Effective cleaning of laundry items in an automatic washing machine, be it a vertical or horizontal axis machine, may be attributable primarily to three factors: chemical energy, thermal energy, and mechanical energy. These three factors may be varied within the operational limits of a selected automatic washing machine to obtain a desired degree of cleaning.
Chemical energy may be related to the types of wash aids, e.g. detergent and bleach, applied to the laundry items. Thermal energy relates to the temperature of the laundry items, which may be established by the temperature of the wash liquid or the use of steam.
Mechanical energy may be attributable to the contact between an oscillating clothes mover and the laundry items, the contact between laundry items themselves, and the movement of washing liquid through the laundry items. Mechanical energy may be also related to the size and configuration of the clothes mover.
There may be benefits to utilizing a clothes mover having a low profile, typically referred to as an impeller, as opposed to a vertical axis agitator with a tall profile. However, low profile clothes movers may be less effective in moving laundry items than elongated agitators, particularly if the laundry load is treated in a reduced level of wash liquid.
A washing machine for treating laundry according to at least one cycle of operation and comprising a basket rotatable about a first rotational axis, having a peripheral side wall extending upwardly from a bottom wall to at least partially define an open top treating chamber; a clothes mover proximate the bottom wall, having a base with a centrally located hub concentric with a second rotational axis about which the clothes mover reciprocally rotates; and a plurality of flexible vanes having an elongated body extending away from the hub and projecting upwardly from the clothes mover to terminate in a tip, with the elongated body having a first end proximate the hub; wherein the flexible vanes flex about a flex axis that is not parallel to either of the first and second rotational axes.
In the drawings:
Conventional automatic washing machines enable a user to select one of several laundering options based upon the type of laundry load being placed in the washing machine. For example, selectable options may include “normal,” “delicates,” “woolens,” and the like. These may be typically referred to as “cycles.” As utilized herein, “laundering cycle” may refer to a specific cycle, such as “normal,” extending from the beginning of the cycle to its completion. A laundering cycle may generally consist of at least a wash cycle, a rinse cycle, and a spin cycle. The wash cycle, the rinse cycle, and the spin cycle may consist of several steps, such as a fill step, a drain step, a pause step, an agitation step, and the like. The invention may be used with any laundering cycle regardless of the types and combination of steps.
The clothes mover 20 may be operably connected to a drive motor 28 through an optional transmission 26 and drive belt 30. The transmission 26 may be fixedly coupled with a clothes mover drive shaft 24 operably engaging the clothes mover 20 for synchronized oscillation. As illustrated in
The memory 36 may store information in a suitable format, such as a database or table, and may store data received from one or more components of the washing machine 10 that may be communicably coupled with the machine controller 32. The database or table may be used to store the various operating parameters for the one or more cycles of operation, including factory default values for the operating parameters and any adjustments to them by the control system or by user input.
The controller 32 may be operably coupled with one or more components of the washing machine 10 for communicating with and controlling the operation of the component to complete a cycle of operation. For example, the machine controller 32 may be operably coupled with a motor controller 40 integral with the motor 28. The controller 32 may also be operably coupled with a steam generator, a sump heater to heat wash liquid as required by the machine controller 32, one or more pumps, one or more valves for controlling the flow of liquid during a cycle of operation, and the like.
The machine controller 32 may also be coupled with one or more sensors provided in one or more of the systems of the washing machine 10 for processing and storing information from the sensors. Non-limiting examples of sensors that may be communicably coupled with the machine controller 32 include a motor speed sensor 44 for determining a speed output indicative of the rotational speed of the motor 28, and a motor torque sensor 46, which may be used to determine a variety of system and laundry characteristics, such as laundry load inertia or mass. The motor speed sensor 44 may be a separate component, or may be integrated directly into the motor 28. Regardless of the type of speed sensor employed, or the coupling of the drum 16 with the motor 28, the speed sensor 44 may be adapted to enable the controller 32 to determine the rotational speed of the drum 16 from the rotational speed of the motor 28.
