The present invention relates to trays for the display of merchandise in supermarkets and other stores and particularly to merchandise display trays comprising a base formed of longitudinally extending wires for supporting the merchandise and slideably mounting a pusher member to urge a column of products forwardly as individual packages are removed from the front of the display.
In the display of merchandise in stores and supermarkets, it is important that the products be presented in a neat and orderly manner, with the front packages of a partly depleted column thereof positioned at the front of the display, where they are easily seen and accessed by customers. For this purpose, it is common to utilize display trays provided with spring-actuated pushers that automatically push forward on a column of packages and serve to advance the entire column forwardly each time a package is removed from the front of the display.
In order to re-stock a tray having a spring actuated pusher, the pusher first must be pushed to the rear of the tray and held there while the tray is reloaded. With trays constructed of plastic materials, this can conveniently be done by molding a notch or the like into the back of the tray to engage the retracted pusher and hold it until released by the store personnel after reloading the tray. However, trays formed with wire bases are in widespread and increasing usage because of cost and certain functional advantages, particularly in connection with refrigerated displays. One potential disadvantage of wire base trays, however, lies in comparative difficulty of locking the spring-loaded pusher in a retracted position during restocking. One known technique involves mounting a latching device at the back of the pusher which automatically latches to the back of the tray when the pusher is fully retracted for loading. However, to a large and increasing extent, supermarkets are using very tight planograms for the display of merchandise, with very little space above or at the sides of the trays, at the back. Accordingly, it can be very difficult, and sometimes impossible, to reach to the back of the display to release a latch device after the tray has been loaded with merchandise, because of tightly packed adjacent trays and little overhead clearance. Moreover, the latching device does not function to hold the tray in an intermediate position, which can be desired in certain instances.
The present invention is directed to a novel, simplified and economical arrangement for locking of a spring-loaded pusher at the back of a wire tray, in a manner that renders the release of the pusher of a reloaded tray both quick and easy and, in many cases, an automatic result of completion of the reloading procedure. The invention is particularly applicable to merchandise display trays in which the base is comprised of a plurality of longitudinally extending wires which support the product and also slideably mount a pusher, typically of plastic material, which is of inverted Y-shaped or V-shaped configuration having spaced apart front and back panels. A locking member is associated with one of the panels, preferably the front panel, and is formed with a slot or opening to embrace one or more wires of the base. The slot is formed with sharp edges which, when the locking member is disposed at an appropriate angle with respect to the wires embraced thereby, lockingly engage the embraced wire or wires and lock the locking member in its then position, typically at or near the back of the tray. The return spring normally acts on the front panel of the pusher to urge the pusher forwardly on the tray. However, in the arrangement of the invention, the spring acts on the pusher through the locking member such that, when the locking member is locked in position on the wire base, there is no forward spring force acting on the pusher, which thus remains in its retracted position for reloading of the tray.
When reloading has been completed, the locking member is tilted back to its normal position, in which its locking edges no longer grip the tray wires. The locking member is then free to move, and is urged forwardly by the spring, along with the pusher, advancing the products to the front of the tray. With the system of the invention, re-tilting of the locking member to its normal position can be effected from the front of the tray, by momentarily pushing rearward at the front of the column of packages. Moreover, in a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, when the tray is refilled to capacity, insertion of the last package will automatically push backward on the pusher enough to cause the locking member to be tilted to a release position and thus automatically return the tray to normal operation.
In various embodiments of the invention, the locking member can be movable separately from the product pusher or alternatively fixed to one of the panels of the pusher.
For a more complete understanding of the above and other advantageous features of the invention, reference should be made to the following Detailed Description of the Invention, and to the accompanying drawings described below
Referring now to the drawings,
A product pusher 29 is slideably supported on the wires 19-22 of the base and is urged in a forwardly direction by a coiled strip spring 30. In the illustrated arrangement, the product pusher is an extruded shape of suitable plastic material and comprises a normally flat, normally upright front panel 31 and a back panel 32 which is integrally joined with the front panel and extends rearwardly and downward therefrom. In the illustrated pusher, the back panel 32 joins the front panel at a junction level located a short distance (e.g., 30% of the height of the front panel) below the top edge of the front panel, forming somewhat of an inverted Y-shaped cross sectional configuration. However, the front and back panels can be joined at the upper edges of both, in an inverted V-shaped cross section, if desired. Likewise, in the illustrated embodiment of the invention the product pusher is formed of a plastic material, with the front and back panels being integrally joined and having a flexible relationship. However, in theory, the front and back panels could be formed of relatively non-flexible materials hingedly joined to each other.
