The display of merchandise in mass merchandising outlets and the like typically involves extensive shelving installations. Typical forms of display shelving comprise gondola structures forming support stands for the shelving. The gondolas may comprise a base from which extends a back wall panel including .two or more vertical uprights formed with slots or other openings to receive shelving at various levels. Stores frequently try to position shelves with relatively minimal vertical clearance between the contents of one shelf and the position of the shelf next above, in order to maximize the number of shelves, and therefore the amount of merchandise displayed, in a given gondola. However, as vertical shelf spacing becomes more compressed, it becomes more difficult to stock and service individual shelves, particularly lower shelves, because of the difficulty and inconvenience in reaching the back areas of the shelves.
To facilitate access to back portions of the display shelves, some stores install pull-out shelving. Pull-out shelves are mounted at their opposite side edges in such way as to enable them to be temporarily displaced forwardly from the back wall of the gondola, exposing significantly greater areas of the shelf surface, and thereby enabling store personnel to more easily restock and otherwise service the merchandise display. A known form of such pull-out shelving is illustrated in International Publication WO 01/21040 of H. L. Display A. B. The disclosed shelf structure includes a pair of spaced apart side supports which engage opposite end edges of a display shelf, using roller tracks or the like to accommodate easy movement of the shelf even when loaded with product. Locking means are positioned underneath the shelf and are engageable by an operator servicing the shelf, enabling the shelf to be freed up for forward and rearward movement, but locking the shelf firmly in position when released. This allows the shelf to be pulled out for servicing, and then easily returned to its normal display position.
A shelf of the type disclosed in WO 01/21040, while functionally satisfactory, is of relatively complex, and therefore relatively costly construction, which tends to inhibit its widespread usage. The present invention is directed to an improved pull-out shelf structure, of the general type disclosed in WO 01/21040 which, at the same time not only provides superior performance but also is of a significantly improved and simplified (and therefore more economical) construction, and thus more suitable for more widespread employment in mass merchandising and other outlets.
Pursuant to the present invention, a pull-out shelf mechanism is provided in which the side supports for a movable shelving system are both significantly strengthened and simplified in structure, so as to achieve improved performance while at the same time reducing the cost of manufacturing the unit. In the prior art structure referred to, the side supports, in order to accommodate the necessary position locking arrangement, are of rather complex construction, involving several independent components requiring separate manufacturing, handling and assembly. In the structure of the invention, by contrast, the side supports are constructed of a rugged, one-piece metal shape, which both significantly strengthens the side support elements and simultaneously accommodates the locking mechanism without additional components. To this end, the side support elements are formed of a relatively heavy sheet metal material, shaped in a generally L-shaped cross section and thus having significant rigidity. The L-shaped configuration, comprising a vertical side wall and a horizontal bottom wall joined integrally and in one piece therewith, enables an elongated locking slot to be formed within the bottom panel, eliminating the need for extra parts to be constructed and installed as in the prior art mechanism.
In an assembly of spaced-apart side supports and a movable shelf member supported at its opposite end edges in the side supports, the assembly is inherently strong and rigid when the movable shelf is locked in a fixed position with respect to the side supports. When the shelf is unlocked, however, to accommodate forward or rearward movement, the mechanism can be somewhat laterally unstable, which can be exacerbated in some cases when the shelf is stocked with heavy merchandise and/or pulled out to an extended position. To ameliorate this lateral instability, the structure of the invention incorporates integral stabilizing elements adjacent the back ends of the respective side supports, which bear against vertical uprights on which the side supports are suspended, to resist lateral deflections of the side supports during periods when the shelf supported thereby is unlocked for movement.
For a more complete understanding of the above and other features and advantages of the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention, and to the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the drawings, the reference numeral 10 designates a typical gondola structure used in many point-of-purchase displays and typically including a base structure (not shown), a back wall 11 and spaced uprights 12, 13. The uprights 12, 13 typically may be spaced on four foot centers, and are formed with a plurality of vertical disposed slotted openings 14 for mounting shelf side supports 15, 16. These supports are formed with notched mounting tabs 17, 18, one above the other, which are adapted to be inserted into vertically adjacent pairs of the slotted openings 14. Notches 19 engage the uprights 12, 13 at the lower ends of the slotted openings 14, to lock the side supports in assembled relation to the vertical uprights. Typically, the mounting tabs are provided with secondary notches 20, which enable the shelf assembly to be mounted with a downward slant, which is useful in the display of certain types of merchandise.
Pursuant to the invention, the side supports 15, 16 are formed of relatively heavy sheet metal material, such as twelve gauge cold roll steel. Each side support is formed of a single piece of material, shaped to form a vertical outer wall panel 21 and a horizontal bottom panel 22. The outer wall panel 21 extends for the full length of the support bracket, while the bottom panel 22 can be inset somewhat from each end of the support bracket. The L-shaped cross section of the bracket (evident in
A shelf assembly 23 is supported at its opposite end edges by the brackets 15, 16 for front-to-back sliding motion relative to the brackets. To this end, roller bearing slides 24 are provided at each side edge. As shown in
In a typical case, the shelf structure will include a top wall panel 30 joined rigidly with the side wall panels 28, a rear wall 31, and a front wall panel 32. The latter advantageously can be given a somewhat C-shaped cross sectional configuration to serve as a label holder.