The motor torque sensor 46 may be a separate component, or may be integrated with the motor controller 40, to provide data communication with the motor 28 and output motor characteristic information, such as oscillations, generally in the form of an analog or digital signal, to the machine controller 32 that may be indicative of the applied torque. The controller 32 may use the motor characteristic information to determine the torque applied by the motor 28 using a computer program that may be stored in the controller memory 36. Specifically, the motor torque sensor 46 may be any suitable sensor, such as a voltage or current sensor, for outputting a current or voltage signal indicative of the current or voltage supplied to the motor 28 to determine the torque applied by the motor 28. Additionally, the motor torque sensor 46 may be a physical sensor or may be integrated with the motor 28 and, combined with the capability of the machine controller 32, may function as a sensor. For example, motor characteristics, such as speed, current, voltage, direction, torque etc., may be processed such that the data provides information in the same manner as a separate physical sensor. Contemporary motors often have a dedicated controller that outputs data for such information.
One or more load, or mass, sensors 42 may be included in the washing machine 10 and may be positioned in any suitable location for providing an output signal indicative of the load or mass of the rotating drum and laundry, either quantitative (inertia, mass, weight, etc.) or qualitative (small, medium, large, etc.), within the treating chamber 18. By way of non-limiting example, it may be contemplated that the amount of laundry in the treating chamber may be determined based on the weight of the laundry and/or the volume of laundry in the treating chamber 18. Thus, one or more load sensors 42 may output a signal indicative of either the weight of the laundry load in the treating chamber 18 or the volume of the laundry load in the treating chamber 18.
As illustrated in
The washing machine 10 may also be connected to a source of water 50 which may be delivered to the tub 16 through a nozzle 52 controlled by a valve 54 operably coupled with the machine controller 32. The valve 54 and the machine controller 32 may enable a precise volume of water to be delivered to the tub 16 for washing and rinsing. Wash liquid may be at any level within the tub 16 from merely wetting the laundry items to fully submerging the laundry items.
As illustrated in
During a wash cycle and/or a rinse cycle, the clothes mover 20 may be driven by the drive motor 28 for movement within the wash chamber. The basket 18 may be stationary during movement of the clothes mover 20, or the basket 18 may freely rotate during movement of the clothes mover 20. The drive motor 28 may drive the clothes mover 20 to oscillate between a clockwise direction 56 and a counterclockwise direction 58. Oscillation in one of the rotational directions may be referred to herein as a forward stroke, and oscillation in the other of the rotational directions may be referred to herein as a backward stroke. The clothes mover 20 may first move in a clockwise direction 56 through a preselected angular displacement, for example, ranging from 180° to 720°. The clothes mover 20 may then move in a counterclockwise direction 58 through a similar preselected angular displacement. This alternating oscillation may be repeated numerous times during a cycle of operation. A complete forward stroke and backward stroke may be referred to herein as one oscillation cycle.
In a typical wash/rinse cycle, laundry items to form a laundry load may be placed in the basket 18 on top of the clothes mover 20. Some of the laundry items may be in direct contact with the clothes mover 20, and some may not. As the clothes mover 20 oscillates, individual laundry items may be moved directly or indirectly about the interior of the wash chamber by the clothes mover 20, including the vanes 64, thereby imparting mechanical energy to the items.
Each flexible vane 72 may extend from the hub 62 to a radial point on a non-flexible vane 64 that may be approximately 70% of the basket radius 82 (
The number of flexible vanes 72 may be equal to the number of vanes 64, one flexible vane 72 being attached to one non-flexible vane 64. However, the vanes 64 may be omitted, and the flexible vanes 72 may extend directly from the obverse side 66.
The configurations of the circumferential flexible vanes and the vane-mounted flexible vanes 72 may differ as a result of differing performance due to location, height, size, rotational speed, material properties, and the like.
As illustrated in
The flexible vanes 72 may tend to return to an upright vertical configuration, thereby imparting a generally upward force on the laundry items 78 in contact with the flexible vanes 72. This upward force may effectively increase when the clothes mover 20 slows as it approaches the end of its stroke.
As the clothes mover 20 begins to rotate in a counterclockwise direction 58, as illustrated in
The circumferential flexible vanes 72 may respond to rotation of the clothes mover 20 in a similar manner, i.e. facilitating inverse toroidal flow by moving laundry items 78 laterally along the obverse side 66 of the clothes mover 20 toward the non-flexible vanes 64, where the laundry items 78 can engage the non-flexible vanes 64 and flexible vanes 72, as previously described.
While the invention has been specifically described in connection with certain specific embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that this is by way of illustration and not of limitation. Reasonable variation and modification are possible within the scope of the forgoing disclosure and drawings without departing from the spirit of the invention, which is defined in the appended claims.
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