As shown in
As shown in
In a preferred form of the invention, the display tray is provided with a locking member 38, shown in
As shown in
In the first illustrated form of the invention, the locking member is formed of stiff sheet metal, and the slot 41 is punched out of the metal of the lower portion 40, such that the axis of the opening is substantially perpendicular to the plane of the lower portion 40. The arrangement is such that the upper and lower walls 43, 44 of the slot 41 lie at a shallow angle to the wires 20, 21 when the upper portion 39 of the locking member 38 is in a generally vertical orientation, as shown in
In a conventional display tray of the type shown herein, the coil spring 30 acts directly against the back of the pusher front panel 31, so that the product pusher 29 is at all times urged in a forwardly direction. In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, however, and as shown in
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the slot 41 has a height that is somewhat greater than the diameter of the wires 19-22. Accordingly, when the locking member is disposed in an upright position, as shown in
For larger trays, for example using base wires of 0.177 inch diameter, the slot 41 is made with a greater height, for example of 0.300 inch. It may also be advantageous, in such cases, to form the locking member with a somewhat greater bend between the upper and lower portions 39, 40, for example about 32°. In either case the combination of wire diameter, slot height and angle of bend is intended to cause the corners 45, 46 to dig in and lock with the wires 20, 21 when the upper portion of the locking member is given a forward tilt of about 10° from the upright position shown in
In normal operations of the tray, the front pusher panel 31 is substantially vertical, as shown in
In order to release the product pusher from its retracted and locked position, force can be applied to upper portions of the front pusher panel 31 to return that panel to an upright orientation. This in turn causes the locking member 38 to return to an upright orientation, as shown in
An advantageous feature of the invention is that the product pusher 29 may be locked in any intermediate position desired by the user and does not have to be retracted all the way to the back of the tray. As shown in the drawings, the forward pressure of coil spring 30 tends to seat the coil in the bottom of the Vee formed between the upper and lower portions 39, 40 of the locking member 38, which tends to urge the upper portion 39 of locking member forwardly against the back of the pusher panel 31. Accordingly, when the bottom of the panel 31 is pushed rearwardly, the resisting action of the spring 30 can cause sufficient forward tilt on the panel and locking member to achieve the desired locking action at an intermediate position on the base wires 19-22. However, where the spring 30 is designed to have a relatively light force, perhaps insufficient to impart a tilt to the pusher panel 31, the user can manually squeeze together the lower portions of the front and rear pusher panels 31, 32, which automatically causes the front panel to tilt forwardly to achieve the desired locking action.
In the above described embodiment of the invention, the locking member 38 is separate from the product pusher 29, which has certain advantages in that locking members can be easily retrofitted into existing displays, without requiring storekeepers replace their existing inventory of trays. Thus, for converting existing displays, all that is required is to insert the locking member between the front and back panels 31, 32 of the pusher panel, in front of the spring 30.
In a second embodiment of the invention, shown in
The illustrated form of the modified locking element 50 is of flat configuration. Accordingly the slot 41a formed in the lower portion thereof is disposed an angle to the principal vertical plane of the element 50, somewhat corresponding to the 26°-32° bend angle of the lower portion of the locking element 38 of the first described embodiment. The depth of the slot 41a, measured vertically, is somewhat greater than the diameter of the wires 20, 21 on which is it positioned, such that when the locking element is in a vertical orientation it can slide easily on the wires. However, if the pusher panel 31a and locking member 50 are tilted forward somewhat (e.g., 10°), the diagonally opposite edges 45a, 46a of the locking element will dig into the wires 20, 21 and lock the member 50 and panel 31a in a fixed position on the wires. Operation of the pusher 29a and its locking member 50 is otherwise generally as described with respect to the embodiment of
The invention, in any of its forms, is uniquely advantageous in providing for the ability to lock a product pusher in any retracted position on a wire base display tray, along with the ability to release the pusher for forward movement from the front of display. In many supermarkets, product displays can be extremely tight together, with little clearance at the sides and also above and below. In such cases, it can be very difficult, if indeed possible at all, to access the rear of a filled display in order to release a locked product pusher. With the arrangement of the invention, when a tray is fully restocked, insertion of the last package will automatically release the locked pusher. Otherwise, a rearward push on the front of the column of packages will effect the desired release.
Pursuant to the invention, the locking mechanism can be easily retrofitted into existing displays or inexpensively incorporated into the original manufacture. It solves a problem of long standing with respect to display trays with product pushers mounted on a wire base structure.
It should be understood, however, that the forms of the invention herein specifically illustrated and described are intended to be representative only and not limiting of the invention. Accordingly, reference should be made to the following appended claims in determining the full scope of the invention.
The present application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of the U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/443,913, filed on Feb. 17, 2011, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61443913 | Feb 2011 | US |