Not applicable.
Not applicable.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to removing heavy contaminant particles of dirt, grit, or debris that become entrapped in a wash rag, wash mitt or wash brush used to clean high gloss surfaces and suspending such contaminants in a cleaning solution, and more particularly to a device for removing particles of dirt, grit, or debris from a long-handle wash brush used to wash a recreational vehicle.
2. Description of Related Art
Manufacturers of products with precision or high gloss surfaces such as mirrors, windows, optical lenses, composites such as Corian® countertops, appliances, metal tools, kitchen and bathroom fixtures, automobiles, recreational vehicles (RV), and boats are well aware of the high risk of scratches, nicks, pitting, staining, corrosion, and discoloration that can occur during manufacturing, assembling, shipping, installation, and refinishing operations of these high gloss surfaces. Therefore, temporary protective coatings are widely used to protect such surfaces from these various products during the material handling process. The surface finishes of new vehicles such as automobiles, boats, or recreational vehicles must often be protected by temporary protective coatings from abrasive particles or other deleterious conditions in the environment during shipment by road, rail, or sea. In these applications, the temporary protective coating on the high gloss surface will become contaminated or dirty, and removal of the temporary protective coating eliminates the contamination, thereby greatly simplifying cleaning of the surface. Once these temporary coatings are removed, the high gloss products are susceptible to scratches or abrasions. In spite of these precautionary steps taken by the manufacturer to avoid abrasions to these high gloss surfaces as well as the use of modern paints and clear coating, automobiles, motorcycles, boats, and recreational vehicles are still susceptible to surface scratches and abrasions after these products are sold to the purchasing public.
A common source of such scratches or abrasions can be dirt, grit, or debris that often accumulates on wash rags, wash mitts, and wash brushes that are used to wash the exterior of the vehicle. Further, automatic car washing equipment utilizing recyclable wash water can also contribute to scratching and abrading of high gloss painted surfaces on automobiles. For this reason alone, some vehicle owners refuse to visit car washes to have their vehicle washed. The alternative is obviously to use a wash rag or wash mitt with a bucket of soapy water and wash the vehicle by hand. Unfortunately, hand washing of an automotive vehicle, boat, or RV is a source of scratches and abrasions caused by the dirt, grit, or debris that often accumulates on the wash rags or washes mitts used to wash the exterior of these vehicles. When a dirty wash rag or wash mitt is placed in a bucket of soapy water for rinsing, the dirt, grit, and debris that has been picked up from the dirty surface of the vehicle is transferred into the bucket of soapy water. As the wash water becomes more contaminated with dirt and grit, the wash rag or wash mitt may actually pickup some of the grit or debris that is suspended in the wash water or that has accumulated in the bucket. Therefore, if the wash rag or wash mitt is not properly rinsed clean, such grit or debris is likely to be transferred back onto the exterior of the glossy surface of the vehicle where it will cause significant damage in the form of scratches to the surface finish of the car, boat, or RV being cleaned.
The prior art has little to offer to solve this problem effectively. One prior art patent addresses this problem, U.S. Pat. No. 7,025,880 issued to Lamb, discloses a system for separating particles of dirt, gravel, grit or other potentially damaging debris from a wash fluid when such fluid is contained in a receptacle such as a bucket. The filter assembly itself is shaped such that it matches the shape of the receptacle and fits firmly within the receptacle. The filter component of the filter assembly has an upward facing side and a downward facing side and is made from a plastic hand mesh, screen, or any other suitable plastic screen-like material. The upward facing side of the filter component includes crossbars that are tapered to minimize the surface area of the filter component. At least two baffles are attached to the downward facing side of the filter component to reduce the motion of the wash fluid around and through the filter assembly. These baffles may include secondary baffle-like structures attached at right angles to the primary baffles for further reducing the movement of the fluid below the filter assembly.
Lamb discloses that after a wash rag or wash mitt which is being used to wash a vehicle or other surface picks up grit, dirt, or debris, the user places the wash rag or wash mitt into the bucket and rubs the wash rag or wash mitt against the filter assembly. The grit, dirt, or debris is loosened from the wash rag or wash mitt and becomes suspended in the wash fluid.
