The present invention refers to an improved kind of clothes drying machine, preferably of the type for use in households, which, along with a regular performance ability of drying clothes, is also capable of giving the possibility for an action to be exerted on the clothes, which satisfactorily replicates, although not in a fully identical manner, the effects of a mild ironing operation.
Although reference to a regular, autonomous clothes drying machine will be made throughout the following description, it shall be appreciated that what is set forth below may similarly be applied to and, therefore, be suitable for combined clothes washing and drying machines.
Clothes drying machines are largely known in the art to generally operate according to different principles and modes, including the condenser mode, i.e. the operation based on the condensation of the moisture contained in the stream of drying air flowing out of the drum, and the exhaust mode, in which dais flow of moisture-laden hot air is exhausted outside the machine.
These machines are largely known to be substantially implemented by installing a ventilation system, i.e. usually a blower formed by a fan and an electric motor associated thereto, and a heating arrangement, which draw air from the outside and, via an appropriate conduit arrangement, heat up such air and blow it into and through the drum holding the clothes items to be dried.
Within an above-mentioned conduit there is installed a heating element which, when appropriately energized, heats up the air that flows over it as blown by said blower, so that air is let into the drum which is sufficiently hot to cause the moisture contained in the clothes to evaporate.
Therefore, upon having been so blown into the drum, the hot air causes the moisture contained in the clothes to evaporate and becomes almost saturated, or even fully saturated, by this evaporated moisture. The hot moisture-laden air is then forced further by said blower to create a continuous flow that is either conveyed into and through an appropriate condensation arrangement or is exhausted directly outside, as already hinted hereinbefore.
After the drying process is completed, the clothes generally appear to be in a well visible state of crumpling, i.e. appreciably wrinkled. This wrinkled state of the clothes comes about even with other drying processes, whether natural or artificial, as are largely known as such in the art.
In view of straightening out and doing away with such aesthetically unappealing crumpled state thereof, the clothes of various kinds generally undergo an ironing process that is carried out in various manners with the use of various apparatuses. A couple of ironing methods that can be cited here as belonging to the most largely known ones include manual ironing, with the use of a hand-operated iron, and pressing with a mangle. Another method, such as disclosed for instance in EP 0 953 669 B1 or EP 0 816 552 B1, provides for the clothes to be dried to be introduced in an appropriate cabinet, in which they are then conveniently hung. A moist and hot atmosphere is then created within this cabinet, in such a manner as to cause the wrinkles existing in the clothes to more readily smooth out, while also taking advantage of the force of gravity, which acts by assisting in keeping the hanging clothes duly outstretched.
Equally well-known in the art, however, is the fact that such ironing methods also have a number of unavoidable limitations and drawbacks. Manual ironing, as carried out at home with the usual hand-operated iron, is in fact an operation that not only requires a lot of care, but is also rather laborious, tiresome and time consuming. The combined effect of these inconveniences causes ironing to be ranked among of the most disliked ones of all household-keeping chores.
Ironing with a mangle is certainly faster to perform, but is more of a process of an industrial nature that poorly fits in a household, i.e. residential environment, owing to its implying the availability and use of equipment that takes a lot of space and is quite demanding and awkward in use. Moreover, ironing with a mangle does not prove as accurate and gentle as many delicate or care-demanding items surely demand for acceptable smoothing results.
Smoothing of clothes in a cabinet is on the contrary a process that failed to gain general acceptance, i.e. is not used to any significant extent, owing to a number of reasons. A first one among these reasons certainly lies in the need for an additional and, above all, bulky electric appliance, i.e. the drying cabinet, to be purchased and installed in the home. Another reason lies in the rather long operating times involved by this process, while, after all, the end results ensured by the process, although bringing in some improvement, do not this to any really significant extent.
While this last fact, i.e. the slightly improved smoothing results, might also prove acceptable in many cases that do not require any strong, intensive ironing (which would anyway bear no comparison with manual ironing with a hand-operated iron), it nevertheless contributes, when combined with the other two above-mentioned major drawbacks, to make this process, and the related equipment, rather unacceptable altogether, as this is on the other hand demonstrated by its very limited diffusion on the marketplace, i.e. its practical inability of gaining any significant foothold.
In addition, there are a number of cases in practice, in which clothing items, such as shirts or the like, while having been already used, are not so soiled as to require a traditional washing treatment and would on the contrary just call for being delivered a mild ironing treatment in order to regain a fresh and clean appearance.
Such a treatment might therefore avert a need for a traditional washing and subsequent ironing procedure to be carried out. Nevertheless, it would imply the need for an ironing process, albeit a mild one, to be anyway carried out and, as already noted above, such operation is a generally undesired one that is not so lightheartedly accepted by those who must perform it, owing to both the time and the effort required.
Disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,419,469 is an apparatus that is capable of removing wrinkles and creases from clothing items. Such apparatus is mainly comprised of a stationary dummy including an air-permeable bag, on which the clothing item to be treated is fitted.
A flow of treatment medium in a gaseous form, which may for instance consist of steam or a jet of atomised water, is introduced in the permeable bag. By flowing through the permeable wall of this bag, said treatment medium comes eventually in contact with the fabrics of the clothing item to be treated and, owing to the combined effect of both moisture and heat, smoothes the wrinkles off the treated item.
However, even this process has the drawback of requiring the use of a special, dedicated apparatus, so that it does by no way bring any practical improvement over the afore indicated ironing process in a cabinet.
It would therefore be desirable, and it is actually a main object of the present invention, to provide a clothes drying machine, which, further to being to ensuring usual clothes drying performance capabilities, is also able to treat the clothes being dried so as to impart an effect resembling a mild ironing treatment.
Within this general object, it is further a purpose of the present invention to provide such ability of the machine so that it is adapted to carry out the process in a fully automatic manner, while the clothes washing machine of the present invention must itself be such as to avoid any significant increase in its complexity and overall manufacturing costs, while ensuring fully acceptable performance characteristics. The machine must furthermore be capable of being manufactured and implemented with the use of readily available means and devices as generally known as such in the art.
According to the present invention, this aim is reached, along with further ones that will be apparent from the following description, in a clothes drying machine with clothes smoothing ability incorporating the features as recited in the appended claims.
Anyway, features and advantages of the present invention will be more readily understood from the description that is given below by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
This means for producing a jet of atomised water may most easily and appropriately be selected among a wide variety of ultrasound atomisers available on the market and largely known as such in the art. Reference may in fact be made in this connection to the patent publication WO 02/14594, which discloses a kind of clothes washing and treating machine that makes exactly use of an ultrasound atomiser of this kind to spread a cleaning or refreshing liquid or gel onto the fabrics of the clothing items to be treated.
After a certain period, during which the clothes are allowed to undergo a humidification within the drum that keeps rotating, the production of atomised water and, as a result, the issuance of the above-mentioned jet of atomised water is stopped and, at the same time, a drying cycle of a traditional type is started.
It is in fact a largely known and experimentally confirmed phenomenon that, if a dry clothing item featuring wrinkles and creases is allowed to undergo a slightly humidification for a certain period of time, said wrinkles are alleviated to a varying extent or are even eliminated (depending on a number of factors that are of no actual relevance in this context), during such humidification procedure. Moreover, if the same clothing item is subsequently allowed to go through a drying procedure without causing it to undergo creasing under any appreciable pressure, or causing it to remain creased for a certain period of time (so that the creases themselves would become permanent), the almost smoothed-out state of the clothes obtained during the previous humidification procedure is preserved and even enhanced.
At this point, it can be clearly inferred that the humidification/drying procedure as described above is fully capable of reaching the purposes of the present invention as set forth hereinbefore. It in fact comprises:
a phase of slight humidification of the clothes, during which the clothes themselves are not anyway really wetted, and
a phase of subsequent drying in which, owing exactly to the reason that it is not carried out on wet clothes, and it takes place in a rotating drum, there can take place
neither a compression of the clothes, since these are substantially dry, and therefore lightweight, so that they cannot exert any substantial pressure onto the underlying layers,
nor a phenomenon of permanent creasing of the fabrics, since the continuous rotation of the drum keeps the clothes tumbling and moving all the time.
The solution that has been just described above, although proving effective from a functional point of view, has however a major drawback in that, upon having flown through the drum, the humidified air is exhausted from the machine, thereby losing the humidity contained therein. This practically makes it necessary for the humidity generator means 9 to be actually oversized, with all additional costs and problems that such oversizing brings with it.
In view of doing away with this drawback, a preferred embodiment of the present invention is intended for application to a condenser-type clothes drying machine, as this is illustrated in
The humidity generator means 9 may in theory be situated at any location whatsoever along the circuit 10. However, for an optimum location thereof, it must of course be positioned in the section of the circuit 10 that lies anywhere between said condenser 11 and said drum 1, so as to prevent part of the humidity contained in the air in the circuit 10 from being otherwise condensed and exhausted immediately.
While it is true that, anyway, all of the air in the circuit 10 eventually flows through the condenser, the proposed solution allows on the other hand for the whole amount of humidity generated by the generator means 9 to be first used to practical advantage, prior to its being condensed, however only partially, in the condenser arrangement.
Referring now to
As this can be easily inferred, when said collection pan 17 fills up with water owing to the condensation process taking place during the actual drying cycle being performed by the machine, this water is taken off by said pump and transferred into said primary reservoir 14 in a controlled manner, with the use of such control means as largely known as such in the art (not shown in the Figures).
In addition, water supply to said auxiliary reservoir 12 may be controlled and actuated in a more complete manner by means of a controlled valve 24 provided at a location along the conduit section extending from said primary reservoir 14 and said auxiliary reservoir 12.
When said primary reservoir 14 is on the contrary totally emptied, said auxiliary reservoir 12 can advantageously be supplied with water via a delivery conduit 25 (see
An advantageous improvement consists in arranging said generator means 9 on the bottom of said collection pan 17, so that said generator means 9 can be either supplied directly with the water collecting in said pan, owing to its being directly poured thereinto by the condenser, or, if the pan is empty, be selectively supplied with water taken from said auxiliary reservoir 12.
During the operation of the machine in the clothes-smoothing mode thereof, a first working phase is carried out, in which following functions take place:
Even the heating element 4 may be energized during this first phase, in order to heat up the air that flows through the drum 1. This has the double effect of promoting the vaporization of the atomised moisture in the same air and contributing to smoothing out creases and wrinkles in the clothes, since it has been found, on the basis of extensive experiments that have been carried out in this connection, that a slight increase in the temperature of the fabrics while being tumbled in the drum, is effective in improving the relaxation and the smoothing effect thereof.
Upon completion of said first phase, the fabrics in the drum will be in a duly smoothed-out state, but—of course—still moist. Therefore, for the treatment to be completed, the need generally arises for a second working phase to be carried out. This consists of a drying procedure of a traditional type, i.e. involving following functions:
In an advantageous manner, suitable means of a generally known kind are used during said first working phase to measure the level of the moisture in the drum; these measurements will be used to determine the moment at which the generation and issuance of atomised moisture must be stopped along with the concurrent relaxation and smoothing-out of the clothes in the drum, as well as the moment at which said second working phase, i.e. the drying phase must be started. While working or cycle times may be pre-set in a rigid manner through an usual timer or the like, it is a generally known and experimentally corroborated fact that an accurate timing of the various phases of operation certainly improves the overall result, reduces energy usage and shortens cycle times.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04100490 | Feb 2004 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3180037 | Bing et al. | Apr 1965 | A |
3266166 | Heinrich | Aug 1966 | A |
4207683 | Horton | Jun 1980 | A |
4519145 | Mandel | May 1985 | A |
4984317 | Christ | Jan 1991 | A |
5146693 | Dottor et al. | Sep 1992 | A |
5419469 | Urso | May 1995 | A |
20020069465 | Chute et al. | Jun 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 816 552 | Jan 1998 | EP |
0 953 669 | Nov 1999 | EP |
1 431 443 | Jun 2004 | EP |
WO 0214594 | Feb 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050172511 A1 | Aug 2005 | US |