The present invention relates to apparatus for cleaning submerged surfaces of swimming pools, hot tubs and spas. More specifically, the present invention relates to an adaptable nozzle attachment for a swimming pool cleaner.
Pool cleaning apparatus are known for passing over the surfaces of pools to remove dirt and debris and to filter the pool water. Such pool cleaning apparatus are typically bulky. Lightweight and hand-held pool cleaners are advantageous because they allow a user to easily manipulate the pool cleaner over the surfaces of a pool, spa or pond. Mechanical pool cleaners which utilize the flow of water drawn through the cleaner by means of a connecting flexible suction hose in communication with a filtration system pump are well known.
In commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,797,157 to Erlich, a highly portable hand-held pool cleaner is powered by rechargeable batteries and includes a body and intake nozzle for suctioning pool water. A nozzle attachment includes a plurality of spaced brushes, which are used to dislodge dirt and debris from the pool surface, thereby allowing the pool cleaner to suction up the dislodged debris. Alternatively, the nozzle attachment can include permanently fixed protrusions on a base to prevent the suctioning effect of the pool cleaner from causing the base to be flush with the pool surfaces. However, such fixed protrusions do not roll, or may not easily slide along a surface, and can thereby impede movement of the cleaner head.
Pool cleaners, such as professional pool cleaners, clean all types and shapes of pools having conventionally known surfaces. For example, swimming pool-surfaces may be formed with a gunite surface, a tile surface, or a combination thereof. Above ground pools are fitted with a vinyl liner, the surfaces of which are usually smooth and semi-flexible. The material gunite is a combination of sand and cement that covers a framework of an in-ground swimming pool. A gunite surface is usually textured and hard. Tile surfaces may be either smooth or textured, and will have depressions formed between the tiles where a waterproof sealer (e.g., grout) is provided. The roughened gunite surface, and to some extent, tile surfaces can cause extreme wear to brushes and plastic parts of the cleaner head.
As the shapes, contours, and surfaces of each pool, hot tub, spa, or other container for retaining a volume of water that is used for recreational or aesthetic purposes may vary, it may be more desirable to use one type of nozzle attachment over another for a particular type of surface and shape of a pool. To accommodate cleaning of the different types of surfaces, many professional pool cleaners or consumers having, for example, multiple recreational and/or aesthetic water containers (e.g., pool and/hot tub) with differing surfaces, have no choice but to purchase separate cleaning equipment suitable for the different types of surfaces they encounter. Thus, the lack of a cleaner capable of cleaning various surface types of recreational and/or aesthetic water containers can cause additional expenses in terms of purchasing and maintaining multiple cleaning devices.
Therefore, there is a need in the art for an adaptable nozzle attachment that is capable of providing optimal cleaning for recreational and aesthetic water containers having different surface materials, textures and/or shapes.
The disadvantages heretofore associated with the prior art are overcome by the present invention of an adaptable nozzle attachment for a pool cleaner. The nozzle is an adjustable attachment to allow a user to selectively attach either brushes and/or rollers to a lower surface of the nozzle attachment, based on the type of surface to be cleaned.
The adjustable nozzle attachment includes a planar member having an upper surface and a lower surface. An orifice is formed through the planar member, and is adapted for coupling to a vacuum suction source. A plurality of attaching means are formed on the lower surface of the planar member.
In one embodiment, each attaching means is adapted to interchangeably receive a roller or a brush at a common location of the lower surface. Alternatively, the attaching means permits selective removal and fastening of the rollers and brushes at different locations along the lower surface. In this embodiment, each attachment means is dedicated to selectively receive either a roller or a brush. In either embodiment, the user can illustratively remove a brush and install a roller (or vice versa) based on the type of surface to be cleaned.
In one preferred embodiment, the attachment means are recesses into which the brushes and/or rollers are received. Other means of attachment include magnets, hook-and-loop fasteners, frictional or locking slide fittings, threaded members, and other mechanical fastening means known to the art.
The configuration of the attaching means, when combined with the plurality of rollers and brushes, permits a user to adjust the overall flexibility of the nozzle attachment to accommodate the type of surface being cleaned. Thus, the ability to interchange the rollers and brushes, and thereby adapt the flexibility of the nozzle attachment, provides a more efficient and effective nozzle attachment to clean the various surfaces of a recreational and/or aesthetic water container (e.g., pond, hot tub, pool, among others).
The invention also minimizes the cost to the manufacturer of a recreational and/or aesthetic water container by providing a single vacuum attachment head along with a plurality of brushes and rollers that the purchaser/user can install, based on the surface to be cleaned.
The ability to convert the attachment of the invention is also particularly attractive to purchasers who have two or more recreational and/or aesthetic water containers (e.g., pools and/or spas), who will be able to remove the brushes and install the rollers (or vice versa) to change the flexible and performance characteristics of the vacuum cleaning/pick-up attachment.
