The present invention relates to a suction fixing arranged to be attached to a substantially flat air-impervious surface and particularly, but not exclusively, to a suction fixing suitable for securing utensils, such as bowls and cups, to a tabletop.
A particularly simple type of suction fixing comprises a one piece moulded suction pad or cup in the form of concave disc, with an attachment portion moulded on to a rear face thereof, by which it is connected to an article to be attached to a surface. The suction pad is secured to the flat surface by being pressed into place, whereby air is expelled from the concaved portion and the resilient nature of the material, normally rubber or a soft plastic, then subsequently acts to adopt its original concave shape, maintaining a partial vacuum under the pad which retains the pad in place.
The above type of suction fixing is inexpensive to produce, but does not provide a particularly stable mounting. Any item attached to it is connected to a single point of contact at the centre of the suction pad, which point of contact is separated by an air gap from the surface and is thus only in contact with the surface by means of the flexible peripheral skirt portion of the suction pad.
An alternative type of suction fixing, which is also relatively inexpensive, is found on the bottom of some plastic mixing bowls and children's bowls. This comprises an annular ring, or downwardly protruding annular wall, moulded on the bottom of the bowl, with a soft rubber seal on a lower edge thereof. With this arrangement, the resilient properties of the bowl, or the resilient properties of the sealing material, can be used to create a small vacuum under the bowl by first pressing the bowl into contact with a surface. However, the partial vacuum created under the bowl is relatively low and this type of fixing is more useful in preventing the bowl from sliding than in preventing the bowl being removed from a surface.
A third type of common suction fixing employs a suction pad with a cam mechanism attached thereto and arranged to emphasise the concave nature of the surface of the suction pad. Such a suction fixing is placed on a flat surface and the cam mechanism operated to increase the concave shape below the suction pad and thus establish a strong vacuum under the suction pad. This type of fixing has the advantage that the materials of the suction pad can be relatively thick which, together with the relatively large partial vacuum created under the section pad, can create a relatively stable mounting. Such suction fixings can be used to mount a mirror to car windscreens for example, where a relatively stable fixing is required. US Patent 2006/85428 discloses such a fixing for retaining a mixing bowl in place on a work surface. This type of fixing has a number of component parts which have to be assembled and therefore is relatively expensive to produce and is not as easy to clean as the two previously described types of fixing.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved suction fixing.
According to the present invention, there is provided a suction fixing comprising a base unit arranged to be fixed to a surface and to releasably engage with an article to be fixed in place by the base unit, the base unit comprising: a suction pad; an actuation mechanism to distort the suction pad to increase the volume between the suction pad and any surface on which it is placed; a release mechanism to release the suction under the pad; a housing attached to the suction pad; and an engagement means on the housing arranged to releasably engage with the article to be fixed to the surface by the base unit, wherein the base unit can be fixed to a surface prior to an article being attached to it by the engagement means and wherein the article has to be removed from the base unit before the release mechanism can be operated to release the base unit from the surface.
A suction fixing in accordance with the present invention enables a base unit to be securely fixed to a surface by means of the suction pad of the base unit and the base unit to be locked in place. In this way the base unit can be securely fixed without the fixing process being hindered by the presence of the article which is to be fixed to the surface.
Furthermore, the article can then be fixed and released from the suction fixing without disturbing the suction fixing. Also a number of different articles may be fixed by a single type of base unit and they may be detached from the base unit for cleaning. They may also be arranged to be free standing when separated from the base. Of course, in some embodiments, it may be possible to also secure the article and base unit simultaneously, if the user desires this.
Where the article is a utensil, such as a bowl, this may be of particular advantage for use with young children or the disabled. The base unit can be secured firmly in place on a table and food placed in a freestanding utensil at a first location, before being transferred and secured to the base unit. The base unit, being locked in place, can then not be removed from the table so the utensil is not likely to be displaced by a small child playing or a person, who for example may only have use of one hand, trying to cut something in the utensil. However a supervisor may easily release the utensil for washing and replace it with a subsequent utensil, for example a cup with a straw.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the actuation mechanism is also the release mechanism and the base unit comprises a locking mechanism arranged to be manually released before the actuation mechanism can be operated to decrease suction between the suction pad and a surface to release the base unit from the surface.
