[0001] The invention relates to sliding and locking means according to the preamble of claim
1 for locking the position of a glass panel, movable along an upper and a lower rail,
at a given angle with respect to the upper rail.
[0002] The invention also relates to a balcony glazing system according to the preamble
of claim 19.
[0003] The glass panels encircling glazed balconies must be removable for example for cleaning
operations or weather changes. For this, the balcony glass panels must be transferred
to a suitable place in the balcony (generally against the balcony side wall) and turned
or locked at an angle of 90 degrees or larger with respect to the upper and lower
rails of the balcony glazing system.
[0004] In balcony glazing systems known from prior art, the sliding and locking systems
of the glass panels generally include upper and lower rails, along which the panels
can be moved. For moving the glass panels along the rails, guide members are arranged
inside the upper and lower rails, and separate locking means are provided for locking
the glass panels at a desired spot. There are known several types of locking means,
but they are generally based on getting a pin-shaped or disc-shaped locking member
into contact with its counterpiece, when the glass is turned at a desired angle with
respect to the upper rail.
[0005] The main drawback with the locking means of the known balcony glazing systems is
their low tolerance for any unevenness in the balcony surfaces of the glass guide
members slidable inside the upper rail and of the locking means, which leads to an
increased need for maintenance and poor functioning. The currently used sliding and
locking means of balcony glass panels work well, if they can be installed on straight
surfaces, but in case the surfaces are skewed, as they in most cases are, several
problems arise; for instance, the passage of the guide members in the rail is prevented,
and the locking means do not function. Often the sliding and locking means known from
the prior art are complicated in their locking and sliding mechanisms, which means
an increase in their manufacturing costs.
[0006] A typical arrangement of sliding and locking means for balcony glass panels is described
in the patent publication
FI 101823. Said publication introduces a lower and upper guide member, and the glass panel
3 can be turned in a turning station by an axis passing through said elements. For
locking the glass panel, the system includes a bar-like or disc-like locking member
7 located above the upper guide member, which locking member is locked with its counterpiece.
This type of locking member functions well, if the locking part can be installed in
the designed position with respect to the counterpiece, but in case the upper rail
for example must be installed at an inclined position, there may easily occur problems
in the locking function. This type of sliding and locking means also include an upper
guide member and locking part supported against a separate rail, which makes the structure
complicated.
[0007] In sliding and locking systems for glass panels known from prior art, the turning
station of the upper rail includes a supporting protrusion, by which the turning rear
end of the glass panel is supported when turning the panel, until the locking parts
arranged in the rail have time to receive the locking parts connected to the front
end located in the turning station of the glass panel. Now the location of the upper
and lower guide members of the glass panel sliding and locking means arranged at the
upper and lower edges of the panels must be adjusted depending on which point of the
turning station each glass panel should be locked to. When the upper and lower guide
members are not located at the ends of the glass panel, this in turn results in that
the location of the glass panel turning station at the balcony end, i.e. the handedness
of the turning station in the balcony, cannot be freely chosen after the installation.
[0008] The object of the invention is to eliminate the above described drawbacks of the
prior art.
[0009] Hence, the main object of the invention is to realize a balcony glazing system provided
with such simple sliding and locking means for balcony glass panels that function
in all conditions. An additional object of the invention is to realize a balcony glazing
system in which the location of the glass panel turning station at a desired end of
the balcony can be freely chosen.
[0010] The main object of the invention is achieved by the sliding and locking means according
to claim 1, and by a balcony glazing system according to claim 19.
[0011] More precisely, the invention relates to sliding and locking means for locking the
position of a glass panel, movable along an upper and a lower rail, at a given angle
with respect to the upper rail. The upper rail consists of an upper side, a bottom,
an inner side and an outer side. At the top edge of the glass panel, there are connected,
by intermediation of an upper support bead, two upper guide members that are slidable
along the upper rail, and at the lower edge of the glass panel, there are connected,
by intermediation of a lower support bead, two lower guide parts that are slidable
along the lower rail. The glass panel is arranged immovably between said lower and
upper support beads, so that at least the upper support bead extends from one end
of the glass panel to the other, and the panel can be turned and locked at an angle
with respect to the upper rail. Each upper guide member is semisphere-shaped and made
as a locking member by connecting it to a support bead secured at the top part of
the glass panel by a rigid fastening that prevents a mutual turning motion between
the support bead and the upper guide member, whereby the counterpiece of said upper
guide member serving as the locking member constitutes a circle segment shaped aperture
located on a shelf, so that the horizontal plane passing through said aperture is
located roughly at halfway of the height of said upper guide member. The upper guide
member of each pair of upper guide members is attached to the support bead at the
end of said bead, and at the same time at the end of the top edge of the glass panel.
[0012] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the upper rail is provided with recesses
that are located at the same longitudinal point of the upper rail as the locking counterpiece
located on the shelf attached to the side wall.
[0013] A balcony glazing system according to the invention comprises several upper and lower
rails encircling the balcony, as well as glass panels that are movable along the upper
and lower rails, so that each upper rail consists of an upper side, a bottom, an inner
side and an outer side, and that at the top edge of the glass panel, there are connected,
by intermediation of a support bead, two upper guide members that are slidable along
the upper rail, and that at the lower edge of the glass panel there are connected,
by intermediation of a lower support bead, two lower guide parts that are slidable
along the lower rail, whereby the glass panel is immovably secured in between said
lower support bead and support bead, and at least the upper support bead extends from
one end of the glass panel to the other and can be turned and locked at an angle with
respect to the upper rail. Each upper guide member is semisphere-shaped, and it is
formed as a locking member by connecting it to a support bead secured at the top part
of the glass panel by a rigid fastening that prevents a mutual turning motion between
the support bead and the upper guide member, so that the counterpiece of said upper
guide member serving as the locking member constitutes a circle segment shaped aperture
located on a shelf, so that the horizontal plane passing through said aperture is
located roughly at halfway of the height of said upper guide member. The guide member
of each pair of upper guide members is attached to the support bead at the end of
said bead, and at the same time at the end of the top edge of the glass panel.
[0014] The invention is based on the idea that the guide members sliding along the upper
rail are arranged to function simultaneously both as a bearing structure when sliding
the glass panels along the rails and as locking means when turning the glass panels
in the turning station at a given angle with respect to the longitudinal direction
of the upper and lower rails. This, in turn, is made possible by a fixed fastening
of these upper guide members to the upper support bead, and by their semispherical
shape and the location of their locking counterpieces with respect to the semisphere
- the counterpiece is located on the horizontal plane passing through the center line
of the semisphere.
[0015] By making the fastening between the upper guide member and the upper support bead
fixed and rigid, the upper support bead and the upper guide member can be locked simultaneously
in the locking position, in which case there are not needed any separate sliding and
locking means, as in the prior art balcony glazing systems.
[0016] This kind of semisphere-shaped, combined guide and locking member is not sensitive
to unevenness and skewness in the fastening surface of the rail structure; even if
the side walls (outer and inner side) directed downwardly from the upper side of the
upper rail were not positioned exactly vertically, but were slightly inclined with
respect to the vertical direction, this does not affect the functionality of the locking
system, because the counterpieces still remain on the horizontal plane passing through
the center line of the semisphere; in the prior art elements used for locking, skewness
in the rail structure often results in functional disturbance of the locking elements.
