Refrigerator Linings Patents (Class 220/DIG18)
  • Patent number: 5934085
    Abstract: The present invention provides a thermal insulator cabinet having high thermal insulating ability and long-term reliability as well as excellent energy-saving and maintenance properties. The thermal insulator cabinet includes a gas-tight container that is filled with a charging gas and a continuous spacing core and a gas-storage container that communicates with the gas-tight container and is filled with an absorbent for absorbing at least the charging gas, wherein the gas-storage container absorbs the charging gas to make inside of the gas-tight container in a state of reduced pressure.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 17, 1998
    Date of Patent: August 10, 1999
    Assignee: Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.
    Inventors: Masaaki Suzuki, Takashi Hashida, Takayoshi Ueno
  • Patent number: 5033636
    Abstract: A refrigerator liner of a vacuum formed plastic with a thickness of about 0.007" to 0.050" has each corner formed without crinkling when thermal insulation material is foamed against the outer surface of the liner. The non-crinkling of each corner of the refrigerator liner is accomplished through forming each of the corners with a flat surface having its periphery as a circle during vacuum forming of the refrigerator liner rather than with a spherical radius. This enables the flat surface to be placed in tension when moved against a corresponding flat surface of a foam plug by the pressure produced during foaming of the foamed thermal insulation material. This results in each corner having a central portion with a convex cross section and an outer portion surrounding the central portion and concave in cross section whereby it does not appear to be crinkled.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 18, 1991
    Date of Patent: July 23, 1991
    Assignee: General Electric Company
    Inventor: Thomas E. Jenkins
  • Patent number: 4905865
    Abstract: A heat insulation container includes an inner casing, an outer casing on the exterior thereof and enclosing the inner casing and defining a space therebetween in cooperation with the inner casing, and a heat insulating foamed material filling the space defined by the casings. An aperture portion is provided in the container through a wall thereof for allowing a piping of a cooling system to go in and out of the container therethrough. The aperture portion is provided with a frame therearound which comprises an annular resilient contacting member brought into hermetical sealing contact with the inner surface of either the inner casing or the outer casing in the vicinity of a periphral edge of the mouth, and an annular tong-like member engaging sealingly with the other of the inner casing and the outer casing.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 29, 1988
    Date of Patent: March 6, 1990
    Assignee: Hoshizaki Electric Co., Ltd.
    Inventor: Masayuki Yamamoto
  • Patent number: 4826010
    Abstract: A refrigerated appliance cabinet for a chest-type freezer is formed from prefinished materials. The side walls of the shell and the liner are formed as a single piece, with the evaporator and condenser coils assembled before bending and after a thermal mastic has been applied to the places where the tubing contacts the sheet metal. The tubing is held in place by a hot melt adhesive. After the side walls are folded, bottom walls are attached mechanically and the liner inserted into the shell, with the space at the top being covered by a breaker strip arranged with the top edge of the liner and shell to provide air venting during foaming so that the foam can expand directly into contact with the underside of the breaker strip and adhesively hold it in place. The compressor compartment is attached mechanically to the shell around an opening, and the weight of the machinery is supported by that connection and the surrounding foam.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 5, 1988
    Date of Patent: May 2, 1989
    Assignee: White Consolidated Industries, Inc.
    Inventors: Richard T. Jahr, Jr., Marcus N. Holt