WO2004099038A2 - Appareil dans une enceinte froide - Google Patents
Appareil dans une enceinte froide Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- WO2004099038A2 WO2004099038A2 PCT/US2004/013899 US2004013899W WO2004099038A2 WO 2004099038 A2 WO2004099038 A2 WO 2004099038A2 US 2004013899 W US2004013899 W US 2004013899W WO 2004099038 A2 WO2004099038 A2 WO 2004099038A2
- Authority
- WO
- WIPO (PCT)
- Prior art keywords
- shelf
- items
- opening
- gate
- guide
- 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.)
- Ceased
Links
Classifications
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A47—FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
- A47F—SPECIAL FURNITURE, FITTINGS, OR ACCESSORIES FOR SHOPS, STOREHOUSES, BARS, RESTAURANTS OR THE LIKE; PAYING COUNTERS
- A47F1/00—Racks for dispensing merchandise; Containers for dispensing merchandise
- A47F1/04—Racks or containers with arrangements for dispensing articles, e.g. by means of gravity or springs
- A47F1/12—Racks or containers with arrangements for dispensing articles, e.g. by means of gravity or springs dispensing from the side of an approximately horizontal stack
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A47—FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
- A47F—SPECIAL FURNITURE, FITTINGS, OR ACCESSORIES FOR SHOPS, STOREHOUSES, BARS, RESTAURANTS OR THE LIKE; PAYING COUNTERS
- A47F1/00—Racks for dispensing merchandise; Containers for dispensing merchandise
- A47F1/04—Racks or containers with arrangements for dispensing articles, e.g. by means of gravity or springs
- A47F1/08—Racks or containers with arrangements for dispensing articles, e.g. by means of gravity or springs dispensing from bottom
- A47F1/087—Racks or containers with arrangements for dispensing articles, e.g. by means of gravity or springs dispensing from bottom the container having approximately horizontal tracks of the serpentine type
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A47—FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
- A47F—SPECIAL FURNITURE, FITTINGS, OR ACCESSORIES FOR SHOPS, STOREHOUSES, BARS, RESTAURANTS OR THE LIKE; PAYING COUNTERS
- A47F7/00—Show stands, hangers, or shelves, adapted for particular articles or materials
- A47F7/28—Show stands, hangers, or shelves, adapted for particular articles or materials for containers, e.g. flasks, bottles, tins, milk packs
Definitions
- This invention relates to various apparatuses used to increase storage capacity in a cold vault.
- Displaying and storing items for sale is an important aspect in how stores do business with their customers. Stores display what is on sale, and customers can then make a choice as to which product to buy, if any. There are various ways of storing and displaying items for sale. For example, a convenience store selling cold drinks in cans, bottles, or other containers will typically place such items in a refrigerator or cold vault which has a number of shelves inside for housing the items, as well as a glass door so that the customer can see the items that are for sale before opening the door. The customer looks through the glass, decides which item to buy (if any), opens the glass door, and takes the selected item.
- cold vaults have to be continually stocked and re-stocked so that an adequate supply of items is available for selection and purchase. And it is preferable to have a number of different selections available to the customer, and to stock enough of each selection in the cold vault. Moreover, it is important that the drinks are cold when the customers select them from the cold vault for purchase.
- Several cold vaults exist today which display and store items for sale. However, these cold vaults do not provide certain features that would be helpful to their users in housing and displaying items for sale. For example, there is a need for more space in a cold vault for merchandising an expanding portfolio of new products.
- an apparatus includes a frame supporting an upper shelf at an angle thereto.
- the frame is configured to be supported by a customer-accessible lower shelf. Both the upper and lower shelves are adapted to support a plurality of items.
- the upper shelf has an opening at a lower end thereof, so that an item supported by the upper shelf drops onto the lower shelf, through the opening, after an item is removed from the lower shelf.
- an apparatus includes a frame supporting a customer-accessible lower shelf disposed at a first angle thereto, and an upper shelf disposed at a second angle thereto and above the lower shelf. Both the upper and lower shelves are adapted to support a plurality of items.
