Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6739069
-
Patent Number
6,739,069
-
Date Filed
Wednesday, October 23, 200222 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, May 25, 200420 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Lazarus; Ira S.
- O'Malley; Kathryn S.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 034 552
- 034 543
- 034 546
- 034 572
- 034 62
- 034 63
- 034 66
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
An automatic clothes dryer has a drying cycle followed by a cool down cycle where the cool down cycle is terminated when the sensed output temperature of the dryer drum falls below a default temperature value preselected or altered by user. This permits the user to adjust the termination cool down cycle temperature to the user's preference and touch sensitivity to the warmth of clothing removed from the dryer. The user adjusts the setting of a user variable selection device on the dryer control panel to a preferred temperature signal representing the desired temperature of articles in the dryer when the cool down cycle is terminated. The dryer has a comparator that is connected to the outlet thermistor for receiving the sensed signal representing the temperature of the air leaving the drum and that is connected to the user variable selection device for receiving the user preferred temperature signal. The comparator generates a cool down cycle termination signal to end the cool down cycle when the sensed signal favorably compares with the user preferred temperature signal. The comparator is preferably embodied in a microprocessor.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to an automatic clothes dryer having a cool down cycle and in particular relates to an operator preferential adjustment to the cool down cycle.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In automatic clothes dryers it is common practice to have a user select a number of drying features such as, for example, permanent press, normal, fluff, and delicate that control the heat drying cycle of the clothing articles in the dryer and that also control the cool down cycle during which the clothes are allowed to cool down to a safe temperature for the operator to handle and remove articles from the dryer.
In more recent energy efficient clothes dryer controls, microprocessors responsive to thermistors sensing the dryer drum inlet temperature and/or dryer drum outlet temperature automatically control the drying cycle time and energy used depending on various algorithms programmed into the microprocessor and sensory inputs. In some instances the microprocessor calculates the cool down time period. In the cool down cycle, the drum continues to rotate and tumble the clothing and un-heated air is drawn or blown through the drum to cool the clothing. In automatic clothes dryers having a time dependent cool down cycle, the dryer operation is terminated when the time period of the cool down cycle elapses. Alternatively, a default temperature setting is used to terminate the cool down cycle. In this latter cool down control, the outlet thermistor in the cool down cycle continues to sense the dryer air outlet temperature and the microprocessor compares this sensed outlet temperature value with the default temperature setting. When the sensed outlet temperature value reaches the default temperature setting, the cool down cycle is completed.
While the feature of terminating the cool down cycle when the clothes reach a predetermined temperature, usually in the range of 100° F. to 120° F., depending on the cycle selection, works quite satisfactory, the user of clothes dryer may desire the clothing to be cooler or warmer to his or her touch when removing the clothes from the dryer drum. While this temperature touch sensation is subjective to each user, it is a feature currently not available in present clothes dryers.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to provide a automatic clothes dryer having a cool down cycle where the user may adjust the termination cool down cycle temperature to the user's preference and touch sensitivity to the warmth of clothing removed from the dryer.
The present invention relates to an automatic clothes dryer having a drying cycle followed by a cool down cycle where the cool down cycle is terminated when the sensed output temperature of the dryer drum falls below a default temperature value preselected or altered by a user.
The present invention relates to an automatic clothes dryer having a drying cycle followed by a cool down cycle. The dryer has a clothes receiving rotatable drum, a blower for circulating air through the drum during the drying cycle and the cool down cycle, and a heater for heating air entering the drum during the drying cycle. The dryer further comprises an air exhaust path along which air is exhausted from the dryer drum and an outlet thermistor positioned in the air exhaust path generating a sensed signal representing the temperature of the air leaving the drum through the air exhaust path. The dryer further comprises a control circuit for terminating the cool down cycle. The control circuit comprises a user variable selection device that is set by the user to represent a user preferred temperature signal. The control circuit includes a comparator having first and second inputs and an output. The first input is connected to the outlet thermistor for receiving the sensed signal representing the temperature of the air leaving the drum. The second input is connected to the user variable selection device for receiving the user preferred temperature signal. The comparator generates at the output a cool down cycle termination signal to end the cool down cycle when the sensed signal favorably compares with the user preferred temperature signal.
