Not Applicable
The following is a tabulation of some prior art that presently appears relevant:
Recycling of beverage cans has become more important than ever due to the increasing energy costs to produce the cans from raw materials and the fact the raw materials are ever depleting. Recycling of these cans voluntarily or mandated by government, begins with the user of the can.
It is desirable to make recycling convenient for the user of the beverage can so more will be recycled. A major inconvenience for the user that is recycling is storing the cans prior to delivery to the recycling center. Storing the cans in the original shape is a problem because the cans occupy much space with very little weight. It is desirable to crush the cans so they will take up only a fraction of the space of the original can.
There are can crushers available to aid the user in crushing the cans prior to recycling. Many of the previously designed crushers are undesirable because the manually operated mechanisms require much force. The force directed to crushing the beverage can is lost due to friction or interactions of the multiple moving parts of the prior art's units.
Many of the manually operated crushers were intended to be used on a table top or mounted to a wall as illustrated by Lowe in U.S. Pat. No. 4,394,834. I have found that it is not convenient to have to mount the crusher to structure or wall. It limits the ability of the user to place the crusher wherever they desire, such as where their household trash receptacle is located, possibly be away from a wall or counter.
Some of the can crushers are free-standing but are very complicated, bulky and expensive, Goldsmith, et al U.S. Pat. No. 4,345,520.
The most convenient crushers are designed to capture and store the crushed can as it falls under its own weight into a receptacle, without having to touch it once it has gone through the device as in U.S. Pat. No. 4,962,701 by Stralow. It is however desirable to have the ability to store enough cans to fill a normal sized kitchen garbage bag prior to emptying.
Some manual devices are capable of being attached to a receptacle, but end up being very large and bulky due to the amount of force required to operate the crusher as shown in Musumeci, Sr., et al U.S. Pat. No. 5,293,816. This limits the ability to locate the unit discretely within the home which is preferable.
In accordance with one embodiment, a can crusher having a support base, a lid comprising a lever arm that is pivotally attached to the base, a crushing chamber, a ram with attached ram roller head, and a receptacle.
Accordingly several advantages of one or more aspects are as follows: to provide beverage can crusher that is free standing on a typically flat floor, that is light weight and portable making it capable of being located as desired by the user, that is inexpensive to manufacture, thus making it accessible to more individuals, that applies as much of the manually applied force as possible to the crushing process, that allows the crushed can to fall freely into a receptacle. Other advantages of one or more aspects will be noticeable through the consideration of the drawings and following description.
One embodiment of the beverage can crusher is illustrated in
The chamber 16 which is sized to be just slightly larger than the diameter of a typical beverage can is attached to the rear horizontal beam 24 and resting on the front horizontal beam 26. The lid 22 is attached to the support frame 12 at the rear horizontal top beam 52 using a pivot mechanism 36. The lever arm 34 is the narrowed extended end of the lid 22.
As illustrated in
The chamber 16 is attached to the rear horizontal beam 24 by the end plate 38 that is the rear termini of the chamber as shown in
There is a cut-away 28 in the front upper half of the chamber 16 to allow the wheels 30 to enter the chamber and contact the beverage can 44 as the lid is brought forward. The slot 42 in the center of the top of the chamber 16 allows the ram 18 to pass through during the crushing process. There is a discharge opening 40 at the rear of the chamber 16 to allow the crushed can to fall freely, without attention, into the receptacle 14 once the lid 22 is raised slightly to remove the down force of the ram head on the crushed can.
Operation—
As shown in
The user would grip the lever arm 34 of the lid 22 and raise the lever arm, making the lid to move about the pivot 36 and continue to raise the lid to a near vertical position or open position as shown in
From the closed position as shown in
When the receptacle 14 has been filled it can be taken from between the support frame 12 to allow the plastic bag full of crushed cans to be removed and a new bag installed and the receptacle placed back into position.
While the present invention has been shown and illustrated in terms of a specific apparatus, it is apparent that various modifications and changes in detail thereof may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Advantages
From the description above, a number of advantages of same embodiments of this can crusher become evident:
Although the description above contains much specificity, it should not be construed as limiting the scope of the embodiments but merely providing illustrations of some of several embodiments. For example, the crushers support frame could be made in similar configurations with various materials or it could be an enclosed, box-type rather than a member frame unit. The lever arm could be extending or telescoping type. Also, the chamber could be shaped differently—triangular, trapezoidal, or oval, and be made of a variety of materials as long as they can withstand forces applied to crush the cans and the capable of withstanding the scraping of the aluminum beverage can against the sides during the crushing process.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2760268 | Richards | Aug 1956 | A |
3299802 | Black, Jr. | Jan 1967 | A |
3780647 | Reimers | Dec 1973 | A |
4345518 | Cash | Aug 1982 | A |
5735195 | Hewitt | Apr 1998 | A |
7546965 | Parkin | Jun 2009 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160332405 A1 | Nov 2016 | US |