- the upper shelf has an opening at a lower end thereof, so that an item supported by the upper shelf drops onto the lower shelf, through the opening, after an item is removed from the lower shelf.
- an apparatus includes a housing for supporting from top to bottom a plurality of customer-accessible lower shelves each disposed at a first angle thereto, and for supporting an upper shelf disposed at a second angle thereto and above the topmost lower shelf. Both the upper shelf and lower shelves are adapted to support a plurality of items.
- the upper shelf has an opening at a lower end thereof, so that an item supported by the upper shelf drops onto the topmost lower shelf, through the opening, after an item is removed from the topmost lower shelf.
- the items are maintained in a substantially upright position on the upper and lower shelves. Because of the angles at which the upper and lower shelves are disposed on the frame or housing, the items on the upper shelf are tilted downward toward the back of the cold vault, while the items on the lower shelf or shelves are tilted downward toward the front of the cold vault.
- the upper shelf may have a plurality of tracks (or upper guides), the tracks' openings corresponding to the upper shelf s openings.
- the tracks are adapted to feed the items positioned on the upper shelf towards the tracks' openings.
- the upper shelf s tracks may use spring-loaded pushers to assist in feeding the items toward the openings.
- the lower shelf, positioned below the upper shelf, may also have a corresponding plurality of tracks (or visislides).
- the lower shelf s tracks are adapted to feed the items towards the front door of the cold vault.
- a gate may be disposed off the lower end of the upper shelf, in a position such that when the lower shelf is full, there is a predetermined amount of space between a rearmost item in the lower shelf (that is, an item positioned closest to the upper shelf s opening) and the gate, so that an item dropping from the upper shelf to the lower shelf is wedged between the gate and the rearmost item of the lower shelf.
- the wedged item falls onto the lower shelf as its (new) rearmost item, and another item from the upper shelf becomes wedged between the gate and the (new) rearmost item of the lower shelf.
- the gate may comprise a plurality of panels, each panel corresponding to a track.
- the gate may be vertically slidably and pivotably mounted to the cold vault frame, such that in a raised and horizontally pivoted position, the lower shelf is ready for loading, and in a lowered and vertically pivoted position the upper shelf is ready for loading.
- the gate may be vertically slidably mounted to the frame, such that in a raised position the lower shelf is ready for loading, and in a lowered position the upper shelf is ready for loading.
- the gate may have a handle to raise and lower it.
- the gate may also have a plurality of flaps to align items dropping from the upper shelf onto the lower shelf in a substantially vertical position, and to keep the dropping items in the corresponding tracks of the upper and lower shelves.
- a rear guide may be disposed at an upper end of the lower shelf to align items dropping from the upper shelf onto the lower shelf in a substantially vertical position, and to keep the dropping items in the corresponding tracks of the upper and lower shelves.
- a lower guide may be disposed below and toward the rear of the upper guide to align items dropping from the upper shelf onto the lower shelf in a substantially vertical position, and to keep the items in the lower shelf in their tracks and in a substantially upright position.
- the lower guide may guide items, such as bottles, in the lower shelf by their caps, by their shoulders, or by both.
- a lifter may be disposed at a lower end of each upper guide's track. When the lifter is in a locked position, a portion of the lifter forms a floor which covers an opening in the upper shelf, preventing items from falling through the opening.
- a pusher may be disposed in each of the upper guide's tracks, the pusher being biased by a spring, in which the pusher is adapted to push the items supported by the upper guide towards the opening.
- An adaptor rod may be disposed at a lower end of the lower shelf, adapted to position the items on the lower shelf.
