US2468727A - Sectional radio cabinet - Google Patents

Sectional radio cabinet Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2468727A
US2468727A US540265A US54026544A US2468727A US 2468727 A US2468727 A US 2468727A US 540265 A US540265 A US 540265A US 54026544 A US54026544 A US 54026544A US 2468727 A US2468727 A US 2468727A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
radio
panel
base
cabinet
section
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US540265A
Inventor
Joseph J Bauman
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Kurz Kasch Inc
Original Assignee
Kurz Kasch Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Kurz Kasch Inc filed Critical Kurz Kasch Inc
Priority to US540265A priority Critical patent/US2468727A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2468727A publication Critical patent/US2468727A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B1/00Details of transmission systems, not covered by a single one of groups H04B3/00 - H04B13/00; Details of transmission systems not characterised by the medium used for transmission
    • H04B1/06Receivers
    • H04B1/08Constructional details, e.g. cabinet

Definitions

  • This invention pertains to cabinet structures, and more particularly to radio cabinets of plastic molding materials, and to the mode of assembly thereof.
  • radio cabinet comprising a plurality of separable sections or units, which are interchangeable with other like sections of similar shapes but of different colors or of different ornamental congurations, for combination with other sections or uni-ts into various combinations to afford a variety of completed cabinets having diierent appearance.
  • the object of the invention is to improve the construction as well as the mode of assembly of radio cabinets and the like, whereby they may not only be economically manufactured, but will be efficient in use, capable of being easily and quickly assembled of maximum strength and unlikely to get out of rapair.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide a, sectional cabinet wherein the different separable sections thereof may be interchanged with like sections of other cabinets of different color, finish, or ornamental delineation into various combinations to produce from a relatively few molds and molded elements, cabinets of distinctively different appearance.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide an improved method of assembly and support of the separable sections, whereby the cabinet sections will be to a great extent relieved of the strain and weight of the radio equipment or other devices contained therein.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide a removable support or base for the radio equipment which base is assembled as a component part of the cabinet.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide a radio cabinet or the like having electrical shielding and conductor elements embodied als a component part of the cabinet.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide a radio cabinet or the like having the advantageous structural features, inherent meritorious characteristics, and mode of assembly and use herein described.
  • Fig. 1 is a perspective view of an assembled radio cabinet embodying the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical sectional view of an assembled radio cabinet taken on a substantially medial plane thereof.
  • Figs. 3 and 4 are two fragmentary sectional views taken on the same plane as Fig. 2 illustrating modications.
  • Fig. 5 is a plan View partly broken away of the radio equipment base, provided with permanently located electrical conductors.
  • Fig. 6 is a fragmentary sectional View taken on the same plane as Fig. 2 illustrating a further modification.
  • a simple form of portable radio cabinet comprising a base section l and a dome or cover section 2, which may be molded of differently colored materials or each may have distinctive ornamental configuration.
  • the invention is not limited to merely two sections, but may comprise three or more sections in a single cabinet.
  • the base section I is duo-functional and includes a continuous top panel 3 directly onto which may be mounted thev radio equipment elements as shown in Fig. 2.
  • the base section I thus becomes the radio chassis and simultaneously a component exposed part of the cabinet.
  • the top of the base section I is marginally rabbeted at 4 to afford a seat for the cover or dome 2, which is not tightly engaged therein, but is sufficiently loosely seated to enable limited eX- pansion and contraction, Adjacent its bottom the base section I is interiorly rabbeted at 5 to receive a bottom panel 5 which may be of fiber board or plywood or other inexpensive nonfragile material.
  • a bolt or tie rod 'I Centrally disposed within the assembly is a bolt or tie rod 'I having at its upper end a carrying handle 8.
  • the tie rod or bolt 1 extends through the top of the dome 2 and through the panel 3 of the base section and thence through the bottom panel 6, where it is engaged by a nut 9.
  • a spacer sleeve I6 Intermediate the top or the dome 2 and the chassis panel 3 the tie rod or bolt is surrounded by a spacer sleeve I6 which may be of card board, paper pulp or of wood.
  • a similar spacer sleeve I I surrounds the tie rod I intermediate the chassis panel 3 and the bottom panel 6.
  • the bottom panel affords an enclosure for the radio elements and connections which may be disposed beneath the top 3 and also sustains the weight of the assembly, relieving the molded sections I and 2 of tension strain,
  • the entire weight of the assembly of cabinet sections and radio equipment is sustained by the tie rod I and the bottom panel 5, thus minimizing breakage of the molded cabinet portions, and also enabling the cabinet to be quickly disassembled and reassembled by removal and reengagement of the tie rod I and nut 9.
