This invention relates to the field of shelving generally and in particular to an adjustable slide-out shelving system for retail stores having high stock turnover such as retail grocery stores, pharmacies and the like.
In retail stores, 80% of the product is sold from 20% of the store. For example, a store with ten aisles will have two of those aisles producing 80% of the store total sales. These sections are known as high traffic areas. Because 80% of the stores' sales originate from the high traffic area, 80% of the stocking costs are spent replenishing 20% of the store. With any business, inventory control is a key ingredient in deriving profits from operations. Pharmacies and other retailers of consumable products must ensure that their inventory is properly rotated (old inventory sold before new inventory) each time the shelf is stocked.
Conventional shelving units seen in the retail market typically comprise a flat board used as a shelf, brackets with tangs, and vertical supports or standards. The bracket tangs are inserted into slots in the vertical supports, and the flat board typically rests on these brackets. Conventional standards are manufactured by Lozier™ (see
It is one object of the present invention to provide for the interchangeability of shelves and tangs with standards regardless of the spacing of the standards or the location of the apertures or slots in the standards.
The shelving system of the present invention provides an adjustable slide-out shelf for shopkeepers so as to improve the ergonomics of the restocking process, reduce labour and time, and to provide for easier inventory counts, and better quality control. These combined advantages reduce operating costs.
The adjustable slide-out stock shelving system of the present invention makes the re-stocking process more efficient by removing the step of having to take the old product off the conventional fixed shelf and placing it on the floor, only to have to return it back onto the shelf once the new product is loaded onto the rear of the shelf. This also potentially reduces the amount of bending a worker has to perform. By eliminating the stage of having to put the old product on the floor and then putting it back after unpacking and placing the new product on the shelf, the shelving system of the present invention speeds up this otherwise laborious process.
The shelving system of the present invention mounts to existing shelving standards, saving the cost of a full replacement of both shelves and standards.
The present invention is both a novel hardware system for retrofitting slide-out shelves onto existing standards, and for improved modular shelf construction, and is also a novel method. The method of the present invention is for installing and operating selectively extendable and retractable pullout shelves constructed according to the present invention. Each of the shelves may include:
Further advantageously the pullout shelves of the present invention are mountable to the shelving standard in closely spaced array, side-by-side between adjacent standards.
In summary the present invention according to one aspect is a shelving system for mounting to at least one pair of parallel, substantially vertical, laterally spaced apart shelving standards, where the standards are laterally spaced apart a first distance. The system includes:
A selectively actuable actuator such as a threaded member including a shaft or bolt may be provided which is mountable to each pair of vertically spaced keys for selectively engaging and tightening each opposed facing pair of tangs onto the corresponding standard when each pair of keys are mounted thereto. The actuator tightens the tangs into snug mating engagement in the corresponding slots in the standard and thereby increases the rigidity of the hooked mating of the tangs into the slots in the standards. In one embodiment the actuator includes a threaded member rotatably journalled through corresponding pairs of bores in the vertically spaced pairs of keys so that one key of each pair is threadably mounted to the threaded member where the elongate member is threadably mounted to that key by engaging threads in the corresponding bore for sliding translation of the threaded member relative to the key. The other key in each pair of keys may be rigidly mounted to the end of the mounting bracket and the threaded-bore key slidably mounted to the end of the mounting bracket so that turning the threaded member causes adjustment of the spacing between the upper and lower keys in each pair of keys.
The shelf may include modularly interlocking shelf members which are releasably mountable to one another. Thus a shelf depth perpendicular to the first length may be adjusted by removing or installing the shelf members from or onto the shelf respectively. The shelf members may also include a front member mountable at a distal end of the each pair of rigid bracket arms, distal to opposite ends of the each pair of rigid bracket arms mountable to the corresponding keys. The front member may include electronic merchandising means mounted within the front member.
In a further aspect, the method according to the present invention of mounting a shelving system according to the present invention includes the steps of:
The method may also include the steps of:
The method may also include the step of providing flanges mounted to forward and/or rear edges of the shelf, where each flange extends vertically upwards.
The shelving system of the present invention streamlines the re-stocking process into five steps which follow onto how the stock on a shelf is typically left by consumers taking product from the shelf:
With reference to the drawings wherein similar characters of reference denote corresponding parts in each view, the shelving system of the present invention includes one or more laterally translatable shelves 10. Herein, lateral translation refers to pulling out or pushing in a shelf on its slides and longitudinal refers to the direction of the longitudinal axis of the shelf. The shelves may be retro-fitted for mounting to a spaced apart pair of generally vertical and parallel standards. The shelves slide in and out between a pair of mounting brackets 14 supporting the shelf. Brackets 14 are cantilevered from the pair of standards. The sliding in and out of the shelves facilitates re-stocking of shelves 10 as old product on shelves 10 may be moved frontwards and new product placed rearwards on the shelves without necessitating the prior removal of old product from the shelves.
Each shelf 10 lies horizontally flat between the corresponding pair of mounting brackets 14. Mounting brackets 14 are mounted to a corresponding pair of drawer slides 16. Slides 16 are mounted under the oppositely disposed ends of shelf 10. Brackets 14 themselves mount to conventional shelving standards 12 by the use of a pair of keys 22. Keys 22 mate with apertures or slots 18 wherein elongate, T-shaped etc. (herein collectively referred to as slots) in standards 12. At least one of the slides 16 is adjustably mounted to the underside of shelf 10, for example by the use of bolts (not shown) engaging slots 24a in longitudinally extending beams 24 mounted under and along so as to support shelf 10 when under load. Slots 24a allow for the selective adjustment of the spacing between the pair of mounting brackets and corresponding pair of slides on opposite lateral ends of each shelf 10. Thus the spacing may be adjusted for different spacing between different pairs of standards 12, and allows for a retro-fit mating of shelves 10 onto pre-existing shelving standards 20 where the standard uprights have apertures or slots into which the key tangs 22a of keys 22 mate.
