Floor cleaning machines often create dust as a by-product of normal operations. For example, burnishers are used to remove one or more layers of wax or other coatings from a hard surface floor, such as composition tile. A rotating pad in the burnisher is in contact with the built-up wax on the floor. As the pad rotates, one or more layers of wax are removed from the floor, restoring the shine to the surface. Dust is normally created as a by-product of this wax removal process. The dust can be troublesome as it settles on almost everything in the surrounding environment. For example, in a grocery store, the dust accumulates on canned goods, bottles, produce, and shelving. In an office, the dust accumulates on furniture, bookshelves, word processing equipment, and other office equipment. In a warehouse, the dust accumulates on boxes, racks and other products. Cleaning personnel spend extra time dusting after a floor has been burnished with prior art burnishers that do not have any kind of dust control apparatus. The industry has recognized a need for burnishers with some type of dust control apparatus.
Pioneer Eclipse® of Sparta, N.C. (www.pioneer-eclipse.com) sells at least two burnishers with dust control apparatus. One model with dust control apparatus is called the Speed Star™ and the other is called the Revolution™.
The Speed Star™ burnisher from Pioneer Eclipse® attempts to collect dust in a dust bag. A non-floating scoop is rigidly attached to the underside of the pad housing above the pad driver and the pad. The scoop is curved and feeds up through the pad housing to a throat that attaches to the dust bag. The dust bag can be removed from the throat to be emptied. A propane-powered engine drives a belt, which causes the pad to rotate. The belt connects to a drive pulley. A pulley cover isolates the belt and the drive pulley. In other words, there is no inlet into the pad housing to facilitate airflow through the scoop and throat and into the dust bag. As a result, there is only a modest amount of dust collected in the cloth dust bag.
The Revolution™ burnisher from Pioneer Eclipse® attempts to collect dust in a removable filter, instead of a cloth dust bag. A non-floating scoop is rigidly attached to the underside of the pad housing above the pad driver and the pad. The scoop is curved and feeds up through the pad housing into a plastic throat, which feeds into a filter housing. The filter can be removed from the filter housing for cleaning or to be replaced. A propane-powered engine drives a belt, which causes the pad to rotate. The belt connects to a drive pulley on top of the pad housing. In other words, there is no inlet into the pad housing to facilitate airflow through the scoop and the throat into the filter housing. As a result, there is only a modest amount of dust collected in the filter and the filter housing. There is still a need for a floor cleaning machine that does a better job of dust control.
Dust control is also a concern in the design and manufacture of sanders for hardwood floors. The Information Disclosure Statement filed concurrently herewith includes an advertising brochure from Clarke American Sanders entitled “Dust Control Floor Sanders.” The brochure has a picture of an orbital sander showing the vacuum fan and a disposable paper filter/collection bag. The apparatus includes a floating skirt to contain dust. The inlet for the dust is positioned on the top of the deck of the sander, not on the side of the sander. This Brochure also pictures a disk sander with a vacuum adapter that connects to any vacuum system with an 1½ inch diameter vacuum hose. This sander also has a floating skirt that directs the dust to a pick-up chamber. Again, the inlet or pick-up chamber for the dust is positioned on the top of the deck and not on the side of the sander. Also included in the Information Disclosure Statement, is brochure from Clarke American Sanders entitled “Professional Dust Control Sanding System.” This Brochure shows a disk sander with vacuum adapter connected to a portable vacuum cleaner. Again, the inlet for the dust is on the top of the deck of the sander and not on the side of the sander. There still is a need for improved dust control systems in floor cleaning machines.
The present invention is a floor cleaning machine with an improved dust control apparatus. This dust control apparatus can also be sold separately as an after-market addition for existing floor cleaning machines that lack any dust control apparatus, or for floor cleaning machines that have inadequate dust control capabilities. This invention is particularly suited for use with propane-powered burnishers that create dust as a by-product during normal operations.
Floor cleaning machines typically have a rotating circular pad in contact with the floor. These pads sometimes travel at relatively high rates of speed, i.e., about 2,000 rpm or more. These pads wear over time and the height of the pad may vary by ½ inch or more during the useful life of the pad. Because the pads wear down over time and for other reasons, some floor cleaning machines have a floating hoop assembly that is sometimes referred to in the industry as a skirt. The floating hoop assembly helps to contain dust during operation of the machine. The present invention includes a floating scoop attached to the floating hoop assembly so the hoop assembly and the scoop will move up and down in tandem over irregularities in the floor and as the pad wears.
The floating scoop directs at least a portion of the dust away from the pad. The scoop is in communication with a throat and a circular canister. In one embodiment, a removable filter is placed in the circular canister. The dust moves through the scoop, the throat, and into the circular canister, where it swirls in a circular motion around the filter. The circular canister and the filter act as a separator to assist in removal of the entrained dust from the air.
A housing surrounds the pad and also helps to contain the dust. The housing includes a generally vertical sidewall around the outer circumference of the pad. A drive belt passes through an opening in the sidewall of the housing to rotate the pad driver, which is connected to the pad. This opening operates as an air inlet during operation of the floor cleaning machine of the present invention. Unlike the Speed StarÂ□ and the RevolutionÂ□ from Pioneer Eclipse®, ambient air passes through this inlet and becomes entrained with particulate (dust). This air with entrained particulate (dust) exits the housing through the scoop on the way to the circular canister. This upper flow path allows a constant stream of air to enter the housing, pick-up dust, exit the housing with the dust and move to the canister where the dust is separated from the air.
The scoop acts as an outlet for the housing. The scoop is in communication with an upper flow path of entrained particulate (dust) and air. The upper flow path is generally defined by the housing and the pad driver. The scoop is also in communication with a circumferential flow path of entrained particulate (dust) and air. The circumferential flow passageway is generally defined by an outer edge of the pad and the floating hoop assembly.
These are merely illustrative aspects of the present invention and should not be deemed an all-inclusive listing of the innumerable aspects associated with the present invention. These and other aspects will become apparent to those skilled in the art, in view of the following disclosure and accompanying drawings.
For a better understanding of the present invention, reference may be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
The floor cleaning machine 10 has a propane-powered engine 12. The propane fuel is stored in a propane tank 14. The operator grips the handle 16 to control the direction of the machine. Rotation of the pad 52, better seen in
A housing 18 surrounds the pad 52, not seen in this view. A floating hoop assembly, generally identified by the numeral 20 is positioned about the outer circumference of the housing 18. The floating hoop assembly 20 moves up and down over irregularities in the floor and also accommodates wear in the pad 52. The height of the pad 52 may vary by as much as ¼ inch due to wear.
A floating scoop 22 is attached to the floating hoop assembly 20 so they both float up and down in tandem. A flexible boot 24 connects the scoop to a throat 26. The throat 26 is in communication with the containment canister 28. Entrained particles (dust) are captured by the housing 18 and the floating hoop assembly 20. The entrained particles (dust) pass through the floating scoop assembly 22, the flexible boot 24, and the throat 26 and then swirl around in the circular containment canister 28 where they are separated from the air stream.
The container canister 28 is circular and holds a removable filter 56. The throat 26 is arranged generally tangentially to the containment canister 28. The floating scoop 22, the throat 26 and the containment canister 28 are all in communication with the housing 18. Air enters the housing 18 through the inlet 30, circulates in the housing 18 and becomes entrained with particles (dust). The air stream with entrained particles (dust) exits the housing 18 through the floating scoop 22, passes through the throat 26 and into the containment canister 28. The air stream with entrained particles (dust) circulates in a circular clockwise motion about the removable filter 56 as shown by the arrow in the drawing. The swirling motion around the removable filter 56 facilitates separation of the air and the particles (dust) as will be discussed in greater detail concerning
The floating hoop assembly 20 is fully extended because the pad 52 is new and has not yet been worn down by operations. The height of the pad 52 may vary as much as ¼ inch due to wear. The housing 18, the sidewall 54 and the pad driver 50 define an upper flow passageway 80, only a portion of which is shown in this drawing. The upper flow passageway 80 includes all of the area between the pad driver 50 and the housing surrounded by the sidewall 54. Ambient air from outside the machine 10 enters the upper flow passageway 80 through the inlet 30, shown in
A circumferential flow passageway 82 is generally defined by an outer edge 84 of the pad 52, the floating hoop assembly 20 and the floor. Air passing through the inlet 30 likewise passes into the circumferential flow passageway 82. Due to the rotation of the pad 52, the air swirls around in a clockwise fashion in the circumferential flow passageway 82 and becomes entrained with particulate (dust). The floating scoop 22 defines an outlet for the air and particulate (dust), the floating scoop 22 being in communication with both the upper flow passageway 80 and the circumferential flow passageway 82.
Air and entrained particles (dust) enter the canister 28 through the throat 26 and swirl around the canister passageway 120, as better seen in
To remove the filter, an operator first removes the propane tank 14 from the machine 10. The lid 102 is then opened and the filter 100 can be removed from the canister 28. The filter 100 can either be cleaned and replaced or a new filter 100 can be installed.
Although the preferred embodiment of the present invention has been described in the foregoing specification with considerable detail, it is to be understood that modifications may be made to the invention, which do not exceed the scope of the appended claims and modified forms of the present invention done by others skilled in the art to which the invention pertains will be considered infringements of this invention when those modified forms fall within the claimed scope of this invention.
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