The invention relates to a wall-mounted holder for vacuum cleaner tools and the like.
Vacuum cleaners are common household, shop, and outdoor tools. Many vacuum cleaners have a body containing an air pump and a depository for debris. The body is connected to a hose used to draw air and debris into the machine. Specialized cleaning tools are attached to the free end of the hose, such as brushes, crevice tools, and rug cleaners to facilitate cleaning tasks.
The hoses come in a variety of sizes, commonly from 1.25 inches to 2.5 inches in diameter. Some hoses are measured in metric units. Smaller diameter hoses are preferred for collecting liquid debris and interior house cleaning, while larger diameter hoses are useful for collecting larger debris found in a workshop or outdoors.
The specialized cleaning tools attached to a hose must match the diameter of the hose. Vacuum cleaners that use hoses of different diameters have a set of tools for use with each hose. One vacuum cleaner can use a number of different size hoses and many tools.
Storage of vacuum cleaner hoses and tools is difficult. The hoses are long and intentionally non-collapsible. The tools have irregular shapes and different sizes. Some vacuum cleaners bodies have a structure that allows tools to be attached to the vacuum cleaner body. Tools attached to a vacuum cleaner body complicate use of the cleaner by increasing the exterior size of the cleaner. The tools can become dislodged during use of the cleaner and can obstruct access to the body when changing the refuse receptacle or servicing the vacuum.
The difficulty of mounting tools and hoses on the vacuum cleaner body makes it desirable to store tools in the area where they are likely to see use but not on the cleaner body.
Storage racks for vacuum cleaner tools are known. The racks may be wall mounted or mounted on the vacuum cleaner body. Some of these racks are constructed from a frame made of wire or other material. The racks are large, expensive and complicated to produce and assemble. They cannot be stored compactly, a feature desirable for reducing packaging and transport cost. Often, conventional racks are not designed to accept specialized tools of different sizes and types.
There is additional difficulty when vacuum cleaner tools and hoses are stored in rooms with unfinished walls having exposed studs, such as closets, basements or garages. These rooms lack a continuous flat mounting surface. Conventional wall racks are difficult to mount on walls with exposed studs and do not make efficient use of available space between studs.
Therefore, there is need for a wall mounted holder for vacuum cleaner tools and hoses that is inexpensive to produce, easy for a user to assemble, and mountable on either a flat surface or a wall having exposed wall studs. The holder should accommodate vacuum cleaner tools and hoses of various sizes and types and should be compact for efficient shipping and pre-sale display.
The invention is a wall mounted tool holder adapted to be mounted on a flat wall or an unfinished wall with exposed studs to hold vacuum cleaner tools of different types and sizes and accompanying vacuum cleaner hoses. The holder can be made from a flat injection-molded preform made from thermo-plastic with reduced thickness hinges and break away pieces attached to a central panel. The holder can be easily and inexpensively molded. The flat pre-form is efficiently stacked permitting inexpensive packaging, transport and pre-sale display.
In a preferred embodiment, the holder is mounted to a flat wall surface though use of a pair of triangular supports. The holder can also be mounted on a wall between exposed wall studs.
The holder has a central panel that can be flexed when mounted on a wall or between studs. This flexibility allows the panel to bow away from the wall or studs and permit mounting of the holder between studs not spaced apart an exact distance. Tools are held behind the bowed panel.
The panel has a number of upwardly pointing fingers that grip and hold vacuum cleaner tools. The fingers hold tools that have a variety of diameters measured in either metric or English units. The cylindrical hose-mountable ends of tools to be stored are positioned between the central panel and the wall and are lowered over fingers flexed from the panel toward the wall. The fingers engage the tool ends and clamp the tools against the panel. Tools are held so that the non-clamped ends extend up from the fingers. The holder may also be equipped with tool directing straps that help support the upper portions of longer tools and a hose strap for hanging vacuum cleaner hoses under the panel.
The tool holder of the present invention allows a user to store vacuum cleaner tools of different diameters and any hoses used with the vacuum cleaner. There is no need for multiple holders that are each dedicated to hold accessories of one diameter.
