The invention relates to a pedal bin comprising a housing in which a waste container can be accommodated, a lid mounted at the top of the housing by means of a pivot pin, which lid has lever means that extend on the side of the pivot pin facing away from the lid and at this location has a sliding construction that allows a sliding movement between a relatively low position and a relatively high position in a plane transverse to the pivot pin, a movable pedal provided at the bottom of the housing and an operating rod interacting with the sliding construction of the lid and the pedal for pivoting the lid, by means of depressing the pedal, between a closed position and a first open position defined by a first pivot angle with respect to the closed position, the sliding construction and the operating rod being in the relatively low position and the operating rod being subjected to tensile force.
A pedal bin of this type is disclosed in NL-A 1 005 057. This known pedal bin has the disadvantage that the lid cannot easily be pivoted into a second position in which it is opened further.
The aim of the invention is therefore to provide a pedal bin that does not have these disadvantages. Said aim is achieved in that the lid can be pivoted further into a second open position defined by a second pivot angle with respect to the closed position by direct operation of the lid, for example, by hand, which second pivot angle is larger than the first pivot angle, and in that auxiliary means are provided for holding the sliding construction in the relatively high position when the lid moves into the second open position, it being possible to move the sliding construction and the operating member into the relatively low position overcoming the pretension when the pedal is depressed, and in that stop means are provided for defining the first open position and the second open position of the lid, which stop means comprise a stop member fixed to the lid as well as at least two operating member sections, such that in the relatively low position of the operating member the stop member is in contact with a first operating member section and in the relatively high position of the operating member the stop member is in contact with a second operating member section.
Because the pedal bin according to the invention has auxiliary means for holding the sliding construction up, the advantage is obtained that both the first open position and the second open position of the lid are clearly defined by separate stops.
The sliding construction can be made in various ways, for example using a carriage. According to a preferred embodiment the sliding construction comprises a lever with a slot, which slot has an end positioned relatively low and an end positioned relatively high, as well as a slider that can be slid in the slot and is joined to the pull rod. A simple embodiment is preferred in connection with reliability, durability and cost price. In a very simple embodiment the slider is formed by an end of the pull rod that is accommodated in the slot such that it can slide.
The auxiliary means can comprise a pretensioning member that engages on the sliding construction. For example, the pretensioning member can comprise a helical torsion spring that is located around the pivot pin.
If the centre of gravity of the lid is on the side of the lid facing away from the lever means when the lid is in the first open position, it is always ensured that when the lid is operated by the foot this always returns to the closed position under the influence of gravity. It is then not necessary to close the lid by hand.
Although a pull rod has been mentioned as an example of the operating member, an operating member that is flexible to bending but rigid to pulling, such as a wire line or chain or the like, can also be used.
The invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the illustrative embodiment shown in the figures.
In a known manner the pedal bin shown in
The pedal 4 is connected in a known manner, which is not shown in more detail, to the pull rod indicated in its entirety by 5. This pull rod has a vertical main section 6 to which the end section 8, which likewise runs virtually vertically, is joined via the laterally bent section 7. This end section 8 merges into a bent end 9 that has been inserted in the somewhat curved slot 10 in the lever 11. This lever 11 is fixed to the lid 3, specifically on that side of the hinge pin 12 by means of which the lid 3 is attached to the container 1 such that it can pivot, facing away from said lid 3.
The major section of the pull rod 5, in particular the vertical main section 6, runs inside the container 1. The lateral section 7 protrudes outwards via the slot 13.
In the rest position shown in
The lever 11 has a stop member 16 that, as shown in
The lid 3 can also be opened from the closed position shown in
According to the invention a torsion spring indicated in its entirety by 18 is now provided. The helically wound section 19 thereof is arranged around the rotary pin 12. The one end 20 of the torsion spring bears inside the chamber 22 of the hinge section that is joined to the lid 3; the other end 21 is hooked under the end 9 of the pull rod 5. The torsion spring 18 is pretensioned in such a way that a pretensioning force oriented upwards is exerted on the end 9.
As a consequence of this pretensioning force the pull rod 5 remains in the relatively high position even when the lid 3 is pivoted by hand into the open position in
The advantage of the use of a pull member such as a pull rod or pull wire is that more direct operation of the lid is possible by this means than with a push rod. This advantage comes to the forefront especially in the case of larger containers with a large lid. A pull rod provides a relatively rigid transmission. A push rod has the disadvantage that the rigidity thereof is less as a consequence of kinking phenomena.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1026542 | Jul 2004 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/NL2005/000468 | 7/1/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/9/2009 |