The teachings of the present invention can be readily understood by considering the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
To facilitate understanding, the same reference numerals have been used, when appropriate, to designate the same or similar elements that are common to the figures. Further, unless stated otherwise, the drawings shown and discussed in the figures are not drawn to scale, but are shown for illustrative purposes only.
The present invention provides various embodiments of an adaptable nozzle attachment suitable for cleaning various textured underwater surfaces. The nozzle attachment is suitable for cleaning a variety of swimming pool surfaces, such as flexible vinyl liners, gunite, and tile, among other textured and non-textured surfaces. It is noted that the pool cleaner can also be used for cleaning other vessels containing water, such as spas, hot tubs, ornamental outdoor ponds, among other recreational and aesthetic water containers.
The present invention is generally discussed in terms of a “nozzle attachment.” However, the present invention is applicable to any other nozzle head, suction head, face plate, vacuum head, or other projecting component with an opening for regulating and directing a flow of fluid while illustratively cleaning a surface of a vessel, such as a swimming pool.
In one embodiment of the invention, an adjustable nozzle attachment includes a planar member having an upper surface and a lower surface with an orifice formed there through the upper and lower surfaces of said planar member. The orifice is adapted for coupling to a vacuum source, such as an underwater vacuum cleaner. A plurality of attaching means are formed at the lower surface of the planar member, where each attaching means is adapted to interchangeably receive at least one of a plurality of rollers and a plurality of brushes.
In one embodiment, the planar member is manufactured from a flexible material, such as a synthetic polymer, natural or synthetic rubber, or other suitable flexible materials. The flexibility of the planar member can be selectively controlled by the type and user placement of rollers and/or brushes that are coupled to the attachment means. For example, rollers can be selectively interchanged and attached to the lower surface of the nozzle attachment for use with swimming pools having a gunite surface material. In this instance, the planar member substantially retains its flexible characteristics and can follow the contours of the pool surface area being cleaned. That is, the flexible planar member will substantially assume the radius of curvature typically found in gunite pools.
Alternatively, brushes may be interchangeably attached to the lower surface of the nozzle attachment for use with swimming pools having a vinyl liner. In this instance, the planar member becomes semi-rigid, thereby allowing greater sweeping and removal of matter from the semi-flexible vinyl surface of the pool liner.
In one embodiment, the pool cleaner 10 can be a battery-powered pool cleaner, as shown and described in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,797,157 to Erlich, the contents of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety. However, one skilled in the art will appreciate that the pool cleaner 10 may include any vacuum source (e.g., a pump) for providing suction to remove matter from an underwater environment. For example, the vacuum source (e.g., body) of the pool cleaner 10 may be positioned externally from the swimming pool, such that a connecting hose is utilized between the nozzle attachment 36 and body 16.
In a first mode of operation shown in
The body 16 of the pool cleaner 10 includes a projecting handle 14. In one embodiment, the handle is integrally formed from the molded plastic to allow the pool cleaner 10 to be hand-held and to be easily carried and manipulated. The body 16 can include hollow sections (not show n) that fill with water during immersion, so the pool cleaner 10 is not buoyant after full immersion. The pool cleaner 10 configured to be of essentially neutral buoyancy so that it can be manipulated underwater with relative ease, as well as in any orientation along any horizontal, vertical or curved surface that is being cleaned.
A pole attachment member 20 extends from the body 16, allowing the extended pole 12 to be securely, but removably attached to the pool cleaner 10 for use in the first mode of operation shown in
A plurality of water discharge ports or apertures 24 are present in the body 16 to allow filtered water to be returned to the pool, and for allowing water to flow into and out of the hollow portions. In a preferred embodiment illustrated in
A filter housing 26 is mounted to the fore of the body 16 for accumulating the debris suctioned into the pool cleaner 10 by the nozzle attachment 36. In a preferred embodiment, the filter housing 26 is composed of transparent plastic, allowing the user to see the amount of debris suctioned and the remaining capacity of the filter housing 26 and thereby to determine the need for emptying the accumulated debris.
As also shown in
In one embodiment, an impeller (not shown) is provided in the body 16 of the pool cleaner. The impeller, when rotating, causes the filtered water to be drawn into the nozzle attachment, pass through the filter bag and be forced out of the water discharge ports 24. Further, the filter housing 26 can be conical in shape, such that while the impeller is rotating, the conical filter housing facilitates the formation of a vortex, which draws the water through the filter housing 26 and out through the water discharge ports 24. Further, the vortex also forces the debris against the bottom portion of the filter, such that the debris is first compacted at the bottom or downstream end of the filter, thereby allowing more debris to be retained in the filter between filter cleanings.