[0017] By using a semisphere-shaped, combined locking and guide member, there also is achieved
the advantage that its moving along the upper rail is not encumbered, even if the
rail were inclined with respect to the vertical direction, as opposed to the case
with prior art locking members, where the locking members are arranged as separate
from the guide members and may hit the rail walls.
[0018] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the upper rail is provided with a double
bottom, and from the glass panel support bead, there is pointed a bracket in between
the upper and lower bottoms of the double bottom. In addition, there may be a sliding
support arranged in between the lower bottom and the bracket of the double bottom.
In that case the bracket thrust in between the double bottom now supports the top
edge of the glass panel that is being turned in the turning station K, until the locking
member counterpiece located on the upper rail receives the locking member. By using
this kind of structure of the support bead of the upper rail and the glass panel connected
to a combined locking and upper guide member, there is achieved the additional advantage
as compared to prior art arrangements, that there is no need to connect to the upper
rail an additional supporting protrusion in order to ensure a horizontal position
for the glass panel when turning the glass in the turning station to locking position.
Now the combined sliding and locking means according to the invention can be placed
at the ends of all glass panels, which in turn enables a free selection of the location
of the turning station at the desired end of the balcony, i.e. the handedness of the
turning station can be chosen before installation and even after the installation.
The term 'balcony end' refers to that part of the balcony where the balcony space
ends.
[0019] In prior art balcony glazing systems, it has been necessary to make the upper guide
members rotary around a vertical axis, i.e. the fastening between the support bead
and the upper guide member is not fixed, because part of the upper guide members located
further in the back with respect to the sliding direction are not located at the support
bead ends. This kind of fastening method between the support bead and the upper guide
member has its origins in that in known systems, there is used an additional protrusion
for supporting the position of the glass panel when turning the glass in the turning
station.
[0020] Consequently, the advantages of a balcony glazing system according to the invention
over the prior art are based on two interconnected features: the junction between
the upper guide member and the support bead is made to be fixed, which in turn is
due to that all upper guide members are placed at the ends of the glass panel. The
upper guide members can be placed at the ends of the glass panel, because in the arrangement
of the invention, it is not necessary to provide the upper rail with a separate supporting
protrusion when turning the glass panels. The need for a supporting protrusion has
been eliminated, because in the invention, the structure of the upper rail is modified
by forming the upper rail bottom as a double bottom, and by providing the support
bead with a bracket, by which the glass panel can be supported against said double
bottom when turning the glass panel.
[0021] Moreover, in another preferred embodiment of the invention, in the turning station
K, adjacent to the counterpiece of each upper guide member, at the same point with
respect to the upper rail length, on the bottom of the upper rail, there is made a
number of identical recesses that are concentrical in relation to the longitudinal
center line of the bottom. By means of these recesses, the glass panel is prevented
from sliding, when turning it in the longitudinal direction of the upper rail.
[0022] In another preferred embodiment of the invention, each lower guide member movable
along the lower rail includes a horizontally rotary guide part. The guide part consists
of two horizontal wheels geared on the same axis, said wheels being rotary in opposite
directions while the guide part moves in a guide chute made in the lower rail. The
guide chute is an element made in the lower rail, in parallel with the lower rail
and bordered at one side by the lower rail bottom, the vertical sides of said guide
chute forming a wedge-like structure; its function is to rotate the guide parts in
different directions when sliding a guide part along the guide chute. The guide part
can be forced towards the guide chute by a support arm connected to the guide part;
spring force is applied on the top part of said support arm.
[0023] Advantageously the vertical sides of the guide chute are shaped so that the guide
parts getting into contact with them touch different vertical sides irrespective of
the inclination of the lower rail.
[0024] By using this kind of structure in the lower rail and the guide part, there is achieved
the advantage that in all conditions, the guide part slides smoothly in the guide
chute. Likewise, the fitting between the guide part and the guide chute remains in
all conditions without any clearance, because the guide part is evenly forced towards
the guide chute by a given spring force.
[0025] The elongate support arm passing through the housing and pressing the guide part
also has a certain motional tolerance in the vertical direction, which means that
a certain vertical creep tolerance is achieved in the balcony glazing system.
[0026] The invention and its various advantages are further illustrated below, with reference
to the appended drawings.
Figure 1 A shows a perspective illustration of a balcony glazing system according
to the invention, showing the principal parts of the sliding and locking means of
one glass panel as placed in the upper and lower rail.
Figure 1B shows the glass panel sliding and locking means according to Figure 1, viewed
from the direction 1B of Figure 1A, without the upper and lower rails.
Figure 2 shows a glass panel and its sliding and locking means according to Figure
1, viewed from the direction II of Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a perspective illustration showing the upper guide member of the glass
panel sliding and locking means of the first embodiment of the invention, and part
of the glass panel attached thereto, as well as the upper guide member counterpieces
arranged inside the upper rail.
Figure 4A illustrates the support and locking device, the upper guide member and part
of the glass panel attached thereto, as well as the counterpieces arranged inside
the upper rail, viewed from the direction IV of Figure 3.
Figure 4B illustrates the upper guide member of another embodiment, seen from the
same viewpoint as in Figure 4A.
Figure 4C illustrates the upper guide member of the embodiment shown in Figure 4B,
viewed from the direction IVC of Figure 4B, when the upper guide member is slightly
turned with respect to the upper rail.
Figure 5 illustrates the locking motion of the upper guide member with its counterpiece.
Figure 6A is a top-view schematical illustration showing, for the sake of comparison,
how glass panels in a prior art balcony glazing system are brought to a turning station
located in a balcony corner.
Figure 6B illustrates, from the same viewpoint as in Figure 6A, how glass panels in
a balcony glazing system according to the present invention are brought to a turning
station located in a balcony corner.
The upper picture series of Figure 7 illustrates the recesses arranged in the upper
rail bottom, in a turning station, in the vicinity of the upper rail bottom, viewed
in a longitudinal cross-section and directly from the side, towards the outer wall
of the upper rail, and the lower picture series illustrates the upper guide members
in this same turning station, viewed directly from above.
Figures 8A, 8B and 8C illustrate a lower guide member located further back on the
lower rail when viewed directly towards the end of the glass element, with the lower
rail visible in cross-section.
[0027] In the following specification, we shall deal with the features of the invention,
illustrated by the appended drawings, and the structures visible in the drawings.
[0028] Figures 1A-1B and 2 illustrate one glass panel 5 in a balcony glazing system according
to the invention, as connected to the upper and lower guide members 2, 3, i.e. to
the sliding and locking means 1, seen from different viewpoints. There is one pair
of each, both of the upper guide members 2 and of the lower guide members 3, as is
apparent from Figures 1A-1B. The upper guide members 2 are attached to the upper corners
of the glass panel 5 by intermediation of an upper support bead 4, and the guide parts
30 of the lower guide members 3 are attached to the lower corners of a rectangular
glass panel by intermediation of a lower support bead 300.
[0029] The glass panel 5 is connected to semisphere-shaped upper guide members 2 located
above its top edge and upper corner by intermediation of an (upper) support bead 4,
which support bead in turn is fastened to the top part of the glass panel. On the
same vertical line Q with the upper guide members 2 there are located the guide parts
30 of the lower guide members 3. Each lower guide member 3 is formed of a lower support
bead 300 secured to the lower part of the glass panel and serving all lower guide
members, and two guide parts 30 are attached to said lower support bead. The guide
parts 30 of the lower guide member 3 are located underneath the lower corner of the
glass panel, and they slide turnably along the lower rail 8. Both the upper support
bead 4 and the lower support bead 300 extend from one end of the glass panel 5 to
the other.