- Figure 1 illustrates a side view of an apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention
- Figures 2 and 3 illustrate perspective views of the apparatus of Fig. 1, with Fig. 2 showing gate 24 in a raised position and Fig. 3 showing gate 24 in a lowered position;
- Figure 4 illustrates an apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention
- Figure 5 illustrates the apparatus of Fig. 4 disposed above a topmost customer-accessible shelf
- Figure 6 illustrates a perspective view of an apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention
- Figure 7 illustrates the apparatus of Fig. 6, with the gate 24 in a raised and horizontally pivoted position
- Figure 8 illustrates the apparatus of Fig. 6, with the gate 24 in a lowered and vertically pivoted position
- Figure 9 illustrates an apparatus in an embodiment of the present invention
- Figure 10A illustrates a side view of frame 91 of the apparatus of Fig. 9
- Figures 10B-10E illustrate top views of various width shelves 92/93 (racks) of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- FiguresllA-F illustrate various views of pusher 100 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- Figures 12A-D illustrate various views of rear guide 96 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- Figures 13A-D illustrate various views of lower guide 99 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- Figures 14A-D illustrate various views of upper guide 94 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- Figures 15A-F illustrate various views of lifter 95 of the apparatus of Fig.
- Figures 16A-C respectively illustrate a locked and unlocked lifter 95 of the apparatus of Fig. 9, as well as the guidance of a bottle by lower guide 99.
- Figures 17A-B respectively illustrate front and rear views of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- the apparatuses of the present invention allow for more space to be utilized in a cold vault and to merchandise an expanding portfolio of products.
- the storage capacity of each cold vault can be increased by as much as 20% or more. Consequently, the present invention may:
- one apparatus of the present invention includes a frame that holds an extra (“drop rotation") shelf to occupy the traditionally dead space above the topmost customer accessible (shopable) shelf of a cold vault, the topmost shelf supporting the apparatus, as shown in Fig. 5.
- Items such as beverage cans and bottles, are stored on the drop rotation shelf, and product gravity and/or a spring-loaded track feeds these items down onto the topmost shelf through one or more openings in the drop rotation shelf, as space becomes available on the topmost shelf when items are removed therefrom.
- the capacity within a cold vault can be increased by at least one entire shelf.
- the increased capacity in the cold vault can accommodate an increased number of items for storage and sale, and can accommodate increased sku needs and flexibility.
- the extra shelf can enhance product rotation and improve upon stocking efficiency, since more items can be stocked at once, thereby reducing the frequency at which the cold vault needs to be re-stocked.
- Back-stock inventory can be reduced as well, and labor costs can be reduced by virtue of reduction in product handling.
- the present invention is particularly advantageous in that it re-fills automatically the topmost shelf, which is often the most shopped shelf.
- Existing cold vaults can be modified (retrofitted) with the present invention, or new cold vaults can be manufactured with the present invention.
- Fig. 4 shows the drop rotation shelf 18 positioned on wire stand or frame 20, which in turn is supported by and straddles the top customer- accessible shelf 16.
- the drop rotation shelf 18 has spring-loaded tracks which operate in conjunction with gravity to push the bottles back toward the gate 24, after which they drop onto the uppermost customer-accessible shelf 16 as space becomes available on that shelf.
- Dividers (or upper guide) 26 are provided to divide the shelf into tracks, and are adjustable to allow for differently sized bottles, cans, or other containers or items which are positioned on the tracks.
- Fig. 5 illustrates the drop rotation shelf 18 of Fig. 4 disposed above the top customer- accessible shelf 16.
- two angularly-related shelves are adapted to hold beverage bottles or other items in a substantially vertical position with a gate 24 disposed at the rear of the two shelves (that is, the topmost customer accessible shelf 16 and the drop rotation shelf 18).
- a gate 24 disposed at the rear of the two shelves (that is, the topmost customer accessible shelf 16 and the drop rotation shelf 18).
- Fig. 1 illustrates a side view of the apparatus of Fig. 4 inside a cold vault 10.
- Customers open front door 12 of the cold vault 10 which contains numerous shelves 14, 16, and 18 supporting plastic bottles for sale.
- the apparatuses of the present invention are intended to support other well-known containers (cans, cartons, glass bottles, etc.), products (soda, juice, beer, etc.), and sizes (12 oz., 16 oz., 20 oz., 2 liters, etc.).
