The invention relates to an electrically operated coffee machine which can be used for preparing espresso, cappuccino or similar hot beverages from coffee grind, comprising a fresh-water feed device, which is usually a water tank, and alternatively a direct fresh-water connection, a heating device, a hot-water or hot-steam guide means and a coupled control and/or feedback control unit, and comprising a chamber in which a vessel is inserted detachably which is used for receiving the coffee grind and carries a fine screen.
It is known in the state of the art to insert fine screens into a vessel in such a way that they can be separated from the vessel if so required.
This configuration is often characterized in a loose arrangement of the fine screen in the vessel. Simple cleaning both of the fine screen and the vessel is advantageous. Cleaning is mandatory for continual preparation of beverages because otherwise the coffee grind would clog the ultra-fine holes of the fine screen and would thus no longer ensure a quantitatively sufficient flow of hot water or steam.
Such a coffee machine is described in the German utility model DE 85 21 974.6, in which a filter insert (vessel) comprises an insertable fine screen above its floor provided with holes. The fine screen is loosely inserted or is secured in a further embodiment by means of an additional holding ring against randomly falling out. It is disadvantageous here that the apparatus is detachable in an unintentional way or has a multi-part arrangement through the holding ring. It is further disadvantageous that in the case of an inadvertent removal of the coffee grind from the fine screen the holding ring might be disposed of together with the coffee grind.
It is further disadvantageous in these coffee machines with an insertable fine screen as known from the state of the art that the various arranged retaining systems (holding rings, holding clamps, etc.) are either provided with only a very low holding force (which leads to the likelihood of unintentional detachment) or a very high holding force for detaching the fine screen, requiring a special tool.
It is the object of the present invention to provide an apparatus which can be detachably coupled and securely fastened, and which can be operated in a functionally proper way with objects conventionally found in a household.
This object is achieved by the described coffee machine according to the features of claim 1, which in addition to the main components, fresh-water feed device, fresh-water tank, heating device, hot-water or hot-steam guide means, control or feedback control unit, comprises a chamber in which a vessel is inserted which carries a fine screen which can detachably be coupled or securably fastened above the floor by means of special embodiments on the vessel.
Preferably, an apparatus is provided on the fine screen through which a movement between fine screen and vessel is initiated by which the securing movement is performed.
The apparatus is arranged in such a way in accordance with an arrangement according to the invention that objects conventionally found in a household can act as tools. Appropriately, the apparatus is provided with a slit, with the apparatus being arranged in the manner of a screw head, being connected in a fixed manner with the fine screen and being disposed in the central of the common axis of motion. It is especially advantageous here when the clearance of the slit is arranged in such a way that in addition to objects conventionally found in the household (e.g. a piece of cutlery) coined money (e.g. 1, 2 and 5 cent pieces of a thickness of 1.65 mm) can be brought into positive engagement with the slit.
After detaching the lock between fine screen and vessel, both parts should be easily separated from one another. This is not always ensured by the coffee grind that is pressed in by means of the hot water (steam).
In this context, an advantageous embodiment of the invention provides that the fine screen is received by means of a spacer in the vessel. The holding force between fine screen and vessel which is caused by the high pressure conditions is reduced to a minimum.
The fine screen is advantageously supplemented in this configuration by a removal apparatus which is arranged in such a way that by using an object again which is conventionally found in households or mentioned coined money (coin) the separation of the fine screen from the vessel can occur in a controlled manner. Useful for this purpose are beads, knobs, slits, undercuts and the like in order to offer a tool-like object a force-introducing point, especially arranged in such a way that slipping can be avoided.
The actual realization of the lock between fine screen and vessel is preferably illustrated by a corresponding possibility for locking. For example, the vessel carries on the inside of its jacket one or several knobs which engage into corresponding depressions, attached to the outside of the jacket of the fine screen, and gradually lead to a fixed press fit by the rotary movement on an associated oblique ramp. This kind of locking is like a bayonet catch and includes the possibility of a secure “detachment” of the frictional and interlocking fit in addition to a fixed, secure “fit”.
The fine screen is advantageously arranged in such a way that the entire coffee grind is received within its jacket height. The walls of the fine screen are arranged to be so high that in the case of maximum filling level the coffee grind will not come into contact with the walls of the vessel. In a special embodiment, a circumferential sealing surface between fine screen and vessel is further arranged in such a way, preferably on a protruding edge of the fine screen at the upper jacket end, that any hot fluid is supplied exclusively through an inlet opening of the vessel to the introduced coffee grind in the fine screen, passes through the same, passes through the screen with the ultra-fine passages of the fine screen, and finally leaves the coffee machine in the direction of the provided (drinking) vessel through at least one outlet opening of the vessel without the coffee grind having found any bypass between fine screen and vessel and thus undesirable residues can be found in the beverage.
It needs to be considered principally when using a circumferential sealing surface that the fine screen will not press on the floor of the vessel in such a way that fluid is obstructed entirely or partly in passing through the coffee grind because yielding of the fluid via the otherwise existing bypass is no longer possible.
Any blockage of the provided flow ducts could lead to permanent damage to the coffee machine. Preferably, means must be arranged between the contact surfaces on the floor of the fine screen and vessel in such a way that clogging of the flow ducts is prevented. These means could consist of incorporated ribs or knobs for example, but also incorporated as slit-like or trough-like depressions. Finally, differently bulged floors could prevent the blockage of the flow ducts.
The invention is now explained in closer detail by reference to drawings/drafts and an illustration, wherein:
Step 1: The knobs 34 of the vessel slide first into the duct-like depressions 44 on the jacket 43 of the fine screen 40.
Step 2: As a result of the rotary movement about the common axis of motion 42, the vessel knobs 34 slide into the bent recesses 45. In this process, they slide on an oblique ramp 71.
Step 3: After passing a certain path on the oblique ramp 71, the connection between vessel 30 and fine screen 40 is ensured by means of a press fit, similar to a bayonet catch, by the rising dimension h1>h2.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1020090116206 | Feb 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/000842 | 2/11/2010 | WO | 00 | 8/11/2011 |