The present invention refers to an improved kind of clothes washing machine, preferably of the type for use in households, which is capable of operating in an improved and more advantageous manner as far as control of the water flows being let into the machine is concerned, and particularly is provided with an additional water flow coming from the bellows and directed with appreciable energy towards the inner portion of the laundry contained into the tub.
Although reference to a regular, simple-type clothes washing 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 washing machines are known in the art, which operate by using not only the home water delivery system, which usually delivers cold water, but also an additional water delivery system specially provided in the home to supply hot water. Quite popular in the US market, in particular, is a kind of clothes washing machine for residential use, and even for use in such communities as apartment buildings, boarding schools, colleges and the like, which are not provided with a heating element of their own to autonomously heat up the water flowing in from the public water utility system and used for washing, but are on the contrary arranged to directly take in and use the hot water delivered by said additional hot-water supply system.
This construction and circuit configuration of the above-described arrangement has turned out as being particularly easy to implement, as well as reliable in its operation. However, it is rather expensive owing to both the presence of as many as five distinct electromagnetic valves, each one of which must be connected independently. All this eventually translates into a rather high overall final cost of the water supply and distribution assembly, which turns out as being by all means undesired in the particular case of a kind of appliance such as a clothes washing machine, which is generally required to be as low and effective in costs as possible.
In order to overcome this drawback, from the Italian Patent Application PN2003A 000034 an arrangement of three electrovalves (3b, 4b and 7b) is known that is associated to a common distribution manifold, and which downstream said electrovalves is combined to a plurality of separate air-gaps together with a common intersection (15) of the water flows coming from two of said electrovalves.
Such a solution is experienced to be particularly disadvantageous, when implemented with the known techniques, as said separate air-gaps, and said intersection and the components to them associated are both complicated in their operation and burdensome in the construction and in the materials that have to be used.
Moreover a further drawback has to be recorded: as the present invention refers to the kind of machines provided with a supplementary water jet coming from the bellows and directed into the laundry to be washed, the problem consists in the implementation of a branch-duct, selectively operable, into which a water flow with a still high pressure can be conveyed, in a simple and convenient way.
From EP 0719884B1 it is known to make up a branch-duct for a water flow directed, downstream the air-gap, towards other operating devices of the machine; however such a solution is not effective from the operating point of view
It would therefore be desirable, and it is actually a main object of the present invention, to provide a clothes washing machine adapted to be supplied with both cold and hot water and provided with arrangements that are capable of distributing the individual flows of said hot and cold water to flow into the various chambers containing the washing and rinsing aids according to an optimised use of the electrovalves, provided with a branch duct directing the respective water flow with a proper pressure to a nozzle lodged into the bellows, and wherein the water dispensers, the relevant air-gaps and the intersection of the water flows are made in a simply and easy way and at a significantly low level costs.
According to the present invention, this aim is reached, along with further ones that will be apparent from the following description, in a clothes washing machine 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
At this point it has to be strongly stressed that the invention applies to water dispensers also wherein further electrovalves are placed, which control respective water flows into respective chambers, as generally described in the cited Italian Patent Appl. No. PN2003A 000034; however for the sake of simplicity the instant description refers the type of water dispenser provided with only two outlet conduits, controlled by respective electrovalves, that intersect in a specified point to create a further outlet conduit supplying a respective chamber, and a third outlet conduit 7, normally used to admit the hot water only, controlled by a respective electrovalve 7b, and that leads in one of said outlet conduits 3 or 4.
According to the invention, said two outlet conduits 3 and 4 do come directly from the respective electrovalves and are oriented to a common intersection point 10, wherein obviously their physical continuity will end to allow the respective water flows to impinge each other, and consequently to form a new water flow that enters into a fourth outlet conduit 11 bound to a respective chamber 12.
Said intersection and interruption point of the outlet conduits 3 and 4 is used also as the air-gap of the same two conduits 3 and 4, and so their air-gaps will coincide with the air-gap of said fourth conduit 11, that obviously exists only downstream the same intersection 10.
Such a coincidence between the air-gaps of the three conduits 3, 4 and 11 and the intersection point 10 of two of them does represent a main aspect of the invention.
It is implemented through a single body 13 that in the same time:
According to a main aspect of the invention, a fifth outlet conduit 15 branches out from a point “P” of said outlet conduit 3 downstream its connection with said third conduit 7, as shown in
In its initial portion 315 said fifth conduit 15 is made enbloc with said single body 13, and according a further advantageous aspect of the invention, said single body 13 is delimited by a “trench” 16 which works both as an air-gap and related intersection point for said two outlet conduits 3 and 4, and as an air-gap also for said fifth conduit 15, 315.
According to the prior art, the chambers containing the substances to be used in the washing process, are provided with respective water flows raining down from respective flat conveyers made enbloc and that comprise a common bottom surface, duly provided with holes to let the water down, and delimiting downwards the plurality of channels placed above said chambers.
Profitably, the end portion of said conduit 15 is made enbloc with said flat conveyers, so to become an integer part of these, as clearly shown in the
As a last improvement, and considered that:
From a productive point of view said fully integrated enbloc 18 can be made by a single injection moulded item, to which the valve assembly and said common distribution manifold 2 are then associated.
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a cold-water inlet conduit 6 is provided to debouch into said common water distribution manifold 2.
Furthermore, a hot water inlet conduit 7 is provided to connect the hot-water supply system (not shown) to one 3 of said outlet conduits downstream of the respective electromagnetic valve 3b.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
04102080 | May 2004 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3044285 | Koplin | Jul 1962 | A |
3086379 | Plante | Apr 1963 | A |
3747645 | Holster et al. | Jul 1973 | A |
3949576 | Waugh et al. | Apr 1976 | A |
4043158 | Bochan | Aug 1977 | A |
4111011 | Waugh | Sep 1978 | A |
4905485 | Fornasari | Mar 1990 | A |
4960139 | Rizzetto | Oct 1990 | A |
5884506 | Blauert et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 719 884 | Jul 1996 | EP |
PN2003A000034 | May 2003 | IT |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050252251 A1 | Nov 2005 | US |