The advantage with the present invention resides in the user variable selection device that permits the user to alter or change the value of the preferred temperature signal. That is the user can change the signal to have the clothing articles in the dryer drum either warmer or cooler when the cool down cycle is complete.
It should be understood that the improvement in the present invention relates to the advantageous feature of a user being able to modify the shut down of the dryer so that the heat sensation of the clothing to the user's touch is to the user's liking. This is accomplished by the user variable selection device that may be in the form of a rotary dial, a touch pad, or other suitable variable control switches on the control panel that indicate to a user a warmer or cooler final clothes temperature. The selection device permits the user to set the temperature signal within a range defined about a factory default temperature value, which preferably is ±5° F. about a default temperature of lying in the range of 100° F. to 120° F. depending on the cycle selection.
It should also be understood that the control circuitry may be a hard wire embodiment of the switches, relays and solenoids, or may be embodied in a microprocessor, or a combination thereof.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
For a better understanding of the nature and objects of the present invention reference may be had to the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying diagrammatic drawings wherein:
FIG. 1
is a side view of a clothes dryer having a thermistor placed at the outlet of the dryer drum; and,
FIG. 2
is a schematic wiring diagram showing circuitry for the cool down temperature selection feature of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring to
FIG. 1
there is shown an electric clothes dryer
10
having a rotating drum
12
mounted therein. While the preferred embodiment is described with respect to an electrically heated clothes dryer, it should be understood that the clothes dryer may be heated by a gas burner. The rotating drum
12
has an open front through which access can be gained through door
14
of the dryer
10
for the insertion and removal of clothing and other articles from the drum. The clothes dryer
10
has a rear panel
16
provided with a series or plurality of louvers
18
through which air may be drawn into the interior of the dryer
10
. The airflow is shown by arrows
20
passing through the louvers, through a series of openings
23
in the rear end head
22
of the dryer drum
12
through an exhaust air path comprising drum exhaust outlet
24
and exhaust ducting
26
. Motor
28
draws or rotates blower or fan
30
to force the air
20
through the drum
12
. The motor
28
through pulley
35
and belt
33
also causes the rotation of the dryer drum
12
. The air flow path shown through the dryer drum
12
is an axial air flow in the preferred embodiment. Preferably, the drum
12
has a rotating rear end head
22
. It should be understood that in alternate dryer constructions the rear end head
22
may be stationary and may include both an air inlet and an air outlet or exhaust port. Consequently the air flow thorough the dryer drum is not necessarily axial air flow. Further, the fan or blower
30
may be located in an air inlet pipe to push air into and through the dryer drum.
In
FIG. 1
, a heater housing
32
is mounted by suitable bolts
34
to the rear panel
16
of the dryer
10
. The heater housing
32
is adjacent the end head
22
. The heater housing
32
has a rear wall
36
that is spaced from the rear end head
22
. The heater housing
32
has an upstanding sidewall
44
that extends around the periphery of the rear wall
36
. The upstanding sidewalls
44
further extend towards the rear end head
22
. An air gap
46
extends between the upstanding sidewall
44
and the end head
22
of the dryer drum. Air flows through the air input gap
46
.
An electrically energized heater comprises helically wound heater coils
48
mounted via electrical insulators
50
to the rear wall
36
of the heater housing
32
. The coils
48
are spaced from the rear walls
36
and from the end head
22
of the dryer drum. The heater coils
48
are connected to a source of electrical supply (not shown). When electrical energy is fed through terminals
52
to coils
48
, the coils warm heating air passing over the coils and towards the openings
23
in the end head
22
of the dryer drum
12
. It should be understood that electric heaters of differing construction may be employed in the dryer.
On top of the dryer
10
is a control panel
60
which includes control dials
64
or touch sensitive key pads for controlling the operation of the dryer
10
. It should be understood that these dials
64
are utilized to provide for automatic control of the dryer
10
through a warm up cycle, one or more selected drying cycles and a cool down cycle. It is the cool down cycle control that the present invention is directed toward. In the cool down cycle the heater coils
48
are de-energized and the air circulating through the dryer begins to cool the internal temperatures within the dryer drum
12
and cool down the articles of clothing or other household fabrics within the drum. For the purposes of the present invention, a rotating dial
64
is shown on the top of the control panel
60
that is utilized as the user variable selection device that is set by the user to represent a user preferred temperature signal. Housed within the control panel
10
is a control panel board with control circuitry including a microprocessor
72
(see FIG.