The nozzle attachment 36 of the present invention includes an orifice 42 that is adapted for coupling to the filter housing 26. In one embodiment, a conduit element 38, such as a hose, bellows cover, among other flexible tubular conduit elements, is coupled to the nozzle attachment 36 over the orifice 42. Alternatively, the conduit element 38 can be a semi rigid tube or the like. The conduit element 38 can be formed of molded polymeric material, and optionally provided with wire reinforcement. In particular, a first end of the conduit element 38 circumscribes and is attached over the orifice 42, while a second end of the conduit element 38 is similarly coupled over an orifice 44 formed in the filter housing 26. The conduit element 38 forms a watertight seal at its points of attachment to the nozzle attachment 36 and housing 26. As such, water and solid material may be pumped through the orifice 42 formed in the nozzle attachment 36, through the conduit element 38, and into the filter housing 26, where the filter 40 traps the solid material, and the water discharge ports 24 expel the filtered water. Further, the flexible conduit element 38 permits the pool cleaner 10 to be easily manipulated over and around curved surfaces in the pool.
Although the conduit element 38 is illustratively shown in
Alternatively, a pole attachment may be coupled either to the nozzle attachment 36 or the end of the hose extension proximate the nozzle attachment 36, to allow a cleaning person to clean any difficult to reach surfaces (e.g., a deep end) of the aesthetic or recreational water container. Thus, the flexible extension hose advantageously accommodates cleaning by hand or with an extension pole for those difficult surfaces requiring extra attention.
The nozzle attachments 36 described herein comprises a planar member 300 having an upper surface 302, a lower surface 304, and the orifice 42 formed there through. In one embodiment, the nozzle attachment 36 is fabricated from a flexible material, such as a synthetic polymer, natural or synthetic rubber, among other water impermeable flexible materials.
The shape of the planar member 300 may be circular, oval, semi-circular, polygonal (e.g., triangle, square, rectangular, pentagon, hexagon, octagon, among other multi-side shapes), elliptical, wing shaped, or any other shape or combination thereof suitable for interfacing with the contours of the pool surface and directing liquid (e.g., water) and solid matter (e.g., debris) into the pool clearier 10. In the illustrative embodiment shown in
Referring to
The nozzle adapter 310 is adapted for coupling to the conduit 38 (e.g., a hose) as discussed above. In one embodiment, the conduit 38 is form fitted around the nozzle adapter 310. For example, the conduit 38 and the nozzle adapter 310 can be circular in shape, and the nozzle adapter 310 includes a protrusion or flange 314 extending outward to provide additional contact area as the end of the conduit 38 is fitted over the nozzle adapter 310. In this embodiment, frictional forces secure the nozzle attachment 36 to the conduit 38. Alternatively, the nozzle adapter 310 and the end of the conduit 38 may include one or more fasteners, such as a latch and hook, a screw, or any other conventional fastener capable of securing the conduit 38 to the nozzle adapter 310 without leakage of fluid there between.
In one embodiment, a plurality of attachment means, illustratively attachment means 320, through 320n (collectively attachment means 320, where n is an integer greater than one) are formed on the lower surface 304 of the planar member 300. The attachment means 320 are sized to receive a brush 350 and/or roller 360, which the user can interchangeably install. The attachment means can be any suitable device for selectively attaching the brushes and/or rollers to the lower surface of the planar member 300. For example, the attachment means 320 can be any fastener, such as a clip, snap, clamp, hook-and-loop, latch, pin, screw, rotating/slide locking pins/plates, as well as magnetic attachments, strapping (e.g., VELCRO straps), among other conventional mounting and fastening devices, or any combination thereof.
User selection of the brushes 350 and/or rollers 360 to be installed is based on the surface type of the pool. For example,
As shown in
In one embodiment, one or more detents (not shown) may be formed in each recess to position and hold the brush or roller, such that the brush or roller can be released by applying an external force to one of the parts. As shown in
In one embodiment, the recesses 322 extend a distance to allow the sidewalls of the recesses to retain the brush heads 352. In another embodiment, the recesses may extend through the upper surface 302 to form respective orifices that are sized to retain the brush heads 352. Alternatively, the recesses 322 can extend beyond above the upper surface 302 of the planar member 302, into corresponding projecting elements 330. The projecting elements 330 are provided over the recesses 332 to retain the inserts (i.e., brush heads 352 and or roller 360). For example, the projecting element 3321 is formed over recess 3221, the projecting element 3302 is formed over recess 3202, and so forth. The projecting elements 330 are sized to receive and cover the brush heads 352. The recess/projecting element pairs 322 and 330 are illustratively formed proximately the perimeter of the planar member 300 to direct any debris swept by the brushes 350 towards the nozzle adapter 310, which facilitates the suctioning of water and debris from the pool surface.
