The present invention relates generally to a pinch grip hangers, and more particularly pertains to a pinch grip hanger used for hanging pants and skirts for shipment to retailers and display of the same in a retail environment. The improved hanger has reduced depth, a greater jaw opening, a greater jaw length, and more constant spring force than prior art hangers.
Consumer taste and fashion have dictated a desire for mass-produced, but well-fitted garments, which are distributed and sold throughout the United States. Large national retailers of clothing generally contract with a plurality of clothing manufacturers to produce uniform standardized clothing, which is essentially identical from batch to batch, even though manufactured by different entities. These manufacturers in turn produce the clothing at their own plants, or in many cases, subcontract the production of the garments to manufacturers based in the Far East, for instance, in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea.
In the retail clothing industry clothing is typically suspended from hangers at the point of purchase. Such hangers are often inexpensive ship-on types and under prevailing garment-on-hanger programs, the garment is shipped from the manufacturer to the retailer while suspended from a hanger. Traditional garment-on-hanger pant and skirt hangers used spring clips that were manually pushed into a locking position to secure the pants or skirts to the hanger. In these hangers, a steel retaining clip was manually clamped over a clam shell garment grip to secure the garment. Use of the hangers in this device required a manual operation to slide the steel clip over the clam shell to close the retention clip on the garment.
However, these hangers were not popular as the physical force needed to close a hanger on a thick waist band could result in increased time and labor costs to load the hanger and complaints of inadvertently broken finger nails were common. For these reasons, pinch grip hangers have become popular in recent years. However, pinch grip hangers generally have greater depth than clip hangers, resulting in fewer garments per rod or per loop when shipping the garments, and a tendency to inadvertently drop the garments when subjected to unexpected shipping loads, as adjacent hangers impact one another and open one or more of the pinch grips. Inadvertent opening of the pinch grips can also occur in a retail store environment, as customers push the garments to one side to better view a garment of interest. Moreover, the length of the pinch grip was not sufficient to grip the waistband of certain garments, so that on impact, the grip would engage the waistband of a garment, causing the garment to easily slip out of the pinch grip hanger. Various guards have been proposed in the prior art to prevent the inadvertent opening of the pinch grips, but these guards also contribute to increased depth for the product.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,446,996 and 4,826,056 are typical of early pinch grip hangers intended for mass merchandise market that used open and unprotected pinch grips. Frequently, these pinch grips would open and drop the garment to the floor if the pinch grips were pressed together, as might happen as a result of over crowding a display rod with too many garments, or even as a result of a customer pushing garments aside to better view a single garment of interest.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,194,274 and 5,082,153 are typical of the clamping hangers referred to above, which used a steel spring to secure the jaws of a clam shell clip together. These hangers, while relatively secure in clamping the garment, required significant physical force to close the clam shell clip of the hanger on a thick waist band. This could result in increased time and labor costs to load the hanger and complaints of inadvertently broken finger nails from retail store personnel were common, with occasional repetitive stress injury complaints from factory workers who were loading thousands of garments a day into hangers of this style.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,946,915, illustrates a prior art hanger with the fixed jaw of a pinch grip hanger offset to the rear of the hanger support bar, and a guard member extending outwardly to protect the moveable jaw when the hangers are pressed together. The design of the pinch grip utilized in this device results in a relatively thick hanger with a modest jaw opening.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,400,932, 6,019,261 and 6,021,933 are typical of more recent hanger designs that incorporate a guard to prevent the inadvertent opening of pinch grips during shipment. In these designs, the pinch grip with a fixed and a moveable jaw is used, with the fixed jaw integrally molded with the hanger support bar. One or more guard members then extend outwardly from the support bar to protect the moveable jaw from inadvertent actuation. While these designs achieve their intended effect, they are relatively thick, reducing the number of hangers that can be shipped on any given support bar. Further, as a result of the pinch grip design utilized, the maximum opening of the pinch grip is limited.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,009,807 is a prior art pinch grip hanger having the pinch grip offset from the center line of the support bar of the hanger. However, in this design, pressing two adjacent hangers together would result in opening the pinch grip, and release of the garment.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,516,014 and 5,785,216 disclose the use of a thermoplastic rubber, sold under the name Kraton, by Shell Oil Company. The thermoplastic rubber provides a non-slip grip for the hanger.
