As known, during combing with brushes or combs, it is easy and often unavoidable also in the healthiest hair that at the end of their use, these tools are not clean, and that hair remains entangled in their teeth or bristles.
At present, hair is mainly removed by rubbing two brushes with one another, a method not assuring a perfectly thorough hygiene (e.g. cleanliness and sterility) of the tools. There also exists a simple tool shaped as a small rake, whose curved metal teeth are inserted, where possible, among the brush bristles, and a device consisting of two idly-mounted parallel bristled rollers between which a comb, but not a brush, can be manually caused to slide thus obtaining a certain degree of cleaning. All of these methods do not perfectly clean, and they act with extreme slowness. Thus, cleaning brushes is boring, since much work is needed for obtaining visible results, and above all is unpleasant since none of the available devices takes care of collecting the removed residuals which, due to their volatility, are not even easy to locate.
This problem, which may be noticed also at home, is particularly felt by professional hairdressers due to the very frequent use of brushes and combs and the hygiene requirements imposed on them, as these are work tools intended for use with different people.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,348,253 describes a device for removing hair from a hair brush and/or a comb comprising two elongated brushes and rotating in opposite directions which comb the hair out of the hair brush into a lower hair receiving compartment.
Nederland Patent 9,300,585 and U.S. Pat. No. 3,805,318 describe apparatuses according to the preamble of claim 1, where however the rotating shaft/s is/are actually one/two bristled brush/es.
A brushing action implies a relevant friction force between a cleaning brush and an hair brush to be cleaned, causing i.a. both to become worn.
The problem at the basis of the present invention is that of eliminating the above disadvantages, by creating an apparatus for removing hair entangled among the teeth of combs or among the bristles of brushes, which should clean combs and brushes in an effective, fast and hygienic way without damaging the items to be cleaned—which may often be fragile materials, have a cloth body and be expensive and valuable-, which should avoid the operator having to hold the brush or comb against the friction force tending to entrain it in rotation. Such an apparatus should preferably have reasonable weight and size, such as to be easily placed on a bathroom console or on the sink bench at the hairdressers.
The invention relates to an apparatus for removing hair from the teeth of a comb or the bristles of a brush, comprising at least a whip extending from at least one rotating shaft for cyclically passing through a comb or brush receiving position, and suction means for creating an air stream in the proximity fo the receiving position, characterized in that each whip is so spaced apart from any other possible whip of a same rotating shaft as not to interfere, in use, therewith, whereby each whip of a same rotating shaft acts on a comb or a brush individually.
In this description and attached claims, the term “whip” is meant to indicate an elongated, essentially filiform, element.
During the rotation of the rotating shaft, the or each whip, hits the comb or brush arranged at the receiving position, catching or breaking any hair entangled among the teeth or the bristles, and the hair or fragment of hair, thus freed, is removed by the suction air stream.
To increase the disentanglement speed, more whips can be provided, for example distributed along one or more circumferences or along a spiral around the rotating shaft.
Preferably, the whips are distributed along an end portion of the at least one rotating shaft.
Moreover, the at least one rotating shaft is preferably horizontally oriented, thus the whips rotate in a vertical plane.
Moreover, preferably, means for collecting the hair removed by the suction means is comprised.
To intensify the disentangling effect, the apparatus preferably comprises a first and a second parallel rotating shafts, provided with at least one respective whip.
Advantageously, moreover, the first and the second shaft are counter-rotating in such directions that the respective whips converge from the receiving position towards the suction air stream. In this way, during the rotation, the whips convey the removed hair towards the air stream, thus reducing the probability of being scattered in the environment.
To limit the overall size of the apparatus and intensify the disentangling action in the central portion of the receiving position, the rotating shafts preferably are at a mutual distance that is essentially equal to the length of the whips.
For the purpose of preventing the whips of the two shafts from interfering with one another during rotation, the whips of the first rotating shaft may then be axially staggered with respect to the whips of the second rotating shaft.