There are several known problems in the use of such prior art dirt, grit, and debris separator. In the first place, since the filter assembly sits at the very bottom of the bucket, the diameter of the bucket is the smallest near the bottom of the bucket. Therefore, lateral movement is very limited not as much so for a wash rag than it is for a wash mitt or wash brush. A wash mitt is placed on the hand of a person, particularly a male user with a relatively large hand; there is little room for lateral movement at the bottom of the bucket. Therefore, the filter assembly has a limited capability of removing grit or debris from a wash mitt because lateral movement of a wash mitt is very limited due to the small diameter of the bucket. Some users have solved this problem by stacking multiple filter assemblies within a bucket so that the upper surface of the filter assembly is at a raised level within the bucket such that it becomes easier to reach as well as provided a little more lateral room to allow for lateral movement in that the diameter of the bucket increases as you approach the open end of the bucket. Such a solution can be expensive. Further, in using the bucket receptacle with the single filter element or multiple elements mounted at the bottom thereof, it is impossible to clean a brush with any type of handle since the bucket is not large enough in diameter to place all of the bristles of the brush against the filter element because the handle of the brush cannot be accommodated within the diameter of the bucket. Therefore, what is needed is a wash bucket with a simple inexpensive insert which will permit the removal of grit, dirt, or debris from wash rags, wash mitts, as well as wash brushes with long or short flow through or non-flow through handles typically used in the cleaning of an RV vehicle.
The invention is a lattice structure intended according to the preferred embodiment to be used with a common five gallon bucket receptacle for washing high gloss surfaces such as boats, automobiles, and recreational vehicles (RV). Combined with such five gallon bucket the invention provides a system for separating grit, gravel, or dirt particles as well as other damaging debris from wash rags, wash mitts and particularly extended handle brushes, into a wash fluid such as soapy water and thereafter separate the debris, grit, or dirt particles from the wash fluid contained in the bucket receptacle.
The lattice structure is a two piece assembly consisting of a plastic molded receiver base for receiving an adjustable upstanding molded scrubber grate. Both the receiver base and the scrubber grate are molded from a high density polyethylene plastic. The scrubber grate is mounted to the receiver base at an acute angle relative to the central axis of the bucket. The receiver base sits transverse to the central axis of the bucket at the bottom thereof. It consists of a plurality of concentrically molded ribs with equally spaced circumferentially disposed radial ribs that provide a structural interface for each of the plurality of concentrically disposed ribs so as to create a structurally rigid, integrally formed receiver base. In the preferred embodiment, the receiver base has a plurality of legs extending from the bottom surface thereof to elevate the receiver base from the bottom surface of the bucket. The legs are integrally molded to the receiver base in the form of tubular stanchion posts which are hollow and serve as a receiver for a complementary plurality of extending lugs along the bottom edge of the upstanding scrubber grate.
The upstanding scrubber grate attached to the receiver base has an outer peripheral form similar to a parabola. Between the outer extremities are integrally molded laterally extending support beams that provide support for the outer peripheral parabolic edges. The support beams are approximately horizontally disposed at selected spaced distances. Each support beam is further linked to adjacent beams by trusses to provide structural integrity to the upstanding scrubber grate. Further, each beam has a plurality of small ribs integrally molded to each support beam to assist in extracting contaminants from the nap of a wash rag, wash mitt, or wash brush that is rubbed vigorously across the ribs of the scrubber grate.
The parabolic segment of the scrubber grate terminates at its apex into an upstanding tab. When the lattice structure is placed into a bucket this upstanding tab is located in the vicinity of the structural ribs or reinforcement collars that are found on all common five gallon buckets. The reinforcement collars are generally found near the open end of the bucket and are integrally molded to the outside diameter of the buckets. Since the placement of these ribs does vary between bucket manufacturers, the scrubber grate provides longitudinal adjustment so that a screw mounted to the upstanding tab of the scrubber grate can be screwed into the structural rib of the bucket to secure the lattice structure within the bucket. The scrubber grate is adjustable by the extending lugs on the bottom edge of the scrubber grate being located in the tubular posts of the receiver base, so that if the screw in the tab along the apex of the scrubber grate does not align with a reinforcement collar, the scrubber grate can be lifted upward to allow the extending lugs to slide within the tubular hollow posts until the screw within the upstanding tab lines up with a reinforcement collar to which it can be secured.