[0030] The upper rail 7 is connected to the surrounding fastening support 6, by which the
system in turn is attached to the balcony structures (not illustrated). The glass
panel 5 is turnable around the vertical lines Q1; Q2 drawn via the guide parts of
the front and rear (upper) guide members 2; 2', 2" located at the front and rear ends
of the glass panel and via the respective lower guide members 3; 3', 3" located at
the front and rear ends of the glass panel. By this arrangement, there is achieved
the advantage that the glass panel can be turned with respect to either one of the
vertical lines Q; Q1 or Q; Q2, so that the handedness of the turning station K to
be described below can be chosen freely. The elongated upper rail 7 consists of an
upper side 73 and of outer and inner sides 76, 75 connected at right angles to the
upper side, as well as of a double bottom 70 positioned on a horizontal plane, on
top of which upper bottom there is supported an upper guide member 2. In cross-sectional
profile, the upper rail 7 is more or less rectangular, and an aperture is provided
in between its inner side 75 and its bottom 70. Inside the space defined by the double
bottom 70, the inner side 75, the outer side 76 and the upper side 73 of the upper
rail 7, there remains a casing-like slide space T, where the upper guide member 2
is placed. The outer side 76 and the inner side 75 extend in the vertical direction
and are mutually parallel. The double bottom 70 and the upper side 73 extend in the
horizontal direction and are mutually parallel.
[0031] Figures 3 and 4A-C show a semisphere-shaped upper guide member 2 seen from different
viewpoints and in more detail, said guide member being located on the upper rail 7
in the slide space T. The upper guide member 2 is attached to the glass panel 5 by
intermediation of a support bead 4. The upper guide member 2 serves simultaneously
both as a bearing structure for the glass panel 5 when sliding on the double bottom
7 of the upper rail, and as a locking member 2 when being locked with the counterpiece
20.
[0032] In Figures 3 and 4A-4B, the upper guide member 2 located inside the slide space T
of the upper rail 7 and the glass panel connected underneath it is illustrated in
the rest position, i.e. in the position where the upper guide members 2 normally are
when sliding along the double bottom 70 of the upper rail, and where they have not
yet been turned and locked with their counterpiece 20 (semisphere-shaped aperture)
located in the upper rail turning station K, on the shelf 200
[0033] In Figure 4C, the upper guide member is illustrated in the position where it is turned
to its locking position in the turning station.
[0034] In the rest position, the vertical straight surface 2a of the semisphere-shaped upper
guide member 2 is turned towards the vertical inner side 75 of the upper rail 7. The
upper rail 7 is at its top part connected to a fastening support 6, and underneath
the upper side 73 of the upper rail 7, there remains an adjusting member 9, used for
adjusting the angle between the fastening support 6 and the upper rail 7, and the
vertical position of the upper rail 7.
[0035] Generally the upper side 73 of the upper rail 7 and the horizontal part of the fastening
support 6 attached to the balcony are in parallel. If the horizontal part of the fastening
support 6 attached to the balcony must, however, be secured at an abnormal station
or position, for instance owing to unevenness occurring in the balcony ceiling, the
adjusting member can be used for adjusting the height of the upper side 73 of the
upper rail 7, as well as for adjusting it in the horizontal direction. The upper rail
7 is provided with a double bottom 70 connected horizontally to the outer side 76,
but not to the inner side 75, said double bottom being respectively formed of an upper
bottom 71 and a lower bottom 72 that are in parallel. The upper bottom 71 is provided
with a guide slot 70; 71; 71a in the longitudinal direction of the upper rail, and
the turning station is provided with a number of successive depressions or recesses
(cf. Figure 7). The guide slot 71a is formed by turning the free end of the horizontal
upper bottom 71 upwardly.
[0036] The semisphere-shaped upper guide member 2 is at its lower surface supported against
the upper surface of the upper bottom 71, in its guide slot 71a, so that the straight
surface 2a of the upper guide member 2 is in a vertical position or even slightly
inclined from the vertical position, for example with an inclination of 5 -10 degrees.
The upper guide member 2 is attached to the top part of the glass 5 by intermediation
of the support bead 4 that in the horizontal direction extends from one end of the
glass panel 5 to the other. In the vertical direction, the support bead 4 extends
from the upper guide member from an aperture provided in the corner between the inner
side 75 of the upper rail and the double bottom 70 towards the glass 5 located underneath
the upper rail 8, and is secured to said glass with a rigid pressure joint. The semisphere-shaped
upper guide member 2 is attached to the support bead 4 underneath a narrow, plate-like
support arm 2b connected directly to the straight surface 2a of the semisphere. The
support arm 2b is permanently fixed in an upwardly opening groove 4a formed by the
upper end of the support bead 4. Owing to the fixed, rigid mutual fastening of the
upper guide member 2 and the support bead 4, the mutual position of the upper guide
member 2 and the glass 5 rigidly fastened to the support bead 4 is not changed, when
the upper guide member 2 is turned (cf. Figures 3C, 5 and 6) in the turning station,
as opposed to the situation in the arrangements according to the invention. Now the
guide member 2 of the upper guide can serve both as a sliding member when moving along
the upper rail and as a locking member, when the glass panel 5 is turned in the turning
station.
[0037] From the support bead 4 connecting the upper guide member 2 and the glass 5, a bracket
41 is projected to between the upper and lower bottom 71, 72 of the double bottom
70 of the upper rail 7. The bracket 41 extends from one end of the upper rail 7 to
the other end, equidistantly from the upper side 73 of the upper rail. The horizontal
part 72a of the lower bottom 72 of the double bottom 70 is provided with a pocket
72b, in which a slide plane 72c can be inserted. The slide plane 72c arranged in the
pocket 72b helps the sliding of the support bead 4 and also the sliding of the upper
guide member 2 attached thereto on top of the lower bottom 72 (cf. Figures 4B and
4C). The junction between the upper guide member 2 and the support bead 4 is located
immediately adjacent to the longitudinal vertical plane P drawn through the middle
of the upper rail 7, and on the horizontal center line L of the upper rail drawn halfway
along the height of the semisphere. Now the straight surface 2a of the upper guide
member 2 is in the rest position located roughly on said vertical plane P extending
in the longitudinal direction of the upper rail, said vertical plain being placed
halfway along the width of the upper side 73, in the middle of the slide space T.
While the upper guide member 2 is in the rest position, its lower surface is supported
against the upper bottom 71 of the double bottom 70, against the fold 71a left between
the horizontal part of the upper bottom 71 and its upwardly turned free end, said
fold serving as the guide slot 71a of the upper guide member 2.
[0038] The semisphere-shaped counterpieces are located on a triangular shelf 200 that is
narrowed towards the free tip thereof and is fastened at the inner side 75 of the
upper rail 7, said free tip extending to the vicinity of the straight surface 2a of
the guide member 2.
[0039] The locking counterpiece 20 of each upper guide member 2 is an aperture 20 located
on the shelf-like structure 200. The shelf is best shown in Figures 3 and 4A - 4C.
