The invention relates to a recessed lighting fixture having a locking assembly for mounting the fixture in the space above the ceiling with the light projecting downwards from the ceiling to illuminate the room below.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,505,960 issued 2003 to Schubert et al, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, teaches a recessed lighting fixture comprises a housing comprising a sidewall extending downward to a lower housing aperture and terminating in a lip extending outwardly around at least a portion of the perimeter of the aperture, a slot in the sidewall extending away from the aperture and, at least one housing locking assembly positionable at a preselected height in the slot to clamp/mount the housing in an opening in a ceiling so that the housing extends into the space above the ceiling and the lip extends around a lower edge of the ceiling opening.
A disadvantage of the prior approach is a requirement for an additional frame resting on the ceiling surface adjacent an upper edge of the ceiling opening for sliding receipt of the housing and for clamping engagement by the locking assembly to protect the surface of the ceiling from damage from the pressure of the locking assembly when mounting the housing in the aperture.
An additional disadvantage is that the slot opens at a mouth at the bottom of the housing to admit the housing locking assembly resulting both in a weakening of a lower end of the housing and a broken lip at the lower end of the housing in direct engagement with the lower face of the ceiling which may not be visually pleasing.
Objects of the invention are to provide a recessed lighting fixture which obviates or ameliorates at least some of the disadvantages of the prior art.
According to one aspect, the invention provides a recessed lighting fixture having a locking assembly which provides an extensive edge-line engagement with a ceiling, distributing clamping force sufficiently to obviate need for an additional underlying frame to reduce contact pressure on the ceiling.
According to another aspect, the invention provides a recessed lighting fixture in which the lamp housing has a locking assembly mounting slot having a laterally enlarged portion to accommodate insertion of an enlarged portion of the locking assembly and, preferably, the enlarged portion of the locking assembly is laterally resilient permitting manual compaction to permit insertion through the laterally enlarged portion of the slot.
Such construction obviates need for the slot to open at a mouth at an edge of the housing both avoiding a consequential weakening of a lower end of the housing and enabling an unbroken lip to be provided at the lower end of the housing in direct engagement with the lower face of the ceiling for a more pleasing visual effect.
In addition, replacement of a locking assembly is possible with the housing assembly remaining in the installation position in the ceiling.
In order that the invention may be readily understood, a specific example thereof will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a is a schematic showing locking assemblies engaging the outside wall surface of a housing and the upper surface of the ceiling in locked positions so as to retain the housing extending through a ceiling openings, and
b is a schematic showing locking assemblies engaging the inside wall surface of a housing and the upper surface of the ceiling before and after locking, respectively.
As seen, for example, in
As shown in
The support member 3 is stamped and formed from a single piece of sheet metal stock with a lower strut portion 5 and an upper attachment portion 6.
The strut portion 5 comprises a channel shape, ceiling engaging portion 7 having a base/foot 8 from opposite side edges of which a pair of leg forming, channel walls 9,9′ extend upwards in divergent, face to face relation and mainly obliquely of the channel axis except for portions 10,10′ of corresponding lower edges of the channel walls adjacent a lower axial end of the base 8 which extend perpendicularly to the channel axis so as to combine with a lower edge 20 of the base 8 to form a foot with a continuous, U-shape edge-line of engagement with the ceiling when clamping the housing thereagainst, as shown in
The attachment portion 6 comprises a pair of flanges 13,13′ extending outwards from upper ends of the leg form sidewalls, providing shoulders extending in a plane parallel to the base and having respective upwardly bent extensions 15,15′ in parallel, face to face relation, having opposite, (small and large), pin receiving, through-sockets 16,16′ providing a biasing spring mounting portion or yoke, having outer, rear ends of which locating tabs 17,17′ are bent towards each other with free ends 18,18′ overlapping in sliding engagement. Respective front edge portions of the shoulders are bent downwards to form housing locking feet 19,19.′
A pivot pin 21 has a head 22 force fitted in the small socket 16 and the shank 23 freely received in the other socket 16′ so as to span the extensions 15,15′. An helical compression spring 14 is mounted axially on the pivot pin so as to bias the upper ends of the legs apart.
The latching member 4 is stamped and formed from a single piece of sheet metal stock and comprises a bracket-form land 24, opposite sides of which are formed with a pair of spaced apart, flange-form ears 25,25′ having through-sockets 26 freely receiving the pivot pin.
A finger-piece or handle 27 extends from a front end of the land 14 and has a locking tongue 28 struck from a central portion, with a tapering/wedging free end 29 extending towards the legs, perpendicularly of the handle.
The housing 1 is box-like and comprises a sheet metal sidewall 31 extending downward to a lower housing aperture 32 and terminating in an outwardly extending ceiling engaging lip 33 around the perimeter of the aperture. A series of vertically extending T-shaped slots 34 are struck in the (opposite) sidewalls. Series of horizontal locking grooves 35 are provided on each side of the vertical portion 36 of each slot on both opposite faces of each of the sidewalls.
The recessed lighting fixture is installed by raising the housing through an opening in the ceiling 37, until the lip 33 engages the lower edge of the opening, partially inserting the strut forming legs 9,9′ into the upper end of the slot 34, with the teeth and flanges in registration with the laterally enlarged “cross” portion 41, and manually squeezing the upwardly bent extensions 15,15′ and therefore the adjacent ends of the legs together, against both their natural resiliency and the action of the compression spring 14, to permit the leg flanges 11, 11′ and teeth to be inserted from the inside of the housing through the horizontal or ‘cross’ portion 41 of the slot with the legs passing through the vertical portion 36, as shown in
The sliding engagement of the overlapping free ends 18,18′ of the tabs 17,17′ assists in maintaining structural integrity, resisting deformation during the squeezing action.
Release of the extensions 15, 15′ permits the recovery of the spring and the legs to resile apart so that the teeth 12 overlie aligned serrations 35 on the outer surface of the housing and, the locking feet 19 overlie those on the inside of the housing. In this state, as shown in
Upward pivoting of the handle withdraws the locking tongue, unclamping the locking assembly to enabling readjustment of the position thereof by sliding up or down the vertical slot.
It will be noted that in the clamped position, the edge portions 10,10′ combine with a lower edge 20 of the base 8 to form a foot with a continuous, U-shape edge-line of engagement with the ceiling when clamping the housing thereagainst, as shown in
Priority is claimed from our provisional patent application 60/871,405, filed Dec. 21, 2006, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6505960 | Schubert et al. | Jan 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60871405 | Dec 2006 | US |