The invention relates generally to cabinets and cabinet door assemblies, and more particularly to pocket door cabinets.
Cabinets are often used for storage of items. Cabinets allow for storage of items, generally out of view and often without the need for constructing built-in fixtures in houses, offices or other structures.
Often cabinets include a storage enclosure accessible by a door. The door may be a sliding door, which has an advantage of the door remaining within the footprint of the cabinet. A disadvantage of a sliding door, however, is that the door, or a part of the door, blocks easy access to a portion of the enclosure. The door may also be a hinged door, which has the advantage of providing more complete access to the enclosure and its contents, but has the disadvantage of extending beyond the footprint of the cabinet when the door is open.
One type of a cabinet which combines many of the advantages of a cabinet with a sliding door and a cabinet with a hinged door is a pocket door cabinet. In a pocket door cabinet the doors open in a hinged manner, allowing easy access to the contents of the enclosure. The door is also coupled to a slidable assembly such that the door, once open, may be moved into a hidden position within the cabinet itself. The door is usually slid into place against a side wall of the superstructure of the cabinet. In some instances, a false wall is provided within the cabinet so as to form a storage place, or pocket, for storage of the door.
A number of issues are raised in the design and construction of a pocket door cabinet. For example, a slidable assembly is generally mounted within the pocket door cabinet, with the door in some manner hinged to the slide assembly. Attempts by user to close the cabinet door prior to full extension of the door outside of the superstructure of the cabinet may result in damage to the door or the cabinet. As the door is generally made of wood, the damage is usually to the door as it hits the slidable structure, which is generally metal, prior to full extension away from the slidable structure in the cabinet. In addition, at times modification or replacement, or mere installation, of the slidable structure may be difficult due to the constrained volume of the pocket door area.
The present invention provides a pocket door cabinet and slide assembly. In one aspect, the invention provides an enclosure with a pocket door, comprising an enclosure formed of a top wall, a bottom wall, and side walls interconnecting the top wall and the bottom wall; a slidable structure mounted within the enclosure approximate a one of the side walls, the slidable structure translatable from approximate a front of the enclosure towards a rear of the enclosure; a door hingedly coupled to the slidable structure, the door being moveable, with the slidable structure approximate the front of the enclosure, from a closed position to an open position, the door being translatable with the slidable structure towards the rear of the enclosure with the door in the open position, the door being within the enclosure between the slidable structure and the one of the side wall when the slidable structure is translated towards the rear of the enclosure.
Another aspect of the invention provides a slidable structure for a pocket door cabinet, comprising a slide rail adapted to be coupled to a false wall of the cabinet; a slidable member coupled to the slide rail, the slidable member being translatable from a rear position on the slide rail to a forward position on the slide rail; and a self-open mechanism adapted to force the slide member to the forward position.
Another aspect of the invention provides a slidable structure for a pocket door cabinet, comprising a slide rail; means for coupling a false wall to a first side of the slide rail, the means for coupling being attachable to a bottom or top of a cabinet enclosure; a slidable member translatably coupled to the slide rail; and means for coupling a door to the slidable member.
Another aspect of the invention provides a slidable structure for a pocket door cabinet, comprising an upper slide rail with an upper slidable member translatably coupled to the upper slide rail; a lower slide rail with a lower slidable member translatably coupled to the lower slide rail, and a connecting member pivotally coupling the upper slidable member and the lower slidable member.
These and other aspects of the invention are more fully comprehended in view of the figures and discussion of this disclosure.
In the embodiment of
Sliding members 27 are slidably, or rollably, coupled to the slide rails. The sliding members may be coupled to the slide rails, for example, using ball bearings or roller bearings or the like. The sliding members, therefore, are adapted to slidably, or rollably, translate on the slide rails from the front to the rear of the cabinet.
Offset brackets 29 are mounted to the sliding members, with offset bracket extending up from a lower sliding member and another offset bracket extending down from an upper sliding member. The offset brackets include a jog 31 towards the side wall, such that leading tabs 33 of the offset brackets are approximate the side wall. A connecting member 35, which may be termed a follower, couples the two offset brackets. The connecting member couples the offset brackets, and therefore the sliding members, such that the sliding members move substantially in parallel and maintain substantially the same position with respect to one another as the sliding members slide on the slide rails.
The door is hinged to the offset brackets. As illustrated in
The mounting brackets are also used for mounting a false wall 39 within the interior of the cabinet. The false wall is parallel to and inset from the side wall, with the slidable structure 21 between the false wall and the side wall. The false wall provides a more well defined storage volume for the cabinet, with the slidable structure in a volume, or pocket, separated from the storage volume. In operation, and as will be discussed more fully with respect to
More particularly, the lower slide rail is coupled to outside faces of the front and rear U-brackets. The channels of the U-brackets, or the width of the U-brackets, are dimensioned so as to receive the false wall. The false wall, therefore, is mounted within the cabinet by mounting the false wall to the U-brackets, with the slide rails on the outside faces of the U-brackets facing the side wall and within the pocket. Mounting the false wall to the U-brackets is beneficial in that removal of the false wall is more easily accomplished, providing easier access to the slidable structure.