The primary objective of the invention is to provide a new and improved device for cleaning high gloss surfaces to remove particles of grit, dirt, or debris from wash rags, wash mitts and/or wash brushes so as to eliminate scratches and abrasions from these high gloss surfaces when they are washed by the car detailer, automobile, boat, or RV owners.
Another object of the invention is to provide a novel cleaning device which can conveniently be used to wash high gloss surfaces and is easy to transport and maneuver by the car detailer.
A further object of the invention is to provide a novel cleaning device wherein long handled brushes used to clean high gloss surfaces can be quickly cleaned to remove dirt particles of grit and debris so as to prevent washing induced swirls and scratches on such high gloss surfaces.
It is yet a further object of the invention to provide a cleaning lattice framework wherein a single device can accomplish the objectives of the invention instead of having to purchase several filter assemblies with a single bucket to avoid the shortcoming of using only one filter element.
It is yet a further object of the invention to provide a novel cleaning lattice framework that is securely mounted in a standard five gallon bucket and further provides sliding adjustment with respect to the receiver base to secure the lattice framework within the standard five gallon bucket.
Other advantages and features of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and claims.
Referring now to the drawings, in particular
The lattice structure 10 is a two piece assembly consisting of a plastic molded receiver base 20 for receiving an adjustable upstanding plastic molded scrubber grate 30. Both the receiver base 20 and the scrubber grate 30 are molded from a high density polyethylene plastic. The scrubber grate 30 is mounted to the receiver base 20 at an acute angle relative to the central axis of the five gallon bucket 40. The receiver base 10 sits transverse to the central axis “X” of the bucket at the bottom thereof as is shown in
The receiver base 20 consists of a plurality of concentrically molded ribs 21 with equally spaced circumferentially disposed radial ribs 22 that provide a structural interface for each of the plurality of concentrically disposed ribs 21 so as to create a structurally integrated receiver base 20. The concentric and radial ribs or crossbars illustrated in the preferred embodiment are not intended to be limiting. The receiver base structure may take the form of a variety of configurations. For example, instead of the ribs being made by concentric and radial crossbars, it is foreseeable that this structure could by honeycomb shaped, dual shaped, round, oblong, or rectangular. Also the receiver base may be molded into a plurality of sections; each section may be of a different configuration. It is to be understood that a variety of configurations of crossbars are possible. The preferred embodiment also illustrates three support legs 23 extending from the bottom surface 24 of the receiver base 20 to elevate the receiver base from the bottom surface of the bucket. The three support legs 23 are integrally molded with the receiver base in the form of tubular stanchions or posts 25 which are hollow and serve as a receiver for a complementary plurality of extending lugs along the bottom edge of the upstanding scrubber grate as will be disclosed hereinafter.
