The invention concerns an extension guide for a drawer including a carcass rail to be fixed to a furniture carcass, a drawer rail to be fixed to the drawer, and a central rail mounted movably between the carcass rail and the drawer rail, wherein at least one running carriage having at least one rolling body is mounted displaceably at least between the central rail and the drawer rail and wherein the at least one rolling body runs on at least one support profile of the central rail.
Such extension guides belong to the state of the art and are described for example in German Utility Model specification DE 20 2009 003 883 U1. In that case the central rail is so shaped that, viewed in cross-section, it has at both sides two support profiles on which the ball bearings of two running carriages run. In that case the purpose of the support profiles is to prevent the running carriages from lifting off the central rail and/or to reduce the tilting play which generally occurs in the case of extension guides without a support profile and which occurs due to the relative clearance between the rails and the at least one running carriage.
That central rail therefore differs from the shape which is usually found to be involved of a U-profile having two vertical legs and a horizontal bar which connects the two vertical legs, wherein the deviation involves in particular the bend edges between the two vertical legs and the horizontal bar.
A disadvantage in that respect is that production of the central rail and thus the entire extension guide is highly complicated and cost-intensive in comparison with the standard form, by virtue of that specific configuration which requires a special bending process.
The object of the present invention is to avoid the above-described disadvantages and to provide an extension guide which is less expensive and simplified in comparison with the state of the art.
To attain that object the invention proposes that the at least one support profile is arranged as a separate structural unit on the central rail.
The invention is based in particular on the realisation that it is only necessary at all under certain circumstances for the central rail to have a support profile to prevent the running carriage from lifting off. More specifically, the weight of the drawer is normally relatively uniformly distributed to the extension guides, so that the risk of lifting off does not arise at all. In those cases the at least one support profile can be readily omitted and thus material can be saved. If however the extension guide is to be used for drawers which for example have a front panel which is very heavy in comparison with the other drawer components and are thus greatly nose-heavy, then the at least one support profile is necessary in particular to avoid the front of the drawer from tipping out in the pushed-in condition of the drawer.
Because the at least one support profile according to the invention is a separate structural unit, it is possible for the central rail to be retro-fitted modularly specifically for rather rare special cases, in which respect such retro-fitting can either already be effected at the factory in manufacture of the extension guide, or it can be effected by the user.
It should also be noted that the at least one rolling body which runs on the at least one support profile can be a runner, a roller or a ball.
To prevent the front of the drawer from tipping out as referred to above in the pushed-in condition of the drawer preferably two measures can be implemented. The one measure provides that the at least one running carriage engages under the at least one support profile in the position of use of the extension guide with the at least one rolling body to safeguard against being lifted off the central rail. The other measure provides that at least one contact leg is arranged on the drawer rail and the drawer rail engages under at least one rolling body arranged on the at least one running carriage in the position of use of the extension guide with the at least one contact leg to safeguard against lifting off of the at least one running carriage. If both measures are implemented then the drawer which is fixed to the drawer rail is prevented by the extension guide from lifting off—to put it in brief terms—by double engagement under the support profile.
In an advantageous embodiment of the invention the at least one support profile extends at least portion-wise in the longitudinal direction of the central rail. To prevent the front of the drawer from tilting out in the pushed-in condition of the drawer or to reduce the tilting play described in the introductory part of this description it may also be sufficient if the at least one support profile extends in the longitudinal direction only over a partial region of the central rail—expressed in numbers, over a partial region of between 20% and 60%, preferably over a partial region of between 30% and 40% of the central rail. If precisely two running carriages are mounted displaceably between the central rail and the drawer rail it can be provided that the at least one support profile extends in the longitudinal direction only over a rear partial region of the central rail, that is arranged in the proximity of the drawer rear wall, or that partial region of the central rail, in which the second rear running carriage is displaceably mounted.
Further details and advantageous embodiments of the invention which are defined in the appendant claims are described more fully in the specific description hereinafter with reference to the Figures in which:
a shows a diagrammatically illustrated perspective view of a drawer box with two drawers in the pushed-in condition,
b shows a diagrammatically illustrated perspective view of the drawer box of
a shows a diagrammatically illustrated perspective view of a preferred embodiment of the extension guide according to the invention in the pulled-out condition,
b shows a diagrammatically illustrated perspective view of the preferred embodiment of the extension guide according to the invention in the pushed-together condition,
a and 1b show diagrammatically illustrated perspective views of a drawer article of furniture 25 with two drawers 2 arranged one above the other. The two drawers 2 are respectively fixed to the furniture carcass 3 of the drawer article of furniture 25 by way of two extension guides 1 arranged at right and left and can be pushed into and pulled out of the article of furniture 25 by way of those extension guides 1. The two drawers 2 are severely nose-heavy drawers as on the one hand they are of a small depth while on the other hand their front panel 26 is relatively heavy compared to the other drawer components including the drawer rear wall 12, the two drawer side walls 27 and the drawer bottom 28. The two extension guides for the upper drawer, in contrast to the extension guides of the lower drawer, have the support profiles 10 and 11 according to the invention whereby the drawer front 26 in the case of the upper drawer in comparison with the lower drawer is prevented from tipping out in the pushed-in condition of the drawer.