Keeping in mind that it is one object of the present invention to provide a single mounting bracket, slide and shelf design to provide a universal fit for existing standards such as found in conventional retail outlets, the sliding shelf must be capable of bearing a relatively heavy load when pulled outwardly on the slides so as to be fully cantilevered from the standards, without harming the standards due to the load. In particular, the bending moment applied to the standard at the adjacent end of the mounting bracket cannot be so great as to deform or tear the metal of the standard. If in one example the retail establishment is a grocery store, it would not be unusual to find one pound items such as a four hundred fifty gram container of sour cream, stacked four high, five deep, and ten wide, that is, ten along the length of shelf 10. These two hundred containers would thus weigh approximately two hundred pounds centered over shelf 10. Presuming that the product is being routinely faced against the forward edge of shelf 10 after product has been removed by consumers from the shelf, the center of gravity of the remaining product taken as a whole shifts from the longitudinal centreline of the shelf towards the forward edge. Thus if the center of gravity of product on shelf 10, when fully extended on slides 16, is cantilevered approximately two feet from standard 12, then when loaded with an evenly distributed two hundred pounds, the mounting brackets will exert a moment of approximately four hundred foot-pounds on standards 12, evenly distributed between the pair of mounting brackets, where the mounting brackets mate onto the corresponding pair of standards.
As described above, keys 22 are mounted to the end of mounting brackets 14 adjacent standards 12 so as to engage tangs 22a extending from keys 22, into mating engagement in slots 18 in standards 12. Because it is desirable to have a single key and tang design fit most if not all existing standards, and in particular so that tangs 22a fit into most if not all existing slots 18 in those standards, tang 22a can be no larger than the smallest of slots 18. Thus for example if the height of slots 18 in the Hussman™ standard of
An upper key block and a lower key slide are mounted onto each mounting bracket 14. A vertically aligned pair of keys 22 are rigidly mounted onto upper key block 26 and lower key slide 28 respectively as by welding, bolting or the like. The keys are arranged so that tang 22a on the key 22 mounted to the upper key block 26 is inclined downwardly into opposed facing relation with an upwardly inclined tang 22a on the key 22 mounted to the lower key slide 28. Upper key block 26 has a channel 26a extending along the length of the block. Channel 26a is sized so as to snugly slide over the upper corner 14a of the base end of each of mounting brackets 14 so that upper key block 26 may be rigidly mounted thereto. Channel 26a extends vertically upwardly from the lower end of upper key block 26. Upper key block 26 also has a vertically extending bore 26b which extends the vertical length of upper key block 26. A bolt 30 having a non-threaded upper portion is fully journalled through bore 26b so as to reside slidably in bore 26b. Bolt 30 has a lower threaded portion which threadably engages a correspondingly threaded bore 28b in lower key slide 28.
Lower key slide 28 is also mounted to the base end of bracket 14 by means of a vertical channel 28a. Channel 28a extends the entire vertical height of key slide 28 so as to slidably mount key slide 28 onto the lower rear corners 14b of the base end of mounting bracket 14. Thus with a lower key slide 28 slidably mounted onto each mounting bracket 14 by slidably mounting lower rear corners 14b into sliding engagement in channels 28a, bore 28b on key slide 28 and bore 26b on key block 26 mounted to upper corners 14a are vertically aligned so as to receive bolt 30 journalled through the bores so that the lower threaded portion of bolt 30 threadably engages the threads in bore 28b.
Thus with bolt 30 journalled through bores 26b and 28b, turning bolt 30 selectively adjusts the vertical separation distance a between the ends of the opposed facing tangs 22a. In use then, bolt 30 is turned so as to adjust distance “a”, for example, so as to be slightly greater than the spacing between two slots 18, shown as distance “b” in
In the example illustrated, bolt 30 is approximately four inches long. It has been found that the greater the spacing between upper key block 26 and lower key slide 28, that is, the greater distance “a” when the upper key block and the lower key slide are mated to a standard 12, the greater the load bearing capacity of shelf 10 without deforming standard when shelf 10 is fully extended cantilevered outwardly on mounting brackets 14 and slides 16. Thus it was found that increasing the length of bolt 30 from approximately three inches to approximately four inches, increased the load bearing capacity approximately one hundred pounds, apparently because the longer bolt 30 allowed the upper key block and lower key slide to be mounted into a pair of slots 18 spaced further apart from one another, for example, into slots 18′ and 18″ leaving one slot 18 un-used therebetween. Using a four inch bolt, it was found that, with shelves 10 having a nominally two hundred fifty pound load capacity and extended fully away from the standards, the Hussman™ standards failed at approximately a two hundred thirty pound loading on shelf 10 and the Lozier™ standards failed at approximately a two hundred ninety pound loading on shelf 10.
In the embodiment illustrated, the head of bolt 30 is formed for mating with an allen key wrench. Other embodiments intended to be included within the scope of the present invention include the use of bolts 30 having thumb screw heads which allow for a manual turning of bolt 30 without the need for a wrench or other tools.
As seen in
In the embodiments of
As will be apparent to those skilled in the art in the light of the foregoing disclosure, many alterations and modifications are possible in the practice of this invention without departing from the spirit or scope thereof. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is to be construed in accordance with the substance defined by the following claims.
This application is a Continuation-in-Part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/658,284 filed Sep. 10, 2003 now abandoned, which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/454,600 filed Mar. 17, 2003, entitled Stock Shelving System.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050263465 A1 | Dec 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60454600 | Mar 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10658284 | Sep 2003 | US |
Child | 11194666 | US |