The invention concerns a device for picking up animal waste, adaptable or integrated to a leash equipped with a reel.
The pollution of public thoroughfares with animal waste is a familiar problem to all city-dwellers, and for decades municipalities and individuals—dog-owners and non-dog-owners alike—have been working to find solutions for this inconvenience, which continues to increase with the number of domestic animals.
To attempt to reduce dog pollution, some municipalities have enacted laws requiring people to keep dogs on leashes and clean up after them, while others are considering issuing fines for failure to clean up public thoroughfares fouled by animals. Other municipalities are attempting preventive action by installing dog waste clean-up bags next to trash cans, but the truth is that these devices, although effective, are insufficient in number and are often far from where the dog chooses to answer the call of nature. Even in these equipped? [question mark sic] locations, the proposed solution is not well adapted to the problem.
Quite obviously, an individualized pickup device that is easily transportable by dog-owners seems to be better adapted.
Various systems have been proposed for picking up said waste without getting one's hands dirty; in particular, the documents FR 2 649 143 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,438,708 describe gloves that can be used as bags. However, these devices have not come into widespread use due to the natural aversion to grasping excrement in this manner, even through a glove.
Other devices generally making use of folded cardboard boxes have been proposed with more success, particularly those of the kind described in the documents FR 2 652 101, FR 2 686 634, FR 2 741 642, FR 2 747 135, U.S. Pat. No. 4,148,510 or U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,636. All of these devices are fairly simple and inexpensive and generally do not take up much space. They do have one major drawback, however: the dog-owner must remember to take them along, which is seldom the case.
Other more or less sophisticated systems have been described, such as, for example, a walking stick/bag in U.S. Pat. No. 4,236,741 and various devices installed on rods, for example those described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,951,987, U.S. Pat. No. 5,702,138, U.S. Pat. No. 5,868,447 or WO 9839517.
Two-part devices of the bag and scoop type—variants of the dustpan/whisk broom system—have been proposed; an example of this type of device is provided by U.S. Pat. No. 5,226,182.
All of these more or less complex “remote” pickup devices have several major drawbacks: they are expensive, and they transform an outing with the animal into an expedition, so cumbersome and ill-suited to emergency outings are the tools involved. As in the case of the simplified? [question mark sic] devices, the pickup tool may often be forgotten.
A better approach to the problem was attempted in GB 2 361 615. That document describes the combination of a leash and a container for carrying pickup boxes. Although that device evinces improvements over the prior art, waste pickup is not easy and the packages used are bulky, resulting in a cumbersome apparatus.
The object of the invention is, therefore, to resolve these principal difficulties by proposing a device that cannot be forgotten by the dog-owner, is easy to use, and makes pickup less disagreeable.
The present invention concerns a device for picking up animal waste, characterized in that it is provided with fixing elements to be arranged on a leash reel or alternatively is integrated therewith in a single, one-piece appliance, and is composed of two articulated arms for collecting waste. Said articulated arms support a disposable package used to collect the waste.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will emerge from the description that follows and an examination of the appended drawings, which are provided merely as non-limitative examples.
FIGS. 1 to 4 present a specific exemplary embodiment according to the invention, in which the leash and its reel are integrated in a one-piece assembly.
As
The pickup device according to the invention is composed of the following essential elements:
More precisely, and as illustrated in
The space inside articulated arms 3, 4 is the useful pickup volume. This is due to the fact that according to the invention a disposable bag is affixed to the ends 8, 9 of the articulated arms, or alternatively is positioned in said space delimited by the movement of the arms, in such fashion as to collect the animal waste.
The disposable bag can be made of various materials, such as paper, plastic, nonwoven materials, flexible laminates, etc., and can have various shapes. However, the bag is preferably chosen from among the standard, small-capacity bags usable for various applications such as packaging and shipping, so as to be readily available at very low cost.
The winding-up device of the leash 2 is not detailed in FIGS. 1 to 4; this device is thoroughly conventional and can assume various forms, the chief of which is to wind the leash onto a central ring, with a spring serving to retract the leash. Such mechanisms are conventional and can be integrated into the pickup device in various forms.
According to the invention, the wind-up mechanism for the leash can either be integrated into the inside of the armature 1 to create a one-piece assembly or can be affixed to the outside of the pickup device, on the face opposite that of the articulated arms. This fixation can be lasting if permanent adhesive means such as glue, double-sided adhesives, etc. are used, or temporary if straps, “Velcro” fasteners or other fasteners are used. Said fixing means can be adjustable and, where appropriate, elastic.
