The present invention refers to a floor washing and drying machine provided with an improved floor wiping device.
Floor cleaning, i.e. washing-drying machines usually comprise a brushing device with water and/or liquid detergent dispensing provision to wash the floor, as well as a wiping device to remove the dirty liquid from the floor and dry up the latter.
Such wiping device has the purpose of scraping and vacuuming the floor behind the brushing device, in order to remove the dirty liquid therefrom by taking it in through suction means, which the wiping device itself is appropriately connected with.
The wiping device is usually comprised of a support, to which there are mounted two flaps (or wiping blades, as they are generally referred to in the art) that are made of a rubber-based or rubber-like material to be able to elastically and slidably engage the floor to be cleaned. These flaps, i.e. a front one and a rear one—as viewed in the forward direction of movement of the machine—are biased, i.e. pressed against the floor so as to substantially act as sealing gaskets and delimitate a suction chamber therebetween, which is connected to the suction or vacuuming means via a conduit. The rear flap has usually a larger thickness and is made of a softer material featuring a greater resistance to water and detergent liquid, since it must perform so as to be able to retain the dirty washing liquid inside the chamber for it to be effectively removed by suction.
The front flap has the task of conveying the liquid into the suction chamber and, to this purpose, it is in fact provided with a plurality of indentations or cuts made along the floor scraping border, i.e. the border in contact with the floor, so as to allow the washing liquid to seep into and enter the suction chamber. The provision of such indentations or cuts has the effect of reducing the negative pressure being created by the suction means inside the chamber, while allowing the air-liquid mixture to be anyhow correctly removed by suction.
In general, the greater is the negative pressure that is created inside the suction chamber, the better is the ability of the liquid to be effectively removed from the floor by suction.
Many machines of the above-noted kind—either with on-board driver or walking driver—have a preferred working direction, typically a forward direction of movement of the machine relative to the driver. In these machines, the wiping device is only effective in drying up the floor if the machine moves exactly in its forward direction.
A floor washing-drying machine of this kind is described for instance in the European patent application no. 07117884.2 filed by this same Applicant.
The floor drying effect of prior-art systems is largely known to be mainly affected by such factors as the tightness of the suction-chamber, the adherence of the rear flap against the floor, and the kind of floor being treated.
In particular, floors paved with tiles featuring fissured seams therebetween are the most difficult to dry up, since such seams generally represent corresponding discontinuities in the surface to be cleaned and wiped, as well as in the volume of the suction chamber. This practically gives rise to localized losses of both negative pressure inside the suction chamber and wiping effect of the rear flap, under corresponding loss of water and detergent. Moreover, when the flap of elastomeric material comes across a seam as the machine moves forwards, the free lip thereof, which is usually pressed down onto the floor, may spring up due to elastic effect and bounce away from the tile above the surface thereof, thereby worsening both the efficiency of the machine and the level of the cleaning effect to a further extent.
The macroscopic effects of this occurrence are to be noticed in a floor that dries up in quite imperfect a manner, with residual water drops near the seams between contiguous tiles and liquid splashes behind the wiper that hit the driver following the machine. The negative effect is still more conspicuous when the drying direction, i.e. the forward moving direction of the machine is perpendicular to the seams (as this is the most usual case, actually) and the wiper has a rounded shape or a delta-like configuration (typical configurations used in view of assisting water collection). In this case, in fact, discontinuities occur just in the zones in which water is conveyed and removed by suction.
It is therefore a main object of the present invention to provide a floor washing-drying machine that is provided with an improved wiping device that does away with the afore-cited drawbacks of prior-art embodiments.
Within this general object, it is a purpose of the present invention to provide a wiping device that is simple in its construction and capable of being fitted also in existing machines.
According to the present invention, these aims, along with further ones that will become apparent from the following disclosure, are reached in a floor washing-drying machine that is provided with a wiping device incorporating the characteristics as defined and recited in the following claims 1 et seq.
Advantages and features of the present invention will anyway be more readily understood from the description of a preferred, although not sole embodiment that is given below by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
The floor washing-drying machine shown in
The wiping device 3 (
The conduit 8 is connected to the wiping device 3 through a suction conduit 18 that is fluidly connected with the suction chamber 7 (
The front scraping flap 5 and the rear scraping flap 6 are typically different. In fact, the front scraping flap 5 is intended to convey the washing liquid so as to cause it to enter the suction chamber 7, whereas the rear scraping flap is intended to wipe the floor dry and retain the liquid inside the suction chamber 7.
To a large extent, the efficiency of the machine depends on the tightness of the suction chamber 7, in consideration of the various kinds of floors, on which the machine is used to washing and drying purposes.
In particular, floors paved with tiles featuring fissured seams 9 between contiguous tiles are the most difficult ones to dry up, since each such seam generally represents a discontinuity in the surface to be cleaned and wiped, and causes the volume of the suction chamber 7 to continuously vary. This practically gives rise to localized losses of both negative pressure inside the suction chamber and wiping effect of the rear flap 6, under corresponding leakage and loss of detergent liquid. Moreover, when the flap of elastomeric material comes across a seam 9 as the machine moves forwards, the free lip thereof, which is usually pressed down onto the floor, may spring up due to elastic effect and bounce away from the tile above the surface thereof, thereby worsening the effectiveness of the washing and drying process to a further extent.
The readily apparent effects of this occurrence are to be noticed in a floor that dries up in quite imperfect a manner under formation of residual water drops 15 or spots near the seams between contiguous tiles, and a generation of liquid splashes directed against the driver following the machine. The negative effect is still more conspicuous when the drying direction, i.e. the forward moving direction of the machine is perpendicular to the seams (as this is the most usual case, actually) and the wiper has a rounded shape or a delta-like configuration, as this is typically used in view of assisting liquid collection. In this case, in fact, discontinuities occur just in the zones in which liquid is conveyed and removed by suction.
According to the present invention (
The above-mentioned further flap 10 is typically narrower in width than the other front and rear flaps 5 and 6. In addition, it forms a kind of screen guarding the machine driver against splashes of detergent liquid. In the case that a fissured seam between contiguous tiles fails to contain the whole amount of liquid remaining there after drying, such further flap 10 is effective in spreading such residual liquid over the next tile, thereby converting it into a thin film of liquid on the surface thereof. While the floor remains in this way wet, actually, it keeps being so for quite limited a period of time, since the thin liquid film is able to dry up by evaporation much more quickly than would large concentrated drops or spots of liquid 15, as this occurs in the operation of traditional machines.
Fully apparent from the above description is therefore the ability of the present invention to effectively reach the afore-cited aims and advantages by providing a wiping device for a floor washing-drying machine that is more efficient and reliable than prior-art devices generally used in machines of the above-noted kind. Moreover, it can be readily appreciated that the novel solution can be easily and readily implemented also in existing floor washing-drying machines.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PN2008A0006 | Jan 2008 | IT | national |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 917 898 | May 2008 | EP |
409206261 | Aug 1997 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090188071 A1 | Jul 2009 | US |