As an alternative, the whips of the first rotating shaft and the whips of the second rotating shaft may extend in a common transversal plane but in out-of-phase radial positions.
By providing flexible whips, the centrifugal acceleration will cause the whips to adopt the maximum radial extension during rotation, still they will be able to bend if hit by the teeth or bristles or by the same body of the comb or brush, thus preventing breakage and/or damage to other parts.
For the same purpose, flexible or non-flexible whips can be mounted as articulated.
As an alternative, each whip may consist of the free end of a continuous thread wound on a reel.
For the purpose of facilitating the cleaning and replacement of the whips, they can be mounted onto removable whip-holder hubs.
Advantageously, the apparatus further has scrapers that are tangential to the rotating shafts and/or to the whip-holder hubs, for preventing hair from winding around them.
Preferably, the apparatus exhibits a containing box-shaped body provided with an aperture suitable to allow the exit of the whips towards the receiving position and the inlet of air of the suction air stream, and provided with aeration splits.
Preferably, moreover, the aperture of the box-shaped body is arranged at its top. Besides being particularly practical in use, such a configuration favours the removal of disentangled hair, which tends to fall due to gravity force.
Moreover, the apparatus may comprise a protective shell at the aperture of the box-shaped body, so as to prevent the risk of injuries, particularly in case of accidental detachment of the whips.
Again for safety reasons, the protective shell preferably has at least one access door urged in the closed position and interacting with a safety switch.
Advantageously, the box-shaped body comprises an extractable drawer-like container for collecting the hair, provided with a hair-retaining filter. In this way, the action of cleaning the filter is facilitated.
For hygiene reasons, the extractable drawer is preferably sealingly closable.
Preferably, moreover, the hair-collecting extractable drawer has a variable height so as to be inserted underneath the motor.
Moreover, to facilitate the cleaning and the possible replacement of the whips, the box-shaped body may have an inspection door at the whips.
Preferably, a common motor is present, typically an electric motor, for operating both a fan of the suction means, and the at least one rotating shaft. Besides limiting the size and the power required by the apparatus, this expedient ensures the simultaneousness of the disentangling and suction actions.
Typically, the apparatus then has first motion transmission means between a driving shaft of the electric motor and the first rotating shaft and second motion transmission means between the first rotating shaft and the second rotating shaft.
The first motion transmission means can consist of a belt drive, preferably at an intermediate portion of the first- rotating shaft.
The second motion transmission means can comprise two gearwheels respectively coupled to the first and to the second rotating shaft and engaged with one another, or two rubber-top pulleys coupled through friction.
Gearwheels or rubber-top pulleys are preferably arranged at an end of the rotating shafts, preferably at the end opposed to that from which the at least one respective whip extends.
Further features and advantages will appear more clearly from the description of a preferred but not exclusive embodiment of a cleaning apparatus for hair brushes and combs, illustrated as a non-limitative indication in the attached schematic drawings, wherein:
Apparatus 1 shown in
A whip inspection door 2 is represented as frontally mounted, for example through a screw coupling 19, 20.
On the top, the box-shaped body 1a exhibits an aperture 16 suitable to allow the exit of whips 11 during the rotation of shafts 8. Moreover, aperture 16 allows the inlet of air, which is sucked by fan 13 through an air manifold 12 and a passage 17, connected to a preferably extractable drawer-like container 3 for collecting the hair and other removed debris. Thus, between aperture 16 and passage 17 there is defined an essentially vertical suction duct below the rotating shafts 8.
The sectional view of
Moreover it can be noted that, for the purpose of preventing the whips of the two shafts from interfering with one another during rotation, the whips of the two shafts 8 are axially staggered.
In fact, for limiting the overall size of the apparatus, and intensifying the disentangling action in the central portion of the comb or brush receiving position, the rotating shafts 8 exhibit, as shown, a mutual distance that is essentially equal to the length of whips 11.
As an alternative to the staggering in axial direction, the whips of the first rotating shaft 8a and the whips of the second rotating shaft 8b could extend in a common transversal plane, but in out-of-phase radial positions.
