing. An assembly may be removably inserted within the housing and is configured to support one or more pans of food within the internal volume and is also configured to in combination with the walls of the housing guide the continuous flow of heated air around the housing and internal volume, and establish a curtain of heated air across the open end of the housing. The assembly may be withdrawn from the housing in a single motion without any external tools, and the assembly may be reinstalled within the housing in a second single motion without any external tools.
Advantages of the disclosed container will become more apparent to those skilled in the art from the following description of embodiments that have been shown and described by way of illustration. As will be realized, other and different embodiments are contemplated, and the disclosed details are capable of modification in various respects. Accordingly, the drawings and description are to be regarded as illustrative in nature and not as restrictive.
Turning now to
The container 10 provides a flow of heated air within the internal volume 69 to maintain the temperature of the food products disposed within the pans 1, as well as a curtain of heated air that flows through a front opening 68 into the internal volume 69 of the container 10. The air curtain 68 establishes a barrier between the heated internal volume 69 and the environment. The flow of heated air that establishes the air curtain across the front opening 68 as well as the flow of heated air that flows through the internal volume 69 of the container 10 is created by one or more fans 24 and one or more heating elements 25 (either electric or gas) that may be disposed within a partially enclosed mechanical compartment 26 of the container 10, or otherwise disposed within the container 10 to limit the possibility of personal injury due to unintended contact with the fans 25 and/or the heating elements 24.
The container 10 includes a housing 20 that is fixed within the container 10 and supports both the mechanical compartment 26, normally disposed in an upper portion of the container 10 above the upper portion 41 of the housing 20, and a removable assembly, or caddy 60 that may be disposed within the internal volume 69 of the housing 20 and may be removed from the housing 20 in a single motion and without the use of any external tools.
With reference to
The upper wall 41 of the housing 20 may be configured with one or more apertures (that may be provided with grates) that provide a suction path for air flowing through one or more fans 25 that are disposed within the mechanical compartment 26 of the container 10. The one or more fans 25 are mounted to the upper wall 41 (and the mechanical compartment 26 is configured) to urge a flow of air toward the rear wall 45 of the housing 20 when the fans 25 are in operation. As discussed elsewhere herein, the one or more heating elements 24 are disposed in conjunction with the fans to transfer heat to the air flowing through the fans within the mechanical compartment 26.
The assembly 60 may be formed as a single unit that may be installed into and removed from the internal volume 69 of the housing 20 in a single motion and without the use of any external tools. The assembly is a single unit that is configured to support a plurality of pans within its internal volume 69a upon one or more racks and additionally in combination with the housing guides a continuous flow of air established by one or more fans 25. As shown in
As best understood with reference to
The right and left walls 62, 64 of the assembly 60 connect with and extend rearwardly of the rear wall 65 of the assembly 60. As best understood with reference to
An upper plenum F of the ventilation path is established between the upper wall 61 of the assembly 60 and the upper wall 41 of the housing 60. The upper plenum F is in fluid communication with the suction side of one or more fans 25, urging air within the upper plenum F into and through the one or more fans 25. The discharge of the one or more fans 25 (normally located within the mechanical compartment 26) is in fluid communication with the first plenum B, with operation of the one or more fans 25 urging continuous air flow through the first plenum B, and around the entire ventilation path to return to the suction of the one or more fans 25.
The lower deflector 76 is disposed upon the forward edge 63b of the lower wall 63 and receives air flowing through the second plenum C therein. The lower deflector 76 establishes the third plenum D of the ventilation path and redirects air received within the lower deflector 76 to flow across the open end 68 of the assembly 60 (and therefore also across the open end 46 of the housing 20 receiving the assembly 60). The flow of air across the open end 68 aids in the prevention of heat loss from within the interior volume 69a of the assembly 60 and additionally prevents foreign matter from the environment around the container 10 from entering the internal volume 69a and interacting with the food product disposed within the internal volume 69a.
An upper deflector 78 is disposed upon the front portion of the upper wall 61 of the housing 60 and is configured to establish the fourth plenum E of the ventilation path and receive air traveling as an air curtain through the open end 68 of the assembly 60 and redirect that air into the upper plenum F for eventual flow thorough the one or more fans 25. Accordingly, the combined first, second, third, fourth, and upper plenums B, C, D, E, F provide for a substantially closed loop of heated air to flow through the housing 20 during operation of the one or more fans 25. The combination of the lower and upper deflectors 76, 78 urges air through the open end 68, which minimizes heat loss to the environment because the air leaving through the open end 68 is minimized. In some embodiments, the housing 20 may include a direction wall 48 (
As shown in
The number and size of apertures 63a, 65a are configured to supply sufficient heated air within the internal volume to avoid cool down and dryout, but additionally establishes a flow rate of heated air through the internal volume 69a that is less than the flow rate of heated air in the curtain across the open end 68 of the assembly 60. The larger flow of heated air along the air curtain than through the internal volume 69a of the assembly minimizes the turbulence of flow at the top portion of the air curtain where air from the internal volume 69a enters the upper deflector 78 and the fourth plenum E (as urged thereto by the relatively lower pressure proximate to the suction of the one or more fans 25) from both the air curtain and inner volume 69a (shown schematically as H in
Further, because heat loss to the environment through the open end 68 is minimized by the flow of the air curtain, as well as the fact that hot air flowing through the various plenums above and below the assembly 60 surrounds the internal volume, heat loss from the internal volume 69a is minimized, limiting the need for air flowing through the internal volume to replace heat lost from the food product disposed therein is minimized and therefore limiting the amount of heated air needed to flow within the internal volume 69a.
In some embodiments, a controller 100 may be provided to maintain the temperature of the air flowing through the ventilation system. The controller may include one or more temperature sensors, such as a thermistors, thermocouple, or the like, and may operate to vary the heat input to the heating elements 24 and/or the speed of the one or more fans 25 based upon the temperature of the air flowing therethrough. In some embodiments, the controller includes an input 28 accessible by the user upon a display section 22 of the container 10, which allows the user to select the desired temperature of air flowing within the housing 20, with the controller modifying the heating elements 24 and/or fan 25 accordingly. In other embodiments, the controlled temperature may be factory set, or may controlled with one or more infinite switches.
In some embodiments, the container 10 may include multiple timers upon the display section 26 that each include a display easily read by the user. The multiple timers 27 are provided for the user to be able to independently track the hold time of several different pans disposed within the internal volume 69a of the assembly 60. The timers 27 may provide an indication of the hold time (both visual with a countdown or count up display, and/or audible with programmable alarms associated with each timer), and may additionally provide an input to the controller 100, causing the controller to modify the operation of one or both the heating elements 24 and the fan 25 based upon the operation of the timers 27.
In some embodiments, the container 10 may include an interlock (either as a part of the controller 100, or as its own component or system) that prevents one or both of the one or more fans 25 and the heating elements 24 from operating when the assembly 60 is not properly positioned within the housing 20. In some embodiments, the interlock may operate by allowing or preventing power flow to one or both of the heating elements 24 and fan 25, while in other embodiments the interlock may provide an input to the controller, which in turn operates one or both of the heating elements 24 and fan 25. The interlock may include one or more mechanical or electrical sensing elements that form an input, with the sensing elements configured to “see” when the assembly 60 is properly positioned. The sensing elements may be mechanical, such as a switch 102 (
While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been described, it should be understood that the invention is not so limited and modifications may be made without departing from the invention. The scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims, and all devices that come within the meaning of the claims, either literally or by equivalence, are intended to be embraced therein.
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