Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6651939
-
Patent Number
6,651,939
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, October 8, 200223 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, November 25, 200322 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Dubno; Herbert
- Wilford; Andrew
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 248 75
- 248 200
- 004 615
- 239 283
- 239 588
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
In a shower-head holder having a bracket (1) fixed on a wall or on a wall rod and a holder body (2) pivotal on a pin (10), the holder body (2) having at lest one friction face that bears under an adjustable spring force on at least one surface fixed rotationally on the bracket (1), it is proposed that the pin (10) be angularly fixed to the bracket (1), the holder body (2) engaging around the pin (10) with a sleeve (20) and being connected via a plate-type brake with the bracket.
Description
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is the US national phase of PCT application PCT/EP01/12890 filed Nov. 8, 2001 with a claim to the priority of German patent application 10059212.0 itself filed Nov. 29, 2000.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a shower-head holder with a bracket mounted on a building wall or a wall rod and on which a holder body is pivotal about an axis, the holder body having at least one friction surface that is pressed by an adjustable spring element against at least one stationary surface on the bracket.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
A shower-head holder of this type is known from European patent document EP 0,529,347. In this holder the bracket is fixed directly to a building wall. In addition it is however also known to mount the bracket at a spacing from the wall on a wall rod such that the bracket can be slid along the wall rod and arrested at any desired position. This holder has however only a relatively small friction surface so that due to low friction only a reduced braking effect is achieved and as a result the shower head is provided close to the pivot axis so that the brake effect is sufficient to hold the shower in the various pivoted positions.
OBJECT OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide a showerhead holder with a relatively long pivotal holder that ensures a sure holding of the shower head in the various pivoted positions for a long service life.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This object is achieved in that the axis is fixed on the bracket, the holder has a sleeve surrounding the axis, and a plate-type brake joins the holder to the bracket.
With these features, thanks to the good braking effect the holder can be provided with a long pivot arm. The proposed brake is thus low in friction and very compact and small so that the outside measurements of the device and the design constraints of a plumbing fixture can be respected.
In a further embodiment of the invention the braking effect in the installed shower-head holder can be set and/or adjusted by an externally accessible adjustment mechanism. Preferably the braking effect is set on manufacture to a predetermined braking torque. After some time when the parts have worked in or worn, a simple resetting of the adjustment mechanism can compensate out this problem so that the shower-head holder will hold in any pivotal position but can still be easily moved by the user by hand to any desired pivotal position.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
An embodiment of the invention is shown in the drawing and is more closely described in the following. Therein
FIG. 1
is a partial view of a shower-head holder taken in a section along plane I of
FIG. 2
;
FIG. 2
is the shower-head holder shown in
FIG. 1
in section plane II;
FIG. 3
is a side view of the pusher ring shown in
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 4
is the pusher ring shown in
FIG. 3
turned through 90°;
FIG. 5
shows a part of the holder body shown in
FIG. 1
in longitudinal section;
FIG. 6
is the body shown in
FIG. 5
turned 90° and in side view;
FIG. 7
shows the sleeve washer shown in
FIG. 1
in smaller scale and side view;
FIG. 8
is the sleeve washer shown in
FIG. 7
turned through 90°;
FIG. 9
shows the pin washer shown in
FIG. 1
in smaller scale and side view;
FIG. 10
is the pin washer shown in
FIG. 8
turned through 90°;
FIG. 11
shows the pivot pin shown in
FIG. 1
in smaller scale;
FIG. 12
is the pivot pin shown in
FIG. 11
turned through 90°;
FIG. 13
is the pivot pin shown in
FIG. 12
along section plane XIII;
FIG. 14
shows the disk shown in
FIG. 1
in smaller scale;
FIG. 15
is a view of the disk shown in
FIG. 14
turned through 90°;
FIG. 16
shows the tensioning nut shown in
FIG. 2
in smaller scale and side view;
FIG. 17
is the tension nut shown in
FIG. 16
along section plane XVII.
SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION
The shower-head holder partially shown in
FIGS. 1 and 2
of the drawing is formed mainly by a bracket
1
fixed on a building wall and having at least one pivot pin
10
on which pivots a holder body
2
with a sleeve
20
, so that one or more unillustrated shower heads can be fitted to the holder body
2
. Between an outer face of the pivot pin
10
and an inner face of the sleeve
20
there is a plate-type brake that is set up so that on the one hand the user can pivot the holder body
2
easily on the pin
10
and on the other hand however the holder body
2
will sit stably in the selected pivoted position.