The details of the two extension guides 1 of the upper drawer will be described more fully hereinafter by reference to
Firstly, mounted laterally to the drawer rail 5 is a damped, spring-assisted retraction device 29 including a force storage means in the form of a spring, wherein that spring is prestressed when the extension guide 1 is pulled out by way of a pin 31 which is fixed to the carcass rail 4 and which is at the end face of an angle portion 30. As from a given position when pushing on the extension guide 1 that pin 31 engages again into a slider which is fixed to the spring and the energy stored in the spring is liberated and causes the extension guide 1 to be completely pulled in over the remaining distance that is still to be covered. So that this movement takes place in damped fashion the retraction device 29 includes a damping device which counteracts the force-storing spring. A second particularity of the drawer rail 5 is a height adjusting device 32 which is arranged in the front region and by way of which the front region of the drawer can be adjusted in height. The third particularity is an adjusting device 33 for adjusting the position of the drawer relative to the drawer rail 5, that adjusting device 33 being disposed in the rear region of the drawer rail 5. It includes a holding projection 34 which projects into a corresponding opening in the drawer rear wall. That adjusting device 33 also serves at the same time as a push-in movement limiting means for the drawer.
It will be seen from
- they are arranged above a horizontal central plane M of the central rail 6, which plane is notional in the position of use of the extension guide 1,
- they extend over a rear partial region T of about 35% in the longitudinal direction L of the central rail 6,
- they completely consist of metal,
- they are welded to the central rail 6, and
- they are of an integral configuration.
Two running carriages 7 and 35 are supported displaceably between the central rail 6 and the drawer rail 5, wherein the support profiles 10 and 11 extend only over the partial region T of the central rail 6, in which the rear running carriage 7 is displaceably supported. That rear running carriage 7 has two support rollers 8 and 9 which are mounted rotatably laterally in the running carriage cage 39 and which run on the two support profiles 10 and 11 of the central rail 6. More precisely in the position of use of the extension guide 1 they engage under the support profiles 10 and 11 to prevent lifting off the central rail 6, that is to say they run at the downwardly directed side 21 and 22 of the two limbs 19 and 20 of the L-shape of the support profiles 10 and 11 respectively. It should also be pointed out that the movement of those two support rollers 8 and 9 in the longitudinal direction L of the central rail 6 is limited on the one hand by an abutment 13 arranged on the support profiles 10 and 11 and on the other hand by an abutment 50 arranged on the central rail 6. In addition to the two support rollers 8 and 9, further rolling bodies 36, 37 and 38 are arranged mounted rotatably in the running carriage cage 39 of the running carriage 7, by way of which further rolling bodies the running carriage 7 runs on the two vertical legs 14 and 15 and the horizontal bar 16 of the central rail 6 and against the underside of the drawer rail 5. The front running carriage 35 is in principle of exactly the same structure as the rear running carriage 7, with the difference that it does not have any support rollers to safeguard against lifting off the central rail 6. Two running carriages 46 and 48 are also supported displaceably between the central rail 6 and the carcass rail 4, those running carriages 46 and 48 being coupled together by way of a coupling device 47. For the sake of completeness attention is also directed to a particularity, to be seen in
If the cross-sectional view shown in
Even if the invention was described in specific terms by means of the illustrated embodiment it will be appreciated that the subject-matter of the application is not limited to that embodiment. Rather measures and modifications which serve to implement the concept of the invention are obviously conceivable and desired. Thus for example the support profiles in cross-section, instead of being of the L-shape, could be of a different shape, for example being at least region-wise of a circular and/or elliptical configuration, or as the outline of a right-angled triangle. It is also conceivable that the support profiles comprise not (just) metal, but instead (or also) they can comprise plastic or other materials. In addition—besides the above-mentioned possibility of attachment by welding—there are many other different possible ways of fixing the support profiles to the central rail, like for example by riveting, screwing or soldering.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1695/2011 | Nov 2011 | AT | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/AT2012/000245 | Sep 2012 | US |
Child | 14269446 | US |