  • a metal shielding for the radio elements which is easily incorporated, as in Fig. 3 by superimposing an aluminum or other metallic plate I2 on top of the base panel 3, with its margins clamped beneath the side walls of the dome or cover section 2, or a sheet of metallic foil may be secured either to the top or under surface of the panel 3.
  • the radio equipment may be assembled upon a metallic chassis plate I4 as shown in Fig. 4 in which event the panel 3 of the base section may be entirely l omitted, leaving only the marginal rabbets to receive and support the chassis plate I4.
  • the chassis panel 3 may be formed separately from plastic material with a sheet of metallic shielding foil attached to either its top or under side, and be removably supported on the marginal rabbet 4 as shown in Fig. 6. By assembling the radio equipment thereon the latter may be readily removed for repair or for replacement by merely removing the nut 9 and withdrawing the tie bolt 1.
  • electrical conductor lines may be applied to either the top or bottom of the base panel 3, as shown in Fig. 5 whether the base panel be integral with the base I or separately formed and assembled between the sections I and 2.
  • Electroconductive lines I5 comprising the radio circuit interconnecting the various radio elements may be formed on either surface of the panel 3 by spraying metal thereon through a mask or otherwise confining it to prescribed lineal areas. Otherwise such conductor lines I5 may comprise strips of metallic foil adhesively applied to one or both the surfaces of the panel 3 in such relation as to connect the radio elements in proper sequence.
  • radio sets may be made quite flexible as to color combinations of the cabinet parts and the combinations of ornamental designs thereof and the radio lill equipment may be rendered quite easily accessible for repair or replacement, and shielding and electrical connections may be economically incorporated.
  • the molded cabinet parts are relieved of strain and stress and breakage is minimized.
  • a radio cabinet including a base section and a dome or cover section both molded from plastic material and interchangeable with other similar sections o different color or of different ornamental design to afford sundry combinations of distinctive appearance, a horizontal instrument panel forming a top for the base section and adapted to support sundry elements of radio enuipment, a bottom for the base section of nonfragile substantially rigid material, a tie bolt extending through the dome or cover, the instrument panel and the base bottom, a handle attached to the top end of the tie bolt and a nut on the lower end thereof beneath the base bottom, the construction and arrangement being such that the weight of the assembly when carried by the handle is sustained entirely by the tie bolt and the base bottom, independently of any tension strains on the base or dome.
  • a radio cabinet of molded plastic material including separable upper and lower sections, the lower section serving as a radio base or chassis and the upper section being a dome shaped cover or enclosure therefor, a marginal rabbet coincident with the top of the lower section in which the upper section is seated, each of said sections being interchangeable with other like sections of diierent appearance to afford sundry distinctive cabinet assemblies, a bottom panel for the lower section, a seat therefor on the lower section against which the bottom panel bears, and a single tie bolt extending centrally through the upper and lower sections and detachably engaged with the bottom panel for detachably holding said sections in assembled relation, the construction and arrangement being such that the weight .of the assembly vis suspended upon the tie bolt and bottom panel wholly independently of tension strain on the upper or lower sections.
  • a radio cabinet of molded plastic material including separable base and cover sections, a seat formed on the base section to receive the cover section and locate it relative to the base section, a chassis panel for support of radio elements removably engaged in said seat intermediate the base and cover section, a bottom panel for said base section, a tie bolt transxing the cover and base section and the chais and bottom .panels and aiiixed to the latter, spacer sleeves surrounding the tie bolt intermediate the cover 4and chassis panel and also between the chassis panel and bottom panel, the construction and arrangement being such that the weight of the assembly is sustained by the tie bolt and bottom panel independently of tension strains upon the base and cover sections.
  • a radio cabinet including a base section, a top panelthereior to support radio elements, projections on the base section extending above the level of the top panel, a cover section seated upon the-base section in accordance with said projections, a bottom panel having seating engagement upon the base section, a tie bolt transxing the cover section, the top panel of the base section and the bottom panel and detachably engagedwith the latter, the construction and arrangement being such that the several parts are separably retained in assembled relation by the tie bolt and when supported thereby the base and cover sections are relieved of tension strain.
  • a radio cabinet including a base section molded from plastic material including side walls, an integral top panel to support radio equipment, a marginal rabbet formed about the top panel to receive a cover section, a bottom panel of non-fragile material. seating areas on the base section engageable by the bottom panel and a suspension member extending through the top panel and releasably engageable with the bottom panel for supporting the assembly independently of tension strain on the base section.