The bracket
1
is formed at one end with a horizontally open blind bore
11
in which the pin
10
is seated and in which it is secured by a radial screw
12
engaging in a peripheral groove
100
. A center region of the pin
10
has a screwthread
70
for a tension nut
7
. The end of the pin
10
opposite the groove
100
is of larger diameter and has splines
30
as best seen in
FIGS. 11 and 12
. A disk
51
with a threaded stem
50
is fitted in a threaded bore
101
in the outer end of the pin
10
. The disk
51
forms a shoulder
5
that bears against the end of the pin
10
. The sleeve
20
also has on its inner surface splining
40
as best seen in
FIGS. 5 and 6
. In addition the sleeve
20
is provided with a radial arm
22
on which is fixable a tubular holder body
2
(FIG.
2
). The ends of the sleeve
20
are each formed with a seat for a respective slide ring
21
. The two slide rings
21
serve primarily as radial bearings so that no radial forces are brought to bear on the plate stack.
The plate-type brake provided between the pin
10
and the sleeve
20
is formed by the tension nut
7
, a spring
8
secured by the tension nut
7
and formed by spring washers, as well as by alternating stainless-steel pin washers
3
and polyethylene sleeve washers
4
. The pin washers
3
are rotationally fixed by the splining
30
as visible in
FIG. 10
of the drawing but are axially shiftable, the washer stack having at each end a pin washer
3
. The sleeve washers
4
shown in detail in
FIGS. 7 and 8
of the drawing are formed with splining
40
but are axially shiftable in the sleeve
20
. As particularly visible in
FIG. 1
of the drawing, alternating pin washers
3
and sleeve washers
4
are stacked between the pin
10
and the sleeve
20
with the end pin washer
3
bearing on the shoulder
5
of the disk
51
and at the other end another pin washer
3
bearing on the end face of the pusher ring
6
.
The pusher ring
6
is formed with internal teeth
60
and external teeth
61
as in particular shown in
FIG. 4
of the drawing. The inner wall surface of the bore seat
11
is complementary to the teeth
61
so that when fitted together the pusher ring
6
is axially shiftable but angularly fixed between the bracket
1
and the pin
10
.
The outer surface of the tension nut
7
is also formed with teeth
71
as in particular shown in
FIGS. 16 and 17
. The inner wall of the blind bore
11
of the bracket
1
is formed level therewith with a window
13
at which the teeth are exposed and the tension nut
7
can be turned, e.g. with the blade of a screwdriver, so that the position of the tension nut
7
on the pin
10
is settable. In order to prevent unintended actuation of the tension nut
7
, the bracket
1
holds a set screw
72
extending tangentially of the tension nut
7
and by means of which the desired angular position of the tension nut
7
can be fixed. In order to prevent unintended actuation of the tension nut, the bracket
1
is provided with a cover
130
that engages over the window
13
and set screw
72
. The cover
130
also complies with the style of the bracket
1
.
The shower-head holder can be assembled in the following manner:
First the disk
51
is mounted on the pin
10
. Then the sleeve
20
of the holder body
2
fitted with the slide rings
21
can be fitted over the pin
10
until it seats on the shoulder
5
. Then the pin washers
3
and the sleeve washers
4
are dropped alternatingly one after the other into the annular space between the sleeve
20
and the pin
10
. Subsequently the pusher ring
6
is slid onto the teeth
30
to seat against the inner end pin washer
3
. Then the spring
8
is mounted and finally the nut
7
is screwed up on the screwthread
70
of the pin
10
. Then the assembled brake with the end portion of the pin
10
carrying the tension nut
7
is inserted into the blind bore
11
axially so that the pusher ring
6
engages with its external teeth
61
in the corresponding internal teeth
61
on the inner surface of the bore
11
, thereby angularly coupling the pin
10
with the bracket
1
. When fitted together the radial screw
12
is screwed into the groove
100
of the pin
10
so that the pin
10
is axially fixed in the bracket
1
. The holder body
2
is fitted on the radial arm
22
of the sleeve
20
. Finally the cover
130
is fitted to the bracket
1
.