The above prior art pinch grip hangers use metal springs with a relatively constant spring rate, which means the pinch grip requires progressively greater force to open as the jaws are opened, i.e., the further the jaws are opened, the greater the bias loading exerted by the spring. This makes it difficult to fully open the jaws of some of these hangers when it is necessary to insert a relatively thick waistband.
These prior art pinch grip hangers are loaded manually, since both pinch grips are normally biased to a closed position by a spring and both must be opened to load a garment into the grips. At the present time this requires an operator to perform four steps. Using one hand the operator must open the first pinch grip and then using the other hand to suspend the garment, one side of the garment is placed in the grip. This process is then repeated for the other pinch grip. With the second pinch grip the operator must also simultaneously tension the garment between the clips, and since both hands are already occupied, the tensioning step may require additional manual movements. At a minimum, four manual steps or movements are required for each garment that is loaded, resulting in relatively high labor costs for loading the garments.
These prior art hangers are difficult to automate as they are not designed to stack load in a magazine, and they frequently have a single pair of projecting high points which causes the hangers to not stack evenly in a magazine. Further, the high points can result in the hanger snagging on the next to be fed hanger in an automated feed mechanism.
It is an object of the invention to provide an inexpensive secure and protected pinch grip hanger of reduced width to allow greater density of garments during shipment.
It is another object of the invention to provide a secure and protected pinch grip hanger of reduced width having a relatively wide jaw opening to facilitate insertion of garments.
It is another object of the invention to provide a secure and protected pinch grip hanger of reduced width that has a multi-stage spring to provide a relatively constant bias force as the jaws are opened, thus minimizing the total force necessary to fully open the pinch grip.
It is another object of the invention to provide a secure and protected pinch grip hanger of reduced width having a relatively long grip to facilitate insertion of a waistband of a garment above the gripping members.
It is another object of the invention to provide a secure and protected pinch grip hanger of reduced width that is particularly adapted for magazine feed and the automated loading of garments.
These and other objects of the invention are met in an improved pinch grip hanger having a hook and a support bar suspended from said hook with the support bar defining a horizontal axis. A pair of pinch grips are provided, with a pinch grip mounted on either end of the support bar. Each of the pinch grips define a first depth in a direction perpendicular to said horizontal axis. Each of the pinch grip has a first and a second pinch grip jaw, with the first jaw mounted on and integrally molded with the support bar at a fixed location. The second jaw is pivotally mounted on said first jaw and spring biased into engagement with said first jaw. The second jaw has a user engagement portion extending upwardly from the pivotal mounting, and a garment engaging portion extending downwardly from said pivotal mounting to a distance that facilitates engaging a garment below the waistband. The user engagement portion enables a user to open the pinch grip for insertion or release of a garment in said pinch grip. A multi-stage spring encompasses the first and second jaws and bias the pinch grip to a closed position to clamp and suspend a garment between said first and second pinch grip jaws in normal use. The hanger further includes an offset mounting portion securing the first jaw of the pinch grip to the horizontal support bar, such that said first pinch grip jaw is offset from the centerline of the hanger by approximately one half the distance of the first dept, thereby reducing the depth of the hanger in normal use.
