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GB2323884A - Gasketless extruded aluminium frame element for wardrobe doors - Google Patents

Gasketless extruded aluminium frame element for wardrobe doors Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2323884A
GB2323884A GB9814841A GB9814841A GB2323884A GB 2323884 A GB2323884 A GB 2323884A GB 9814841 A GB9814841 A GB 9814841A GB 9814841 A GB9814841 A GB 9814841A GB 2323884 A GB2323884 A GB 2323884A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
wall
panel
rear wall
framing element
gasketless
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB9814841A
Other versions
GB9814841D0 (en
GB2323884B (en
Inventor
John D Gephart
Paul R Cusson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Stanley Works
Original Assignee
Stanley Works
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US08/709,267 external-priority patent/US5860264A/en
Application filed by Stanley Works filed Critical Stanley Works
Publication of GB9814841D0 publication Critical patent/GB9814841D0/en
Publication of GB2323884A publication Critical patent/GB2323884A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2323884B publication Critical patent/GB2323884B/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E06DOORS, WINDOWS, SHUTTERS, OR ROLLER BLINDS IN GENERAL; LADDERS
    • E06BFIXED OR MOVABLE CLOSURES FOR OPENINGS IN BUILDINGS, VEHICLES, FENCES OR LIKE ENCLOSURES IN GENERAL, e.g. DOORS, WINDOWS, BLINDS, GATES
    • E06B3/00Window sashes, door leaves, or like elements for closing wall or like openings; Layout of fixed or moving closures, e.g. windows in wall or like openings; Features of rigidly-mounted outer frames relating to the mounting of wing frames
    • E06B3/70Door leaves
    • E06B3/88Edge-protecting devices for door leaves

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Wing Frames And Configurations (AREA)
  • Securing Of Glass Panes Or The Like (AREA)

Abstract

A wardrobe panel door has a generally rectangular panel 10 which is seated in a frame provided by opposed pairs of integrally formed gasketless door stiles and rails. Each rail has an outer wall 58, a front wall 62 and a rear wall 70. The junction 72 of the rear wall and the outer wall of the aluminium extrusion is notched to enable resilient deflection of the rear wall. The front and rear walls form a channel therebetween to receive the edge portion of the panel. The rear wall bears upon the rear surface of the panel and presses it against the front wall to securely seat it in the channel. The rear wall has oppositely angled portions 71,76. The front wall has an inward end portion 64 which extends rearwardly and has a depending flange 66. Also disclosed is the construction of the stile elements, corner connectors, and sliding door runners.

Description

GASKETLESS ALUMINUM FRAME ELEMENT The present invention relates to panel doors, and, more particularly, to gasketless frame elements for receiving the edges of mirrors and other planar panels.
Mirrors or doors with mirrors on a face thereof are widely employed in bedrooms, bathrooms, wardrobes, and dressing rooms to enable viewing of attire on the wearer, to enhance the appearance of rooms, or to provide special effects. In some instances, the mirror itself comprises a sliding panel, but preferably its periphery is seated in a peripheral frame to provide a sliding shower or wardrobe door.
Flexible vinyl gaskets are commonly employed between a channel in the frame and the glass panel to help seat the panel tightly within the frame and to provide a water seal in shower doors. Generally, the appearance of the frame can vary greatly in size, shape, and color. Because the flexible gaskets are usually visible in part, it is desirable for them to match the frame in contour and color for aesthetic reasons. However, a vinyl gasket will rarely completely match an extruded aluminum frame, and it is difficult to clean, detracts from the appearance, and is costly and time consuming to install. Alternatives to vinyl gaskets include adhesives and sealants applied as tapes and liquids, but these also are at best time consuming and relatively messy to apply.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a gasketless frame element for a panel door to retain the panel securely therein.
It is also an object to provide such a frame element which enables simple and rapid assembly of the door.
Still another object is to provide framing elements which may be readily and economically fabricated and which produce a long lasting rugged assembly.
The present invention provides an integrally formed gasketless extruded aluminum door framing element for receiving the edge of a panel, the framing element having front, rear, and outer faces defining, outward, frontward, inward, and rearward directions, the framing element comprising: (a) an outer wall providing the said outer face and having front and rear sides; (b) a relatively rigid front wall providing the said front face and extending inwardly along the front side of the outer wall, the front wall having an inward end portion extending towards the said rear face and a depending flange on the end of the inward end portion extending towards the said outer face; and (c) a rear wall providing the said rear face and extending inwardly along the rear side of the outer wall, the rear wall having a first portion adjacent the outer wall angled towards the front wall and a second portion spaced from the outer wall angled oppositely to the first portion, the junction of the rear wall and the outer wall being configured to enable resilient deflection of the rear wall relative to the outer wall, the said depending flange of the front wall and the said second portion of the rear wall being spaced apart and cooperating to provide an inwardly opening channel, to receive the edge portion of a panel, the junction of the said first and second portions of the rear wall being adapted to bear upon the panel when seated in the channel.
The forming element may be initially formed as an extrusion which is then further formed to provide the desired channel width.
Generally, the junction of the rear wall and the outer wall includes a groove which extends along their inner surface to facilitate the resilient deflection. Usually, the panel is a mirror.
The outer wall of the forming element preferably has an inwardly extending rib on its inner surface, and the front edge of the rib is generally aligned with the junction of the portions of the rear wall to seat an edge portion of the panel thereagainst and prevent rotation of the rail about the edge of the panel.
In the accompanying drawings: Figure 1 is a partially exploded perspective view of a mirror door employing a gasketless frame with arrows showing the manner of insertion of the panel into the channels of the framing elements; Figure 2 is a fragmentary side elevational view of the stile of the gasketless frame of Figure 1, the stile not embodying a framing element according to the present invention; Figure 3 is a sectional view of the stile along the line 3-3 of Figure 2 drawn to a greatly enlarged scale with arrows showing the rear wall deflected about its juncture with the outer wall as shown in phantom line, and in its at rest position in solid line; Figure 4 is a sectional view similar to Figure 3 but showing the mirror panel inserted into the stile; Figure 5 is a fragmentary side elevational view of the rail of the gasketless frame of Figure 1, the rail embodying a framing element according to the present invention; Figure 6 is a sectional view along the line 6-6 of Figure 5 drawn to a greatly enlarged scale and showing the rear wall shown in a deflected position, in phantom line and in its at rest position in solid line; Figure 7 is a sectional view similar to Figure 6, but showing the mirror panel inserted into the rail; Figure 8 is a fragmentary perspective view of a bottom corner connector prior to assembly with the stile and rail of the gasketless frame; and Figure 9 is a fragmentary rear elevational view of the mirror door after the corner connector of Figure 8 is assembled on the lower portion of the gasketless frame.
Turning first to Figure 1, therein illustrated is a wardrobe door employing a gasketless frame. In this instance, the door is a mirror door in which a mirror panel generally designed by the numeral 10 is seated in channels 38 in the stiles which are generally designated by the numeral 12 and in ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ channels 78 in the rails which are generally designated by the numeral 14. The stiles 12 and rails 14 together provide the perimeter frame for the door, and are assembled with corner connectors seen in Figure 8 and 9.
Turning in detail to the stile 12 as seen in Figures 2-4 it bas an outer wall 16 and front and rear walls 18, 26 extending generally perpendicularly from the front and rear sides of the outer wall 16. The rear wall 26 is resiliently deflectable about its juncture 28 with the outer wall 16, and this deflectability is enhanced by the groove 30 which significantly reduces the thickness of the metal at the juncture.
The inner wall 32 extends perpendicularly forwardly from the inner end of the rear wall 26, but is spaced from the front wall 18 to provide a channel 38 therebetween.
The inner wall 32 includes vertically extending elongated slots 34 extending therethrough adjacent the ends of the stile 12. A flange 36 extends inwardly and rearwardly from the front end of the inner wall 32 to guide the panel 10 gradually into the channel 38 during assembly.
A shelf 46 extends perpendicularly rearwardly from the inner surface of the front wall 18 at a point spaced from the outer wall 16, and it terminates in a perpendicularly inwardly extending leg 48. As seen in Figure 4, the shelf 46 seats the edge of the panel 10.
A flange 20 extends perpendicularly forwardly from the inner end of the front wall 18 and terminates for aesthetic reasons in an enlarged outwardly projecting lip 22 and to provide a functional handle by which the stile may be gripped by the user's forefingers to slide the door.
The front surface of the flange 36 has small ribs or barbs 40 thereon to bear on and grip the rear polyethylene backing 56 which covers the silver layer 54 on the mirror panel 10. These barbs 40 are opposite and cooperate with convex projection or rib 42 on the inner surface of the front wall 18. In addition, a second similar convex projection 44 is spaced intermediate and apart from the flange 46 and the convex projection 42. These convex projections 42, 44 provide two points of contact between the front face 52 of the minor 10 and the inner surface of the front wall 18 and facilitate movement of the panel 10 onto the shelf 46.
Turning next in detail to the rail 14 which is iUustrated in Figures 5-7, it has an outer wall 58 with horizontally extending elongated slots 60 extending therethrough adjacent its ends. Front and rear walls 62, 70 extend inwardly from front and rear sides of the outer wall 58 to provide the outer, front and rear faces of the rail 14. The rear wall 70 has a first portion 71 which is angled toward the front wall 62 and is resiliently deflectable about its juncture 72 with the outer wall 58, and this is enhanced by the groove 74 in the inner surface of the juncture 72.
The rear wall 70 has a portion 76 at its free end which is angled oppositely. The 64 front wall 62 has an arcuately inwardly extending upper portionlwhich has at its end a depending flange 66 which extends toward the outer wall 58 to provide one side of channel 78 which is bounded on the other side by the juncture 80 between the portions 71,76 of the rear wall 70. The reverse angle of the portion 76 facilitates guidance of the panel 10 into the channel 78 during assembly.
An upstanding rib 82 extends perpendicularly inwardly from the inner surface of the outer wall 58, and it has one surface aligned with the juncture 80. The rib 82 provides an abutment for the rear surface of the mirror 10 to position the mirror 10.
For aesthetic reasons, the front wall 62 extends beyond the outer surface of the outer wall 58 to provide a skirt 68.
Upon assembly, the front surface 52 of the mirror 10 abuts the flange 66 of the front wall 62, and the rear backing 56 of the mirror 10 abuts the juncture 80.
In both the stile 12 and the rail 14, the resilient deflection of their rear walls 26, 70 applies a biasing pressure on the rear surface of the mirror panel 10 to seat it finnly in the channel 38, 78 against the front wall 18, 62.
As seen in Figures 8-9, the door frame is completed by corner connectors which engage the adjacent ends of the stiles 12 and rails 14. A sliding door roller assembly is generally designated by the numeral 84 and engages the lower ends. The roller assembly 84 includes upwardly projecting tabs 86 which seat within the horizontally extending elongated slots 60 in the bottom rail 14. In addition, the roller assembly 84 includes locking arms 88 which seat and lock within the vertically extending slots 34 in the inner wall 32 of the stile 12. Finally, the bottom portion of the roller assembly 84 includes upwardly and outwardly extending lips 90 which seat the bottom edge of the rear wall 26 of the stile member 12.
The top ends of the stiles 12 and rails 14 are similarly assembled with top corner connectors.
During assembly, the mirror panel 10 is easily seated in the channels 38, 78 of the stiles 12 and rails 14 as indicated by the arrows in Figure 1. Usually, the panel 10 is supported in a horizontal position on a flat surface, and the stiles 12 and rails 14 are assembled thereabout. During assembly, the guide surfaces 36, 76 of the stiles 12 and rails 14 guide the edges of the panel 10 into the slots 38, 78.
As the panel 10 pastes into the slot 38 of the stile 12, the inner wall 32 and rear wall 26 connected thereto deflect at the juncture 28 as illustrated in Figures 3 and 4 to permit the panel 10 to be inserted into the channel 38, which is narrower than the thickness of the panel. The inner wall 32 of the stile 12 is biased against the polyethylene backing 56 of the panel and seats the panel 10 against the convex projections 42, 44 on the inner surface of the front wall 18. The frictional fit created by the biased inner wall 32 and the rear wall 26 thereby retains the panel 10 once it is fully inserted into the stile member 12 with its edge abutting the abutment flange 46.
The assembly of the rail member 14 on the panel 10 is similar to that of the stile member 12. As the rail 14 is fitted onto the panel 10, the panel 10 is guided into the channel 78 as illustrated by the downwardly projecting arrow in Figure 1. This deflects the rear wall 70 rearwardly to allow the panel 10 to pass into the channel 78 which has a width narrower than the thickness of the panel 10. Once fully inserted, the end of the panel 10 abuts the outer wall 58 of the rail 14 and the rear surface of panel 10 abuts the flange abutment 82. The resiliently deflectable rear wall 70 biases the panel 10 against the flange 66 of the front wall 62 to retain the panel 10 securely within the rail 14.