In one embodiment, a portion of the recesses 322 can each include a wheel well 332. For example, wheel wells 3321 through 332p (where p is an integer greater than one) are illustratively shown formed coincidently with recesses 3301, 3303, 3304, and 330n, respectively. In one embodiment, the wheel wells 330 are formed centrally and perpendicular to the rectangular recesses 322, although other arrangements are also possible.
As shown in
The embodiment shown in
The nozzle attachment 36 comprises a planar member 500 fabricated from a flexible material or materials, as described above. The planar member 500 is illustratively formed in a substantially triangular shape, and as illustratively shown in
Referring to
In one embodiment, the recesses 522 may extend through the lower surface 504 and upper surface 502 to form an aperture (not shown), which is sized to secure the brushes 350 against the sidewalls of the aperture. Alternatively, and as shown in
The nozzle attachment 36 illustratively includes wheel wells 532, through 532s (collectively wheel wells 532, where s is an integer greater than one) formed proximate the perimeter of the planar member 500. In the embodiment of
For example, roller 560 can include a wheel portion 564 and an axle portion 566 extending perpendicular through the center of the wheel 564 via a central hub. The axle 566 extends outward on each side of the wheel 564. The axle 566 of the roller 560 can be inserted into the cutout portion 536, and the wheel well 532 is sized greater than the size of the wheel 564 to allow clearance for the wheel 564 to rotate unimpeded about its axle 566. The roller 560 can be molded as a single piece or formed as an assembly of component parts.
The embodiment shown in
A plurality of recesses 7221 through 722u (collectively recesses 722, where u is an integer greater than one) are formed proximately the perimeter of the planar member 700. For example, three substantially rectangular recesses 7223 through 722s can be axially aligned proximate a straight edge 706 of the planar member 700. A fourth recess 7221 is formed along the central axis at the apex 708 of the semi-circle, which is perpendicular to the straight edge 706. At least two additional recesses 7222 and 722u are formed between the straight edge 706 and apex 708. The at least two additional rectangular recesses 7222 and 722u are illustratively formed in a direction extending from the central orifice 42 towards perimeter of the semi-circular portion of the planar member 700.
At least three of the substantially rectangular recesses 722 include a wheel well portion 734 sized to receive a portion of a roller, such as the roller 360 shown and described with respect to the embodiment of
One skilled in the art will appreciate that the nozzle attachment 36 can be formed in any shape suitable for either rolling over or sweeping a surface of a swimming pool. In each of the illustrative embodiments shown, the recesses are sized to allow the interchangeable rollers and brushes to be easily removed and replaced by the other. Additionally, the wheel wells are aligned to accommodate the rollers, so that the user can easily move the nozzle attachment 36 either forwards or backwards along a line of direction.
Although the recesses and brushes are illustratively shown as being substantially rectangular in shape, other shapes can be provided as well. For example, curved shaped recesses and respective brushes may be utilized to direct debris into the central orifice 42. Further, the brush heads 352 can be fabricated from a flexible, semi-flexible or rigid material, such as plastic, to facilitate a desired stiffness or flexibility of the planar member. That is, when the brushes 350 are inserted into the recesses, the planar member of the nozzle attachment 36 may lose some of its flexibility, depending on the stiffness of the brush heads 352 being inserted therein. In many applications, such as cleaning a vinyl pool surface, it may be desirable to have a stiffer brush head to decrease the flexibility of the planar member. Alternatively, when cleaning a tile surface, it may be desirable to utilize a more flexible brush in the nozzle attachment 36. It is noted that all materials of construction are selected for resistance to the chemicals commonly used in maintaining water quality, cleaning compounds, and the ultra violet rays of the sun.
One skilled in the art will appreciate that a similar analysis also applies to the rollers, such as the rollers 360 shown in
Further, although the brushes and rollers have been shown and described in the various embodiments as being attached to the planar member of the nozzle attachment via recess formed therein, such attachment means is not to be considered as being limiting. For example, the brushes and rollers can be attached by fasteners, such as clips, mating snaps, and/or other conventional fasteners known in the art.
As such, the present invention provides a nozzle attachment 36 that includes removable and/or interchangeable brushes and rollers. Further, the user is able to adjust the flexibility of the nozzle attachment 36 by installing brushes and/or rollers producing differing stiffness characteristics in the normally flexible planar member, depending on the type of surface area (e.g., gunite, vinyl, tile, among others) to be cleaned. As such, the user (e.g., as a professional pool cleaning service), can purchase a single pool cleaning device suitable for multiple types of surfaces, as opposed to having to purchase specialized vacuum cleaning heads for different types of surfaces.
Although various embodiments that incorporate the teachings of the present invention have been shown and described in detail herein, those skilled in the art can readily devise many other varied embodiments that still incorporate these teachings.