In one embodiment of the invention, the actuation mechanism comprises, within the housing, a rotating member which can rotate relative to the housing but which is rotationally fixed relative to the suction pad, wherein: the rotating member and housing have interacting cam surfaces arranged such that rotation of the housing relative to the rotating member causes relative axial displacement of the housing relative to the rotating member; the housing is connected to a central region of the suction pad and the rotating member is arranged to contact an outer peripheral region of the suction pad such that rotation of the housing relative to the suction pad in a first direction causes the central region of the suction pad to be raised relative to the surface on which the fixing is placed and the outer peripheral region of the suction pad to be retained in place by the housing; and the locking mechanism is arranged to prevent relative rotation of the housing and rotating member and to lock the two in place.
A suction fixing in accordance with this embodiment of the invention may comprise a very compact and aesthetically pleasing base unit, which can be positioned and operated by simply placing the base unit on a surface and twisting it to establish the suction between the surface and the base unit.
Advantageously, the fixing further comprises an article having engaging means arranged to cooperate with the engaging means on the housing to enable the article to be mounted on and retained in place on the base unit by the engaging means, wherein the article, when mounted on the base unit, prevents the locking mechanism from being released.
The locking mechanism may have a lever extending from the housing which lever the article abuts when it is mounted on the base unit, thereby preventing operation of the lever until the article is first removed from the base unit.
In an alternative embodiment the fixing may further comprise an article having engaging means arranged to cooperate with the engaging means on the housing, wherein: the article can be mounted on and retained in place on the base unit by the engaging means; the actuation mechanism is also the release mechanism and is mounted on the top of the base unit; the article is arranged to cover the top portion of the base unit when attached to the base unit; and the article locks the actuation mechanism by preventing access to the actuation mechanism.
This above arrangement again prevents the actuation mechanism being used to release the base unit until the article is first removed and additionally also permits the base unit to be substantially enclosed within the base of the article. This is particularly advantageous where the article is in the form of a bowl with an annular rim as its base, whereby the bowl may function as an ordinary bowl, but permit the bowl to also be mounted on the base unit and the base unit to be accommodated in the base of the bowl. Thus when mounted on the base unit the bowl will adopt substantially the same position as when used without the base unit.
Advantageously, the actuator mechanism comprises a cam lever mounted on the top of the housing which is connected to a central region of the suction pad, the housing is arranged to contact an outer peripheral region of the suction pad and a cam surface on the cam lever acts against the housing to cause the central region of the suction pad to be raised relative to a surface on which the fixing is placed whilst the outer peripheral region is retained in place by the housing. Thus a suction can be created between the suction pad and a surface on which the fixing is placed to fix the base unit to the surface by simple operation of the cam lever.
The above arrangement provides a particularly stable base unit because the outer rigid wall of the housing tightly sandwiches the peripheral region of the suction pad to the table.
Preferably, the cam lever is arranged to be rotated from a raised position to a lowered position where it is substantially flush with the top surface of the base unit when the base unit is fixed to a surface. In this way, the base unit may be particularly compact with substantially flush outer surfaces.
In an alternative embodiment of the invention, the actuation mechanism comprises a spring arranged to bias the suction pad to a position to increase the volume between the suction pad and said surface and a button for depressing the suction pad against the action of the spring, such that the base unit can be fixed to a surface by initially depressing the button to decrease the volume between the suction pad and the surface.
In the above embodiment, the release mechanism may comprise an extended portion of the suction pad which extends beyond the periphery of the housing and which may be raised to release the suction under the pad, the fixing further comprising an article having engaging means arranged to cooperate with the engaging means on the housing to enable the article to be mounted on and retained in place on the base unit by the engaging means, wherein the article, when mounted on the base unit, prevents the extended portion being raised.
In any of the above embodiments of the present invention, the base unit may be circular wherein the fixing further comprises an article having a downwardly protruding annular wall arranged to fit over an outer wall of the base unit. Preferably the engagement means on the base unit then engage with the said annular wall of the article. In this manner, the base unit may be substantially concealed within the annular wall of the article which may be desirable for aesthetic reasons. Furthermore, a close fit may be provided between the annular wall and the base unit providing a particularly rigid fixing for the article.