The structure of the invention includes a locking mechanism for securing the shelf assembly 23 in a preset position (typically fully retracted or fully extended, but also anywhere between those extremes). For this purpose, the locking mechanism incorporated in the structure of the invention utilizes in part a useful form of mechanism shown in WO 01/21040, in conjunction with significant improvements forming features of the present invention. With particular reference to
Each of the trigger mechanisms 33 include an elongated actuator wire 34 which extends adjacent to and generally parallel with the side walls 28 of the shelf structure. The actuator wires terminate at the front in gripping elements 35, which project laterally inward toward the center of the shelf structure, and terminate at the back with connecting links 36. A horizontally disposed, U-shaped pivot bracket 37 (
In the illustrated arrangement, the actuating wires are supported near their front ends by passing through portions of a transverse stiffening bar 41, and adjacent their back ends by passing between the upper and lower legs of the U-shaped actuating levers 39 (see
As is evident in
While the general principles of the locking mechanism thus far described are explained in the beforementioned WO 01/21040 publication, the mechanism of that prior art publication utilizes a somewhat complex and expensive, multi-part structure, in conjunction with the locking mechanism, including a special U-shaped channel for receiving the locking bar. In the shelf structure of the present invention, a greatly simplified arrangement is provided for the locking mechanism, which is simpler and less costly to manufacture, and achieves superior results at the same time.
Pursuant to the invention, the integral bottom walls 22 of the side supports 15, 16 is formed with the elongated slots 43, which are punched or milled into the heavy gauge sheet material of the side supports. The slots 43 run for a length equal to or slightly exceeding the maximum travel of the locking bars 38. When the trigger mechanisms are drawn forwardly by an operator, the locking bars 38 are rotated out of contact with the side walls of the slot 43, allowing the shelf structure to be moved freely on the roller slides 24. When the trigger mechanisms are released, the springs 42 cause the locking bars to be rotated to bring opposed corners thereof into contact with the side walls of the slot to lock the shelf in any position, generally as previously described.
As will be understood, the slots 43 are formed in the horizontal bottom panel 22 of the side support, which provides a substantial expanse of metal in the plane in which locking forces are applied by the locking bar 38. In the illustrated embodiment, for example, slots of around 0.3 inch in width are formed with about ⅝ inch of panel width on both sides thereof. This compares, for example, to the opposite side walls of a U-shaped channel, in which the resisting force to the locking bar action is provided only by the channel side walls, which are mounted in a cantilever fashion at the bottom of the channel. Additionally, the engagement of the locking bar 38 with the side walls of the channel 43 takes place over a relatively short axial distance equal to the thickness of the sheet metal (approximately one eighth inch in the illustrated instance) such that there is a significant concentration of locking forces between the locking bars 38 and the side walls of the slots 43, as compared to the cooperative action of a locking bar within a U-shaped channel, for example. Thus, in the structure of the present invention, the use of the one-piece, heavy gauge sheet metal supports to provide a slot for the locking mechanism provides a superior mechanism at a lower manufacturing cost, with fewer parts, fewer assembly operations and better performance.
As previously mentioned, when the shelf structure 23 is locked together with the side supports 15, 16, the entire structure is very rigid and stable. However, during those moments when the locking mechanisms are released, there is minimum resistance to lateral deflection of the assembly. For this reason, the structure of the invention incorporates laterally extending stabilizing tabs 44 at the inner ends of the support brackets 15, 16, immediately adjacent to the mounting tabs 17, 18. These stabilizing tabs are integral with the side panels 21 of the support brackets, and are bent at right angles thereto such that, when the mounting tabs 17, 18 of the support brackets are properly installed on the uprights 12, 13, the outer (rear) faces of the stabilizing tabs abut the outer faces of the uprights, as shown particularly in
The stabilizing tabs 44 function to minimize lateral deflection of the support brackets 15, 16 relative to the uprights 12, 13 and thus add significant stability to the assembly as a whole during times when the shelf structure is released from the support brackets and is in motion either in an inward or an outward direction. The provision of the stabilizing tabs 44 enables the side support brackets 15, 16 to be utilized without use of a special stabilizing structure (e.g., cross bracing or the like) extending between and connecting the brackets. The brackets can be connected solely by the uprights 12, 13 and by the shelf structure 23.
The mechanisms of the invention enable many of the advantageous features of the prior art, as disclosed in WO 01/21040, to be utilized while at the same time providing for an assembly which not only provides superior performance but does so with a significantly more simplified structure and a correspondingly lower manufacturing cost.
It should be understood, of course, that the specific forms of the invention herein illustrated and described are intended to be representative only, as certain changes may be made therein without departing from the clear teachings of the disclosure. Accordingly, reference should be made to the following appended claims in determining the full scope of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country |
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0730424 | Jul 1999 | EP |
WO 0121040 | Mar 2001 | WO |