A pallet or a dolly with a deployable bail arm for accommodating loads with an area greater than the original footprint of the pallet or dolly.
Pallets and dollies are in extensive use worldwide to facilitate the movement of goods. Both pallets and dollies may be described as low to the ground, portable platforms on which goods may be stacked for storage or moving. The two devices are distinguished primarily by their type of undersurface or ground contact. Pallets have a fixed, non-rolling, bottom surface, whereas dollies have wheels, with or without brakes.
A common type of pallet bottom surface is a skid, which is a continuous plank that provides support along its whole length. Pallets generally also include open ends configured to receive the forks of a manual pallet jack, motorized forklift truck, or other lifting device, so that the palletized load can be raised and moved about easily.
Pallets are particularly suitable for storing goods, such as in a racking arrangement, at a warehouse, moving goods on conveyor belts and roll conveyors, and for transporting goods between distant locations, where the pallets are loaded onto shipping containers, trucks, railway cars, and other vehicles. Dollies are better suited for the internal movement of goods within a given location where pallet moving equipment such as manual pallet jacks or forklift trucks would be unwieldy or costly. For example, unloading a shipment of goods at a supermarket is often more efficiently accomplished by having a stocking clerk wheel a dolly holding the goods to the appropriate display section of the store, rather than through use of a forklift.
One drawback to existing pallets and dollies is that they have a fixed planar surface area, or footprint, to accommodate loads of varying sizes. In some instances, the load area exceeds the footprint of the dolly and the load is subject to tipping or falling from the dolly. The present invention provides a mechanism connected to the dolly that can be moved from a stowed position, where the pallet has a first support area, to a deployed position where the total pallet support area is the sum of the first support area and an overhang area defined by a supplemental support surface adjacent the deck and created by the mechanism.
The present invention provides a pallet or dolly having a deck with a generally planar upper surface with a peripheral edge defining a first area, and a ground engaging structure connected to the deck. A mechanism is connected to the pallet and is moveable from a stowed position to a deployed position. When in the deployed position, a portion of the mechanism defines an overhang area adjacent the first area to increase a total support area of the pallet.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following specification taken in conjunction with the following Figures.
To understand the present invention, it will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying Figures in which:
While this invention is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms, there is shown in the drawings, and will be described herein in detail, specific embodiments thereof with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to the specific embodiments illustrated.
The peripheral edge 14 is shown having two opposed lateral edges 16 and two opposed end edges 18. The area of the deck 12 is calculated by multiplying a “length” dimension of a lateral edge 16 with a “width” dimension of an end edge 18. The deck 12 is for supporting bins, boxes or other items and has a fixed support area. If a load is too large to be accommodated by the prior art pallet 10, a user of the pallet would have to seek out a pallet having a larger support area.
The present invention provides a mechanism 30 connected to a pallet 10 for increasing the load supporting area of the pallet. Using the same reference numbers of
In one form of the invention, the mechanism 30 is a bail arm assembly 30 that is moveable from the deployed position (
In one preferred form of the invention, the channel 32 will be dimensioned to match the shape and size of the bail arm for proper stowage.
The channel 32 is also generally U-shaped in cross-sectional dimension having two horizontally spaced side walls connected together at a proximal end by a bottom wall leaving a distal end open to provide access to a chamber for receiving a leg of the bail arm 30.
The first two segments 34 of channel 32 will each have a stowing channel 37 and a deploy channel 39 continuous with one another and divided by a pivot 50. While the two segments 34 are shown extending along a length dimension of the pallet, or parallel to the lateral edges 16, they could also be oriented to extend parallel to an end edge 18. Likewise, the third segment is shown extending in a line parallel to the end edge 18, it could be oriented to extend along a line parallel to the lateral edges 16 of the pallet.
The bail arm assembly 30 includes two legs 40 horizontally spaced from one another in parallel spaced relationship and are connected together at their distal ends by a cross member 42. Each of the legs 40 is pivotally mounted to the pallet and preferably is connected by a pivot point 50. The pivot point 50 is positioned in the channel 34 as shown in
As shown in
In one preferred form of the invention, the cross member 42 is an assembly of parts such as a pair of connecting members 58, one of each connects opposed ends of the cross member 42 to the distal end of the legs 40. The connecting member 58 shown in
The bail arm 30 can also be a single integral piece. The bail arm can be fabricated from various materials such as plastics, metals, composites, and wood. The bail arm can be formed from any suitable processes such as, for metal pieces, metal forging, metal casting, metal cutting, metal extruding, and metal bending, for example. Plastic parts can be formed through thermoplastic or thermosetting shaping techniques including injection molding. Wood and composite materials can be molded or cut into the desired shape. The bail arm can also be formed using 3D printing techniques. Whether the bail arm is an assembly of parts or is a single integral piece, the term “bail arm assembly” is meant to encompass both.
In one exemplary form, the two bail arm assemblies are positioned proximal a single peripheral edge, the end edge 18. More particularly, the two bail arm assemblies include a short bail arm 64 nested within a long bail arm 66.
While the bail arms shown are generally semi-rectangular in shape, they could be of other shapes without departing from the scope of the present invention. For example, the bail arm could be generally semi-elliptical, semi-circular, semi-polygonal, or other shape.
From the foregoing, it will be observed that numerous variations and modifications may be effected without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is to be understood that no limitation with respect to the specific apparatus illustrated herein is intended or should be inferred. It is, of course, intended to cover by the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the scope of the claims.
The present invention claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/272,852 filed Dec. 30, 2015, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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