Engagement means on the base unit may be outwardly biased pins arranged to engage with the apertures in the annular wall, which pins are depressed in order to release the article. Alternatively, the engagement means on the base unit may be keys or keyslots arranged to engage with corresponding keyslots or keys on the annular wall of the article, when the article is rotated in a first direction relative to the base unit. This enables the base unit to first be attached to a surface and then an article to be subsequently attached to the base unit by being twisted onto the base unit and released by being twisted off the bas unit. Preferably, the keyslots are shaped to initially resist rotation of the article to release it from the base unit such that when the article is installed on the base unit it is locked in position.
The fixing may comprise an article which in use has one or more correct rotational orientations and wherein the base unit is marked so that it may be correctly fixed to a surface, to ensure that when the article is subsequently attached to the base unit the article has the correct orientation.
Various embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals are used throughout to indicate like parts and of which:
Referring to
The assembled components, including the housing 2, are shown in cross section in
With the cam lever 4 in the position shown in
When the base unit 1 of
Referring to
In addition to the above, because the lower annular rim substantially covers the base unit 1, the invention may be applicable to other applications, for example in securing articles such as bathroom or kitchen fittings to a tiled wall. The fitting would be secured by first securing the base unit 1 and subsequently securing the fixing to the base unit 1 and obscuring the base unit 1 from view. In this manner a common base unit may be used with any number of fittings.
The base unit 1, seen in
Referring to
The base unit 23 comprises a housing 24, an upper shaft 25, a rotating member 26, a lower shaft 27, suction pad 28 and screw 29. The shaft 27 is inserted through the base of the suction pad 28 and through the rotating member 26 into the housing 24. The upper shaft 25 is then inserted through the top of the housing and into the rotating member 26, whereupon the assembly is screwed together by screw 29 screwing the upper shaft 25 to the lower shaft 27. The upper shaft 25, rotating member 26, lower shaft 27 and suction pad 28 are joined together and prevented from rotating relative to each other by the square shafts 25 and 27 engaging with square aperture 30 within the rotating member 26 and lugs (not shown) on the lower side of the suction pad 28 engaging with the apertures 31, on the lower shaft 27. Thus, these components are rigidly fixed together, (with the exception that the rotating member 26 can slide up and down on the shaft), as illustrated in
On the lower surface of the housing 24 is a first cam surface 32 which engages with a second cam surface 33 formed on the rotating member 30 (see
In use, the base unit 23, illustrated in
The housing 24 raises the upper shaft 25, lifting the lower shaft 27 causing it to slide through the square aperture 30 in the rotating member 26. This raises the central region 34 of the suction pad 28 (see
As shown in
As the housing 24 is rotated, causing the housing 24 to move axially away from the rotating member and forcing the central region 34 of the suction pad 28 to be drawn into the rotating member 26, the pip 41, biased by the resilient section 40, engages the notch 42 and locks the rotating member in a fixed rotational position relative to the housing 24. This retains the rotating member 26 and housing 24 in a fixed axial separation, thus maintaining any suction generated between the suction pad 28 and the surface on which it is placed.
To release the base unit 23, lever 43 attached to the resilient section 40 is lifted, disengaging the pip 41 from the notch 42. The housing 24 may then be rotated in an opposite direction, returning the base unit to its original position and releasing any suction below the base unit 1.
When the base unit 23 has been attached to a surface as described above then, as shown in
In the
Referring now to
A further alternative embodiment of a suction fixing is illustrated in
When assembled, as shown in
To affix the suction pad to a surface (not shown) the base unit is placed on the surface and the button 53 depressed, as shown in
In order to release the base unit, the suction pad 55 has an extended portion 61 which extends beyond the wall of the housing 54. This can be raised to permit air to enter below the suction pad 55 and thus, in this embodiment, the extended portion forms the release mechanism for the base unit 52. Once the base unit has been fixed to a surface an article 62, such as a bowl or cup, may be attached to it, as shown in
In a variation of the embodiment disclosed in
Several embodiments of the present invention have been described above by way of example and the skilled person will appreciate that any number of alternative embodiments may be possible within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0909791.6 | Jun 2009 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB10/50898 | 5/28/2010 | WO | 00 | 1/20/2012 |