1. Field of the Invention
This invention refers to a device for internal lighting of furniture.
2. State of the Prior Art
In the prior art small battery devices are known that can be arranged inside a piece of furniture, generally a cupboard, to light the inside thereof. Some of these devices have a power pushbutton arranged so as to switch off the device automatically when the piece of furniture is closed. There is a need to provide these devices with a system of fixing to the piece of furniture that is rapid and repositionable but the solutions proposed in the prior art are unsatisfactory.
For example, removing a screw and/or expansion plug-mounted device exposes the original hole with the spoilt edges to view. It not only becomes difficult to ensure a future solid fixing in the hole, but the aesthetic appeal is in any case compromised, as the ruined hole clearly stands out inside the piece of furniture. Further, in the case of expanding plugs, the plug that is removed is normally deformed and hardly reusable.
A further added feature is that of having stable and tough hooking, above all because the lighting device receives quite heavy and repeated blows on the power pushbutton. However, this conflicts with the desire for a rapid, simple system that does not spoil the point of hooking and is flexible without the use of tools.
Further, it is desired that the entire device should be small, with a simple, tough and cheap structure and enables the battery to be changed easily. Also in this, the known solutions are unsatisfactory.
The general object of the present invention is to provide a lighting device for furniture that has a simple, tough and cheap structure and which is rapidly and securely fixable without the use of tools. A further object is for the device to enable the battery to be changed easily.
In view of this object it was decided to make, according to the invention, a device for the automatic battery-operated illumination inside a piece of furniture, comprising a body provided with fixing means on a surface of the piece of furniture by means of a mounting surface thereof and a chamber containing an electric battery and a light source and from which at the front the control end of a normally closed pushbutton contact protrudes to connect the battery to the light source to the opening of the piece of furniture, characterized in that the fixing means comprises a tongue, which is intended to rest at a corner of the surface of the furniture and a tooth that faces the tongue and is intended to be inserted into a hole on said surface of the furniture, a hooking lever being rotatable on the base body from an unhooking position to a hooking position controlling means for moving tooth and tongue towards one another to cause the tooth to engage in the hole wall with a reaction on the tongue resting on the corner of the piece of furniture.
In order to make clearer the innovative principles of the present invention and the advantages thereof over the known prior art, a possible embodiment applying such principles will be disclosed below with the help of the attached drawings by way of non-limiting example. In the drawings:
With reference to the figures, in
The device 10 comprises a body 11 (advantageously molded from plastics) provided with fixing means 12 for fixing to the furniture and with a chamber 13 containing an electric battery 14. In the body there is also a light source 15 (advantageously a high-luminosity white LED) that protrudes externally to project a light beam. From a front end of the body there protrudes the control end or pushbutton 16 of a normally closed pushbutton contact for connecting the battery to the light source when the furniture is opened.
The fixing means 12 comprises a base body 41, which is preferably made of metal and which defines a mounting surface 30 intended to rest on the fixing wall on the piece of furniture. Advantageously, the base body 41 can be made of U-shaped sheet metal to make a pair of side rails 58 extending parallel to the main axis of the base to enable the body 11 to be received as in a drawer manner.
From the surface 30 there protrude an abutting tongue 43 and an engaging tooth 44, that face one another and are generally parallel. The tooth 44 is supported on the body by means of a pivot 45 and is moved between a rest position and an engaging position by activating an operating lever 46. Advantageously, the tooth 44 has an edge facing the tongue 43 that is deeply serrated. Means for moving the tooth and tongue towards one another are controlled by the lever 46. As can be clearly seen also in
The pivot 45 is constrained to slide transversely to the axis thereof along guide grooves 50 in the base in a normal direction to the mounting surface 30.
The lever 46, which is advantageously U-shaped, is mounted at the ends of the pivot to rotate from the unhooking position of
As can be clearly seen from the comparison with
From the drawings it is clear how the opposition movement between the tooth 44, driven by the lever 46, and the tongue 43 enable the device to be firmly fixed to the surface 31 of a piece of furniture near a corner 32 and exploiting a hole 55.