The pinch grips are protected in two ways. First, an outwardly extending member is mounted on at least one side of the pinch grip, extending from a rear plane of the pinch grip in a direction perpendicular to said support bar to define a fixed guard for the user engagement portion of the second jaw. The fixed guard extending perpendicularly from said rear plane of said pinch grip beyond said user engagement portion when said pinch grip has a garment secured therein, such that when two or more improved pinch grip hangers are suspended from their respective hooks with garments clamped in their respective pinch grips, the fixed guard on the first of two hangers will engage the rear plane of the pinch grip of the second of said two hangers when the hangers are pressed together, thereby preventing accidental actuation of the pinch grips and release of the garments. Second, a pair of arches are formed on the pinch grip jaws, below the pivot axis of the jaws, such that when two or more pinch grip hangers are suspended from their respective hooks with garments clamped in their respective pinch grips, the arch or guard portion on the second jaw of the first of two hangers will engage the rearward facing arch formed on the back of the first pinch grip jaw of the second of said two hangers. Since the engagement is below the pivot axis of each of the pinch grips, when the hangers are pressed together, the fixed arch and the moving arch engage each other, not the user engagement portion, thus preventing accidental actuation of the pinch grips and release of the garments.
The second or moveable pinch grip jaw is mounted on posts which extend outwardly from the first pinch grip jaw, through the center axis of the hanger. The moveable pinch grip jaw is secured to the fixed pinch grip jaw by a multi-stage spring which wraps around both arches. The arches are contoured, but the spring is formed with relatively linear engagement portions. When the spring initially engages the plastic arch to be clamped, the effective length of the spring is relatively short, and the spring effect exerted is relatively stiff. As the jaw is opened, it opens to disengage sequential linear portions of the spring along the plastic arch, thus increasing the effective length of the spring. Thus the fixed spring constant, and the relative increasing bias of the spring as it is progressively bent, is offset by the increasing length of the leverage of the spring against its respective plastic member, so that as the spring is biased to its fully opened position, the spring constant is now biased against a longer leverage, making it easier for the user to fully open the jaws of the pinch grip.
FIG. 3(a) is a diagrammatic and perspective view of the inside of the moveable jaw of the pinch grip of the present invention.
FIG. 3(b) is a diagrammatic and perspective view of the inside of the fixed jaw of the pinch grip of the present invention.
FIG. 3(c) is a diagrammatic and perspective view of the inside of the elongated moveable jaw of the pinch grip of the present invention.
FIG. 3(d) is a diagrammatic and perspective view of the inside of the elongated fixed jaw of the pinch grip of the present invention.
FIG. 6(a) is a side view of the pinch grip of the present invention, particularly illustrating the relationship of the jaws and the spring when the pinch grip is closed.
FIG. 6(b) is a side view of the pinch grip of the present invention, particularly illustrating the relationship of the jaws and the spring when the pinch grip in normal operation, as for example in gripping a garment.
FIG. 6(c) is a side view of the pinch grip of the present invention, particularly illustrating the relationship of the jaws and the spring when the pinch grip is wide open.
FIG. 6(d) is a side view of the elongated pinch grip of the present invention, particularly illustrating one embodiment of the elongated pinch grip when the pinch grip is closed.
FIG. 6(e) is a side view of the elongated pinch grip of the present invention, particularly illustrating a second embodiment of the elongated pinch grip when the pinch grip is closed.
FIG. 6(f) is a side view of the elongated pinch grip of the present invention, particularly illustrating a third embodiment of the elongated pinch grip when the pinch grip is closed.
FIG. 10(a) is an end view of the multi-stage spring of the present invention.
FIG. 10(b) is an front view of the multi-stage spring illustrated in
FIGS. 12(a) and 12(c) illustrate an end view of a first and second version, respectively, of a first embodiment of a size indicator of the present invention for engaging the first web of the hanger illustrated in FIG. 2.
FIG. 12(b) illustrates a top view of the size indicators of FIGS. 12(a) and 12(c).
FIG. 13(a) illustrates an enlarged view of the first web of FIG. 2.