The false wall is mounted to the top and bottom of the cabinet using U-shaped brackets 73, with the false wall within the U of the U-shaped brackets. Slide rails 75 are affixed to pocket side faces of the U-shaped brackets. Sliding members 77 are coupled to the slide rails.
Returning briefly to
As shown in
The false wall is mounted to the bottom of the cabinet using a U-shaped bracket 99. The false wall is placed within a channel of the U-bracket 101. A slide rail 103 is mounted on the outside of the U-bracket within the pocket. The slide rail is substantially C-shaped, with arcuate raceways 105 interconnected by a web 107. The web is coupled to the outside face 109 of the U-bracket. A slidable member 111 is coupled to the slide rail, with, for example, ball bearings (not shown). An offset bracket 113 extends from the slidable member in an offset fashion, first towards the side wall and then upwards parallel to the side wall. The upwardly extending portion 115 of the offset bracket is coupled to a connecting member, which connects to a similar structure at the top (not shown in
The sliding structure of
The flange and self-open mechanism may be more clearly seen in
The self-opening mechanism includes a body 171 with a substantially linear cutout 173, with a rear lock opening 175. A spring 177 is maintained within the body, with the spring biasing a pin 179 extending through the cutout towards the flange. In operation, when the sliding member, and therefore the flange, is at the rear of the cabinet the pin is held in the rear lock opening, with the spring compressed and biasing the pin towards a front surface of the rear lock opening. As the sliding member, and therefore the flange, moves forward, the push ramp contacts the pin and biases the pin out of the rear lock opening. With the pin free of the rear lock opening the spring biases the pin towards the front of the self-open mechanism, with the pin pressing against the camming protrusion. The force of the pin on the camming protrusion forces the flange, and therefore the sliding member and any door coupled to the sliding member, forward. Thus, the self-open mechanism assists in ensuring that the door is fully extended from the pocket, and the possibility of the door contacting the sliding structure, or the cabinet side wall, is reduced.
When the door is inserted into the pocket, the camming protrusion forces the pin back towards the rear lock opening. Once the pin reaches the rear of the cutout the camming protrusion forces the pin down into the rear lock opening. As the spring force is overcome to so move the door, the self-open mechanism also provides a detent out in inserting the door into the pocket.
Details of the self-open mechanism are shown in
The body also includes a cutaway slice 197 approximate the rear lock opening. The cutaway slice slices in front of the rear lock opening, so that when the pin is pressed against the front of the rear lock opening by the force of the spring, the slice compresses and dissipates some of the force exerted against the portion of the body forming a front face of the rear lock opening.
The aperture at the front of the body is in the form of a slot. The pin is able to move within the slot, thereby allowing some translation of the pin, for example when the shoe is translated perpendicular to the general line of the post when the pin is forced into the rear lock opening.
The connecting member is placed against the face plate, with the flange along an edge of the connecting member. The face plate includes upper screw holes 237 and lower screw holes 239. The upper screw holes are approximate an upper end of the face plate, and the lower screw holes are approximate a lower end of the face plate. The upper screw holes and the lower screw holes are adapted to receive a screw or the like with the connecting member positioned against the face plate, screws may be passed through the upper screw holes and the lower screw holes and into the connecting member so as to securely hold the connecting member against the face plate.
The face plate is juxtaposed against a receiving plate 241 of the offset bracket. The receiving plate includes a pivot aperture 249. The pivot aperture is approximate an upper portion of the receiving plate, and midway the length of the receiving plate. The pivot aperture receives a stud 245 extending from the face plate. In-some embodiments the stud is a rivet, for example a shoulder rivet. The face plate, which is part of the pivoting attachment, is therefore able to pivot about the stud.
A further stud 247 protrudes through a semi-cylindrical cutout 251 in the receiving plate. The semi-cylindrical cutout is substantially below the pivot aperture, and as the pivoting attachment is pivoted about the stud in the pivot aperture, the further stud moves within the cylindrical cutout.
The further stud is threaded to allow for a nut, such as a wing nut or a lock nut, to be screwed onto the further stud. Thus, the pivoting attachment may be pivoted about the stud in the pivot aperture, with the position of the pivoting attachment, and therefore the connecting member, fixed in a desired position by tightening the wing nut.
Fine adjustment of the position of the pivoting attachment may also be provided through the use of a blade screwdriver or the like being inserted through fine adjustment cutouts 253 and into blade holes 255. The fine adjustment cutouts are in the receiving plate of the offset bracket, and the blade holes are on the face plate of the pivoting attachment.
As may be seen in
Returning to
The pivoting attachment is beneficial in many ways. For example, discrepancies or tolerances in positioning various items of the pocket door cabinet, some related to the slide assembly and some generally, may result in misalignment of the cabinet door. A misadjustment of the cabinet door may be compensated for by adjusting an angle of the connecting member, thereby the relative position of the hinges coupling the cabinet door to the slidable assembly. In addition, at times the weight of the cabinet door itself may cause some relative movement of portions of the slidable assembly. Such movement may be compensated for through adjustment of the connecting member as previously described. In addition, the slidable assemblies may be effectively pre-loaded through use of the pivoting attachment.
Although the invention has been described with respect to certain embodiments, it should be recognized that the present invention includes the claims and their equivalents supported by the disclosure.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040239216 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |