This invention is drawn to the field of brushing, scrubbing and general cleaning, and more particularly, to a novel dust wand cleaning appliance.
Dust wands (usually having lambswool or polyester fibers) are well-known implements which remove dust and other foreign matter when they are manually wiped across the surfaces of furniture, walls, artifacts and other objects.
Dust wands, particularly lambswool dusters, are reusable implements that are generally effective at dust and foreign matter removal. They typically enjoy a long useful life but need to have accumulated dust and foreign matter removed from them by periodic cleaning to restore their cleaning power. In the usual case, a rapid back-and-forth movement or spinning action is employed to mechanically shake loose accumulated dust and foreign matter from the wand.
Electrically-powered devices to vacuum the fibers of the wand are known, but their complication adds to their expense. Examples of such electrically-powered devices can be seen in U.S. Pat. No. 6,530,114 to Bailey et al. and U.S. Patent Publications 2003/0079309 to Vandenbelt et al. and 2010/0101043 to Kim et al. There remains a need in the art for a simple, reliable, inexpensive, easy-to-use tool for cleaning dust wands to restore their cleaning ability.
The present invention fulfills one or more of these needs in the art by providing a dust wand cleaner for dust wands that have radially-arrayed fibers that protrude to a define a generally cylindrical fiber head, The cleaner has two open end sections and a midsection. Each end section has an internal passageway. The midsection has an internal passageway that is aligned with the internal passageways of the end sections and that has inwardly extending bristles, so that when a dust wand is passed through the aligned passageways of the two open end sections and the midsection, debris adhering to the dust wand fibers is loosened from the dust wand. The passageways of the end sections preferably narrow from a first width that easily receives an inserted end of a generally cylindrical fiber head of a dust wand to a second width that compresses the generally cylindrical fiber head of the dust wand.
Preferably, the cleaner needs no electricity and therefore is free of sources of electricity.
The bristles may be metal. The bristles are desirably arrayed substantially completely around the internal passageway of the midsection. The bristles may be arrayed in multiple rows that are spaced from one another along the internal passageway of the midsection.
The end sections are preferably readily separable from the midsection, permitting access to the bristles for cleaning of the bristles. For example, each end section may be joined to the midsection by a bayonet mount so the end sections are readily separable from the midsection, permitting access to the bristles for cleaning of the bristles. The two end sections may be identical.
The passageway of the midsection may be wider than the second width of the passageway of an end section. Typically, for each end section, the passageway's first width is further from the midsection than the passageway's second width. The bristles are preferably mounted in an expansion chamber in the midsection.
The invention will be better understood by a reading of the Detailed Description of the Examples of the Invention along with a review of the drawings, in which:
The sections 12, 14, and 16 are shown separated in
As seen in
The sectional view of the assembled cleaner shown in
Applicant has also found that it is preferable to have the inner ends of the bristles 30 close to the same inner diameter as the second width 42 of the passageway and for the midsection to have a length adjacent the bristles that is not negligible. This length in the midsection results in an expansion chamber 44 that lets the cylindrical body of fibers of the dust wand that has been compressed by being fed into the entrance end section expand up against the bristles before being directed back inward by the wall of the second width 42 as the fiber head is pulled out the exit end section.
The expansion chamber 44 also permits the use of finer, more flexible bristles 30. The expansion chamber 44 has room for the bristle tips to flex when combing the fibers and then spring back to their static position as the dust wand completes its journey through the cleaner. Different size cleaners can be made for dust wands that have substantially different diameters of fiber cylinders.
In operation, the end sections are assembled to the midsection to make the cleaner. The dust wand is then passed through the cleaner (preferably but not necessarily, handle-first). As the fibers of the dust wand pass through the initial end section, they are compressed by the reducing diameter of the passageway in that end section. Then, upon reaching the expansion chamber 44, they rebound to the more-extended shape and quickly encounter the bristles 30 that comb through the fibers, loosening and removing debris attached to the fibers. Then the fibers encounter the narrowed passageway of the exit-side end section where further cleaning takes place, depositing most removed debris within the cleaner 10. The disclosed tool is a simple, reliable, inexpensive, easy-to-use tool for cleaning dust wands to restore their cleaning ability.
Certain modifications and improvements will occur to those skilled in the art upon reading the foregoing description. It should be understood that all such modifications and improvements have been omitted for the sake of conciseness and readability but are properly within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1714346 | Carleton | May 1929 | A |
5094557 | Nelson | Mar 1992 | A |
6530114 | Bailey et al. | Mar 2003 | B2 |
D691772 | Blaisdell | Oct 2013 | S |
20030079309 | Vandenbelt et al. | May 2003 | A1 |
20100101043 | Kim et al. | Apr 2010 | A1 |