Moreover, the particular shape of container 3 for collecting the hair is visible, having a variable height so as to be inserted under motor 6.
Moreover,
In
In
More in detail, the operation of apparatus 1 is as follows.
By acting on the switch (not shown), it is possible to power the electric motor 6 which, in its circular motion, will actuate both the fan 13 and the rotating shafts 8, and thus, whips 11 facing aperture 16 of the box-shaped body 1. The motion of fan 13 within the toric chamber-shaped manifold 12 will cause a continuous air flow within apparatus 1, sucking it through aperture 16, where the disentangling whips 11 act; the sucked air will enter into the drawer-like collecting container 3, passing through the filtrating meshes of filter 5, and it will be discharged clean outside through slits 14.
A condition of continuous suction and discharge is thus stabilised, suitable for collecting and retaining all residuals that come in the proximity of aperture 16, where the disentangling whips 1 act.
The disentangling and cleaning action is performed by whips 11, which during the rotation of rotating shafts 8, cyclically pass through the receiving position of comb P or brush S, in the proximity of aperture 16, where they effectively catch and break the hair and other residues entangled among the bristles of brush S or the teeth of comb P. The motion of shafts 8 and thus, of whips 11 mounted on hubs 7, integral with them, is counter-rotating, that is, the first on the left in
It is worth noting that during the rotation of the rotating shafts 8, whips 11 are always dipped in the suction air stream, which favours removal of any hair entangled in the whips 11 themselves.
In the practical implementation of the apparatus of the invention, the most functional whips 11 will be selected in conformity with the tools they have to clean. Thus, they can be rigid or more or less flexible, and/or articulatedly mounted and orbitally mounted on the entrainment hubs 7.
As an alternative, as illustrated in the partial section of
To increase the safety of apparatus 1, moreover, there can be provided, as illustrated in
Moreover, since the receiving position of the comb or of brush S is bounded by the same protective shell 26, the user's hands do not contact the whips.
The protective shell 26 shown in
The front access door 28 exhibits a projection 31 which, in the illustrated opened position, co-operates with a safety switch 32, connected to motor 6 through electrical connections, not shown. The illustrated safety switch 32 is of the push-button type, and it actuates motor 6 only when the front door 28 is held downwards, against the force of the torsion spring at hinge 30. Thus, requiring the use of both hands, apparatus 1 is safe also against the actuation by children.
The invention thus devised can be subject to changes and variants, all falling within the inventive scope. All details can be replaced with other technically suitable elements, in practice, the materials used, provided that they are compatible with the specific use, and the size and the shapes that are contingent to the invention can be of any type according to the requirements.
For example, separate motors could be provided for actuating the fan 13 and the rotating shafts 8, as well as different motion transmission systems. For example, two separate transmissions could be provided for the two rotating shafts 8, and the transmissions can be implemented through gears, belts or rubber-top pulleys coupled through friction.
As regards the number of whips, it can be understood that several embodiments can be devised. In fact, while on the one hand a single rotating shaft with a single whip could suffice, on the other hand the single rotating shaft or each rotating shaft could be provided with more than two whips distributed along a circumference and/or with more axially spaced whips so as to act along the entire length of a brush without having to move it forwards and backwards.
As an alternative to the extractable drawer provided with filter, as hair collecting means it could be possible, for example, to use a collecting bag as those used in vacuum cleaners.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI99A2026 | Sep 1999 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IT00/00383 | 9/28/2000 | WO | 00 | 6/24/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO01/22846 | 4/5/2001 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3072939 | Rehberg | Jan 1963 | A |
3321789 | Gundelfinger et al. | May 1967 | A |
3348253 | McCoy | Oct 1967 | A |
3805318 | Marquette | Apr 1974 | A |
4403364 | Schroeder | Sep 1983 | A |
6367120 | Beauchamp | Apr 2002 | B2 |
6532619 | Kasper et al. | Mar 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
9300585 | Nov 1994 | NL |