FIG. 13(b) illustrates the enlarged view of the web of
FIG. 14(a) illustrates a partial sectional view of the web of
FIG. 14(b) illustrates the first web and the size indicator of FIG. 14(a) wherein the pivoting latch is being pivoted to release the size indicator therefrom.
The improved pinch grip hanger 100 of the present invention is illustrated in plan view in
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
The central support bar 105 is formed of a square M-shaped cross-section, further illustrated in cross section in
The construction of a typical pinch grip is more fully illustrated in
The fixed jaw 10b is formed with an arch with a pair of u-shaped molded channels 15a and 15b which strengthen the fixed jaw and provide additional strength to resist deflection in the lateral direction. Likewise, the moveable jaw 12b is formed with a similar pair of molded u-shaped channels 15c and 15d for the same purpose.
Each of the jaws maybe fitted with a molded non-slip pad 16a as illustrated in
In a first embodiment of the invention, integrally molded teeth are used to engage the garment. As illustrated in
The teeth 16c, 16d are very effective in retaining garments within the hanger. The increased retention power of the teeth 16c, 16d is derived from channeling the full retention power of the spring member 14a or 14b through the narrow contact area of the teeth 16c, 16d, as compared to alternative gripping surfaces. Accordingly, the teeth 16c, 16d of the elongated pinch grip hangers are particularly suited for rugged and heavy garments such as denim jeans with wide waistbands. Garments made of rugged material have relatively more resiliency than, for example, garments suitable for casual or formal wear. The teeth 16c, 16d can compress garments made from rugged material without there being the concern that the teeth 16c, 16d will leave noticeable impressions at the locations where the teeth 16c, 16d engage the garment.
The teeth 16c on the movable jaw 12b preferably have the same length and width of the teeth 16d on the fixed jaw 10b, although segmenting either or both of the teeth is possible without affecting the operation of the teeth 16c, 16d. The teeth 16c, 16d are designed such that when the pinch grip jaw is closed and not engaging a garment, the outer width of the pinch grip hanger at the teeth location, illustrated as “W” in
In a preferred embodiment, the teeth are preferably formed so that, when the jaw is closed and not in use, the tip of the bottommost tooth 16d on the movable jaw 12b meets the tip of the bottommost tooth 16d on the fixed jaw 10b, as illustrated in
As will be more fully described with respect to
The use of the section 200 allows the pinch grip jaw to grip clothing below a waistband. Gripping clothing below a waistband is beneficial because the waistband is often accompanied with additional bands of fabric, making the waistband area the thickest area of the garment. Gripping the garment below the waistband area thus effectively traps the garment within the pinch grip structure. In comparison, prior art pinch grip hangers gripped the garment on the waistband, and very frequently the friction coefficient of the cloth material was insufficient to hold a heavy garment, with the result that the garment tended to slip out of the grip of the pinch grip hanger in response to an impact on the grip, or sudden movement of the grip. Once the garment began to slip, there was no structure to stop the garment from falling on the floor.
A second embodiment of the invention uses non-slip pads rather than teeth to genage the garments. When non-slip pads are used as the garment engaging means, the non-slip pads 16a are formed from a thermoplastic rubber such as Raplan, or the Kraton family of materials manufactured by Shell Oil Company. This material has a high coefficient of friction when engaging a fabric, and is durable enough to maintain pad integrity during repeated clamping cycles. The pads 16a are post molded by injection molding through openings 17a and 17b in the fixed jaw and openings, and openings 17c and 17d in the moveable jaws into corresponding recesses on the garment engagement side, such as recess 16b in
As will be more fully described with respect to
The pivot post 18a and 18b and the sockets 19a and 19b define a pivot axis for the pinch grip with the pinch grip having a garment engaging means 16 mounted below the pivot axis. The user engagement portion 24 extends upwardly from the pivot axis to enable the user to open the pinch grip for insertion of the garment between the garment engagement pads 16. The user engagement portion 24 also enables the user to open the pinch grip for release of the garment in the pinch grip. The first fixed jaw also includes a forwardly extending flange or guard member 26 which is mounted on the forward face of the fixed pinch grip jaw 10b and extends forwardly pass the center line of the hanger support bar 105 to prevent the accidental dislodgement of garments from the pinch grip when two adjacent hangers are inadvertently pressed together.
The operation of the guard 26 can be better illustrated in a comparison of
As described above, protection of the user engagement portion 24 is necessary in a pinch grip hanger to prevent inadvertent actuation of the pinch grip when two or more of the improved pinch grip hangers are suspended from their respective hooks and placed adjacent one another. Without the guard, if the hangers are pressed together by shipping loads, or eager shoppers, the pinch grip will be opened, allowing the garment to fall. The present invention avoids this problem in two ways. In the first way, the fixed guard 26 of the first hanger will engage the rear plane 30 of the pinch grip to the second of two hangers when the hangers are pressed together thereby preventing engagement of the user engagement portion 24 and accidental opening of the pinch grip and release of the garments. As noted earlier such inadvertent opening can occur in a retail store environment as customers push the garments to one side to better view a garment of choice or can occur in the shipping environment when unexpected shipping loads occur on the container or truck in which the garments are being transferred. When such loads are encountered, adjacent hangers may impact one another and open one or more of the pinch grips if the pinch grips are not protected.
The pinch grip illustrated in
The plurality of hangers is illustrated in
It should be noted that the offset placement of the pinch grips and the dimensioning of guard 26 and the user engagement portion 24 provide a hanger of reduced depth as will be hereinafter described. First as noted with respect to
As was described previously, and as can be seen in
It should also be noted that the pinch grip of the present invention may also be opened to a wider dimension than the pinch grips of the prior art. For example, in the prior art hanger illustrated in U.S. Pat. No. 6,021,933, the plastic teeth utilized in this hanger begin to impede the insertion of any garment having a waistband thicker than ½ inch. When gripping a ½ inch thick object, the outside maximum dimension of the prior art pinch grip is approximately 1 inch. In contrast, and as illustrated in
As will be noted in
As will be noted in
The present invention also includes a multi-stage spring 15 which will now be described with respect to
These safety locks serve two purposes. First, with the prior art hangers, it is possible to inadvertently dislocate or remove the moveable jaw, by pulling downwardly on the jaw. This can happen inadvertently by stress loading the garment in the grip in the downward direction, particularly if the moveable jaw has a stronger grip on the garment than the fixed jaw. This downward force may be exerted by the garment in response to a sudden change in direction of the container or truck in which the garment is being transported, or by a customer or sales person trying to pull the garment out of the pinch grip before the grip is fully open. This downward force is particularly noticeable where the elongated pinch grip hanger contains a garment having a distinct waistband, and a customer pulls downward so as to jam the waistband against the teeth 16c, 16d of the pinch grip jaw. Secondly, once the jaw of the prior art devices are dislocated, it is possible for the spring to fly off the pinch grip, and if this happens in a retail environment it may strike a customer or sales person. The returns, or hooks 14c, 14d enable the spring to be locked into the pinch grips via the rib configuration molded into the pinch grip jaws, as illustrated in FIGS. 6(a)-6(c). If a downward force is exerted on the moveable jaw, the retention rib 12c is caught by the hook 14d, locking the moveable jaw to the hanger. Downward force on the spring is resisted by the engagement of the spring at 14e-14f against the fixed pinch grip jaw 10b, and stopped entirely by the hook 14c as it engages retention rib 10c. As noted in
When the spring is installed as illustrated in
As illustrated in
The magazines 102a, 102b are adjustably suspended above main base 94, and attached to intermediate base members 104a, 104b by means of brackets 95a, 95b. Pinch grip ram cylinders 114a, 114b are used to open the hanger pinch grips, and are also attached to base members 104a, 104b. Intermediate base members 104 are supported above main base 94 by means of inverted unshaped support bracket 93. The brackets 95a, 95b suspend the magazines 102a, 102b from the base members 104a, 104b, so that the lower portions of magazines 102a, 102b are elevated a defined distance above main base 94, as will be hereinafter discussed in detail. The main base 94 is supported by legs 98a, 98b and 96, which together provide a stable platform for the device and allow the device to be located at an elevation and location convenient to the operator.