The tool holder can be easily mounted on either a flat wall or a wall having exposed studs in a location convenient to their use. This facilities tool organization and eases cleaning tasks.
Other objects and features of the invention will become apparent as the description proceeds, especially when taken in conjunction with the accompanying six sheets of drawings illustrating three embodiments of the invention.
Preform 10 illustrated in
Tool holder 14 of preform 10 is rectangular in shape having spaced, parallel top and bottom edges 26 and 28 and spaced parallel ends 30 extending between edges 26 and 28. The body has a uniform thickness defining a flat, rectangular central or finger panel 32 located between the top and bottom edges and opposed inner hinges 34 extending perpendicularly between the top and bottom edges. The central panel may have a height of about 6 inches, a length of about 16 inches and a thickness of about ⅛ inch. Outer hinges 36 extend perpendicularly between the top and bottom edges of body 12 between hinges 34 and ends 30. A vertical mounting panel 38 extends between hinges 34 and 36 at each end of central panel 32. A second vertical mounting panel 40 is located between each hinge 36 and each body end 30. As illustrated in
Five flat tool support fingers 42 are formed in central panel 32. Each finger includes a base 44 at the bottom of the finger integral with the central panel, a body 46 extending upwardly from the base, a tip 48 at the top of the body and a finger edge 49 extending around the finger from one end of base 44, up the finger, past tip 48 and down the other side of the finger to the other end of the base. The fingers extend upwardly with base 44 of each finger adjacent the panel bottom edge and the tip of each finger adjacent the top panel edge.
A U-shaped slot 50 extends through the thickness of panel 32 and around each finger 42 from one end of base 44 past the tip to the other end of base 44. Panel edge 51 extends around the outside of the slot. Finger edge 49 extends around the inside of the slot. The slot separates the edge of the finger from the adjacent edge of the central panel to facilitate flexing of the finger outwardly from the plane of the panel and mounting of a tool on the finger. As illustrated, the width of the top of the slot, at fingertip 48, is approximately twice the width of the lower legs of the slot at the base 44 of the finger. The increased width at the top of the slot facilitates positioning an end of a vacuum cleaner tool over the finger during mounting on the finger, as described below in further detail.
A recess 66 is formed in body top edge 26 above each of the outer fingers 42.
Each support preform 16 preferably has a uniform thickness, like the thickness of body 12, and includes horizontal arm panels 52 and 54, a mounting panel 56 located between panel 52 and 54 and an attachment panel 58 on the side of panel 54 away from panel 56. Three reduced thickness hinges 60, like hinges 34 and 36, join panels 52, 56; 56, 54; and 54, 58. Mounting panel 56 is narrower than panel 52 and 54 and the width of panels 54 and 58 approximates the width of panel 52.
A number of vertical hinges 62, like reduced thickness hinges 34 and 36, are formed in straps 18, 20 and 22 as illustrated. A plurality of mounting holes 64 are formed through the members of preform 10 at desired locations. The purpose of the mounting holes 64 is described below.
Packaging of preform 10, the support preform 16 are preferably folded 180 degrees about the joints 24 joining the preforms to holder 14 so that the support preforms overlie one side holder 14. Likewise, the strips 18, 20 and 22 are folded about the joints 24 joining strips 18 to holder 14 to position the strips on the other side of the tool holder. The folded preform comprises a three-layer stack with support preform 16 on one side of holder 14 and the strips 18, 20 and 22 on the other side of the body. The folder support preforms in the strips are connected to the tool holder by 180 degree bent joints 24 adjacent the top and bottom body edges 26 and 28.
The holder is mounted on the wall 72 by mounting both support preforms 16 on the wall with hinges 60 extending vertically. The mounting panels 56 are then attached to the wall 72 by appropriate fasteners 74 extending through openings 64 in the vertically oriented mounting panels 56. The two mounting panels 56 are spaced apart a predetermined distance so that panel 32 is bowed out from wall 72 as illustrated.
One of the panels 38 of body 13 is positioned adjacent the mounting panel 56 of one support preform and the support preform panels 52 and 54 are bent about hinges 60 away from wall 72 to capture or sandwich panel 38 between panels 52 and 54 as shown in
Each tool holder has an upper and a lower continuous band 93, 95 at the top and bottom edge 26, 28 and extending fully across the holder between the ends 30. In holder 14, the bands contact with each other at line 97. Line 97 extends from one end of the holder to the adjacent finger 42, between adjacent fingers 42 and to the opposite end of the holder. If desired, the bands 93, 95 may be separated at line 97 with band 93 spaced a distance above band 95. The fingers 42 extend upwardly from the lower band 95. Upper band 92 is located over the fingers 42.
Tools with small diameter tubular ends are mounted on a tool holder by positioning the tools above a holder previously mounted on a wall or between studs and then lowering the tubular ends between band 93 and the wall and fitting each end freely over a finger 42. The tools lean inwardly toward the wall and may be supported by the wall or by a tool support loop 78 mounted on the back of the upper band 93. The upper band 93 prevents the tools mounted freely on the fingers from falling forwardly away from the wall and off the holder. In this way, tools with small diameter ends insufficiently large to be clamped between the fingers and the panel are positively held in place on the holder.
Vacuum cleaners frequently include heads that are mounted on tubular sections for cleaning floors and rugs. These heads have an elongate body and a central tubular mounting portion extending away from the body. Heads of this type may be mounted on the ends of holder 70 with one end of the head extended into the narrow space between panel 32 and wall 72 at a slot 66 and with the head seated in the slot to support the tool.
If desired, strap 20 may be formed into a loop and secured to the inner surface of panel 32 at mounting hole 64 located below central finger 42. Strap 20 forms a loop for supporting a coiled vacuum cleaner hose, as shown more clearly in the second embodiment of
Second embodiment tool holder 90 is illustrated in
Holder 90 includes body 12 with a finger or central panel 32 and mounting panels 38 and 40 to each end of the central panel with hinges 34, 36 between adjacent panels, as previously described and illustrated in
T-shaped vacuum cleaner tool 118 is fitted in the space between the left end of panel 32, adjacent stud 92, and wall 94. The side of the tool adjacent central outlet 124 seats in recess 66 to retain the tool in the holder.
As illustrated in
Slit 138 allows deflection of finger 130 inwardly of the panel 134 to receive a lower cylindrical end of a tool inserted over the finger, as previously described. See
The tip 48 of finger 42 and tip 134 of finger 130 may be deformed, either by molding or permanent bending, beyond the inner side of the respective panel to be in position to receive the end of a tool lowered over the finger. Locating the fingertip on the inside of the panel reduces or eliminates the need to push the finger manually beyond the panel during mounting of a tool on the finger.
The tilting of the outer fingers and slots assures that vacuum cleaner tools mounted on the outer fingers and slots do not tilt directly away from the inner surface of panel 142 but are tilted a small angle outwardly from the center of the panel. This small tilt assures that the tools mounted on the bowed panel 142 of holder 140 are tilted back directly toward the wall behind the holder. When viewed from the front of the holder, the tools are parallel to each other. This orientation is pleasing to the viewer and facilitates grasping and removal of the tools from the holder.
U-shaped slots 50 extend completely around fingers 42 from one end of the finger base past the tip to the other end of the finger base. These slots provide spacing between the sides of the finger and the adjacent panel sides to permit positioning of vacuum cleaner ends of the fingers with minimal inward deflection of the fingers. The lower tool ends fill the slots to either side of the finger.
If desired, the fingertips could extend upwardly to the upper edge of the panels with a slit between the fingertip and the panel and two separate slots each extending from the tip of the finger down to one end of the finger base. The finger can be deflected from the panel to receive the lower end of a vacuum cleaner tool as previously described with the end of the tool filling the lower ends of the two separate slots as shown in
Holder 14 has been described with central panel 32 bowed outwardly from the wall or studs supporting the holder. If desired, the holder may be mounted on adjacent studs with panel 32 extending flat between the two studs. Vacuum cleaner tools are mounted on the tool support fingers 42 as described. There is no need to rotate the fingers and slots as illustrated in
While I have illustrated and described preferred embodiments of my invention, it is understood that these are capable of modification, and I therefore do not wish to be limited to the precise details set forth, but desire to avail myself of such changes and alterations as fall within the purview of the following claims.