  • a radio cabinet including a hollow base section and a domed cover section both molded from plastic material, locating means upon the base section for positioning the cover section relative thereto, a radio equipment supporting panel separating the hollow base section from the domed cover section, a bottom panel of nonfragile material seated on the base section, a tie bolt releasably interconnecting the top of the cover section through the cover section and hollow base section and intermediate radio equipment supporting panel with the bottom panel, spacer tubes surrounding the tie :bolt intermediate the top of the cover section and the radio equipment supporting panel, and between the latter panel and the base panel, the construction and arrangement being such that the base and cover sections are held in assembled relation by the tie bolt and the weight of the assembly when suspended is sustained by the base panel and tie bolt independently of tension strain on the base or cover sections.
  • a radio cabinet including a base section and a cover section engageable upon the base section, both being molded from plastic material, a chassis panel to support radio equipment elements formed integral with the base section and separating the assembled cabinet into separate compartments, a bottom panel for the base section engageable therewith in spaced relation with the radio chassis panel, a tie bolt interconnecting the cover section and the bottom panel extending through the intermediate cover and base compartments and the separating chassis panel.
  • a radio cabinet including separable base and cover sections, both molded from plastic material, matching conformations upon the respective sections for locating the cover section in superposed relation with the base section, a chassis panel for support of radio equipment elements comprising a stratum of dielectric mate- (Fili rial and a parallel contacting stratum of metal affording an electrical shielding effect, remov-A ably clamped between the cover section and base section, and a tie member :for interconnecting the cover and base sections with the chassis panel clamped therebetween.
  • dielectric mate- Finili rial and a parallel contacting stratum of metal affording an electrical shielding effect
  • a radio cabinet including separable base and cover sections, both molded from plastic material, matching conformations upon the respective sections ior locating the cover section in superposed relation with the base section, a chassis lpanel for support of radio equipment elements, said chassis panel comprising a stratum of dielectric materialand metallic lines delineated thereon defining an electrical radio circuit communicating with radio equipment elements supported upon the chassis panel, and connector means for detachably interconnecting the cover and base sec-- tions into a unitary assembly, with the chassis panel interposed therebetween.
  • a radio cabinet including separable superposed base and cover sections of molded plastic material, interchangeable with other like sections of different color or ornamental characteristics .in diierent combinations to afford cabinet assemblies of diierent appearances, a bottom panel engageable with the base section, a chassis panel for support of radio equipment elements separating the assembly into upper and lower compartments, and a suspension rod interconnecting the top of the cover section with the bottom panel of the base section for transportation maintaining the parts in assembled relation and supporting the assembly independently of tension strains lon the base and cover sections.
  • a radio cabinet including separable superposed base and cover sections of molded plastic imaterial, a chassis panel for support of radio equipment elements coincident with the top of the base section and separating the assembly into upper and lower compartments, a bottom panel engageable with the base section in spaced relation with the chassis panel, a suspension rod interconnecting the top of the cover section with the bottom panel of the base section into a unitary assembly, and a handle attached to the suspenxsion rod for transporting the assembly, the construction and arrangement being such that the Isuspension rod and bottom panel sustains the weight of the assembly independently of strain lon the base and cover sections, during transportation.
  • a radio cabinet including separable base and cover sections molded from plastic material, :a separable chassis panel for support of radio yequipment elements clamped between the base :and cover sections, a bottom panel engageable With the base section in spaced relation with the chassis panel, a connecting bolt interconnecting 'the top of the cover section with the bottom panel of the base section and clamping the chassis panel therebetween, the construction and arrangement being such that the weight of the assembly is sustained by the connecting bolt and bottom panel wholly independently of tension strain on the cover and base sections.
  • a radio cabinet including separable superposed base and cover sections molded from plastic material, a chassis panel of dielectric material for :support of radio equipment elements dividing the :assembly into upper and lower compartments, and 'metallic strips aiixed to the chassis panel comprising electroconductors of a radio circuit connecting radio equipment elements mounted there- Aon, a bottom panel engageable with the base section in parallel spaced relation with ⁇ the chassis panel and a single tie, bolt interconnecting the cover section and the bottom panel retaining the several parts in assembled relation.
  • a radio cabinet including separable superposed base and cover sections molded from plastic material, a chassis panel of dielectric material for support ⁇ of radio equipment elements dividing the assembly into upper andlower compartments., a stratum of metallic material overlying at least a portion of the chassis panel and alfordirig-l eleotric shielding for at least a portion of the radio equipment elements mounted on said panel, a bottom panel engaged with the base section in parallel spaced relation with the chassis panel and a single interconnection between the cover section and the bottom panel separably retaining the several parts in assembled relation.

