Not Applicable
1 Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a floor finish applicator for applying floor finish to a floor. More particularly, it relates to fields of applicators which have a tank and means for causing floor finish to be dispensed from the tank to the floor whereupon a fibrous mop pad is used to further distribute or smooth out the applied liquid.
2. Description of Related Art
Traditionally, the application of floor finish to floors has been done using the mop and bucket approach—a slow, laborious and environmentally unfriendly method. Floor finish applicators of the pull-behind type are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,979,756; 3,457,015; 3,981,596; 4,124,315; 4,471,713; 8,246,263. These applicators have the advantage of being able to cover large areas in shorter amounts of time than their manually operated wanded counterparts. However, the pull-behind applicators are bulky and lack the flexibility of being able to access tight corners or work around corners or obstructions. Additionally the pull-behind applicators taught in the aforementioned patents are complicated systems with numerous components. Manually operated wand-type floor finish applicators are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,152,084; 6,799,916; 8,782,843. Some of these wand-type applicators utilize a backpack tank for the floor finish. These manually operated wand-type applicators require considerable physical labor to apply floor finish, especially to large areas.
Floor finishes have the dominant characteristic of quickly drying very hard when exposed to ambient conditions. A shared characteristic of all these applicators, whether pull-behind or manual wand-type, is that they require a clean out procedure when the floor finishing task is completed to rid the applicator passages of floor finish which upon drying will clog the system thus requiring special, additional, intensive, time-consuming cleaning. In addition, the expensive and wasted floor finish resulting from flushing the apparatus ends up as an environmental pollutant.
Alternatively, some pull-behind applicator designs involve a separate holding tank containing a clean-out liquid such as water, additional valving and tubing, an auxiliary pump, and a switching mechanism to accomplish the clean-out process automatically or semi-automatically, usually at considerable additional cost of complexity and implementation.
The prior art does not provide for a floor finish applicator with a minimum number of parts which allows floor finish to be applied rapidly to very large areas such as is possible with pull-behind applicators and simultaneously to small areas with obstructions such as is possible with the wand-type applicators, requires no cleaning whatsoever after each use, and provides a visual indicator to the operator for clog preventive purposes.
This invention permits a floor finish applicator to be used multiple times without flushing after each use with varying degrees of time duration between use minutes, hours, days, weeks, or even months, thus eliminating the time and effort required to clean up and store the applicator after it has been used. At the heart of the present invention is the discovery that the drying or coagulating of a liquid at a nozzle's discharge orifice is effectively obviated by isolating the discharge orifice in a liquid retaining reservoir when the applicator is not in use and providing visual indication to the user whenever the discharge orifice is not in its isolated position within the liquid retaining reservoir. A visual indication such as a light serves very well as a reminder to the user to retire the discharge orifice to the liquid retaining reservoir to prevent subsequent clogging when not in use, which for some liquids can begin to take place in as little as three minutes depending on ambient conditions. The activation of a visible light is made possible by a non-contact switching means adapted to this application wherein the liquid floor finish dries to a hard consistency on all surfaces it is in contact with.
The present invention relates to a floor finish applicator head for use in distributing floor finishes to a floor. Some embodiments feature a unique system for maintaining a clog-free liquid discharge orifice that allows for multiple application operations without the necessity of cleaning out the system to prevent the floor finish from drying out and clogging the liquid's exit orifice. This invention prevents the liquid discharge orifice of an applicator, whether of the spray type or the drip or non-spray type from drying out thus removing the need to empty and clean out the applicator's internal passages after each use. This invention provides a means of maintaining the function of an applicator's liquid floor finish discharge port by allowing the operator to open and close said discharge port without the possibility of the liquid floor finish drying out at the discharge orifice when not in use.
In waxing floors, the floor finish applicator components located in the vicinity of the spray head are usually covered by the spray mist generated by the applicator head during use.
Consequently, all exposed parts of the applicator device will receive an undesirable coating of the liquid being applied. Upon drying, all coated surfaces which are supposed to move relative to each other for function, if present, are likely to be stuck together unless they are thoroughly cleaned after use—an additional undesirable cleaning requirement. This invention takes this scenario into account by designing components and materials that will still perform their functions in such a hostile environment.
In one embodiment, a liquid retaining reservoir comprising a non-permeable container and a resilient non-permeable cap with a reclosable opening used to substantially contain and maintain a liquid-laden reservoir environment in which the liquid discharge orifice resides when not in use.
In one embodiment, a liquid-retaining open-celled foam material is used to hold a maintenance liquid in the vicinity of the liquid discharge orifice when it is not in use.
In one embodiment, a reversible screw motion action is used to move the liquid retaining reservoir and the cap with a reclosable opening to expose or conceal the liquid discharge orifice as needed for the applicator to perform its function.
An object of the invention is to provide a floor finish applicator that alerts the operator when the liquid floor finish discharge orifice is exposed to environmental conditions that will result in clogging at or around the orifice.
This invention provides a visual indicator by means of a visible light that serves as a reminder to the operator that the liquid floor finish discharge orifice is exposed to ambient atmospheric conditions that promote clogging thus preventing further use of the applicator head and necessitating a clean-out and unclogging procedure for removing dried out liquid floor finish from the applicator's flow passages.
One object of the invention is to provide a floor finish applicator that reduces the amount of labor necessary for applying floor finishes to areas large and small.
In one embodiment, the source of the floor finish is contained inside a backpack-style tank.
In another embodiment, the backpack tank contains a pump and a rechargeable battery for providing power to said pump. It is understood that the finish can also be supplied to the applying device by gravitational forces.
In another aspect, the delivery of liquid floor finish to the discharge orifice is made possible by the activation of a trigger valve.