The apertures located on the shelf are illustrated in Figures 5 and 7.
[0040] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, at the locking counterpieces placed on
the shelf 200, at the upper bottom 71 of the upper rail, there is arranged a number
of recesses 25 by means of an aligning element 250. This embodiment is illustrated
in Figure 7 and in Figures 4A - 4C.
[0041] The horizontal shelf 200 is on the horizontal plane fastened to the turning station
K of the inner side 75 of the vertical upper rail 7, i.e. at a point where the glass
panels 5 should be turned at a desired angle (generally about 90 degrees) with respect
to the longitudinal direction of the upper rail. The turning station illustrated in
Figure 3A is placed at the other end of the upper rail 7 (cf. Figure 6). The lower
edge of the shelf 200 is located on a horizontal plane that is drawn halfway along
the height of the upper guide member 2. Thus the shelf 200 is fastened at such a height
on the inner side 75 that the horizontal lower edge of the shelf is placed about halfway
along the height, i.e. diameter, of the semisphere-shaped upper guide member 2, when
viewed from the upper bottom 71 of the upper rail 7. The apertures 20 arranged on
the shelf 200 are located adjacently, and they are at least as many as there are glass
panels included in the balcony glazing system. In their longitudinal section profiles,
the apertures 20 have a circular shape, and their orifice opens away from the inner
wall 75, towards the upper guide member 2 arranged on the upper rail. The radius r
of the apertures is roughly equal to the radius of the semisphere-shaped guide member
2. The free edge of the shelf 200 extends to the vicinity of the straight surface
2a of the semisphere-shaped guide member 2.
[0042] The locking of the guide member 2 with the counterpiece 20 is carried out as is illustrated
in Figure 5. For the sake of simplicity, the drawing only depicts the upper guide
members 2; 2'a, 2'b and the shelf 200, on which the counterpieces 20; 20',20",20"'
are located. In the situation shown in Figure 5, the first glass panel on the right-hand
side is turned at an angle of 90 degrees with respect to the inner wall 75 of the
upper rail, said inner wall 75 extending in parallel with the shelf 200. The semisphere
2'b connected to a first glass panel and used as an upper guide member is turned 90
degrees in order to be locked with the counterpiece 20; 20' that is circle segment
shaped in cross-section. Adjacent thereto, there is the semisphere 2'a, connected
to a second glass panel, which semisphere 2'a has just been set adjacent to the counterpiece
20"; now, by turning the semisphere 90 degrees counterclockwise, the glass panel attached
thereto is aligned in parallel with the first glass panel.
[0043] Figure 6B shows a number of glass panels 5 that are adjacently turned in the turning
station K according to the method illustrated in Figures 4B, 5A and 5B, which panels
are arranged at an angle of 90 degrees with respect to the longitudinal direction
of the upper rail. Figure 6B also shows the placing of the pair of upper guide members;
both longitudinal ends of the support beads 4 of each glass panel are provided with
a guide member 2. In the inner side 75 of the upper rail there is now made an aperture,
not illustrated in the drawings, by removing a piece before the turning station, in
order to allow the guide member 2; 2" running further back to turn out of the upper
rail. The upper guide member 2 shown in Figures 4B and 4C is the foremost guide member
2,2' that runs inside the upper rail in Figure 6. From Figure 4C it can be seen how
the bracket 41 of the support bead 4 turning along with the guide member 2 all the
time remains at least partly inside the intermediate bottom, i.e. in between the lower
bottom 72 and the upper bottom 71, even if the rear end 4" of the support bead 4 and
at the same time the rear end of the glass panel 5 fastened to the support bead are
turned outwardly, i.e. towards the inner wall 75 of the upper rail. Owing to the double
bottom 70 constituting a turning support for the bracket 41 of the support bead 4,
the end of the glass panel slid along the rails 7, 8 supported by the guide parts
of the upper guide members 2 and of the lower guide members 3, in other words that
end of the glass panel that is run further back, i.e. the rear end, need not be supported
by a supporting protrusion separately arranged on the upper rail 7 as is the case
in prior art balcony glazing systems, when the guide member 2; 2" attached by a support
bead 4 at the top edge of the end located furthest back in the sliding direction of
the glass panel 5 is turned outwardly in the turning station K. In a preferred embodiment
explained in more detail below, in connection with the description of Figure 7, the
reliability of the turning function of the glass panel 5 is improved by making depressions
or recesses 25 on the upper bottom 71 in the turning station K by means of an aligning
element 250. The recesses 25 prevent the glass panel 5 from moving in the longitudinal
direction of the upper rail 7 during the turning operation. The structure of the aligning
element 250 is for the main parts visible also in Figures 4A, 4B and 4C.
[0044] For the sake of comparison, balcony glazing systems known from the prior art are
illustrated in Figure 6A. Here only the sliding members 21; 21', 21" running on the
upper rail of the glass panel that is the first to be brought to the turning station
K are fastened at the ends of the upper support bead 4 of the glass panel, but in
the rest of the glass panels, the sliding member 21 " that is located further back
in the transfer direction is attached at a given distance from that end (rear end)
4" of the support bead 4 that is located further back in the transfer direction. Said
distance depends on the location where the glass panel is turned in the turning station
K. The reason why the sliding member 21 " located further back cannot be placed at
the rear end 4" of the support bead, as in the arrangement of the present invention,
is that in prior art balcony glazing systems, there is a supporting protrusion (not
illustrated) arranged on the upper rail and protruding therefrom, in the vicinity
of the turning station K, against which supporting protrusion the end 4" of the support
bead of that glass panel that is located further back in the transfer direction is
supported when turning the glass panel in the turning station K. In the arrangement
of the invention this problem does not arise, because the support bead 4 is, by intermediation
of the bracket 41, supported against the double bottom 70, when the glass panel is
turned.
[0045] Figure 6B also demonstrates an advantage that is achieved by this kind of a structure
for a balcony glazing system 10 according to the invention, as compared with known
balcony glazing systems (Figure 6A); in case a railing V is arranged to run outside
the upper rails 7, in their immediate vicinity, a glass panel 5 provided with guide
members according to the invention can be conducted without difficulty past the angle
between the upper rails 7; 7' and 7; 7", because the upper guide members 2 are located
at the ends of the support bead 4 fastened to the glass panels, and the upper guide
members 2 all the time run inside the upper rail 7. In prior art systems, only the
guide members of that glass panel that is the first to be brought to the turning station
K are both placed at the ends of the support bead connected to the glass panels, but
the upper guide member of the other glass panels running further back in the sliding
direction is fastened more centrally in the glass panel support bead, in which case
those ends of these glass panels that are located further in the rear may hit the
railings V in the corner between the two upper rails.
[0046] In the balcony glazing system 10 according to the invention, both of the upper and
lower pairs of the guide members of all glass panels can be placed at the opposite
ends of each glass panel (Figure 6). Now the upper and lower rails meeting in the
corner at an angle of 90 degrees can be sloped at a mitre slot of 45 degrees.