According to the invention, the winding-up device or the fixation system of the leash is always disposed in the upper portion of the pickup device, opposite the articulated arms.
The operating mechanism of the device for picking up animal waste illustrated in the various figures comprises, in addition to the two articulated arms 3, 4 solidly affixed to shafts 10, 11, a gear rack 12 actuated by means of the pushbutton 6. Said gear rack is toothed over two portions of its length and on both of its faces, as illustrated in
The teeth 18, 19 carried by gear rack 12 interact with the teeth carried by toothed wheels 13, 14 solidly affixed to shafts 10, 11.
A return spring 17 the end of which is connected to armature 1 is solidly affixed to shaft 10, which spring serves to close the pickup device when the pushbutton is actuated.
A catch 16 allows the pickup device to be locked in open position, and operates in relation to the notch 20 carried by gear rack 12.
A guide 15 is disposed near the end of gear rack 12 so that the latter slides easily in its axis of movement and actuates the articulated arms.
The pickup apparatus is advantageously provided with a stop 21 that limits the rotation of articulated arm 4 during its movement.
Flexible elements 22 and 23, depicted only in
According to the invention and in reference to
In the configuration represented by
The invention has multiple advantages over the prior art:
As shown in the various figures, the handle 7 has been arranged so that the device can be used easily by a right-handed person, the pushbutton actuating the opening and closing mechanism being situated so that it is actuated with the thumb when the user has hold of the handle. A variant for a left-handed person or another position for the pushbutton is entirely feasible without departing from the ambit of the invention.
Plural variants of the waste pickup device are possible without departing from the ambit of the invention, the chief of which concerns the various possible configurations of leashes, with or without reels, in the apparatus. For instance, it can easily be envisaged to incorporate a link to a retractor, of which numerous variants exist.
The pickup device combined with the leash is susceptible to several variants as to the arrangement of the articulated arms, their relative positions, their dimensions, the devices for closing and opening said arms, with or without springs, with various means for releasing the arms, said means possibly being motorized and for example battery-operated, without departing from the ambit of the invention.
The types of materials used to make the pickup device, can, of course, vary widely. For economic reasons, for example an apparatus made primarily of molded plastic or a more robust apparatus made of aluminum may be contemplated without departing from the ambit of the invention.
One interesting variant of the invention concerns the possibility of fitting the armature of the pickup device with a system for attaching disposable bags as refills. To this end, it may be contemplated to dispose on the armature 1 a ring in the form of a payout reel, connected to both sides of the apparatus, so that a roll of plastic bags can be placed thereon. It is even conceivable for a box system containing refills to be disposed inside the frame, between the leash payout device and the articulated arms, so that the disposable bags can be withdrawn from the reserve supply through the vacant interior space of the apparatus in the same way as disposable handkerchiefs and wipes are withdrawn from their containers nowadays. In this case the bags are folded up and can be withdrawn either through a slit or through a star-shaped opening.
A device such as that described hereinabove is illustrated in
A device of this kind is depicted in
Other variants of the invention concern the possibility of adding a locking device for the leash, which can be affixed to the leash, to the pickup device, or, by means of a hook, to the belt loop of the owner of the animal, for example. Such a device, which is very simple, advantageously improves the invention. During pickup the dog will often tug on the leash, making it precarious to pick up waste or dispose of the bag containing it. It is therefore desirable to secure that portion of the leash that is attached to the dog to a fixed point, preferably connected to the dog-owner, to free the pickup device from any inopportune traction. An appropriate fixing device can be for example a quick release fastener, a clip or any other securing means that can be fitted firmly to the leash and is provided with an additional connecting element such as a hook, snap, burr-type closure, etc., designed to be positioned on a belt loop, a belt or any other point that enables the dog-owner to be connected to his animal without having to hold onto the leash. There are, of course, numerous variants of this improvement in the operation of the pickup device, and such possibilities form part of the invention.
The invention naturally is not limited to the embodiments described and is illustrated by way of example. It also encompasses all the technical equivalents as well as the combinations thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0310677 | Sep 2003 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR04/02323 | 9/13/2004 | WO | 5/3/2006 |