Description

May 3, 1949. J. .1. BAUMAN SECTIONAL RADIO CABINET Filed. June Y14, 1944 dllllllll R. m m V N ATTORNEY,
Patented May 3, 1949 SECTIONAL RADIO CABINET Joseph J .'Bauman, Chicago, lll., assigner to Kurz- Kasch, Inc., Dayton, Ohio, a corporation of Ohio Application June 14, 1944, Serial No. 540,265
(Cl. Z50- 16) 14 Claims.
This invention pertains to cabinet structures, and more particularly to radio cabinets of plastic molding materials, and to the mode of assembly thereof.
In the present disclosure there is contemplated a radio cabinet comprising a plurality of separable sections or units, which are interchangeable with other like sections of similar shapes but of different colors or of different ornamental congurations, for combination with other sections or uni-ts into various combinations to afford a variety of completed cabinets having diierent appearance.
The object of the invention is to improve the construction as well as the mode of assembly of radio cabinets and the like, whereby they may not only be economically manufactured, but will be efficient in use, capable of being easily and quickly assembled of maximum strength and unlikely to get out of rapair.
A further object of the invention is to provide a, sectional cabinet wherein the different separable sections thereof may be interchanged with like sections of other cabinets of different color, finish, or ornamental delineation into various combinations to produce from a relatively few molds and molded elements, cabinets of distinctively different appearance.
A further object of the invention is to provide an improved method of assembly and support of the separable sections, whereby the cabinet sections will be to a great extent relieved of the strain and weight of the radio equipment or other devices contained therein.
A further object of the invention is to provide a removable support or base for the radio equipment which base is assembled as a component part of the cabinet.
A further object of the invention is to provide a radio cabinet or the like having electrical shielding and conductor elements embodied als a component part of the cabinet.
A further object of the invention is to provide a radio cabinet or the like having the advantageous structural features, inherent meritorious characteristics, and mode of assembly and use herein described.
With the above primary and other incidental objects in view as will more fully appear in the specification, the invention intended to be protected by Letters Patent consists of the features of construction, the parts and combinations thereof, and the mode of operation, or their equivalents, as hereinafter described or illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings,
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of an assembled radio cabinet embodying the present invention.
Fig. 2 is a vertical sectional view of an assembled radio cabinet taken on a substantially medial plane thereof.
Figs. 3 and 4 are two fragmentary sectional views taken on the same plane as Fig. 2 illustrating modications.
Fig. 5 is a plan View partly broken away of the radio equipment base, provided with permanently located electrical conductors.
Fig. 6 is a fragmentary sectional View taken on the same plane as Fig. 2 illustrating a further modification.
Like parts are indicated by similar characters of reference throughout the several views.
The radio industry has long since been interested in permanent colors of all hues, including pastel shades for radio cabinets, but heretofore the materials available have not been satisfactory because they lacked mechanical stability. Such available materials when used for molded radio cabinets have been subject to shrinkage and cracking, and lacked strength to support the radio equipment, especially when used in portable radio cabinets. By the construction hereinafter described, it is quite possible to produce molded cabinets having tops and bases of preferred colors, the tops of which are not subjected to strain, or required to perform any mechanical functions. The cabinet parts are not necessarily rigidly held in place, but may be free for slight relative shifting movement to compensate for expansion and contraction and thus avoid stresses and strains and consequent fracture.
Referring to the drawings, there is illustrated a simple form of portable radio cabinet comprising a base section l and a dome or cover section 2, which may be molded of differently colored materials or each may have distinctive ornamental configuration.
By assembling bases and domes of different colors or different ornamental designs in various combinations, a quite large variety of cabinets may be produced from a relatively few molds. The invention is not limited to merely two sections, but may comprise three or more sections in a single cabinet.
The base section I is duo-functional and includes a continuous top panel 3 directly onto which may be mounted thev radio equipment elements as shown in Fig. 2. The base section I thus becomes the radio chassis and simultaneously a component exposed part of the cabinet.
The top of the base section I is marginally rabbeted at 4 to afford a seat for the cover or dome 2, which is not tightly engaged therein, but is sufficiently loosely seated to enable limited eX- pansion and contraction, Adjacent its bottom the base section I is interiorly rabbeted at 5 to receive a bottom panel 5 which may be of fiber board or plywood or other inexpensive nonfragile material.
Centrally disposed within the assembly is a bolt or tie rod 'I having at its upper end a carrying handle 8. The tie rod or bolt 1 extends through the top of the dome 2 and through the panel 3 of the base section and thence through the bottom panel 6, where it is engaged by a nut 9. Intermediate the top or the dome 2 and the chassis panel 3 the tie rod or bolt is surrounded by a spacer sleeve I6 which may be of card board, paper pulp or of wood. A similar spacer sleeve I I surrounds the tie rod I intermediate the chassis panel 3 and the bottom panel 6. The bottom panel affords an enclosure for the radio elements and connections which may be disposed beneath the top 3 and also sustains the weight of the assembly, relieving the molded sections I and 2 of tension strain,
The entire weight of the assembly of cabinet sections and radio equipment is sustained by the tie rod I and the bottom panel 5, thus minimizing breakage of the molded cabinet portions, and also enabling the cabinet to be quickly disassembled and reassembled by removal and reengagement of the tie rod I and nut 9.
In some assemblies of radio equipment, it may be desirable to provide a metal shielding for the radio elements, which is easily incorporated, as in Fig. 3 by superimposing an aluminum or other metallic plate I2 on top of the base panel 3, with its margins clamped beneath the side walls of the dome or cover section 2, or a sheet of metallic foil may be secured either to the top or under surface of the panel 3. In lieu thereof the radio equipment may be assembled upon a metallic chassis plate I4 as shown in Fig. 4 in which event the panel 3 of the base section may be entirely l omitted, leaving only the marginal rabbets to receive and support the chassis plate I4.
The chassis panel 3 may be formed separately from plastic material with a sheet of metallic shielding foil attached to either its top or under side, and be removably supported on the marginal rabbet 4 as shown in Fig. 6. By assembling the radio equipment thereon the latter may be readily removed for repair or for replacement by merely removing the nut 9 and withdrawing the tie bolt 1. As a further means of simplifying the construction electrical conductor lines may be applied to either the top or bottom of the base panel 3, as shown in Fig. 5 whether the base panel be integral with the base I or separately formed and assembled between the sections I and 2. Electroconductive lines I5 comprising the radio circuit interconnecting the various radio elements may be formed on either surface of the panel 3 by spraying metal thereon through a mask or otherwise confining it to prescribed lineal areas. Otherwise such conductor lines I5 may comprise strips of metallic foil adhesively applied to one or both the surfaces of the panel 3 in such relation as to connect the radio elements in proper sequence.
By such construction manufacture of radio sets may be made quite flexible as to color combinations of the cabinet parts and the combinations of ornamental designs thereof and the radio lill equipment may be rendered quite easily accessible for repair or replacement, and shielding and electrical connections may be economically incorporated. The molded cabinet parts are relieved of strain and stress and breakage is minimized.
From the above description it will be apparent that there is thus provided a device of the character described possessing the particular features of advantage before enumerated as desirable, but which obviously is susceptible of modification in its form, proportions, detail construction and arrangement of parts Without departing from the principle involved or sacrificing any of its advantages.
While in order to comply with the statute the invention has been described in language more or less specific as to structural features, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the specific features shown, but that the means and construction herein disclosed comprise the preferred form of several modes of putting the invention into eiect, and the invention is therefore claimed in any of its forms or modifications within the legitimate and valid scope of the appended claims.
Having thus described my invention, I claim:
1. A radio cabinet, including a base section and a dome or cover section both molded from plastic material and interchangeable with other similar sections o different color or of different ornamental design to afford sundry combinations of distinctive appearance, a horizontal instrument panel forming a top for the base section and adapted to support sundry elements of radio enuipment, a bottom for the base section of nonfragile substantially rigid material, a tie bolt extending through the dome or cover, the instrument panel and the base bottom, a handle attached to the top end of the tie bolt and a nut on the lower end thereof beneath the base bottom, the construction and arrangement being such that the weight of the assembly when carried by the handle is sustained entirely by the tie bolt and the base bottom, independently of any tension strains on the base or dome.
2. A radio cabinet of molded plastic material, including separable upper and lower sections, the lower section serving as a radio base or chassis and the upper section being a dome shaped cover or enclosure therefor, a marginal rabbet coincident with the top of the lower section in which the upper section is seated, each of said sections being interchangeable with other like sections of diierent appearance to afford sundry distinctive cabinet assemblies, a bottom panel for the lower section, a seat therefor on the lower section against which the bottom panel bears, and a single tie bolt extending centrally through the upper and lower sections and detachably engaged with the bottom panel for detachably holding said sections in assembled relation, the construction and arrangement being such that the weight .of the assembly vis suspended upon the tie bolt and bottom panel wholly independently of tension strain on the upper or lower sections.
3. A radio cabinet of molded plastic material, including separable base and cover sections, a seat formed on the base section to receive the cover section and locate it relative to the base section, a chassis panel for support of radio elements removably engaged in said seat intermediate the base and cover section, a bottom panel for said base section, a tie bolt transxing the cover and base section and the chais and bottom .panels and aiiixed to the latter, spacer sleeves surrounding the tie bolt intermediate the cover 4and chassis panel and also between the chassis panel and bottom panel, the construction and arrangement being such that the weight of the assembly is sustained by the tie bolt and bottom panel independently of tension strains upon the base and cover sections.
4. A radio cabinet, including a base section, a top panelthereior to support radio elements, projections on the base section extending above the level of the top panel, a cover section seated upon the-base section in accordance with said projections, a bottom panel having seating engagement upon the base section, a tie bolt transxing the cover section, the top panel of the base section and the bottom panel and detachably engagedwith the latter, the construction and arrangement being such that the several parts are separably retained in assembled relation by the tie bolt and when supported thereby the base and cover sections are relieved of tension strain.
5. A radio cabinet, including a base section molded from plastic material including side walls, an integral top panel to support radio equipment, a marginal rabbet formed about the top panel to receive a cover section, a bottom panel of non-fragile material. seating areas on the base section engageable by the bottom panel and a suspension member extending through the top panel and releasably engageable with the bottom panel for supporting the assembly independently of tension strain on the base section.
6. A radio cabinet, including a hollow base section and a domed cover section both molded from plastic material, locating means upon the base section for positioning the cover section relative thereto, a radio equipment supporting panel separating the hollow base section from the domed cover section, a bottom panel of nonfragile material seated on the base section, a tie bolt releasably interconnecting the top of the cover section through the cover section and hollow base section and intermediate radio equipment supporting panel with the bottom panel, spacer tubes surrounding the tie :bolt intermediate the top of the cover section and the radio equipment supporting panel, and between the latter panel and the base panel, the construction and arrangement being such that the base and cover sections are held in assembled relation by the tie bolt and the weight of the assembly when suspended is sustained by the base panel and tie bolt independently of tension strain on the base or cover sections.
7. A radio cabinet, including a base section and a cover section engageable upon the base section, both being molded from plastic material, a chassis panel to support radio equipment elements formed integral with the base section and separating the assembled cabinet into separate compartments, a bottom panel for the base section engageable therewith in spaced relation with the radio chassis panel, a tie bolt interconnecting the cover section and the bottom panel extending through the intermediate cover and base compartments and the separating chassis panel.
8. A radio cabinet, including separable base and cover sections, both molded from plastic material, matching conformations upon the respective sections for locating the cover section in superposed relation with the base section, a chassis panel for support of radio equipment elements comprising a stratum of dielectric mate- (Fili rial and a parallel contacting stratum of metal affording an electrical shielding effect, remov-A ably clamped between the cover section and base section, and a tie member :for interconnecting the cover and base sections with the chassis panel clamped therebetween.
9. A radio cabinet, including separable base and cover sections, both molded from plastic material, matching conformations upon the respective sections ior locating the cover section in superposed relation with the base section, a chassis lpanel for support of radio equipment elements, said chassis panel comprising a stratum of dielectric materialand metallic lines delineated thereon defining an electrical radio circuit communicating with radio equipment elements supported upon the chassis panel, and connector means for detachably interconnecting the cover and base sec-- tions into a unitary assembly, with the chassis panel interposed therebetween.
10. A radio cabinet, including separable superposed base and cover sections of molded plastic material, interchangeable with other like sections of different color or ornamental characteristics .in diierent combinations to afford cabinet assemblies of diierent appearances, a bottom panel engageable with the base section, a chassis panel for support of radio equipment elements separating the assembly into upper and lower compartments, and a suspension rod interconnecting the top of the cover section with the bottom panel of the base section for transportation maintaining the parts in assembled relation and supporting the assembly independently of tension strains lon the base and cover sections.
11. A radio cabinet, including separable superposed base and cover sections of molded plastic imaterial, a chassis panel for support of radio equipment elements coincident with the top of the base section and separating the assembly into upper and lower compartments, a bottom panel engageable with the base section in spaced relation with the chassis panel, a suspension rod interconnecting the top of the cover section with the bottom panel of the base section into a unitary assembly, and a handle attached to the suspenxsion rod for transporting the assembly, the construction and arrangement being such that the Isuspension rod and bottom panel sustains the weight of the assembly independently of strain lon the base and cover sections, during transportation.
12. A radio cabinet, including separable base and cover sections molded from plastic material, :a separable chassis panel for support of radio yequipment elements clamped between the base :and cover sections, a bottom panel engageable With the base section in spaced relation with the chassis panel, a connecting bolt interconnecting 'the top of the cover section with the bottom panel of the base section and clamping the chassis panel therebetween, the construction and arrangement being such that the weight of the assembly is sustained by the connecting bolt and bottom panel wholly independently of tension strain on the cover and base sections.
13. A radio cabinet, including separable superposed base and cover sections molded from plastic material, a chassis panel of dielectric material for :support of radio equipment elements dividing the :assembly into upper and lower compartments, and 'metallic strips aiixed to the chassis panel comprising electroconductors of a radio circuit connecting radio equipment elements mounted there- Aon, a bottom panel engageable with the base section in parallel spaced relation with` the chassis panel and a single tie, bolt interconnecting the cover section and the bottom panel retaining the several parts in assembled relation.
14. A radio cabinet, including separable superposed base and cover sections molded from plastic material, a chassis panel of dielectric material for support` of radio equipment elements dividing the assembly into upper andlower compartments., a stratum of metallic material overlying at least a portion of the chassis panel and alfordirig-l eleotric shielding for at least a portion of the radio equipment elements mounted on said panel, a bottom panel engaged with the base section in parallel spaced relation with the chassis panel and a single interconnection between the cover section and the bottom panel separably retaining the several parts in assembled relation.
JOSEPH J. BAUMAN.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the le of this patent:
Number Number OTHER REFERENCES Wireless World, Metal Cabinets," pages 27-29,
Z-16.3, July 10, 1929.
US540265A 1944-06-14 1944-06-14 Sectional radio cabinet Expired - Lifetime US2468727A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US540265A US2468727A (en) 1944-06-14 1944-06-14 Sectional radio cabinet

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US540265A US2468727A (en) 1944-06-14 1944-06-14 Sectional radio cabinet

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2468727A true US2468727A (en) 1949-05-03

Family

ID=24154705

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US540265A Expired - Lifetime US2468727A (en) 1944-06-14 1944-06-14 Sectional radio cabinet

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2468727A (en)

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2567829A (en) * 1947-03-06 1951-09-11 Suthann Robert Andree Combined cabinet and chassis for mounting electrical components
US2605326A (en) * 1949-11-22 1952-07-29 Admiral Corp Radio chassis assembly
US2611040A (en) * 1947-06-23 1952-09-16 Brunetti Cledo Nonplanar printed circuits and structural unit
US2733544A (en) * 1956-02-07 Toy buildings
US2737579A (en) * 1951-04-06 1956-03-06 Acf Ind Inc Amplifier assembly
US2738419A (en) * 1952-07-26 1956-03-13 Motorola Inc Radio receiver apparatus
US2756338A (en) * 1952-07-23 1956-07-24 Standard Electronics Corp Variable radio frequency interstage impedance
US2810068A (en) * 1953-02-24 1957-10-15 Motorola Inc Portable electronic unit
US2820890A (en) * 1955-04-29 1958-01-21 I D E A Inc Radio chassis construction
US2821566A (en) * 1952-08-08 1958-01-28 Sylvania Electric Prod Unitary radio chassis
US2939051A (en) * 1958-09-03 1960-05-31 Jr Ben H Griffith Printed circuit assembly
US3195050A (en) * 1962-12-21 1965-07-13 Philco Corp Electrical apparatus and method of fabricating it
US3224826A (en) * 1964-09-16 1965-12-21 Scovill Manufacturing Co Motor driven food mixer
DE1234818B (en) * 1962-09-05 1967-02-23 Telefunken Patent Communication engineering device with a chassis and a detachable handle
US3364315A (en) * 1963-01-25 1968-01-16 Akg Akustische Kino Geraete Electronic appliance
US3724151A (en) * 1971-01-18 1973-04-03 Kaywood Prod Corp Mobile home anchor
US5093759A (en) * 1988-12-13 1992-03-03 Honeywell, Inc. Replaceable electronics box

Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US18035A (en) * 1857-08-25 Improved method of hermetically sealing cans
FR635782A (en) * 1927-06-10 1928-03-24 Equip Electr L Improvements in telegraphy and wireless telephony devices
US1920741A (en) * 1927-09-20 1933-08-01 Rca Corp Radiocabinet
US1930103A (en) * 1930-10-06 1933-10-10 Monroe J Mechling Container
US2066511A (en) * 1935-07-20 1937-01-05 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wiring device
US2068844A (en) * 1935-10-12 1937-01-26 Ingraham E Co Radio construction
US2176212A (en) * 1936-09-03 1939-10-17 Philips Nv Radio receiving apparatus
US2176374A (en) * 1937-02-23 1939-10-17 Smith Joseph B Housing construction for radio apparatus
US2219941A (en) * 1933-12-12 1940-10-29 Lorenz C Ag High frequency arrangement
US2278835A (en) * 1940-06-24 1942-04-07 Daniel J Crowley Combined lamp and radio receiving set
US2300617A (en) * 1941-01-27 1942-11-03 Daniel J Crowley Radio receiving set

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US18035A (en) * 1857-08-25 Improved method of hermetically sealing cans
FR635782A (en) * 1927-06-10 1928-03-24 Equip Electr L Improvements in telegraphy and wireless telephony devices
US1920741A (en) * 1927-09-20 1933-08-01 Rca Corp Radiocabinet
US1930103A (en) * 1930-10-06 1933-10-10 Monroe J Mechling Container
US2219941A (en) * 1933-12-12 1940-10-29 Lorenz C Ag High frequency arrangement
US2066511A (en) * 1935-07-20 1937-01-05 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wiring device
US2068844A (en) * 1935-10-12 1937-01-26 Ingraham E Co Radio construction
US2176212A (en) * 1936-09-03 1939-10-17 Philips Nv Radio receiving apparatus
US2176374A (en) * 1937-02-23 1939-10-17 Smith Joseph B Housing construction for radio apparatus
US2278835A (en) * 1940-06-24 1942-04-07 Daniel J Crowley Combined lamp and radio receiving set
US2300617A (en) * 1941-01-27 1942-11-03 Daniel J Crowley Radio receiving set

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2733544A (en) * 1956-02-07 Toy buildings
US2567829A (en) * 1947-03-06 1951-09-11 Suthann Robert Andree Combined cabinet and chassis for mounting electrical components
US2611040A (en) * 1947-06-23 1952-09-16 Brunetti Cledo Nonplanar printed circuits and structural unit
US2605326A (en) * 1949-11-22 1952-07-29 Admiral Corp Radio chassis assembly
US2737579A (en) * 1951-04-06 1956-03-06 Acf Ind Inc Amplifier assembly
US2756338A (en) * 1952-07-23 1956-07-24 Standard Electronics Corp Variable radio frequency interstage impedance
US2738419A (en) * 1952-07-26 1956-03-13 Motorola Inc Radio receiver apparatus
US2821566A (en) * 1952-08-08 1958-01-28 Sylvania Electric Prod Unitary radio chassis
US2810068A (en) * 1953-02-24 1957-10-15 Motorola Inc Portable electronic unit
US2820890A (en) * 1955-04-29 1958-01-21 I D E A Inc Radio chassis construction
US2939051A (en) * 1958-09-03 1960-05-31 Jr Ben H Griffith Printed circuit assembly
DE1234818B (en) * 1962-09-05 1967-02-23 Telefunken Patent Communication engineering device with a chassis and a detachable handle
US3195050A (en) * 1962-12-21 1965-07-13 Philco Corp Electrical apparatus and method of fabricating it
US3364315A (en) * 1963-01-25 1968-01-16 Akg Akustische Kino Geraete Electronic appliance
US3224826A (en) * 1964-09-16 1965-12-21 Scovill Manufacturing Co Motor driven food mixer
US3724151A (en) * 1971-01-18 1973-04-03 Kaywood Prod Corp Mobile home anchor
US5093759A (en) * 1988-12-13 1992-03-03 Honeywell, Inc. Replaceable electronics box

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2468727A (en) Sectional radio cabinet
US4006546A (en) Back-lighted display arrangement
DK161875C (en) Thermally insulating, multi-layered BITUMINOES PLATE AND A ASSEMBLY PROCEDURE FOR PREPARING A COMPOSITE STRUCTURE INCLUDING SUCH PLATES
US3579859A (en) Design grid with variable guide
DE69022529D1 (en) Arrangement for testing fully assembled printed circuit boards, method for producing and testing the same.
WO1995010960B1 (en) Cabinet and supporting frame for liquid dispensing system
CN210723788U (en) Low-voltage power distribution cabinet
US2025619A (en) Wiring or connection of radio or other electrical circuits
US2930939A (en) Panel
US2309323A (en) Radio apparatus
GB750108A (en) Improvements in and relating to signs
EP0259874A3 (en) A coupling plate having a plurality of electric coupling points, a method of producing such a plate and a use of the coupling plate as a planning board
GB2015934A (en) Improvements in and relating to camping equipment
US3305705A (en) Module support structure
CN212748232U (en) Mechanical vibration test bench
CN208093019U (en) A kind of modularized electric experimental provision
CN209891616U (en) Wall combination panel
CN217248987U (en) High school is teaching device for biology
US1641602A (en) Method and means for supporting vibratory structures
US1613578A (en) Radio panel board
JPS63127038U (en)
US1815230A (en) Assembling fixture
ES2050599A1 (en) Board for the playing of multiple board games
JPS6017177Y2 (en) Assembled display stand
GB799276A (en) Improved electric lamp support