The biasing action of the resiliently deflectable rear walls 26, 70 eliminates the need for flexible vinyl gaskets to retain the panel 10 within the stiles 12 and rails 14.
This, in turn, enables much quicker and easier assembly of wardrobe doors and a reduction in material and manufacturing costs.
The gaskedess frame members are initially formed as aluminum extrusions which are further formed in a post forming operation. The extrusion may be approximately 10 percent thinner than normal since it is extruded in a non-hollow die, and thereafter post formed to provide a close tolerance gap for the channel. This may be further adjusted by a secondary forming operation since the channel width is quite critical.
As a specific example of gasketless elements, aluminum extrusions are made with a wall thickness of about 1.15 mm (0.045 inch) and subjected to a secondary forming operation to provide a channel width of about 2.4 + 0.1 mm (0.095 + 0.005 inch) for a mirror and backing of about 3.0 + 0.25 mm (0.120 + 0.10 inch). To achieve this width, the roll dies pinch the extrusion to a width of about 2.16 mm (0.085 inch), and the springback is to the desired width.
Thus, the gasketless frame effectively retains a panel without requiring the use of vinyl gaskets, and it is readily assembled. The frame elements are readily and economically fabricated and may be formed to provide a close tolerance for the channels to receive the edge portions of the panels and provide the resilient deflection.
Attention is directed to our co-pending application No. 9717780.2 (GB-A-2 316 971) from which this application has been divided and which claims an integrally formed gasketless extruded aluminum door framing element for receiving the edge of a panel, the framing element having front, rear, outer, and inner faces defining inward, outward, frontward, and rearward directions, the framing element comprising: (a) an outer wall providing the said outer face and having front and rear sides; (b) a rear wall extending inwardly along the rear side of the outer wall and providing the said rear face, the junction of the rear wall and the outer wall being configured to enable resilient deflection of the rear wall relative to the outer wall; (c) a relatively rigid front wall providing the said front face and extending inwardly along the front side of the outer wall; and (d) an inner wall extending from the inward end of the rear wall towards the front wall and terminating at a point spaced therefrom to provide an inwardly opening channel therebetween, to receive the edge portion of an associated panel, the inner wall having a flange extending inwardly from its frontward edge thereof, the junction between the flange and the inner wall being adapted to bear upon the panel when seated in the said channel, the rear wall being resiliently deflectable about the said junction with the outer wall to vary the spacing between the inner wall with its flange and the front wall.
The parent application also claims a panel door comprising: (a) a generally rectangular panel; (b) a pair of horizontally spaced, integrally formed gasketless extruded aluminum door stile elements receiving the side edges of the panel, each stile element having front, rear, outer, and inner faces defining inward, outward, frontward, and rearward directions, each stile element including (i) an outer wall providing the said outer face and having front and rear sides, (ii) a rear wall extending inwardly along the rear side of the outer wall and providing the said rear face, the junction of the rear wall and the outer wall being configured to enable resilient deflection of the rear wall relative to the outer wall, (iii) a relatively rigid front wall providing the said front face and extending inwardly along the front side of the outer wall, and (iv) an inner wall extending from the inward end of the rear walls towards the front wall and terminating at a point spaced therefrom to provide an inwardly opening channel therebetween receiving the edge portion of the panel, the inner wall having a flange extending inwardly from its frontward edge, the junction between the flange and the inner wall resiliently bearing upon the panel seated in the channel, the rear wall being resiliently deflectable about the said junction with the outer wall to vary the spacing between the inner wall and its flange and the front wall; (c) a pair of vertically spaced, integrally formed gasketless extruded aluminum door rail elements receiving the upper and lower edges of the panel, each rail element having front, rear, and outer faces defining inward, outward, frontward and rearward directions, each rail element including (i) an outer wall providing the said outer face and having front and rear sides, (ii) a relatively rigid front wall providing the said front face and extending inwardly along the front side of the outer wall, the front wall having an inward end portion extending towards the said rear face and a depending flange on the inward end portion extending towards the said outer face, and (iii) a rear wall providing the said rear face and extending inwardly along the rear side of the wall, the rear wall having a first portion adjacent the outer wall angled towards the front wall and a second portion spaced from the outer wall angled oppositely to the first portion, the junction of the rear wall and the outer wall being configured to enable resilient deflection of the rear wall relative to the outer wall, the said depending flange of the front wall and the said second portion of the rear wall being spaced apart and cooperating to provide an inwardly opening channel receiving the edge portion of the panel, the junction of the said first and second portions of the rear wall resiliently bearing upon the panel seated in the said channel; and (d) corner connectors coupling the ends of the stile and rail elements.

