The present invention relates to a supporting bracket for a wall-mount rack, and more particularly to a highly efficient multipurpose supporting bracket for supporting shelves, drawer-type containers, etc. on the wall-mount rack.
A general wall-mount rack includes a horizontal crossbar and a plurality of vertical posts. The horizontal crossbar is horizontally fixed to a wall surface high from the ground or floor, and the vertical posts are hung on the crossbar and are spaced parallel from one another and perpendicular to the ground or floor. The vertical post is provided on a front side with a row of holes, into which a supporting bracket is inserted, so that a metal wire shelf may be supported on two horizontally corresponding supporting brackets for holding things thereon. U.S. Pat. Nos. D490,697; 3,701,325; and 5,110,080 disclose wall-mount racks having the above-described structure.
The conventional supporting brackets for wall-mount rack are designed to support only one type of member for holding things. For example, the brackets disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,701,325 and 6,024,333 are designed to support metal wire shelves only. When it is desired to mount a slide-out basket, for example, on the wall-mount rack, another type of bracket is required. Moreover, the brackets disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,701,325 and 6,024,333 are designed to support only one metal wire shelf each. When it is desired to mount two metal wire shelves side by side at the same height on the wall-mount rack, two brackets are required to locate between the two metal wire shelves to separately support one of them. That is, the conventional brackets for wall-mount rack have only one single function and fail to meet the general consumers' requirements.
It is therefore tried by the inventor to develop a high-efficient multipurpose supporting bracket for wall-mount rack to eliminate the drawbacks existed in the conventional brackets.
A primary object of the present invention is to provide a multi-purpose and high-efficient bracket adapted to support metal wire shelves, board-type shelves, slide-out baskets, and hanger rods on a wall-mount rack.
The supporting bracket for wall-mount rack according to the present invention includes two parallel side wall portions, so that two members for holding things may be supported at two lateral sides of the bracket to locate at the same height on the wall-mount rack with simplified mounting procedures.
The two side wall portions of the supporting bracket of the present invention are provided on top edges with retaining slots to firmly hold the supported shelves to the bracket.
The supporting bracket of the present invention may have at least one rail connected to one of the two side wall portions. The rail includes two spaced L-shaped tabs, and the side wall portions of the supporting bracket are correspondingly provided with two insertion holes each, so that the rail is connected to the side wall portion by inserting the L-shaped tabs into the insertion holes. With the rails connected to two adjacent supporting brackets, a slide-out basket or a drawer may be supported on the rails to locate between the supporting brackets.
The supporting bracket of the present invention may have a hanger connected to a lower side thereof, so that a crossbar may be supported on two such hangers connected below two adjacent supporting brackets for holding suit hangers thereon.
The structure and the technical means adopted by the present invention to achieve the above and other objects can be best understood by referring to the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments and the accompanying drawings, wherein
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The metal wire shelf 30 is formed by welding intersected metal wires together. The metal bar 31 forms a rear edge of the metal wire shelf 30, and the metal bars 32 are spaced intermediate transverse bars on the metal wire shelf 30 located between the metal bar 31 and a metal bar 33, which forms a front edge of the metal wire shelf. Two longitudinal side metal bars 34 are located at two lateral sides of the metal wire shelf 30. Two ends of the transverse metal bars 31, 32, 33 are perpendicularly welded to the two longitudinal side metal bars 34. When one end of the metal bars 31 and 32 of the metal wire shelf 30 are received in the retaining slots 14 and 15, respectively, on one of the two side wall portions 13 of the bracket body 10, the side metal bar 34 corresponding to that end of the metal bars 31, 32 is pressed against an inner surface of that side wall portion 13, preventing the metal wire shelf 30 from sidewardly separating from the bracket body 10.
The two side wall portions 13 are provided at a rear end with two vertically spaced hooks 16 each. The hooks 16 at the rear ends of the two side wall portions 13 may be extended into and hooked to the hook holes 23 at the front side of the vertical post 22, so as to hold the supporting bracket 1 to the wall-mount rack 20. When the supporting bracket 1 has been fully assembled to the vertical post 22 of the wall-mount rack 20, the top edges of the two side wall portions 13 are in or close to a horizontal position. The retaining slots 14, 15 on each of the two side wall portions 13 of the supporting bracket 1 are adapted to receive one end of the metal bars 31, 32, respectively, on one metal wire shelf 30 and thereby provide a support to the metal wire shelf 30. Therefore, each supporting bracket 1 is able to support two metal wire shelves 30 located at two opposite lateral sides of the bracket 1.
The rearmost retaining slots 14 on the side wall portions 13 of the bracket body 10 have a rearward opening each. The elastic stopper 17 is disposed at a position adapted to partially block the rearward openings of the retaining slots 14, so as to stop the metal bars 31 of the metal wire shelves 30 received in the retaining slots 14 from moving out of the retaining slots 14 via the rearward openings thereof.
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A top 17g of the reversed U-shaped member 17a is a slightly forward and downward inclined surface. When an end of the metal bar 31 of the metal wire shelf 30 is pressed against the top 17g of the reversed U-shaped member 17a, the metal bar 31 is brought to move forward along the top 17g while presses the whole reversed U-shaped member 17a downward due to the weight of the metal wire shelf 30, and then automatically moves into the retaining slot 14. At this point, the reversed U-shaped member 17a is automatically elevated by the elastic element 17b to block the rearward opening of the retaining slot 14 again and locate behind the metal bar 31. Meanwhile, the ends of the metal bars 32 of the metal wire shelf 30 correspondingly sink into the retaining slots 15 on the bracket body 10, making one lateral side of the metal wire shelf 30 stably held to and supported on the bracket 1. When the two lateral sides of one metal wire shelf 30 are separately held to and supported on two adjacent supporting brackets 1, the metal wire shelf 30 is assembled to the wall-mount rack 20 for use. When it is desired to dismount the metal wire shelf 30, simply move the reversed U-shaped member 17a downward with the second rivet 17f located in a lower end of the L-shaped guide slot 17c. At this point, the reversed U-shaped member 17a is held to a lowered position, and the metal bar 31 of the metal wire shelf 30 can be removed from the retaining slot 14 to dismount the metal wire shelf 30 from the wall-mount rack 20.
In the illustrated embodiment of the present invention, there are two retaining slots 15 provided on the top edge of the side wall portions 13 of the bracket body 10. Each of the retaining slots 15 is an L-shaped slot having an open-topped vertical section and a lower horizontal section. The metal bars 32 of the metal wire shelf 30 enter the L-shaped retaining slots 15 via the open-topped vertical section. When the metal wire shelf 30 is further forward pushed, the metal bars 32 are moved into the lower horizontal section of the retaining slots 15 to restrict the metal wire shelf 30 from moving upward.
A front end 18 of each of the side wall portions 13 on the bracket body 1 is adapted to support the front transverse metal bar 33 of the metal wire shelf 30 thereon. A protrusion 18a is formed closely behind the front end 18 to stop the metal bar 33 from moving rearward, so that the metal wire shelf 30 assembled to the wall-mount rack 20 is stably located in place.
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With the above arrangements, a user may selectively mount metal wire shelves 30, board-type shelves 40, slide-out baskets 50, or drawers on the wall-mount rack 20, and/or support a crossbar 73 below the bracket bodies 10 for holding suit hangers thereon. Therefore, the supporting components for the wall-mount rack 20 are simplified in structure and reduced in quantity, making the wall-mount rack 20 more convenient for use and more neat in appearance to increase the commercial value thereof.
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