- the cold vault 10 may have multiple columns of shelves and corresponding front doors 12, each column of shelves having a corresponding apparatus as described herein.
- Shelves 14 and 16 are accessible through the front door to the customer, and are angled downward towards the front door 12. Shelf 14, and similar shelves below shelf 14, operate in a conventional manner. As the customer takes a bottle from shelf 14, gravity forces the remaining bottles on the shelf 14 to move one spot closer to the front door 12, thus filling the space created by the removed bottle. [0046] The operation of shelves 16 and 18 will now be discussed. As shown in Fig. 5, stand 20, which is preferably wire but could also be made from plastic or from another suitable material, sits on the topmost customer-accessible (shopable) shelf 16.
- Stand 20 straddles shelf 16 and supports a drop rotation shelf 18, which is configured at an angle generally opposite to that of shelf 16; that is, the drop rotation shelf 18 is angled downward and toward the back of the cold vault, rather than downward toward the front of the cold vault as are shelves 14 and 16.
- the absolute angles (with respect to the horizontal plane) of shelves 16 and 18 may differ.
- the drop rotation shelf 18 is preferably made out of metal, but of course other suitable materials could be used. [0047]
- the drop rotation shelf 18 in this embodiment has a plurality of tracks (glides), which may be plastic injection-molded glides, but of course other suitable materials may be used.
- the glides help transfer the bottles from the drop rotation shelf 18 to shelf 16.
- a spring-loaded mechanism can also be incorporated into the drop rotation shelf 18 to further assist the movement of bottles from front to back toward the track opening.
- gate 24 functions as a backstop to keep the bottles from toppling out of the shelves as they are being transferred, and assists in guiding bottles from the drop rotation shelf 18 to shelf 16.
- the gate 24 can also be, for example, raised and lowered to allow for product loading.
- the gate 24 may be vertically slidably mounted, as shown in Figs. 2 and 3, or vertically slidably and pivotably mounted, as shown in Figs. 6-8, on the cold vault housing.
- Other gate mountings are within the scope of the art, such as a hinged mounting (not shown).
- the gate 24 maybe made of metal, plastic, or other suitable material.
- Figs. 2 and 3 illustrate perspective views of the cold vault 10. In these figures, the gate 24 is made up of integrated, individual cylindrical panels corresponding to each shelf track.
- the gate 24 In order to load bottles onto shelf 16, the gate 24 is slid up into a raised position, and then the topmost customer accessible shelf 16 is loaded with items from the cold vault's interior, as shown in Fig. 2. In order to load bottles onto the drop rotation shelf 18, also from the cold vault's interior, the gate 24 is slid down into a lowered position, as shown in Fig. 3. [0050] h Figs. 6-8, gate 24 is vertically slidable and pivotable mounted on the cold vault's frame. Fig. 7 shows the gate 24 in a raised and horizontally pivoted position, which allows the topmost customer accessible shelf 16 to be loaded with items from the cold vault's interior. Figs.
- gate 24 in a lowered and vertically pivoted position, which allows the drop rotation shelf 18 to be loaded from the cold vault's interior, h this embodiment, gate 24 is flat, and has a handle 24c attached thereto for raising and lowering it.
- the gate has two pins 24a and 24b located on its sides which, when the gate is in the lowered position, rest against frame 25 to limit the gate's forward movement toward shelf 16 as shown.
- Pins 24e in slots 24d (a pin/slot pair on each side of the gate) allow the gate when it is raised to pivot and slide forward toward the front door 12 at a predetermined frame location.
- Figs. 6 and 7 also show flaps 28 on gate 24, which help keep the bottles in line as they drop from the drop rotation shelf 18 to the shelf 16.
- Fig. 6 also shows the "visislide" guide 38, which provides a plurality of tracks in the topmost shelf 16. The tracks 38 feed the items toward the front door of the cold vault.
- Fig. 9 illustrates another embodiment of the present invention. Front and views of this apparatus are also shown respectively in Figs. 17A and 17B.