The distance between base members 104a and 104b can be laterally adjusted on support 93 to allow various sizes of hangers 100 to be used in the mechanism. The base members 104 are adjusted by means of adjustment holes, two of which are identified at 92a, 92b. This enables magazines 102a, 102b and ram cylinders 114a, 114b to be moved into proper positions on either side of a centerline axis of the mechanism for use of the mechanism with various hanger lengths or sizes. In a preferred embodiment of the mechanism, the centerline axis is defined by the reciprocal movement of the push plate 106.
The push plate 106 is designed so that other hangers in the magazine 102 are retained in the magazine, and do not snag on the push plate 106 or otherwise leave the magazine when the push plate is in motion. The feed mechanism is a “slice feeder” in which the push plate 106 reciprocates back and forth under the magazine 102 and appears to be slicing off a single hanger 100 with each reciprocation. The dimensions and position of the push plate 106 with respect to the magazine 102 may be adjusted so that the device can accommodate a variety of hanger thickness, or alternately the device may utilize matched sets of magazines and plates, with each set appropriate for a specific hanger design. In operation, the next hanger in the magazine 102 is only released from the magazine 102 when the push plate has fully reciprocated to its rearward position. As the push plate 106 is retracted under the magazines 102, a single hanger 100 is released from the magazine and drops onto main base 94. The bottoms of magazines 102 are adjusted to be approximately one hanger thickness above the main base 94. As the push plate begins its cycle of operation, the push plate 106 reciprocates forwardly to engage the hanger 100 on main base 94. As illustrated in
During the slice feeding, the push plate 106 moves forward and then backwards under the next to be dispensed hanger, with the push plate sliding under the next to be released hanger, which is constrained from movement by magazine 102. The sliding surface of push plate 106 prevents the hanger above the push plate 106 from dropping to the main base 94 until the push plate 106 is fully retracted. At that time, the next to be dispensed hanger is exposed to the main base 94, which allows the stack of hangers to drop downwardly so that the next hanger to be dispensed rests on the main base 94. This hanger is then advanced with the next reciprocation. The thickness of the hanger and the dimensions of the dispensing slot and the thickness of the push plate 106 prevent multiple hangers in the magazine from being dispensed or causing the device to jam on a second hanger.
The present invention is intended to work with either wire hook hangers or plastic hook hangers, and the forgoing description is equally applicable to both types of hangers. Optionally, when plastic hook hangers are used, it may be desirable to automatically affix a size cap to the hanger at the time the hanger is positioned for garment loading. The following description is relevant to this option.