In one embodiment, the liquid floor finish orifice is configured as a spray nozzle to broadly and quickly dispense liquid floor finish to the floor.
In yet another embodiment, the applicator head is attached to an applicator frame to which an applying device is attached for further spreading the liquid floor finish on the floor after spraying. The applying device is a pad with fibrous material which is stored in a substantially air tight container when not in use to prevent the evaporation of moisture from the working surface of said pad thereby causing drying and hardening of the pad surface. The pad can then be stored without the need for rinsing out the embedded liquid floor finish and thus can be reused immediately after removal from the substantially air tight container.
This invention provides a drip-free spray applicator suitable for maintaining the integrity of a just-waxed floor surface when the mop head and frame assembly is lifted off the floor surface. The mop head frame tilts upwards when the frame is lifted off the floor surface thereby preventing any liquid from dripping from the discharge orifice or from the liquid retaining reservoir proximate to the orifice orifice. A suitable seal is provided on the non-opening end of the reservoir to prevent dripping.
The present invention relates to applicators for applying floor finish to floors. More particularly, it relates to a simplified floor finish spray applicator head which utilizes a tank, a pump, and a clog preventing spray head that eliminates the need to clean out the applicator after each use.
The present invention will now be described in detail with the understanding that the specific embodiments of the invention presented with reference to the drawings are merely and only illustrative of a small number of possible embodiments which simply represent a variety of applications of the principles that undergird the present invention.
The fundamental principle of the present invention which differentiates it from all of the prior art floor finish applicator assemblies discussed in the Description of Prior Art section is the use of a liquid retaining reservoir to prevent clogging and dripping in a floor finish applicator that does not require either cleaning out or generation of any waste in regular use along with a switching means and electronic circuitry that indicates by means of a light, the position of the applicator's discharge orifice during and after use.
Referring now to
The illustrated floor finish applicator tool 10 comprises a floor finish holding tank 12 which in this embodiment is carried in a backpack fashion by the operator. The tank 12 has a removable cover 14 through which liquid floor finish is added by way of a removable strainer, not shown. The tank 12 has within it a pump and a rechargeable battery that provides power to said pump, not shown. An internal filter screen, not shown, ensures that clog-causing debris and congealed floor finish do not enter into the pump passages. The backpack tank 12 also has an on/off switch, not shown, which can be set in low or high rates, depending on the rate of delivery of floor finish desired.
The floor finish flows from the pump in the tank 12 through a conduit 15 to a hand-operated trigger gun 16 mounted at the proximal end of an elongated handle 18. The trigger gun 16 comprises a valve actuator lever and a valve, as well as a means for holding and manipulating the elongated handle 18. The elongated handle 18 is a hollow tube constructed of light weight material such as aluminum to reduce operator fatigue during use. By activating the trigger in the trigger gun 16, floor finish flows from the tank 12 to the conduit 15 through the trigger gun and into the conduit 20 which is contained within the hollow elongated handle 18.
Referring to
The handle 18 pivots in two principal directions, about a medial axis and about a lateral axis of the applicator frame. The pivoting of the handle 18 about these two principal axes provides great flexibility for a powered floor finish applicator allowing the operator to apply floor finish around corners, under furniture, and in any direction in the plane of the floor surface. The handle 18 is mounted to bracket 30 to allow for handle 18 to pivot about a medial axis. A desirable feature of the present invention is that the ease with which handle 18 pivots with respect to bracket 38 around the medial axis is controlled by the tightness of the nut 40 which couples handle 18 to bracket 38 using carriage bolt 42 and thus controls the friction between both components. The wing nut 40 in the preferred embodiment is one that the operator can easily tighten or loosen because of said wing nut's extents which facilitate the manual application of tightening torque using the operator's fingers and not a separate tool for that purpose. A further description of the method of operation and relevant internal components of the floor finish applicator will be forthcoming with subsequent references to other figures.
In
The internal configuration of the liquid retaining reservoir 34 which exists to maintain a humid environment around the discharge outlet 44 of the floor finish applicator tool is illustrated in
Referring again to
The importance of keeping the liquid floor finish from running out of the liquid retaining reservoir 34 can be seen in
Referring back to
As a result of the use of a magnetic field for switching the warning light 36, it is necessary that adjacent components be constructed of nonferrous materials in order to reduce the size of the magnet needed to actuate the warning light 36. In the preferred embodiment, the applicator head 24 is made from plastic, and the threaded feeder tube 32 and the applicator frame 28 are made of aluminum.
In
Referring to
The present invention combines the flexibility of a backpack floor finish applicator with the speed and coverage capability of a wheeled-cart applicator without the need to flush out the system after use. The operator is kept alert to detrimental exposure of the discharge outlet at all times. The tool can be used and reused at short notice with minimal preparation and can be placed in storage for hours, days, or weeks without the labor intensive process of ridding the tool of quick-to-coagulate floor finish.
Modifications and changes obvious to ones skilled in the art pertaining to the present invention are deemed to be within the spirit and scope of the present invention as further defined in the appended claims. Also, it is understood that the terminology and phraseology used herein is for the purpose of description should not be regarded as limited. Other alternate mechanical and electrical configurations are possible and fall within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
It should be understood that the foregoing description of this novel floor finish applicator tool is merely a representation of an exemplary embodiment of the present invention and that one skilled in the art can make various changes and modifications in the arrangement and details of construction of the described elements without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Other possible embodiments of this invention can be used in the following applications wherein clogging can be problematic:
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described in the foregoing detailed description, it is understood that there is no intent to limit the invention by such disclosure but instead the illustration and description are intended to cover all modifications and alternate constructions falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
Various features of the invention are set forth in the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6550998 | Fernschild | Apr 2003 | B1 |
10478038 | Gardner | Nov 2019 | B1 |