- the frame 91 rests upon an existing wire shelf 90.
- the frame 91 supports both a lower (customer accessible) shelf (or “rack”) 92 and an upper drop rotation shelf (or “rack”) 93.
- the lower shelf 92 has plastic "visislides” 97
- the upper shelf 93 has plastic upper guides 94, which provide tracks for each shelf.
- the tracks support, for example, bottles 98.
- bottle 98d in upper guide 94 of the upper shelf 93 as acted upon by spring-biased pusher 100 and gravity moves into the space previously occupied by bottle 98 a, and so on.
- the bottles on the upper shelf 93 are assisted by negator springs (not shown) disposed on each upper guide track 94 of the upper shelf 93.
- the negator springs are preferably made of spring steel, and bias each track's pusher 100 toward the rear of the upper shelf 93.
- the downward angle of the upper shelf 93 (as compared to horizontal) is less than the downward angle of the lower shelf 92 (as compared to horizontal), in this embodiment, to reduce the space the upper shelf 93 occupies in the cold vault.
- the tracks of the upper shelf 93 preferably use the negator spring-loaded pushers 100 to assist in feeding the bottles 98 positioned on the upper shelf 93 to the lower shelf 92.
- the downward angle of the upper shelf 93 is preferably greater than zero (that is, non-horizontal), because otherwise the gravity component in that direction would be zero and the negator springs would have to provide the entire force for feeding the bottles along the upper shelf 93.
- FIGS 11A-F illustrate various views of pusher 100 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- a graphic panel or point-of-sale panel may be attached to the front of the lower guide 99 to display advertisements or product/company labeling (see, for example, Fig. 17A).
- Fig. 10A illustrates a side view of frame 91 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- the frame 91 is preferably constructed of 11 gauge crs steel wire, but other known sizes and materials may be used.
- a bracket 91a preferably made of 16 gauge sheet metal and welded or otherwise attached to the rear of the frame 91 as shown, is used to support the lower shelf 92 on the frame 91, and to maintain the lower shelf 92 at a proper downward angle.
- the frame has various substantially cross members and vertical members, in the relationship shown, to provide sufficient strength to support loaded lower and upper shelves.
- Figures 10B-10E illustrate top views of various width shelves 92/93 (racks) attached to the frame 91.
- FIG. 10B shows an "8 wide” rack, Fig. 10C a “7 wide” rack, Fig. 10D a “9 wide” rack, and Fig. 10E a "5 wide” rack. These racks may used for the upper shelf 93 or lower shelf 92, or both.
- Figures 12A-D illustrate various views of rear guide 96 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- Rear guide 96 is disposed at an upper end of the lower shelf 92 to align items dropping from the upper shelf 93 onto the lower shelf 92 in a substantially vertical position, and to keep the dropping items in the visislide track 97 that corresponds to upper guide's track 94 from which the item dropped.
- the rear guide 96 has a curved component 96a which attaches to the rear of the lower shelf 92 and the visislide 97.
- FIGs 13A-D illustrate various views of lower guide 99 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- Lower guide 99 is disposed below and toward the rear of the upper guide 94 to align items dropping from the upper shelf 93 onto the lower shelf 92 in a substantially vertical position, and to keep the items in the lower shelf 92 in their tracks 97, also in a substantially upright position.
- a pair of relatively short vertical members 99a extending downward from the lower guide 99 and more than halfway down the track 97 (that is, the length of the lower guide 99), guide bottles 98 in the lower shelf s tracks by their caps. The caps ride between the pair of short vertical members 99a, preventing the bottles from tipping.
- the short vertical members 99a eventually taper outwards to meet vertical members 99b, as shown in Fig. 16C.
- a pair of relatively longer vertical members 99b extending downward from the lower guide 99 and more than halfway down the track 97 (that is, the length of the lower guide 99), guide bottles 98 in the lower shelf s tracks by their shoulders, as also shown in Fig. 16C.
