This invention relates to cyclonic separators for suction cleaners.
Suction cleaners (“vacuum cleaners”) are very well known products, in which dust (which expression as used herein includes other debris and embraces a range of particle sizes from microns to millimeters or even centimeters) is picked up by suction and entrained in an airflow, the dust particles subsequently being separated from the airflow in at least one cyclonic separator. The dust laden air is caused to pass through the separator(s), in which it flows at high speed in a circular path so that the dust particles are dumped out of the airflow by centrifugal force. The separator may include a filter or filters which remove all or very nearly all of any remaining entrained dust particles from the airflow, which will usually be particles of very small size.
In most suction cleaners using a cyclonic separator, the separated dust is retained in the vicinity of the separator, within a body of the separator at the bottom thereof having regard to its normal orientation in use. Disposal of this dust entails removal of all or part of the separator body from the cleaner, so that the dust can be emptied. Inherently this removal and the emptying procedure gives good access to the interior of the separator body which enables it to be cleaned if required. Cleaning of the inside of the separator body might be required if dust which is picked up by the cleaner is of a nature such that it sticks to any surface with which it makes contact and thus coats the inside of the separator body which eventually would detract from the effectiveness of operation of the separator: for example the picking up of damp dust such as plaster dust might have this effect. It also facilitates access to any filter, whether coarse or fine, within the separator body for any necessary cleaning or replacement of the filter.
It has been proposed that instead of collecting dust within the body of a separator the dust might be collected in a removable dust receptacle while the separator remains in position in the body of the cleaner. In this case the dust needs to pass from the separator by way of an outlet in the form of an aperture or opening in an appropriate position on a body of the separator, to enter the dust receptacle. Such an outlet by which dust leaves the separator body to enter the dust receptacle is unlikely to be sufficiently large to enable easy access to be gained by way of it for cleaning the separator body interior. It is also a possibility that if a large piece of debris is sucked up by the cleaner (assuming it is able to travel along the airflow passageways leading to the separator), it might not be able to pass through the outlet from the separator to the dust receptacle and thus be trapped in the separator body. Removal of such a piece of debris would be inconvenient and time consuming.
Accordingly it is an object of the present invention to overcome or reduce this disadvantage.
According to one aspect of the invention, we provide a dust separating apparatus for a suction cleaner, comprising a cyclonic separating device having a body with an inlet and an outlet for a stream of air and an outlet for dust separated from the airstream to enter a receptacle for the separated dust, wherein said body comprises a part movable in relation to the rest of the body while the rest of the body remains in position in the cleaner, to provide access to the interior thereof.
The movable part of the body may be completely removable therefrom, so that when the separating apparatus is installed in a suction cleaner the part can be removed from the cleaner leaving the rest of the body in position therein.
The separating device may have the inlet and outlet for the stream of air at one end of the body and the outlet for dust at the other end of the body, the removable part being that having the outlet for dust therein. The body may be of circular cross-sectional shape for the flow of the stream of air therein in a vortex between the air inlet and outlet, and may be of more or less constant cross-section or may taper, e.g. conically. With a tangential air inlet and a central air outlet at or towards one end of the body, the dust outlet may extend generally tangentially at or towards the other end of the body.
The separating apparatus may comprise first and second cyclonic separating devices each comprising a body with an inlet and an outlet for the stream of air and an outlet for separated dust. The two separating devices may be arranged successively with the air outlet of the first communicating with the air inlet of the second so that dust is separated from the airstream in two stages, the first separating device removing large dust particles from the stream of air and the second separating device removing any remaining particles after the first separating device, and also finer particles. At least the first separating device may have a movable body part as aforesaid and preferably both the separating devices are so provided.
The removable body part of the or each separating device may engage with the rest of the body thereof by a bayonet fitting, i.e. one requiring the removable part to be presented to the rest of the body in the direction of the longitudinal axis of the separator after which an angular movement thereof about the axis causes the engagement of at least one retaining formation to hold the parts together. Suitable sealing means such as a deformable gasket may be provided between the body parts to prevent air leakage at the connection therebetween.
According to another aspect of the invention, we provide a suction cleaner provided with a dust separating apparatus according to the first aspect of the invention as set forth in one or more of the preceding paragraphs.
The two separating devices may lie in a body or casing of the suction cleaner spaced from, e.g. in generally parallel disposition to, one another with a receptacle for separated dust having at least a part lying generally between them, the receptacle having respective inlets for separated dust communicating with the openings forming the dust outlets of the two separating devices.
The invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Referring firstly to
The separating apparatus comprises a first cyclonic separator indicated generally at 10 and a second cyclonic separator indicated generally at 11. Each of the separators is a cyclonic separating device, in which air flows in a stream from an air inlet to an air outlet and is caused to flow in a helical vortex within the separator, which causes entrained dust particles to be separated from the airstream by centrifugal force. Cyclonic separators in suction cleaners are well known. The axis about which such flow in a vortex takes place is called herein the axis of the separator, and terms such as axially, tangentially and so on make reference to such axis.
The first separator 10 comprises a body 12 with a first body part 13 and a second body part 14. The body 12 is generally cylindrical, of circular cross-sectional shape and more or less constant cross-sectional area along its length. The body part 13 has a tangentially oriented air inlet 16 for a stream of air with dust entrained therein. This will have been picked up at a cleaning head of the cleaner, connected thereto, e.g. by a flexible hose and rigid wand. The nature of the connection to the cleaning head is irrelevant to the present invention. The body part 13 further has a centrally disposed axially extending outlet 18 for the stream of air. The body part 14 has, at its end remote from the body part 13, a tangentially oriented lateral outlet opening 20 for dust separated from the stream of air by centrifugal force in the course of its flowing in a vortex between the inlet 16 and outlet 18 of the separator 10.
The second separator 11 is disposed with its axis generally parallel to the axis of separator 10, and comprises a body 22 with a first body part 23 and second body part 24. The body part 23 has a tangentially and slightly helically inclined inlet 26 for the stream of air which it receives from the outlet 18 of the first separator 10 by way of a connecting elbow 27a and duct 27. An outlet for the airstream extends axially through the centre of the body part 23 and is indicated at 28. This is arranged to be connected by suitable ducting to a suitable motor-driven fan in a suction cleaner, with a filter arranged in such connection to trap any dust particles not separated from the airstream by the separators 10, 11. The body part 24 of the separator 11 is of tapering configuration so that its end 30 remote from the body part 23 is of much smaller diameter than the latter. Adjacent its end 30 there is a lateral outlet opening 32 for dust separated from, the airstream by centrifugal force within the body 22 of the separator 11.
When installed in a suction cleaner a dust receptacle 34 is disposed generally in the region between the two separators 10, 11 for receiving dust separated from the airstream by the two separators.
On the opposite side of the receptacle 34 a partition wall 46 defines an internal compartment within the receptacle which is separated from the main internal volume thereof. This secondary compartment has an inlet opening which registers with the outlet 32 from the second separator 11 so that the secondary compartment can receive dust separated from the airstream by the second separator. A flexible seal operative between the separator 11 and the dust receptacle is shown in
Also visible in
Referring now to
The body part 13 has at its free end an annular spigot 60 which fits closely within a complementary sleeve 62 at the facing end of the body part 14. A flexible seal 64 in the form of an O-ring is accommodated in an annular recess at the base of the sleeve 62, to provide an airtight seal between the body parts 13, 14. The body part 14 is provided with two hook-like latching formations 66 which are diametrically opposite one another relative to the body part, and these are engageable with lugs 68 similarly disposed on the body part 13. Thus a “bayonet connection” is afforded between the two body parts: the body part 14 is removable from the body part 13 by firstly an angular movement of the former to disengage the formations 66, 68 followed by axial movement of the body part 14 until it is clear of the body part 13. This facilitates access to the interior of the separator for cleaning or removal of any large items of debris which, having been picked up by the vacuum cleaner, are trapped in the separator 10 being unable to leave it by way of the dust outlet 20 or the airstream outlet 18. Refitting of the body part 14 to the part 13 is of course the reverse of the removal procedure.
Finally,
Although in the above described embodiment the separators 10, 11 have their axes oriented generally parallel to one another, they may alternatively be in some other orientation. For example their axes may be generally perpendicular to one another and in this case the airstream outlet of the first separator may lead directly tangentially into the inlet of the second separator, tangentially thereof. A dust receptacle, with respective inlets oriented to register with the outlets of the separators, may then lie generally in a space partly bounded by the two separators.
Although the suction cleaner described above is of the cylinder type, it is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to use in such a cleaner: it is also applicable to cleaners of the “upright” type.
In the present specification “comprises” means “includes or consists of” and “comprising” means “including or consisting of”.
The features disclosed in the foregoing description, or the following claims, or the accompanying drawings, expressed in their specific forms or in terms of a means for performing the disclosed function, or a method or process for attaining the disclosed result, as appropriate, may, separately, or in any combination of such features, be utilised for realising the invention in diverse forms thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0228152.5 | Dec 2002 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB03/05193 | 12/2/2003 | WO | 00 | 11/4/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2004/049890 | 6/17/2004 | WO | A |
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