2
). The microprocessor
70
operates the dryer in accordance with signals supplied thereto by sensors located in the dryer
10
. In the present invention, a thermistor sensor
62
is located in the exhaust air flow path in the duct
26
proximate the dryer exhaust drum outlet
24
. The thermistor
62
generates a voltage signal that corresponds to the temperature of the air flow leaving the dryer drum and hence proportional to the temperature of articles tumbling in the dryer drum
12
.
Referring to
FIG. 2
, a schematic representation of the control system of the present invention is shown. The control system comprises a control circuit for terminating the cool down cycle comprising a user variable selection device or dial
64
that is set by the user to represent a user preferred temperature signal. The variable selection switch is connected to a potentiometer
66
. The dial
64
adjusts the voltage set by factory preset voltage V
F
to a preference voltage at input
68
. The preferential voltage is representative of the preferential temperature chosen by a user selecting either a warmer or cooler setting on dial
64
.
The input
68
is connected as one of many inputs (other inputs not shown) into a microprocessor
70
. Embodied within the microprocessor
70
is a comparator
72
. The comparator
72
has first and second inputs
74
,
68
respectively and an output
76
. The first input
74
is connected to the outlet thermistor
62
for receiving the sensed signal representing the temperature of the air leaving the drum
12
. The second input
68
is connected to the factory present voltage V
F
as modified by potentiometer setting
66
which in turn is controlled by the user variable selection control dial
64
. The comparator
72
generates at the output
76
a cool down cycle termination signal S to end the cool down cycle when the sensed signal from input
74
favorably compares with the user preferred temperature signal at input
68
.
The user variable selection device permits the user to set the preferred temperature signal within a range defined about a factory default temperature value. In the preferred embodiment factory default temperature lies in a range of 100° F. to 120° F., depending on the drying cycle selected and the range is ±5° F.
As is apparent from the foregoing disclosure, various other embodiments and alterations and modifications which may differ from the embodiments disclosed may be readily apparent to a person skilled in the art. It should be understood that the scope of the patent shall be defined by the claims and those embodiments which come within the scope of the claims that follow.
Claims
- 1. An automatic clothes dryer having a drying cycle followed by a cool down cycle, comprising:a clothes receiving rotatable drum; a blower for circulating air through the drum during the drying cycle and the cool down cycle; a heater for heating air entering the drum during the drying cycle; an air exhaust path along which air is exhausted from the dryer drum; an outlet thermistor positioned in the air exhaust path generating a sensed signal representing the temperature of the air leaving the drum through the air exhaust path; and, a control circuit for terminating the cool down cycle comprising: a user variable selection device that is set by the user to a user preferred temperature signal representing a user desired temperature of clothes in the drum at the end of the cool down cycle; and, a comparator having first and second inputs and an output, the first input being connected to the outlet thermistor for receiving the sensed signal representing the temperature of the air leaving the drum, and the second input being connected to the user variable selection device for receiving the user preferred temperature signal, the comparator generating at the output a cool down cycle termination signal to end the cool down cycle when the sensed signal favorably compares with the user preferred temperature signal.
- 2. The automatic clothes dryer of claim 1 wherein the control circuitry includes a microprocessor.
- 3. The automatic clothes dryer of claim 2 wherein the comparator is embodied within the microprocessor.
- 4. The automatic clothes dryer of claim 1 wherein the user variable selection device comprises a variable selection switch located on a control panel for the clothes dryer.
- 5. The automatic clothes dryer of claim 4 wherein the variable selection switch is connected to a potentiometer.
- 6. The automatic clothes dryer of claim 1 wherein the user variable selection device permits the user to set the preferred temperature signal within a range defined about a factory default temperature value.
- 7. The automatic clothes dryer of claim 6 wherein the factory default temperature is between 100° F. and 120° F., depending on a selected drying cycle, and the range is ±5° F.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2364067 |
Nov 2001 |
CA |
|
US Referenced Citations (13)