- the bottle When combined with the guidance provided to the bottle's bottoms by the visislide track 97, the bottle are well-guided in a substantially upright position down the lower shelf 92 to the front door of the cold vault.
- FIGs 14A-D illustrate various views of upper guide 94 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- Upper guide 94 via barriers 94c, provides a plurality of tracks 94a to carry the bottles 98.
- a spring-biased pusher 100 which in operation moves from the front toward the rear
- a lifter 95 Also at the rear of each track is an opening 94b.
- FIGs 15A-F illustrate various views of a hook-shaped lifter 95 of the apparatus of Fig. 9.
- Each lifter 95 is pivotably attached by lifter pins 95b to slots 94e of the upper guide 94, so that it may pivot between a locked position (see Fig. 16 A) when pushed toward the upper guide and an unlocked position (see Fig. 16B) when pulled away from the upper guide.
- the upper guide 94 can be loaded with bottles 98.
- the lifter may be molded in the shape and dimensions shown in Figs. 15 A-F, or manufactured and sized in any known equivalent manner.
- a "false floor” is created by the bottom 95a of the lifter over the opening 94b through which the bottles fall in normal operation (see Fig. 16 A).
- the floor allows the corresponding track 94a of the upper guide 94 to be loaded without the bottles falling through the opening 94b.
- the bottom of the first bottle 98 loaded onto the track 94a rests on the floor and against the pusher 100, and then is pushed forward along the track 94a as the next bottle 98 is loaded, and so forth.
- This is advantageous because typically the upper guide 94 will be high off the ground (e.g., 7 feet), and with this configuration, a person more easily may load the upper guide 94.
- bottle 98a and bortle 98b it is preferable for bottle 98a and bortle 98b to be sitting "bottom to cap”; that is, the bottom of bottle 98a should preferably be resting on the cap of bottle 98b. This is preferable to the bottom of bottle 98a resting on the shoulder of bottle 98b, because in that case bottle 98a's potential energy will be lower. The lower potential energy may prevent the bottle 98a from being able to fall all the way down to the visislide 97 of the lower shelf 92, and might instead fall and rest upon, disadvantageously, only as far as the hip of bottle 98b. Bottle 98a will thus be out of alignment in the visislide 97 and lower guide 99. This situation may require servicing to re-align the bottles properly.
- Flap 99c of the lower guide 99 and rear guide 96 helps guide the bottles 98a and 98b to the preferred "bottom to cap” position.
- An adaptor rod (not shown) may also be included in the apparatus of the present invention.
- the adaptor rod may be positioned at the front of the lower shelf 92, between existing supporting rod 89 (extending into the drawing figure) and the bottles.
- the adaptor rod can further assist in creating the preferred "bottom to cap” alignment between dropping bottle 98a and the bottle 98b below, by pushing the bottles 98 on the lower shelf 92 towards the rear guide 96, so that the dropping bottle 98a may rest on the bottle 98b below in the preferred "bottom to cap” alignment.
- the adaptor rod may or may not be used, depending on such factors as the ambient temperature of the cooler, the barometric pressure, whether the beverage is carbonated or non-carbonated, etc. For example, carbonated bottles tend to expand, while non-carbonated bottles do not, and so the adaptor rod might be used with non-carbonated bottles. Of course, this is just an example, and may not apply to all situations. Essentially, the alignment may (or may not) be altered slightly by factors such as those mentioned, and the adaptor rod may (or may not) be used.
- the adaptor rod is preferably made out of metal, though other suitable materials are envisioned.
- Components that are not steel may be injection-molded plastic.
- the rear guide 96, the lower guide 99, visislide 97 and upper guide 94 are preferably made of polypropylene, while lifter 95 and pusher 100 are preferably made of polyurethane.
- upper guide 94 and visislide 97 may be configured for the various sized racks (e.g., 9-wide, 8-wide, 7-wide, 5 wide etc.).
- the dimensions shown in the drawing figures are generally representative of apparatuses used to support 20 ounce beverage bottles, as shown in Figs. 17A and 17B. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, other dimensions may be used for other container types and sizes.