[0047] When the glass panels 5 of the balcony glazing system 10 are being moved on the upper
and lower rails, supported by the upper guide members 2 and by the guide parts of
the lower guide members 3, the upper guide members 2 can in the corner between the
upper rails be transferred directly from the upper bottom of the first upper rail
to the upper bottom of the second upper rail. Normally the guide member 2 runs inside
the rail in the rest position (cf. Figures 3 and 4), i.e. its straight surface 2a
is parallel with the lengthwise axis of the upper rail, but in the corner and after
the corner, the foremost guide member runs for a moment so that its straight part
is placed at an angle with respect to the lengthwise axis of the upper rail. Thus
the upper guide member need not be turnable with respect to its vertical axis P and
to the support bead, as is the case in corresponding balcony glazing systems known
from the prior art, but the fastening between the upper guide member 2 and the support
bead 4 can be arranged to be permanently fixed.
[0048] In prior art balcony glazing systems, the upper guide members must be made rotary
around the vertical axis, i.e. the fastening between the support bead and upper guide
member is not fixed, because part of the upper guide members 21; 21" that are located
further back in the transfer direction are not placed at the ends of the support bead
4. An upper guide member 21 that is thus arranged to be turnable with respect to the
support bead cannot in the same way function both as sliding and locking means as
the upper guide member 2 according to the invention.
[0049] As was already pointed out, that end of the glass panel 5 that runs further in the
back with respect to the transfer direction need not be in any way supported in the
turning station K, when the glass panel is turned in the way illustrated in Figure
6. This is due to the fact that the bracket 41 of the support bead 4 is long enough
to extend so deep in between the lower and upper bottoms of the double bottom 70 that
the bracket 41 is during the turning motion supported for a sufficiently long time,
at least for one of its parts, to between the lower and upper bottoms of the double
bottom 70, thus forming a turning support together with them. At a certain point of
the turning motion, the foremost guide member 2; 2" starts being pushed in the locking
counterpiece 20, so that the end 5" of the glass panel coming further back need not
be separately supported.
[0050] When using a balcony glazing system 10 according to the invention, the balcony glass
panels can be gathered at any of the balcony sides, because the upper guide members
2: 2', 2" of all glass panels are located at the same point of the support bead 4
attached to the glass panel 5, i.e. at the ends 4' and 4" of the glass bead 4. Thus
the structures of all upper guide members 2 as well as their location on the support
bead 4 of the glass panel are mutually identical. Also the lower guide members 3 are
mutually identical and located at the same point of the guide members.
[0051] Figures 7 and 4A - 4C illustrate yet another preferred embodiment of the invention,
comprising an aligning element 250 installed in the turning station on the upper rail.
In the upper rail turning station, adjacent to the counterpiece of each upper guide
member, at the same point of the length of the upper rail 7, on the upper bottom 70;
71 of the upper rail 7, there is made a number of identical recesses 25; 25', 25",
25"' that are concentrical with respect to the longitudinal center line of the bottom,
by means of the aligning element 250, which also is seen in Figures 4A - 4C.
[0052] Figures 4A - 4C show the location of the aligning element 250 on top of the upper
bottom 71 of the upper rail 7. The aligning element 250 is a separate plastic aligning
part installed in the turning station on top of the upper bottom 71 of the upper rail,
comprising a number of recesses 25 made in the slide part 27 arranged on top of the
upper bottom 71, and a joining piece 26 that is connected at right angles to the slide
part 27 of the aligning element. The joining piece 26 is in parallel with the outer
side 76 of the upper rail, and attached thereto by a suitable junction.
[0053] Figure 7 illustrates the aligning element 250 located on top of the upper rail in
the turning station, provided with three recesses 25 on the slide part 27. In the
upper series of drawings in Figure 7, the upper rail is viewed directly from the side,
and in the lower series of drawings, it is viewed directly from the top. In the lower
series of drawings, the outer side of the upper rail is viewed from the level of the
upper bottom; here said outer side of the upper rail remains behind the joining piece
26 of the outer side attached on top of the aligning element. In the lower series
of drawings, said joining piece 26 is visible in the top part of the picture. Two
recesses 25; 25' and 25; 25" of the recesses 25 are provided with an upper guide member
2, while one of the recesses 25; 25"' remains free.
[0054] Consequently, the two upper guide members 2; 2'a and 2; 2'b shown in the series of
drawings are placed in the two left-hand side recesses 25' and 25", while the right-hand
side recess 25; 25"' remains free. The upper guide member 2; 2'a brought in the recess
25; 25' located farthest on the left-hand side is in the position in which the glass
panel was recently brought in the turning station, i.e. the glass panel and the upper
guide member 2; 2'a are not yet turned in the recess 25; 25'. Therefore said upper
guide member 2'a has not yet been turned to its locking counterpiece, which means
that its straight part 2a; 2aa is aligned in the longitudinal direction of the upper
rail 7. As for the second upper guide member 2; 2'b located in the centermost recess
25", it has already been turned 90 degrees in its locking position, which means that
the glass panel has respectively been turned 90 degrees with respect to the longitudinal
direction of the upper rail, so that it is now in the turning station K, in the position
illustrated in Figure 6B. The straight part 2a; 2ab of said upper guide member 2;
2'b is positioned at an angle of 90 degrees with respect to the longitudinal direction
of the upper rail 7.
[0055] The purpose of the recesses 25 is to align the upper guide member 2; 2' with respect
to its counterpiece, so that the user cannot even accidentally turn the glass panel
elsewhere than exactly at the counterpiece. When the upper guide member 2; 2' is set
in the recess 25, said recess 25 prevents the motion of the upper guide member in
the longitudinal direction of the upper rail 7, thus simultaneously also preventing
the glass panel from moving in the longitudinal direction of the upper rail 7, so
that the upper guide member 2; 2' is turned and easily locked in its counterpiece.
Likewise, because the recess 25 prevents the upper guide member 2; 2a from moving
in the longitudinal direction of the upper rail 7 during the turning process, the
edge of the straight part 2a of the upper guide member 2 does not, when turning, get
into contact with the counterpiece tip.
[0056] Figures 8A, 8B and 8C illustrate in more detail a lower guide member 3 of the glass
panel sliding and locking means used in a balcony glazing system. The structure of
the lower guide member 3 was illustrated more generally above, in Figures 1 and 2
and in connection with the description of said drawings.
[0057] Figure 8A illustrates a situation where the rearmost lower guide member 3; 3" placed
on the lower rail 8 is in the rest position, or where said lower guide member is when
sliding the glass element supported by the upper and lower guide members located on
the respective lower and upper rails.
[0058] Figure 8B in turn illustrates a situation where the turning of a glass element 5
in the turning station is just being started.
[0059] Figure 8C illustrates a situation where the glass element and its lower guide member
have already been turned to some extent in the turning station.
[0060] Figures 8A - 8C show the cross-section of the lower rail 8 and the rearmost lower
guide member 3; 3" located on the lower rail, which guide member is connected to the
lower support bead 300. Said rearmost lower guide member 3" can together with the
glass panel 5 be turned in the turning station (cf. Figure 6B). The lower guide member
3 comprises the following elements, to be described in more detail below: a support
arm 32, a vertical housing 301 provided with a pressure string surrounding the support
arm, and a guide part 30 connected to said support arm.
[0061] The glass element 5 is at its lower end fastened to a lower support bead 300 that
is directed downwardly from the glass panel and extends from one end of the glass
panel 5 to the other. Through a vertical housing 301 that is arranged in the lower
support bead 300 and located adjacent to the glass panel, there runs in the up and
down direction a support arm 32 of the lower guide member 3; 3', said support arm
extending in its lower position (Figure 8A) for a certain distance underneath the
lower edge of the housing 301 provided in the lower support bead 300. Inside the housing,
there is arranged a prestressed pressure string (not illustrated) that forces the
support arm 32 downwardly, towards a guide chute 80, and simultaneously towards the
bottom of the lower rail 8. The lower end 32a of the support arm 32 is made as a horizontal
bracket 32a that is pointed directly towards the outer side, and a horizontal guide
part 30 is geared to said bracket 32a. The guide part 30 is formed of two parallel,
concentrically geared and superimposed wheels: an upper guide part 30a and a lower
guide part 30b. The support arm 32 aligns the gearing point of the guide parts 30
on the same vertical level with the plane of the glass panel 5.
[0062] The lower rail 8 is formed of a vertical outer wall 86 and a vertical inner wall
85 as well as a horizontal bottom 81 that connects the outer and inner walls. As can
be seen in Figures 8A - 8C, the inner wall 85 and the outer wall 86 are roughly equally
high. The top edge of the inner wall 85 is folded inside to form a horizontal bracket
85a. The bracket 85a extends from one end of the inner wall to the other, except that
at the turning station, there is arranged an aperture, in order to be able to lift
the lower guide part 30 away from the guide chute (aperture of bracket 85a: cf. Figure
8B). From the bottom 81 of the lower rail, there rises upwardly a mainly vertical
intermediate wall 8; 88. To the lower rail bottom 81, there are attached two supports
81b, with cross-sectional shapes of two upside down turned letters L, the small notches
of the letters being pointed towards each other.
[0063] In the space defined by the intermediate wall 88, the bottom 81 and the inner wall
85, there now remains a guide chute 80. The vertical walls bordering the guide chute
80, i.e. the inner wall side 88a of the intermediate wall 88 and the outer wall side
85b of the inner wall 85, are mutually shaped so that when moving, the lower guide
part 30b of the guide part 30 and the upper guide part 30a both touch only one of
said sides 85a and 88a, and that each of the guide parts 30a and 30b also touches
a different side. In the embodiment of the invention illustrated in Figures 8A - 8C,
the lower guide part 30b, when being placed in the guide slot, touches the inner side
88a of the intermediate wall 88, and the upper guide part touches the inner side 85b
of the inner wall. When the guide part 30 is moved along the guide chute 80, the upper
guide part 30a and the lower guide part 30b rotate in opposite directions, on one
hand due to the friction between the lower guide part 30b and the side 88a, and on
the other hand due to the friction between the upper guide part 30a and the side 85b.
In the embodiment according to Figures 8A - 8C, the contact of the equalsized guide
parts 30a, 30b with different guide chute sides 88a, 85b, when the guide part 30 is
moving along said guide chute, is realized by a wedge-like structure of the guide
chute, as well as by a pressure string that forces the support arm 32 and further
the guide part 30 downwardly. In the embodiment illustrated in the drawing, the wedge-like
structure of the guide chute 80 is realized so that from roughly below the halfway
along the height of the inner side 88; 88a of the intermediate wall, the side 88a
is curved towards the inner wall 85, but from above the halfway of said height, the
side 88a is curved towards the outer side 86. Thus the cross-sectional profile of
the side 88a resembles a low-gradient letter S in. Respectively the inner side 85b
of the inner wall 85 is shaped so that from roughly above the halfway of the height,
the surface of the inner side 85b is straight or curved slightly towards the outer
wall 88, but from below the halfway, the surface of the inner side 85b is strongly
curved away from the outer wall 86.
[0064] Figure 8A shows a situation where the guide part 30 of the rearmost guide member
3; 3' moves in a wedge-like guide chute 80, or alternatively the guide part 30 is
in the rest position in said guide chute 80. The support arm 32 is in its lower position,
pressing the upper guide part 30a of the guide part 30 towards the inner side of the
intermediate wall 88, and the lower guide part 30b towards the inner side of the inner
wall 85, owing to the effect of the pressure string arranged in the housing 301. The
guide part 30 is wedged against the vertical walls 85 and 88 of the guide chute 80.
Thus the pressure string ensures that the parts 30a, 30b of the guide part 30 are
always pressed compactly, without any clearance, against the vertical sides 88a and
85b of the guide chute 80, so that the guide parts 30 of the glass elements in the
balcony glazing system cannot, even in strong wind, move in the guide chute 80. This
prevents the customary noise and rattle of the balcony glass panels in windy conditions.
The wedge-like structure of the above described guide chute 80 ensures that the lower
guide part 30b and the upper guide part of the guide part 30 always rotate in opposite
directions although they are located on one and the same rotary axis, which brings
forth a further advantage, i.e. that the guide part 30 moves in all conditions smoothly
and evenly in the guide chute 80. In addition, the vertical walls 88a and 85b of the
guide chute are also shaped in the above described way, so that the upper guide part
30a and the lower guide part 30b always touch different sides of the vertical wall,
even if the bottom 81 of the lower rail 8 were inclined from the horizontal direction.
[0065] Figure 8B in turn illustrates a situation where the glass panel 5 is prepared for
turning it in the turning station (cf. Figure 6B and its description). The guide part
30 is lifted up from the guide chute 80 through an aperture provided in the bracket
85a of the top edge of the inner wall 85. The support arm 32 supporting the guide
part 30 is in its high position.
[0066] Figure 8C illustrates a situation where the front end of the glass element 5 and
simultaneously the rearmost guide member 3" attached to the front end of the lower
support bead of the glass element is turned inwardly through an aperture arranged
in the inner wall 85 of the turning station. The pair of horizontal wheels forming
the guide part 30 of the rearmost guide member 3', i.e. the lower guide part 30b and
the upper guide part 30a, are as a whole turned over the edge of the inner wall 85
of the lower rail 8, in which case the turning motion can be continued, so that the
glass element 5 is turned 90 degrees with respect to the lower rail (cf. Figure 6B).
In Figure 8C, the glass element is opened to inside the balcony. At a corresponding
foremost lower guide member in the turning station, there is not arranged an aperture
in the inner wall 85, which means that it cannot escape from the guide slot 80.
[0067] The elongate support arm 32 running through the housing 301 has a certain motional
tolerance in the vertical direction. In case the support structures above the upper
rail 7 in the balcony glazing system, or the upper rail 7 itself, happen to sink lower,
so that the upper rail 7 is lowered towards the lower rail 8, the distance between
the lower end 32a of the support arm and the lower edge of the glass panel 5 can be
adjusted in the high and low positions of the support arm. By using the above described
structure of the support arm 32 and of the pressure string forcing said arm downwardly,
there is now achieved the advantage that the support arm 32 cannot touch the lower
rail, and the guide part 30 continues sliding smoothly in the guide chute 80. Thus
a certain vertical creep tolerance is obtained in the balcony glazing system.
[0068] In the above specification, we have only described a few embodiments of the sliding
and locking means 1 according to the invention as well as embodiments of balcony glazing
systems, and for a man skilled in the art it is obvious that the invention can also
be realized in many other ways within the scope of the inventive idea apparent from
the appended claims.
[0069] Thus, the adjusting member 9 can likewise be located in between the fastening support
and the upper rail, as underneath the upper side 73 of the upper rail 7. The shelf
200 can also be planar in shape.
