The present invention relates to a refrigerating appliance, especially its door.
The housing of conventional refrigerating appliances comprises a heat-insulating body and a likewise heat-insulating door which abuts against a front of the body and extends mostly over the entire width of the body. In a known housing of a refrigerating appliance the door ends a few centimetres below the upper edge of the body to leave space for a control panel which is mounted on the upper edge of the body above the door, whose front ends flush with the front of the door and which serves to accommodate switches, push-buttons or other control elements for adjusting an operating status of the refrigerating appliance as well as display elements which provide information on operating parameters of the refrigerating appliance in an accessible position clearly visible for the user.
In order to satisfy the taste of the widest possible range of customers, it is desirable for the manufacturers of refrigerating appliances to be able to supply refrigerating appliances with different appearances, where particular importance is attached to the door as the most striking part of the refrigerating appliance. One possibility for modifying the appearance is to enlarge the door such that it covers the body of the refrigerating appliance as far as its upper edge, including the control panel attached thereto. However, this has the result that the convenient operation and visibility of the control panel are lost.
It is the object of the invention to provide a door for a refrigerating appliance or a refrigerating appliance where the door is raised up to the upper edge of the body without at least the visibility of control elements attached to a front side of the body being lost when the door is closed.
This object is solved by a door having the features of claim 1 or a refrigerating appliance according to claim 14.
The viewing window can extend over the total thickness of the door; however, since in general no thermal insulation is required in the edge zone of the door where the viewing window is formed, it is sufficient if the inner wall of the door which together with the outer wall encloses the heat-insulating intermediate space of the door, is no larger than necessary to seal the interior of the body. The viewing window then only needs to be provided in the edge zone of the outer wall which projects over the edge of the inner wall, which substantially only has an aesthetic function.
The insulating intermediate space between the inner and outer wall is preferably closed on one side by an end element affixed to the edge of the outer wall in which the viewing window is cut out and an edge of the inner wall, which follows the contour of the at least one viewing window formed in the outer wall.
The viewing window can be completely open so that control and display elements arranged on a control panel of the body located therebehind can not only be viewed but can also be touched by hand.
In order to provide a smooth, easy-to-clean front of the refrigerating appliance, it is preferable if a transparent pane is arranged in the viewing window. Such a pane prevents control elements attached therebehind from being directly actuated when the door is open. However, the operation of the control elements is only of minor importance compared with the visibility of the display elements since the control elements are only rarely actuated whereas the free visibility of the display elements at all times is important so that defective operating states or functional disturbances of the refrigerating appliance can be identified at all times, even when the door is closed.
The transparent pane can be formed in one piece with the end element or it can be inserted into a window cut-out of the end elements. In order to ensure that the pane abuts against the door over its entire edge, especially if the outer wall is arched in the area of the viewing window, it is appropriate if the pane is mounted under pre-stress. Locating means for locating the window on the door, which act centrally on the pane, are especially desirable for this purpose.
The pane can be made of a highly transparent material so that it allows an unhindered view of control and display elements of any kind located therebehind.
The pane can also be made of an opaque material; this is especially appropriate if the pane is constructed in one piece with the end element which for its part is preferably not transparent; provided that the opacity is not too great, such a pane especially allows self-illuminating display elements located a short distance behind the pane to be identified without any difficulty.
At least part of the back of the pane is preferably provided with a non-transparent decoration.
Further features and advantages of the invention are obtained from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the appended figures. In the figures:
As shown in
Visible through the pane 14 is a control panel 17 mounted at the upper front edge of the body 1 whereon especially display elements for displaying an operating state of the refrigerating appliance such as a digital temperature display, a fault warning light or the like are mounted.
The embodiment in
A vertical section through the door 4 at the height of the window cut-out 13 does not differ from the section shown in
On its inner side facing the outer wall 3 and the end element 5 the edge zone 20 is provided with a coloured non-transparent decoration adapted to the outer wall 3 or the end element 5, which covers the edge of the outer wall 3 in the vicinity of the window cut-out 13 so that slight dimensional deviations in this area between outer wall 3 and end element 5 remain invisible and do not appear as blemishes.
As a result of another embodiment not shown in a figure, the upper end element 5 and the pane 14 can be manufactured in one part from the same plastic material. In general, non-transparent plastic material pigmented in the colour of the outer wall 3 is used for the end element 5. However, its wall thickness can be reduced to such an extent in the area of the pane that it at least has a translucent effect. A luminous display attached in a control panel mounted behind the pane at a short distance from the pane locally causes the translucent pane itself to light up so that the operating state indicated by the display can be read off directly on the pane itself.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
103 02 797.1 | Jan 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP04/00638 | 1/26/2004 | WO | 3/31/2006 |