In order to set or adjust the braking effect, once the cover
130
has been removed and the set screw
72
has been backed off, the tension nut
7
is rotated through the window
13
on the screwthread
70
so that the axial position and the axial pressure effective on the washer stack is changed. The orientation of the window
13
in the bracket
1
makes it easy to subsequently adjust the braking effect in a shower-head holder already mounted on a building wall.
Water is fed to the unillustrated shower head via a passage
14
in the bracket
1
and an unillustrated feed pipe extending parallel to the radial arm
22
on the opposite side of the bracket
1
. Alternately the shower head can be connected via a hose to the water supply, in which case the shower head is either stationary on the shower-head holder or is constituted as a telephone shower fitted to the shower-head holder.
In the above-described embodiment the bracket
1
is mounted directly on the building wall. Of course the bracket can also be formed such that it is vertically positionable on a wall rod spaced from the building wall.
Claims
- 1. A shower-head holder comprising:a bracket formed with a pivot pin centered on an axis and having a pair of axially confronting faces spaced along the pin; a holder adapted to carry a shower head and having a sleeve surrounding the pin and rotatable about the axis on the pin; a brake having a sleeve plate angularly fixed to the sleeve adjacent one of the faces, a bracket plate angularly fixed to the bracket and engaged between the sleeve plate and the other of the faces, and means for urging the faces toward each other and thereby pressing the plates axially against each other, whereby friction between the plates brakes pivoting of the holder on the bracket.
- 2. The shower-head holder defined in claim 1 wherein the bracket plate is of metal and the sleeve plate is of plastic.
- 3. The shower-head holder defined in claim 2 wherein the bracket plate is of stainless steel and the sleeve plate is of polyethylene.
- 4. The shower-head holder defined in claim 1 wherein the bracket includes a pusher ring angularly fixed on the bracket, axially displaceable on the pin, and forming the one face and the pin has a shoulder forming the other face, the urging means being a spring braced axially between the ring and the bracket.
- 5. The shower-head holder defined in claim 2 wherein the bracket is formed with a blind bore receiving an end of the pin, the spring, and the nut.
- 6. The shower-head holder defined in claim 5 wherein the ring has internal teeth fitted with the pin and locking it angularly thereto and external teeth fitted with the bracket and locking it angularly thereto.
- 7. The shower-head holder defined in claim 5, further comprisinga lock screw engages through the bracket into the blind bore with the pin to lock the pin axially to the bracket.
- 8. The shower-head holder defined in claim 5 wherein the spring is formed by a stack of spring washers.
- 9. The shower-head holder defined in claim 1 wherein the sleeve is fitted with slide rings engaging the pin and allowing the sleeve to pivot about the axis on the pin.
- 10. The shower-head holder defined in claim 1, further comprisinga nut threaded on the pin, the spring being braced axially between the nut and the ring, whereby rotating the nut on the pin alters the compression of the spring.
- 11. The shower-head holder defined in claim 10 wherein the nut has external teeth and is recessed in the bracket, the bracket being formed with a window through which the teeth are-exposed, whereby the nut can be rotated by means of a tool engaging through the window with the external nut teeth.
- 12. The shower-head holder defined in claim 11, further comprisinga removable cover on the bracket overlying the window.
- 13. The shower-head holder defined in claim 11, further comprisinga screw threaded in the bracket and engageable with the external nut teeth to arrest the nut relative to the pin.
- 14. The shower-head holder defined in claim 1 wherein the pin includes a disk forming the other face and having a stem threaded axially into the pin.
Priority Claims (1)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
| 100 59 212 |
Nov 2000 |
DE |
|
PCT Information
| Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
| PCT/EP01/12890 |
|
WO |
00 |
| Publishing Document |
Publishing Date |
Country |
Kind |
| WO02/44482 |
6/6/2002 |
WO |
A |
US Referenced Citations (3)
| Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
|
5340064 |
Heimann et al. |
Aug 1994 |
A |
|
6361005 |
Faisst et al. |
Mar 2002 |
B1 |
|
6502796 |
Wales |
Jan 2003 |
B1 |
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
| 198 02 917 |
Jan 1998 |
DE |
| 298 01 155 |
May 1998 |
DE |
| 0 529 347 |
Mar 1993 |
EP |