Reference numbers
[0070]
- 1
- Sliding and locking means
- 2
- Upper guide member
- 2a
- Straight side of upper guide member
- 2b
- Support arm of upper guide member
- 2'a, 2'b
- Front ends of upper guide members connected to separate glass panels
- 2', 2"
- Front and rear ends of upper guide member (according to the invention)
- 21', 21"
- Front and rear ends of upper guide member (not according to the invention)
- 25
- Recesses in upper rail
- 20
- Counterpiece of the locking of upper guide member
- 20', 20", 20"
- Counterpieces of the locking of upper guide member
- 200
- Shelf of the locking counterpieces
- 250
- Aligning element
- 25
- Aligning element recess, depression
- 26
- Joining piece of aligning element
- 27
- Slide part of aligning element
- 3
- Lower guide member
- 30
- Guide part
- 30a
- Lower guide part
- 30b
- Upper guide part
- 32
- Support arm
- 300
- Lower support bead
- 301
- Housing provided in lower support bead
- 4
- (Upper) support bead
- 4', 4"
- Front and rear end of support bead
- 41
- Bracket of support bead
- 5
- Glass panel, glass
- 5', 5"
- Front and rear edge of glass panel
- 6
- Fastening support
- 7, 7', 7"
- Upper rail
- 70
- Double bottom of upper rail
- 71
- Upper bottom of double bottom
- 72
- Lower bottom of double bottom
- 71 a
- Guide slot in upper bottom
- 72a
- Horizontal part in lower bottom
- 72b
- Pocket in lower bottom
- 72c
- Slide plane
- 73
- Upper side
- 75
- Inner side
- 76
- Outer side
- 8
- Lower rail
- 80
- Guide slot in lower rail
- 81
- Bottom of lower rail
- 85
- Inner wall of lower rail
- 86
- Outer wall of lower rail
- 88
- Intermediate wall of lower rail
- 9
- Adjusting member
- 10
- Balcony glazing system
- K
- Turning station
- L
- Central line of upper rail
- P
- Vertical plane
- Q1, Q2
- Vertical lines
- r
- Radius of locking member
- T
- Slide space
- V
- Railing
1. Sliding and locking means (1) for locking the position of a glass panel (5), movable
along an upper and a lower rail, at a given angle with respect to the upper rail (7),
said upper rail (7) consisting of an upper side (73), a bottom (70), an inner side
(75) and an outer side (76), where at the top edge of the glass panel, there are connected,
by intermediation of a support bead (4), two upper guide members (2; 2' and 2, 2")
slidable along the upper rail (7), and at the lower edge of the glass panel, there
are connected, by intermediation of a lower support bead (300), two lower guide members
(3; 3' and 3; 3") slidable along the lower rail (8), so that the glass panel (5) is
immovably connected between said lower support bead (300) and upper support bead (4),
in which case at least the upper support bead (4) extends from one end of the glass
panel (5) to the other end and can be turned and locked at an angle with respect to
the upper rail (7),
characterized in that
- each upper guide member (2; 2', 2; 2") is semisphere-shaped and formed as a locking
member by connecting it to an upper support bead (4) secured at the top part of the
glass panel (5) by a rigid fastening that prevents a mutual turning motion of the
upper support bead (4) and the upper guide member (2), so that the counterpiece (20)
of the upper guide member (2) serving as the locking member constitutes a circle segment
shaped aperture (20) located on a shelf (200), and that the horizontal plane running
through said aperture is located roughly at halfway of the height of said upper guide
member (2),
- each upper guide member (2', 2") of each pair of upper guide members (2) is fastened
to the upper support bead (4) at the end of the support bead and simultaneously at
the top edge end of the glass panel.
2. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 1,
characterized in that the
- bottom of the upper rail (7) is made as a double bottom, comprising an upper bottom
(71) and a lower bottom (72),
- from the upper support bead (4) of the glass panel, there is pointed a bracket (41)
arranged as a turning support to in between the upper and lower bottoms (71, 72) of
the double bottom (70),
- the upper rail (7) can be fastened, by intermediation of its upper side (73), either
directly or indirectly, to a planar element, such as the balcony ceiling.
3. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 2,
characterized in that
- both the upper support bead (4) and the bracket (41) attached to the support bead
extend from one end of the glass panel (5) to the other,
- the bracket (41) of the support bead (4) of the glass panel, thrust in between the
upper and lower bottoms (71, 72) of the double bottom (70), serves as a bearing structure
when sliding the upper guide members (2; 2', 2") on the upper rail (7), along the
upper bottom (71) of the double bottom (70).
4. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 2 or 3, characterized in that on top of the lower bottom (72) of the double bottom, there is arranged a slide plane
(72c) that helps the sliding of the bracket (41) of the upper support bead and also
the sliding of the upper guide member (2) fastened to the upper support bead (4).
5. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 2, characterized in that the upper rail (7) is rectangular in cross-sectional profile and consists of a planar
upper side (73), a double bottom (70), an outer side (76) and an inner side (75),
which together form a casing-like structure, inside which there is left a slide space
(T).
6. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 5,
characterized in that
- the counterpiece (20) of the upper guide member (2) is located on a shelf (200)
attached to the turning station (K) on the inner side (75) of the upper rail,
- when the upper guide member (2) is placed in the rest position in the turning station,
the shelf (200) is placed in between the plane drawn via the straight surface (2a)
of the upper guide member (2) and the inner side (75) of the upper rail.
7. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 6, characterized in that the shelf (200) is horizontally projected from the inner wall (75) of the upper rail
to inside the upper rail, immediately adjacently to the straight surface (2a) of the
semisphere-shaped guide member (2).
8. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 6 or 7, characterized in that in the turning station K, adjacently to the counterpiece (20) of each upper guide
member (2), at the same point of the length of the upper rail (7), on the bottom (70)
of the upper rail (7), there is made a number of identical recesses (25) that are
concentrical with respect to the longitudinal center line of the bottom.
9. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 8, characterized in that the recesses (25) are made in the turning station (K) by an aligning element (250)
located on the upper rail, said aligning element constituting a part placed on top
of the upper bottom (71) of the upper rail and comprising a number of recesses (25)
provided in a slide part (27) set on top of the upper bottom (71) as well as a joining
piece (26) arranged in parallel with the outer side (76) of the rail and fastened
thereto by a suitable joint, said joining piece (26) being connected at an angle to
the slide part (27).
10. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 1, characterized in that each lower guide member (3) that is movable on the lower rail (8) includes a horizontally
rotary guide part (30), having a lower guide part (30b) and an upper guide part (32a)
geared on the same axis, said guide parts (30a, 30b) being rotary in opposite directions,
while the guide part (30) moves along a guide chute (80) made in the lower rail (8).
11. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 10, characterized in that the guide chute (80) is an element located in parallel with the lower rail, placed
on the lower rail, and bordered by the lower rail bottom (81) on one side, the vertical
sides (85, 88) of said chute (80) forming a wedge-like structure, for rotating the
guide parts (30a, 30b) in opposite directions when sliding the guide part (30) along
the guide chute (80).
12. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 11, characterized in that the vertical sides (85, 88) of the guide chute are shaped so that the guide parts
(30a, 30b) getting into contact with them touch different vertical sides irrespective
of the inclination of the bottom (81) of the lower rail (8) with respect to the horizontal
direction.
13. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 10, characterized in that the guide part (30) is geared at the lower end of an elongate support arm (32), so
that the guide part (30) can be forced by intermediation of the support arm (32) towards
the bottom of the guide chute (80).
14. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 13, characterized in that the top part of the support arm (32) is connected to a housing (301) provided adjacent
to the lower support bead (300) of a glass element, inside which housing there is
arranged a spring member that presses down both the support arm (32) and the guide
part (30) geared at its lower end.
15. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 14, characterized in that the distance between the lower end (32a) of the support arm (32) and the lower edge
of the glass panel can be adjusted both in the lower position and in the higher position
of the support arm.
16. Sliding and locking means (1) according to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that on the upper bottom (71) of the upper rail (7), there is made a guide slot (71a)
in the longitudinal direction of the upper rail, in which slot the lower end of the
upper guide member (2) can be thrust, and which guide slot (71a) is advantageously
a fold made on a planar upper bottom (71).
17. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 16, characterized in that the guide slot (71a) is advantageously located in the cross-sectional profile of
the upper rail, halfway along its width (L).
18. Sliding and locking means (1) according to claim 1,
characterized in that the upper rail (7) is, by intermediation of its upper side (73), attached to a fastening
support (6) that can be attached to a planar element, such as the balcony ceiling,
- and that immediately underneath the upper side (73) of the upper rail (7), there
is an adjusting member (9) for adjusting the vertical position of the upper rail and/or
the distance between the planar element and the fastening support (6).
19. A balcony glazing system (10) comprising several upper and lower rails (7, 8) encircling
a balcony, as well as glass panels (5) movable along the upper and lower rails, so
that each upper rail (7) consists of an upper side (73), a bottom (70), an inner side
(75) and an outer side (76), where at the top edge of the glass panel, there are connected,
by intermediation of a support bead (4), two upper guide members (2; 2' and 2, 2")
slidable along the upper rail (7), and at the lower edge of the glass panel, there
are connected, by intermediation of a lower support bead (300), two lower guide members
(3; 3' and 3; 3") slidable along the lower rail (8), so that the glass panel (5) is
immovably connected between said lower support bead (300) and upper support bead (4),
in which case at least the upper support bead (4) extends from one end of the glass
panel (5) to the other end and can be turned and locked at an angle with respect to
the upper rail (7),
characterized in that
- each upper guide member (2; 2', 2; 2") is semisphere-shaped and formed as a locking
member by connecting it to an upper support bead (4) secured at the top part of the
glass panel (5) by a rigid fastening that prevents a mutual turning motion of the
upper support bead (4) and the upper guide member (2), so that the counterpiece (20)
of the upper guide member (2) serving as the locking member constitutes a circle segment
shaped aperture (20) located on a shelf (200), and that the horizontal plane running
through said aperture is located roughly at halfway of the height of said upper guide
member (2),
- each upper guide member (2', 2") of each pair of upper guide members (2) is fastened
to the upper support bead (4) at the end of the support bead and simultaneously at
the top edge end of the glass panel.
20. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 19, characterized in that to each glass panel (5), there is connected, by an upper support bead (4) and a guide
part, two pairs formed of an upper and a lower guide member (2, 3), said pairs being
located at the ends of each glass panel.
21. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 20,
characterized in that
- the upper guide member (2) and lower guide member (3) of each glass panel (5) is
located on the same axis (Q),
- each upper guide member (2) is attached to an upper support bead (4) connected to
the glass panel (5), so that its straight surface (2a) is in the rest position turned
towards the inner side (75) of the upper rail (7),
- each upper guide member (2) is in the rest position supported against a guide slot
(71a) made in the double bottom (70) of the upper rail, which guide slot (71 a) is
advantageously located halfway along the width (L) of the cross-sectional profile
of the upper rail.
22. A balcony glazing system (10) according to any of the claims 19 - 21, characterized in that it includes a glass panel turning station (K) that is arranged at any point of the
upper rail (7) by placing in the turning station a shelf (200) provided with locking
counterpieces (20), and by making an aperture on the inner side (75) of the upper
rail (7), so that the rearmost upper guide member (2; 2") of each glass panel (5)
can be turned out of the upper rail (7) through said aperture.
23. A balcony glazing system (10) according to any of the claims 19 - 22,
characterized in that
- from the upper support bead (4) of the glass panel, there is pointed a bracket (41)
to between the upper and lower bottoms (71,72) of the double bottom (70), said bracket
(41) serving as a bearing structure for the glass panel (5) when sliding said glass
panel, supported by the upper guide member (2), adjacent to the upper rail (7) and/or
underneath it,
- the upper support bead (4) and the bracket (41) extend from one end of the glass
panel (5) to the other,
- in between the lower bottom (72) of the double bottom and said bracket (41), there
is arranged a slide plane (72c) that helps the sliding of the support bead and also
of the upper guide member 2 attached thereto.
24. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 19, characterized in that the bracket (41) of the upper support bead (4) and the double bottom (70) of the
upper rail (7) together form such a turning support at the rear end of the glass panel
(5), that when turning the guide member (2), connected to the rear end of said glass
panel by intermediation of the upper support bead (4), away from the upper rail (7)
in the turning station (K), the bracket (4) remains in between the lower and upper
bottoms (71, 72) of the double bottom (70) during said turning motion.
25. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 19, characterized in that the bracket (41) of the upper support bead (4) is arranged to function together with
the double bottom (70) as a turning support during the turning motion, until the foremost
upper guide member (2; 2') begins to be supported against its locking counterpiece
(20).
26. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 19, characterized in that in the turning station (K), adjacent to the counterpiece (20) of each upper guide
member (2), at the same point of the length of the upper rail (7), in the bottom (70)
of the upper rail (7), there is made a number of identical recesses (25) that are
concentrical with respect to the longitudinal center line of the bottom.
27. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 26, characterized in that the recesses (25) provided in the upper rail are made in the turning station (K)
by an aligning element (250) that is an element located on top of the upper bottom
(71) of the upper rail and comprises a number of recesses (25) made in the slide part
(27) set on top of the upper bottom (71), as well as a joining piece (26) that is
parallel with the outer side (76) of the rail and fastened thereto by a suitable joint,
said joining piece (26) being connected at an angle to the slide part (27).
28. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 19, characterized in that each of the lower guide members (3) movable along the lower rail (8) has a horizontally
rotary guide part (30) including a lower guide part (30b) and an upper guide part
(32a) geared on the same axis, said guide parts (30a, 30b) being rotary in opposite
directions, as the guide part (30) moves in the guide chute (80) made in the lower
rail (8).
29. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 28, characterized in that the guide chute (80) is an element located on the lower rail (8) in parallel thereto,
bordered on one side by the bottom (81) of the lower rail (8), the vertical sides
(85, 88) of said guide chute (80) forming a wedge-like structure, for rotating the
guide parts (30a, 30b) in different directions when sliding the guide part (30) along
the guide chute (80).
30. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 28 or 29, characterized in that the inner wall (85) of the lower rail (8) is in the turning station provided with
an aperture, through which the rearmost lower guide member (3; 3") is brought when
turning the glass panel (5) at an angle with respect to the lower rail (8).
31. A balcony glazing system (10) according to claim 30, characterized in that in the turning station (K), there is no aperture in the inner wall (85) of the lower
rail (8) at the foremost lower guide member (3; 3").