1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is used particularly in the field of refrigerated display units. The invention can also be used for heated and ambient units, as well as for displays of any kind of goods, such as jewelry, clothes, and telephones.
2. Description of Related Art
Display units for the sale of foodstuffs and non-foodstuffs contain panes made of glass or plastic material. Their function is to isolate products from the surrounding environment and/or to ensure customers do not remove the products. The panes can be attached to a display unit in a number of ways. For example, the panes can be secured to a frame above them, which is supported by uprights, or to a frame below them, which is fixed to the display unit.
There are a number of known opening systems that make use of an overhanging support frame. The production costs of such systems are often high due to customers' needs, both aesthetic and functional. These opening systems can involve front or back frames, as well as varying opening angles of the panes. The hinges used today have a fixed structure such that each hinge is suited to a pane with a particular opening angle, and the uprights can either be in front or behind. Consequently, a variety of different elements must be used, and thus the production costs of these opening systems are high.
Another common problem is keeping insects and dust out of display units, especially outside of business hours. Certain known opening systems contain at least one gasket, which bridges the gap between the gripper that supports the pane and the closing section bar. However, the gasket is fixed to the closing section bar, and the panes are not always completely tight to each other. Since various display units contain different panes, the gripper supporting a particular pane does not always attach to the pane in the same manner. Therefore, the gasket cannot guarantee air tightness in every case.
The superstructure for the movement of panes of display units of the present invention provides a solution to the problems of conventional opening systems. The opening system includes an upright containing a section bar that acts as a spacer, a hinge-bearing section bar, at least one hinge, and at least one piston that helps lift the pane. The superstructure also includes a gripper for supporting a pane, a closing section bar, and a gasket.
The section bar that acts as a spacer has fins, which bound a bottom and a top guide. The top guide fits a guide projection from the hinge-bearing section bar, and the hinge-bearing section bar is fixed to the spacer section bar by screws inserted into slots.
Each hinge is fixed to the hinge-bearing section bar and includes conical guides on an end that attaches to the gripper. The conical guides on the hinge receive conical arms on an end of the gripper. The hinge also includes a groove on an arm that points towards the closing section bar. The groove receives one end of the plastic gasket, and the other end of the plastic gasket runs along the closing section bar.
When spherical panes are used, the opening system uses special hinges. Each hinge comprises a body with a base fixed to it, and the base of the gripper sits atop the base of the hinge. Further, the special hinges can vary in shape and size to allow for the use of spherical panes with differing opening angles.
The present superstructure is extremely flexible. The superstructure can be installed with both back and front uprights without affecting the mechanics of the rotational motion and while maintaining the same frame. As a result, customers are offered two very effective possibilities that differ in appearance and cost, as the price is usually higher when back uprights are used.
Another advantage of the superstructure of the present invention is due to the use of a plastic gasket fixed onto the gripper. Since the gasket is mobile along with the gripper, the gasket does not have a fixed point of arrival. Thus, the gasket can be either tight fitting or loose when the pane is closed. Consequently, the gasket provides air tightness and prevents insects, dirt, and coins placed on the change counter from entering the display unit.
Further characteristics and advantages will become better apparent from the detailed description of a preferred but not exclusive embodiment of a superstructure, according to invention, illustrated only by way of a non-limiting example in the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In the following example of an embodiment the present invention, the superstructure is used on a display unit with a glass pane 1 placed on the customer side.
An upright 2 is fixed to a spacer section bar 3 by means of pin and screws assembly where a pin 4 is inserted into a hole on a front upright 2 and screws 5, having passed through a lower wall of the section bar 3, fit into the pin 4.
The spacer section bar 3, which has a box-shaped section, bears fins 3.1 on its lower side. The fins 3.1 lie parallel to the longitudinal axis of the section bar 3 and bound a bottom guide 3.2. A top end of the upright 2 slides into the bottom guide 3.2. The section bar 3 also bears fins 3.3 on its top side. The fins 3.3 lie parallel to the longitudinal axis of the section bar 3 and bound a top guide 3.4. The lower fins 3.1 can be either present on both sides of the section bar 3, as shown in
A hinge-bearing section bar 6 is fixed above the section bar 3 by means of screws 7. The hinge-bearing section bar 6 includes a guide projection 6.1 on its lower side, and the guide projection 6.1 fits into the top guide 3.4 of the spacer section bar 3. The top guide 3.4 guides the translation of the hinge-bearing section bar 6 with respect to the section bar 3, ensuring the hinge-bearing section bar 6 and spacer section bar 3 are correctly joined together. The two section bars 3 and 6 can thus be very precisely adjusted, and grippers 9 can be correctly aligned at sight. To allow for the precise adjustment of the section bars 3 and 6, screws 7 are inserted through slots situated in the area where the two section bars 3 and 6 join and fasten together.
A hinge 8, which is generally semicircular, is hinged onto the section bar 6 by means of a pin 8.1. The gripper 9 is fixed to the hinge 8. The gripper 9, at an end that attaches onto the hinge 8, bears conical arms 9.1 that run parallel to the longitudinal axis of the gripper 9. The arms 9.1 slide into conical guides 8.2 in the end of the hinge 8. The joining of the gripper 9 and the hinge 8 is adjustable by the force exerted by grains 10 that, due to the conical shape of the arms 9.1 and guides 8.2, work both vertically and laterally. This joining ensures that the gripper 9 and hinge 8 are safely fastened, and, if need be, the gripper 9 can be moved, once the grains 10 have been loosened, to better position both the gripper 9 and the pane 1 that is fixed to the gripper 9 within the space available.
The gripper 9 also bears a groove 9.2. The groove 9.2 runs parallel to the longitudinal axis of the gripper 9 and is situated on an arm of the gripper 9 that points towards a closing section bar 11. An end of a plastic gasket 12 fits into the groove 9.2. The gasket 12 bridges the gap between the gripper 9 and the closing section bar 11. The closing section bar 11 is fixed to the hinge-bearing section bar 6 and lies facing the gripper 9 when the pane 1 is closed.
One end of a piston 13 that helps lift the pane 1 is fixed to the hinge 8. The other end of the piston 13 is fixed onto the front upright 2 by means of a bracket 14, as shown in
When a display unit has a spherical pane 1, hinges 15, as shown in
Unlike the hinges 8, the longitudinal axis of the conical guides in the hinges 15 is not orthogonal but is instead incident to the longitudinal axis of the hinge 15. The base of the connecting piece 15.2 can be rotated with respects to the body 15.1 so that the same hinges 15 may be used for panes 1 having different opening angles without interfering with the hinge-bearing section bar 6. For example, the opening angle of panes 1 shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
TS05A0001 | Jan 2005 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IT2006/000031 | 1/19/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/6/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/077615 | 7/27/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4842349 | Stenemann | Jun 1989 | A |
5112118 | Wiehle | May 1992 | A |
5116274 | Artwohl et al. | May 1992 | A |
5622414 | Artwohl et al. | Apr 1997 | A |
5639149 | Grassmuck | Jun 1997 | A |
6634460 | Hackenberg | Oct 2003 | B1 |
7640696 | Yingst | Jan 2010 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
198 45 741 | Apr 2000 | DE |
2004100727 | Nov 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080047912 A1 | Feb 2008 | US |