- the various configurations permit the apparatus of the present invention to be retrofitted to existing cold vaults.
- the apparatus may also be integrated in the manufacture of a cold vault, including a cold vault frame, a drop rotation shelf, and a plurality of lower (customer-accessible) shelves.
Landscapes
- Freezers Or Refrigerated Showcases (AREA)
- Warehouses Or Storage Devices (AREA)
- Cold Air Circulating Systems And Constructional Details In Refrigerators (AREA)
Abstract
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US46802503P | 2003-05-05 | 2003-05-05 | |
| US60/468,025 | 2003-05-05 |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| WO2004099038A2 true WO2004099038A2 (fr) | 2004-11-18 |
| WO2004099038A3 WO2004099038A3 (fr) | 2005-03-10 |
Family
ID=33435157
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/US2004/013899 Ceased WO2004099038A2 (fr) | 2003-05-05 | 2004-05-05 | Appareil dans une enceinte froide |
Country Status (2)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US20060082262A1 (fr) |
| WO (1) | WO2004099038A2 (fr) |
Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DE102005033022B4 (de) * | 2005-07-15 | 2007-01-04 | Daimlerchrysler Ag | Regallager |
| EP2060500A1 (fr) * | 2007-11-15 | 2009-05-20 | Rehrig Pacific Company | Ensemble de transport et d'emballage d'affichage |
Families Citing this family (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KR101179933B1 (ko) * | 2010-09-17 | 2012-09-07 | 한국지질자원연구원 | 유출빗물 연속샘플러 |
| CN112971368B (zh) * | 2021-02-20 | 2022-08-26 | 江西金虎保险设备集团有限公司 | 一种防倾倒的抗震式密集架 |
Family Cites Families (10)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US2315515A (en) * | 1939-10-19 | 1943-04-06 | Williams Oil O Matic Heating | Dispensing apparatus |
| US2652154A (en) * | 1949-12-27 | 1953-09-15 | John F Mccarthy | Display rack |
| US3055293A (en) * | 1960-08-05 | 1962-09-25 | Michael J Lariccia | Storage and dispensing rack for cans and the like |
| US3318455A (en) * | 1965-08-30 | 1967-05-09 | Century Display Mfg Corp | Dispensing rack |
| US3938700A (en) * | 1974-11-25 | 1976-02-17 | Cavalier Corporation | Multi-rack article dispensing apparatus |
| US4997106A (en) * | 1989-10-19 | 1991-03-05 | Rock-Ola Manufacturing Corporation | Storage magazine and feed system for vending cylindrical articles |
| US5080256A (en) * | 1990-01-18 | 1992-01-14 | Rock-Ola Manufacturing Corporation | Slant shelf magazine for automatic vending machines |
| JP2502549Y2 (ja) * | 1991-09-06 | 1996-06-26 | 株式会社椿本チエイン | 先入先出物品保管棚装置 |
| US5356033A (en) * | 1992-12-01 | 1994-10-18 | David Delaney | Beverage dispensing method and apparatus |
| US6259965B1 (en) * | 1999-06-09 | 2001-07-10 | The Coca-Cola Company | Cooler inventory management system with light guard |
-
2004
- 2004-05-05 WO PCT/US2004/013899 patent/WO2004099038A2/fr not_active Ceased
-
2005
- 2005-07-06 US US11/175,732 patent/US20060082262A1/en not_active Abandoned
Cited By (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DE102005033022B4 (de) * | 2005-07-15 | 2007-01-04 | Daimlerchrysler Ag | Regallager |
| WO2007009604A1 (fr) * | 2005-07-15 | 2007-01-25 | Daimlerchrysler Ag | Rayonnage |
| EP2060500A1 (fr) * | 2007-11-15 | 2009-05-20 | Rehrig Pacific Company | Ensemble de transport et d'emballage d'affichage |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US20060082262A1 (en) | 2006-04-20 |
| WO2004099038A3 (fr) | 2005-03-10 |
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