The receiver base 20 is peripherally shaped and sized to fit the particular bucket it will be used in. The preferred embodiment was chosen to be round since most buckets are round. However, the peripheral shape or configuration of either the bucket or receiver base has no specific limitation as long as when the receiver base is seated in the bottom of the bucket, the periphery thereof is adjacent the inside surface of the bucket. Therefore, the receiver base and bucket may be of any peripheral shape. There is, however, a portion of the receiver base that is not adjacent to the bucket's inside diameter. The two tubular posts 25 that are used for receiving the extension lugs of the scrubber grate are spaced near the outer edge 26 of the receiver base. The outer edge 26 of the receiver base 20 between the two tubular post 25 is notched 27 inwards, in a direction away from the bucket's inside diameter so as to create an opening in the receiver base 20 to provide a passage for dirt, grit, gravel, or debris particles that are removed from either the wash rag, wash mitt or wash brush due to vigorous rubbing/scrubbing to allow these particles to migrate downwards in the cleaning liquid and drop to the bottom of the bucket to bypass the receiver base. The concentric 21 and radial ribs 22 of the receiver base 20 are formed to reduce any agitation of the liquid below the receiver base, therefore the motion or agitation of the cleaning liquid in the bottom of the bucket 40 underneath the receiver base 20 will be significantly dampened while a user is vigorously rubbing a wash rag, wash mitt or wash brush against the scrubber grate above the receiver base 20. The fact that the vigorous action taken to scrub the wash rag, wash mitt, or wash brush against the scrubber grate is located well above the receiver base within the bucket is a significant improvement over the prior art for the reason that, in the prior art all of the vigorous scrubbing occurs at or near the bottom of the bucket. This scrubbing action will cause agitation of the cleaning fluid as well as agitation of the contaminants near the bottom of the bucket resulting in keeping the contamination in suspension longer due to the continued agitation caused by the vigorous rubbing against the prior art device. Since in the invention, the vigorous scrubbing occurs against the upright scrubber grate, the agitation within the bucket occurs at a much higher level within the bucket. Therefore, the liquid near the lowest area of the bucket is not agitated as much as in the prior art device resulting in the contaminants not being disturbed and staying below the receiver base along the bottom of the bucket. Since the majority of the contaminants will be removed by the scrubber grate and discharged into the washing fluid along the backside of the scrubber grate, gravity will assist the suspended contaminants to migrate directly to the bottom of the bucket through the passage created by the notch 26 in the outer edge of the receiver base. These contaminants will be constrained to remain along the bottom of the bucket due to the dampening effect on liquid movement caused by the rib structure of the receiver base.
The scrubber grate 30 is attached along its bottom edge 31 to the receiver base 20 by two extending lugs 32 that slide into the tubular posts 25 of the receiver base 20. The outer peripheral upper portion of the scrubber plate 30 is in the form of a parabola with converging sides 33 that terminate at its apex into an upstanding tab 34. Between the outer extremities of the converging sides 33 are integrally molded support beams 35 to provide structural integrity for the outer parabolic shape. The support beams 35 extend approximately horizontally at selected spaced apart equal distances. Each support beam 35 is further integrally linked by the molding process to adjacent beams 35 by trusses 36 to provide a rigid surface against which wash rags, wash mitts, and wash brushes can be vigorously scrubbed. To insure thorough cleaning of the wash rag or wash mitt as well as a wash brush that is used to wash a high gloss surface, two protruding rib fingers 37 are molded on each support beam 35 that extend between the converging sides 33 of the parabolic form of the scrubber grate 30. These rib fingers 37 are provided so that the nap of the wash rag or wash mitt can be disturbed so as to release the particles or grit, dirt, or gravel that may have migrated therein. Vigorous movements of the wash rag, wash mitt or wash brush across these rib fingers 37 will facilitate the removal of the smaller contaminant particles to insure that they are extracted from the wash rag, wash mitt or wash brush so that they will not be transferred back on to the wash rag, mitt or brush, and cause scratches and swirl marks on the gloss and finish on the article being washed.
As discussed above, the parabolic or converging sides 33 of the scrubber grate terminates at its apex in an upstanding tab 34. When the lattice structure 10 is placed into a bucket 40 as illustrated in
From the foregoing, it will be seen that the invention is one well adapted to obtain all the objects herein set forth, together with other advantages which are obvious and which are inherent in the structure.
It will be understood that certain features and sub-combinations are of utility and may be employed without reference to other features and sub-combinations. This is contemplated by and well within the scope of the claims herein. Although the preferred embodiment is shown in the drawings, many other embodiments may be made of the invention without departing from the scope thereof. For example, the shape of the bucket may be of any configuration providing the receiving base is also of the same shape. The number of legs may be less or more than the preferred embodiment providing the legs compliment the extending lugs of the scrubber grate to orient the scrubber grate at an acute angle with respect to the centerline “X” of the bucket. It is undisputed that all matter herein set forth shown in the accompanying drawings is to be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U. S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/059,930 filed on Jun. 9, 2008.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61059930 | Jun 2008 | US |