The positioning of the tooth 44 on the base is sized so that when the lever 46 starts operation, moving to the engaging position (
In this manner, driving the lever 46 involves moving the tooth until the tooth interferes with the wall of the hole 25, reacting with the tongue 43. The retracting movement of the tooth (upwards in
In order to unhook the device from the piece of furniture it will be sufficient to return the lever to the initial position, freeing the tooth 44. Advantageously, when the lever is raised to the rest position suitable locking means prevent sliding of the pivot due to the traction on the lever. This is advantageously obtained with lateral protrusions 56 on the base body that are housed in corresponding grooves 57 in the ends of the lever, preventing upward traction on the lever taking the tooth 14 to the clamping position without rotating the lever. This also enables the lever to be used as a handle to remove the device.
Advantageously, the grooves 57 have an inlet for the protrusions 56 that is shaped for actively pushing the pivot 45 into the start position and ensuring the return movement of the tooth 44 to the rest position. As can be seen clearly in
As can be seen clearly in
In
Also advantageously, the tongue 19 also constitutes a removable fixing means for maintaining the pushbutton 16 fixed in the seat 13 during normal operation of the device. For this purpose, the tongue 19 has a bent end that protrudes frontally on the pushbutton 16 in a suitable seat 21 to constitute an end 22 for the manual control for unhooking a tooth 23 of the tongue from an abutment 24. The abutment 24 can advantageously coincide with an end of the fixed contact 20. The tooth 23 advantageously has a tilted surface for elastically flexing the tongue 19 when the pushbutton 16 is inserted into the seat and for then snapping into the lock position against the abutment 24.
Advantageously, the fixed contact 20 is connected to the lighting source by interposing an overriding switch arranged serially on the circuit to enable the lighting to be switched off even when the pushbutton 16 is not pressed. In the shown embodiment, the overriding switch comprises a control wheel 25, pivoted in the device and protruding laterally therefrom (as can be seen clearly in
The lighting source is advantageously at the rear end of the body 11, i.e. the end opposite the pushbutton 16, and is tilted with respect to the axis movement of the pushbutton and directed away from the fixing surface. In this manner it appropriately illuminates the interior of the piece of furniture.
Advantageously, assembling the various parts of the device inside the body 11 occurs through a lower opening 34 of this body that is closed by a plate 35 made of plastics that is snap-inserted.
At this point it is clear how the preset objects have been reached. Engaging is rapid and fixing is of excellent solidity. The presence of the reaction tongue on the edge of the surface of the piece of furniture makes fixing substantially insensitive to thrust forces directed towards the interior of the piece of furniture, such as those that act on the device upon closure of the piece of furniture. Further, the gripping movement inside the hole ensures that the edge of the hole remains undamaged. The device can thus be removed without leaving a trace and can be repositioned as many times as is desired. The device can be dimensioned so as to adapt to a standard system for drilling the sides, like the 37×32 and 28×32 systems that are used by most furniture manufacturers for fixing accessories. In this manner special drilling is not necessary.
By providing an abutting surface consisting of the tongue 43 that rests on the outside of the front edge of the piece of furniture, the tolerances of the drilling and fixing system are made insignificant and positioning is more accurate. This is very advantageous to have correct interaction between the pushbutton and part of the piece of furniture that closes by abutting on the outer edge of the side. Further, replacing the battery is easy and the cost of the device is limited despite the toughness and reliability thereof.
Naturally, the above description of an embodiment applying the innovative principles of the present invention is given by way of example of such innovative principles and must not therefore be taken to limit the scope of what is claimed herein.
For example, as easily imaginable by those skilled in the art, the form of the fixing base may vary and can also be made integral with the body 11. The base can be made of bent sheet metal, as shown, or can be made molded or in another manner. Also the shape and arrangement of the operating lever can be different from those shown. Although the lever movement disclosed has been found to be particularly advantageous in terms of toughness, practicality and cost, other operating means for moving the tooth can easily be imagined by those skilled in the art in the light of the above description, to control the moving of the tooth towards the tongue 13 and, possibly, to pull the tooth inside the resting surface of the base. Naturally, as easily imaginable by those skilled in the art, the resting surface 12 can be made for only partial resting with the piece of furniture (for example by means of feet or raised edges). The tooth can also have an engaging edge in the wall of the hole that works by friction rather than biting the material. In such a case the tooth can be made covered with yieldable material with good friction (for example rubber or the like). The overriding switch can also be made with a different operation, for example as a slidable slide.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2007A2263 | Dec 2007 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5032957 | Canfield | Jul 1991 | A |
5580155 | Hildebrand et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
7384166 | Tress et al. | Jun 2008 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090141483 A1 | Jun 2009 | US |