When desired, the present invention enables the size caps to be automatically attached to the hook portion 111 of the hanger 100. As illustrated in
The following is an example of the operation of the present invention utilizing size caps 101 that are mounted on a hanger hook 111. Typically the hanger hook flange 120 and the size cap 101 have engagement formations which require a certain amount of force to overcome the resistance, but upon application of such force in the engagement of the two pieces, the hanger 100 and size cap 101 snap fit to one another. The snap fit may be permanent, as taught by U.S. Pat. No. 5,604,975, or releasable, as taught by U.S. Pat. No. 5,794,363. As noted above, both of these patents are assigned to the assignee of the present invention, and the disclosures of both patents are incorporated herein by reference thereto. As the push plate 106 begins its first reciprocal movement towards the operator, a size cap 101 is removed from the size cap magazine 110. The removed size cap is captured within a cut out or a receptacle 178 (illustrated in
The push plate 106 is advanced and retracted by a reciprocating cylinder 112. In the example shown in
As the push plate 106 is advanced towards the operator, and after the push plate has engaged the size cap and hanger 100, and positioned the hanger at the hanger load position, a control engagement cam 125 engages an pneumatic switch 124, which initiates a pneumatic signal which is sent through the pneumatic control system to actuate a pair of pinch grip cylinder rams 114a, 114b. The stroke of cylinder 112 limits the travel of the push plate 106 so that there is no further movement of the push plate after reaching a stop position and hanger stop 103. When the hanger reaches the stop position, each of the pinch grip cylinders 114a, 114b project rams 122 onto their respective pinch grips of the hanger 100, as illustrated in
With the pinch grips 90a, 90b open and the hanger secured in the stop position, the operator can insert a garment into the now open pinch grips. As illustrated in
The placement of the triggers 116 to each side of the location where the garments are inserted provides an added safety feature for the device. Since there is no opportunity for an operator to inadvertently injure herself while operating the device. This is a result of the dual trigger mechanism, which necessitates that the operator grip the garment at its outer edges, and pull it taut for insertion. The operator must pull the garment outward at its ends with both hands to insure that there is no sagging of the garment between the grips. Thus, both of the triggers are tripped while the garment is in the proximate location after it is inserted into the pinch grips. As a result of requiring the operator to use both hands to hold the garment to trip the triggers, there is a reduced likelihood that the operator can inadvertently injure himself or herself. This increased safety is due largely to the fact that their hands are holding the ends of the garment, and therefore cannot inadvertently engage any of the reciprocating elements of the device.
Upon triggering, two actions take place. Instantly, the pinch grip cylinder rams 122(a) and 122(b) are retracted. The retraction allows the spring force of each pinch grip 90 to return to its normally closed position, thereby securely gripping the garment there between. This permits the operator to lift the hanger and garment combination off of the main base 94, and place the combination elsewhere for further processing. Secondly, the push plate 106 begins moving in a direction away from operator. As the push plate 106 passes the magazine 102, a new hanger 100 drops to the main base 94 and the process begins a new.
Referring again to
Referring Now to
Referring back to
Referring now to
Referring now to
The size indicator 150 includes finger means 134 for engaging the fixed and pivoting latches 140, 142, respectively, such that the size indicator is secured on the web during normal use. However, the size indicator is releasably secured on the web 120 such that it may be released from the web 120a when the pivoting latch 142 is pivoted out of engagement with the finger means 134 of the size indicator when the release force (F) is applied. The finger means 134 preferably comprises an inwardly facing ridge 134a, 134b disposed at each of the foremost edges 130, 132 and projecting inwards towards the channel 129 of the size indicator 150.
In an alternative version, a second size indicator 150a of the first embodiment is illustrated in
Referring back to
The web preferably also has an outermost edge 120d having an outermost portion 120e of a predetermined cross-section. The first version of the size indicator 150 has a trough 124c (
The engagement abutments 126a, 128a cooperate with the trough 144 or the first and second spaced projections 124a, 124b to prevent side to side movement of the size indicator on the web and contribute to a secure and solid attachment of the size indicator tot he hanger.
Referring to
Referring now to
To release the size indicators 150, 150a from the web 120a, a releasing force (F) is applied to the cantilevered end 122 of the pivoting latch 142, preferably by engaging the dimple 141 thereon with a release tool (not shown). The release force (F) results in the pivoting latch 142 to pivot about the living hinge 120c in the direction of arrow A. As can be seen in
While several embodiments and variations of the present invention for a pinch grip hanger mechanism are described in detail herein, it should be apparent that the disclosure and teachings of the present invention will suggest many alternative designs to those skilled in the art.
This is a Continuation-in-Part of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/076,790, filed Feb. 15, 2002.
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WO 9009651 | Aug 1990 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030209577 A1 | Nov 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10076790 | Feb 2002 | US |
Child | 10292128 | US |