Claims (7)

Claims:
1. An integrally formed gasketless extruded aluminum door framing element for receiving the edge of a panel, the framing element having front, rear, and outer faces defining, outward, frontward, inward, and rearward directions, the framing element comprising: (a) an outer wall providing the said outer face and having front and rear sides; (b)a a relatively rigid front wall providing the said front face and extending inwardly along the front side of the outer wall, the front wall having an inward end portion extending towards the said rear face and a depending flange on the end of the inward end portion extending towards the said outer face; and (c) a rear wall providing the said rear face and extending inwardly along the rear side of the outer wall, the rear wall having a first portion adjacent the outer wall angled towards the front wall and a second portion spaced from the outer wall angled oppositely to the first portion, the junction of the rear wall and the outer wall being configured to enable resilient deflection of the rear wall relative to the outer wall, the said depending flange of the front wall and the said second portion of the rear wall being spaced apart and cooperating to provide an inwardly opening channel, to receive the edge portion of a panel, the junction of the said first and second portions of the rear wall being adapted to bear upon the panel when seated in the channel.
2. A framing element according to claim 1, being an aluminum extrusion which is further formed to a channel width providing the desired resilient deflection.
3. A framing element according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the outer wall has an inwardly extending rib on its inner surface, the frontward edge of the rib being generally aligned with the junction of the said first and second portions of the rear wall, to seat the edge portion of a panel thereagainst.
4. A framing element according to any preceding claim, wherein the junction of the rear wall and the outer wall includes a groove extending along its inner surface to facilitate resilient deflection.
5. A framing element substantially as described with reference to, and as shown in, Figures 5 to 7 of the accompanying drawings.
6. A panel door comprising a generally rectangular panel and a gasketless aluminum frame receiving the edges of the panel, the frame having stile elements and rail elements whose ends are coupled by corner connectors, wherein each rail element is a framing element in accordance with any of claims 1 to 5.
7. A panel door according to claim 6, wherein the panel is a mirror.
GB9814841A 1996-09-06 1997-08-21 Gasketless aluminum frame element Expired - Fee Related GB2323884B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/709,267 US5860264A (en) 1996-09-06 1996-09-06 Gasketless aluminum frame for wardrobe doors
GB9717780A GB2316971B (en) 1996-09-06 1997-08-21 Gasketless aluminium frame for wardrobe doors

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB9814841D0 GB9814841D0 (en) 1998-09-09
GB2323884A true GB2323884A (en) 1998-10-07
GB2323884B GB2323884B (en) 1998-11-25

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB9814841A Expired - Fee Related GB2323884B (en) 1996-09-06 1997-08-21 Gasketless aluminum frame element

Country Status (1)

Country Link
GB (1) GB2323884B (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
RU2549321C1 (en) * 2014-03-24 2015-04-27 Вадим Александрович Беляков Door
US20220056755A1 (en) * 2020-08-24 2022-02-24 Phoenix Door Systems LLC Traffic door with edge trim and method of assembling same

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN106968565B (en) * 2017-05-15 2020-08-21 杨浩 Aluminum alloy frame composite door corner protector

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1208232A (en) * 1968-05-10 1970-10-07 Acme General Corp Panel frame corner connection
GB1460790A (en) * 1973-09-29 1977-01-06 Hirz Kg E Metal window frame

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1208232A (en) * 1968-05-10 1970-10-07 Acme General Corp Panel frame corner connection
GB1460790A (en) * 1973-09-29 1977-01-06 Hirz Kg E Metal window frame

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
RU2549321C1 (en) * 2014-03-24 2015-04-27 Вадим Александрович Беляков Door
US20220056755A1 (en) * 2020-08-24 2022-02-24 Phoenix Door Systems LLC Traffic door with edge trim and method of assembling same

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB9814841D0 (en) 1998-09-09
GB2323884B (en) 1998-11-25

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20010821