1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to a cleaning apparatus, and, in particular, to an apparatus especially suited for cleaning hard-surfaced floors.
2. Description of the Related Art
Cleaning floors is a tedious and laborious task. Over the years, many devices have been designed for this purpose, including brooms, mops, vacuum-cleaners, and countless variations thereon. For example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,896,611 and 500,976 each discloses a device that utilizes a rotatable brush to accelerate debris into a collection container. These devices have the ability to pick up relatively large dirt particles, but smaller items such as dust and hair are usually left behind. Additionally, these devices generally are designed for industrial applications, and therefore, tend to be too cumbersome for household use.
Meanwhile, widely-used electret cloth mops, which utilize static electricity to attract dirt, hair, and dust particles, pose the opposite problem. These devices are effective at picking up small particles, but larger debris tends to collect at the front edge of the mop where the debris is pushed across the floor until a user manually removes the debris from the floor. In addition, using electret cloth mops is time consuming because the user frequently has to replace spent electret cloth. Other floor cleaning devices, like those depicted in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,092,699 and 5,372,609, attempt to solve this problem by providing a continually-fed cleaning cloth, but these devices are likewise incapable of picking up larger debris.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for a cleaning apparatus that is capable of removing both large and small particles from a surface, yet is easily handled and operated.
This invention addresses the foregoing needs in the art by providing a cleaning apparatus with continuous action wiping and sweeping, in which a continuously-fed cleaning ribbon works in conjunction with a rotatable sweeping brush to remove both large and small debris from a hard-surfaced floor.
In a first aspect of the invention, the cleaning apparatus includes a housing and a handle attached to the housing. The housing houses a supply reel, a take-up reel, a cleaning ribbon extending between the supply reel and the take-up reel, and a rotatable brush. The cleaning ribbon is configured to form a particle trap, and the rotatable brush sweeps particles into the particle trap from a forward side of the particle trap.
In another aspect of the invention, a cleaning apparatus includes a housing and a handle attached to the housing. The housing detachably secures a cartridge. The cartridge includes a supply reel, a take-up reel, a cleaning ribbon extending between the supply reel and the take-up reel, and a rotatable brush. The cleaning ribbon is configured to form a particle trap, and the rotatable brush sweeps particles into the particle trap from a forward side of the particle trap.
In yet another aspect of the invention, a cleaning apparatus includes a housing and means for advancing the housing along a surface to be cleaned. The housing houses a supply reel for dispensing a supply of cleaning ribbon and a take-up reel for collecting spent cleaning ribbon. The housing additionally includes means for keeping a portion of the cleaning ribbon that extends between the supply reel and the take-up reel parallel to the surface to be cleaned, means for trapping particles, and means for sweeping particles into the particle trapping means.
In still another aspect of the invention, a cartridge for detachable securement within a cleaning apparatus includes a supply reel, a take-up reel, and a cleaning ribbon extending between the supply reel and the take-up reel. The cartridge further includes means for sweeping particles into a particle trap, and means for detachably securing the cartridge to the cleaning apparatus.
In a further aspect of the invention, a cartridge for detachable securement within a cleaning apparatus includes a supply reel, a take-up reel, and a cleaning ribbon extending between the supply reel and the take-up reel configured to create a particle trap. The cartridge also includes means for detachably securing the cartridge to the cleaning apparatus.
A better understanding of these and other objects, features, and advantages of the invention may be had by reference to the drawings and to the accompanying description, in which there are illustrated and described preferred embodiments of the invention.
For illustrative purposes, the preferred embodiments of a cleaning apparatus according to this invention are described in connection with the cleaning of floors. This invention, however, can be utilized in the cleaning of other surfaces, such as, for example, walls and sidewalks.
A guiding system 270 is mounted within the housing 201 to maintain proper orientation of the cleaning ribbon 203. In this embodiment, the guiding system 270 consists of a plurality of rollers 207 and a platen 206. The plurality of rollers 207 and the platen 206 establish the path of the cleaning ribbon 203 between the supply reel 204 and the take-up reel 205, and create tension in the cleaning ribbon 203. The platen 206 also forms a cleaning surface 208 by maintaining a section of the cleaning ribbon 203 parallel to, and in substantial contact with, the surface to be cleaned. The path of the cleaning ribbon 203 and the tension in the cleaning ribbon 203 are established such that there is no lateral movement in the cleaning ribbon 203.
In an alternative embodiment, the guiding system 270 is a track that engages the sides of the cleaning ribbon 203, and directs the cleaning ribbon 203 in a specified path. In a further embodiment, the guiding system 270 may not comprise the rollers 207 and would include only the tension in the cleaning ribbon 203 as established by either a platen 206, or the rotation of the supply reel 204 and take-up reel 205, or a combination thereof.
At the forward edge of the cleaning surface 208, the cleaning ribbon 203 is directed rearwardly, i.e., above the cleaning surface 208 in a direction opposite to the direction of normal travel of the cleaning apparatus 200 so as to create a particle trap 210. In this embodiment, the particle trap 210 is created by the plurality of rollers 207, and an angled portion 209 formed on the forward edge of the platen 206. The angled portion 209 may extend from, or be mounted to, the stationary surface 206. In alternative embodiments, the angled surface could be separately mounted within the housing 201 or the angled portion 209 may not exist at all.
