Since the 1940's, the beverage industry has utilized vending machines as a means of selling cold beverages to consumers. Since that time, there has been a distinct evolution in beverage vending machine design in an effort to better communicate with the consumer and thus sell more beverages. Early models of beverage vending machines concentrated on ornamental shapes of the actual machine to appeal to consumers. Prom there, increasing emphasis was put on graphics as a way of identifying the beverage company whose products were within the machine. Further evolution led to the use of illuminated signage. This illuminated signage eventually comprised the majority of the front of the vending machine by the mid-1980's.
At this point, beverage companies recognized the importance of depicting a picture of one of the products contained in the machine. The actual product in the machine was represented by indicia located in or immediately adjacent to the specific selection button. This indicia was generally a small, rectangular card approximately 1″×3″. By the end of the 20th century, the trend in design shifted to more prominent display of the indicia relating to the specific selection buttons. As a reference, the size of the product selection indicia increased 200%-500% an new equipment used by the major beverage companies.
This has resulted in a dilemma over the marketing usefulness of existing beverage vending equipment. It is important to note that there are conservatively 2,000,000+ pieces of beverage vending equipment in the market today that are limited in the size of product identification indicia that can be used. This is leading to premature obsolescence of useful beverage vending machines due to inadequate product identification indicia size relative to the new equipment designs.
Existing beverage vending equipment currently uses product identification indicia on or immediately adjacent to the actual switch that will deliver a given product selection. The existing product identification indicia are approximately 1″×3″. This is believed to create difficulty and confusion for the consumer on the choice of product, as the product identification indicia are difficult to read due to their size.
A signage retrofit fit kit for a vending machine includes a sign having a front side visible by a customer of the vending machine and a rear side facing the vending machine. The sign is attachable to a front portion of the vending machine and has at least one window portion through which an item located on the rear side of the sign can be viewed from the front side of the sign. The window portion is spaced apart from a product identification window of a selection panel of the vending machine and has a size greater than a size of the selection panel product identification window. The kit also includes a holder constructed and arranged to be positioned on the rear side of the sign, the holder also being constructed and arranged to hold a remote product identifier such that the remote product identifier is viewable from the front side through the window portion of the sign, the remote product identifier also having a size greater than the size of the selection panel product identification window.
The present invention has been specifically designed as an improvement on beverage vending equipment produced from 1985 to the present and provides a means of utilizing significantly larger (approximately 5″×7″) remote product identifiers without mechanical alteration to the vending machine. This is a tremendous benefit to the beverage industry in that it transforms a machine with inferior product identification indicia into a vending machine with product identification indicia comparable to new beverage vending equipment. The economic impact is significant. Consider the following illustration.
Estimate of existing beverage vending machines: 2,000,000+
Estimate of machines with premature obsolescence; 100,000 (5%)
Estimate of new machine cost: $1500
Estimate of invention cost: $50
Potential industry savings (100,000×$1450): $145,000,000
A retrofit kit for existing beverage vending machines allows the display of product contained in the machine by means of significantly larger product identification indicia than the existing product identification indicia.
An enhanced product identification system for beverage vending machines utilizes a remote holder of product identifiers that correspond to the existing selection buttons on beverage vending equipment.
An enhanced product identification system for beverage vending machines utilizes a remote holder of product identifiers that correspond to the existing selection buttons on beverage vending equipment and also incorporates a holder of advertising indicia.
The product identifiers can be viewed through clear windows that are registered to the holder in an illuminated sign on a beverage vending machine.
The clear windows in the illuminated sign can have identification printed on them that relate to the particular selection button for the particular product depicted in that clear window.
The holder can be attached to the back of the illuminated sign by bolts, clips or other fasteners that pass through the sign or by adhesive that bonds the holder to the sign.
The remote product identifiers can be positioned so that the existing vending machine lighting used for the sign can illuminate the product identifiers.
Accordingly, it is the primary object of this invention to provide a means in which product identification can be significantly enhanced while utilizing the existing selection switches.
It is another object of this invention to utilize a system of relating each product indicia to the appropriate switch through the printing of a number either on the illuminated sign or on the remote product identifier that corresponds to the selection button for that product.
It is another object of this invention to incorporate clear viewing windows in the illuminated sign so that the remote product identifier may be viewed. The clear viewing windows are registered to the holder.
It is another object of this invention to provide a holder of remote product identifiers that incorporates a series of tabs and/or channels that retains the larger product remote product identifiers.
It is another object of this invention to provide a holder of marketing indicia in addition to the product identification holder.
It is another object of this invention to utilize the existing illumination for the sign as a means of illuminating the remote product identifiers retained by the indicia holder.
It is another object of this invention to attach the holder to the back of the illuminated sign by means of bolts that pass through the sign or with adhesive. Other embodiments could include clips that pass through the sign or similar means of semi-permanent attachment.
The detailed description of the invention references the accompanying drawings so as to provide a visual reference.
Referring to the drawings in more detail,
The remote product identifiers 24 retained by the holder 4 and depicted in the openings 12 specifically relate to the existing selection panel 2 product indicia 26. This can be done by way of corresponding identification in the holder openings 12 and selection panel buttons 7. Thus, a consumer may view the large remote product identifiers 24 through the windows 6 and the holder openings 12 and then make their selection by pressing the corresponding button 28 on the existing selection panel 2. The windows 6 can also be structured as cutouts in the sign 1 with a clear panel attached to the sign 1 and covering the cutouts. The remote product identifiers 24 are preferably at least 100% larger than the product indicia 26, more preferably between 200-500% larger and can be even larger as situations allow. In one embodiment, the product identifiers 24 are approximately 5″×7″.
As shown in
With the present invention as disclosed in the various embodiments above, a retrofit kit can be supplied for various types of older style vending machines that allows the upgrading of the appearance of the machine to a style similar to the marketing graphics of new vending machines merely by the replacement of the existing sign 1 with the present invention sign/holder assembly as described above and, optionally, the graphics associated with the selection panel 2 and selection panel windows 7 and buttons 28. Since in the preferred embodiment, no modifications to the vending machine or other components are needed to retrofit the older style machine, the cost of the retrofit is but a fraction of the cost of the replacement of the machine. The present invention retrofit kit uses the machine's existing signage lighting and can be installed on the vending machine with the same tools required to change the sign 1 and in approximately the same amount of time. Thus, the preferred new style marketing graphics can be used on an older style vending machine without incurring the cost of replacing the entire vending machine. Since signage is routinely replaced at 3-5 year intervals, the cost of the retrofit can be further reduced by retrofitting machines at the time signage replacement would be otherwise desired or required (including signage replacement required because of damage or vandalism to the sign). Graphics for the holder openings 67 selection panel 2 and buttons 7 are easily replaceable, either as group units or individually, to change images and/or product selections.
It is also contemplated that switching structure 50 can be incorporated in to the retrofit kit such that manipulation or touching of some portion of the graphic images 21, or the structure associated therewith, will trigger the vend cycle instead of, or in addition to, the product selection buttons 28. See
It is intended that aspects of the invention as described above can be used in any number of different combinations and permutations.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/690,825 filed Oct. 23, 2003, now Pat. No. 7,377,065, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/420,251 filed Oct. 23, 2002, which applications are incorporated by reference herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090019744 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60420251 | Oct 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10690825 | Oct 2003 | US |
Child | 11979095 | US |