At a location forward of the particle trap 210 is a rotatable brush 212. The rotatable brush 212 is rotatably mounted within the housing 201 and, in a preferred embodiment, is mounted on the same axis as one of the plurality of wheels 202 (shown in FIG. 1). The rotatable brush 212 is covered with a plurality of bristles and acts to propel larger particles from the surface to be cleaned into the particle trap 210. Once in the particle trap 210, particles are collected along with the spent cleaning ribbon 203 by the take-up reel 205. The take-up reel 205 collects the cleaning ribbon 203 so as to maintain a dirty side of the cleaning ribbon 203 facing the take-up reel 205.
While the rotatable brush of the present invention comprises a plurality of bristles, in alternative embodiments, the brush may include a plurality of flexible blades as shown, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,646,380 to Kobayashi, et al. The Kobayashi, et al. patent is hereinafter incorporated by reference. The cleaning ribbon 203 is preferably an electret material like that sold by S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc., of Racine, Wis., under the trademark GRAB-ITâ„¢. Additional compositions for the cleaning ribbon 203 could include an adhesive material, a fabric soaked in a cleaning agent, a textured cloth, or any combination thereof, for example.
In the further embodiment depicted in
Similarly,
In
In
Advancing the cleaning apparatus 500 along the surface to be cleaned causes the plurality of wheels 502 to rotate. This simultaneously causes the wheel pulley 520 to rotate, and, as a result, the belt 518 drives the take-up pulley 519. As the take-up pulley 519 rotates, the take-up reel 505 does also, thus advancing the cleaning ribbon 503. By varying the sizes of the wheel pulley 520 and the take-up pulley 519, cleaning potential for the cleaning ribbon 503 can be maximized by setting an optimal value for the rate at which the cleaning ribbon 503 advances with respect to the rate at which the cleaning apparatus 500 moves along the surface to be cleaned.
In
Advancing the cleaning apparatus 600 along the surface to be cleaned causes the plurality of wheels 602 to rotate. This, in turn, causes the wheel gear 621 to rotate, and, as a result, driving power is transferred through the additional gears 622 to drive the take-up gear 617. Thus, the cleaning ribbon 603 is advanced. By varying the sizes of the wheel gear 621, the take-up gear 617, and the additional gears 622, cleaning potential for the cleaning ribbon 603 can be maximized by setting an optimal value for the rate at which the cleaning ribbon 603 advances with respect to the rate at which the cleaning apparatus 600 moves along the surface to be cleaned.
In
Advancing the cleaning apparatus 700 along the surface to be cleaned causes the plurality of wheels 702 to rotate. This, in turn, causes the wheel pulley 720 to rotate, and, as a result, the belt 718 drives the brush pulley 723. As the brush pulley 723 rotates, the rotatable brush 712 does also. By varying the sizes of the wheel pulley 720 and the brush pulley 723, cleaning potential for the rotatable brush 712 can be maximized by setting an optimal value for the rate at which the rotatable brush 712 advances with respect to the rate at which the cleaning apparatus 700 moves along the surface to be cleaned.
In
Advancing the cleaning apparatus 800 along the surface to be cleaned causes the plurality of wheels 802 to rotate. This, in turn, causes the wheel gear 821 to rotate, and, as a result, the brush gear 824 is driven. By varying the sizes of the wheel gear 821 and the brush gear 824, cleaning potential for the rotatable brush 812 can be maximized by setting an optimal value for the rate at which the rotatable brush 812 advances with respect to the rate at which the cleaning apparatus 800 moves along the surface to be cleaned. Alternatively, the cleaning apparatus of
According to the embodiment of
A significant advantage of this embodiment is that the cleaning ribbon 903 and rotatable brush 912 can be used to their maximum cleaning potential and can then be easily replaced when necessary; the cleaning apparatus 900 need not be exchanged entirely. While in one embodiment of the invention the cartridge 914 is disposable, in another embodiment, the cartridge may be detached merely to facilitate replacement of the cleaning ribbon 903, or to allow for cleaning of the rotatable brush 912.
Similar to the housing 901 of
According to the embodiment of
According to
The embodiments discussed above are representative of embodiments of the present invention and are provided for illustrative purposes only. They are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Variations and modifications are apparent from a reading of the preceding description and are included within the scope of the invention. The invention is intended to be limited only by the scope of the accompanying claims.
The apparatus of this invention is suited for use in cleaning floors, and is particularly useful for household use on hard-surfaced floors. The cleaning ribbon disposed parallel to, and in substantial contact with, the floor is effective at attracting and retaining smaller debris particles. As the apparatus is moved along the surface to be cleaned, the rotatable brush acts to sweep larger debris particles into a particle trap. By collecting smaller and larger debris particles, the apparatus effectively cleans an entire surface with minimal manual interaction.
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Number | Date | Country |
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29910164 | Jul 1999 | DE |
29910165 | Oct 1999 | DE |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030159223 A1 | Aug 2003 | US |