The present disclosure relates generally to food waste disposers, and more particularly, to a food waste disposer having a food deflecting housing.
Food waste disposers are used to comminute food scraps into particles small enough to safely pass through household drain plumbing. A conventional food waste disposer of the type for under sink mounting that is mounted to a sink, such as a kitchen sink, includes a food conveying section, a motor section, and a central grinding section disposed between the food conveying section and the motor section. The food conveying section includes a housing that forms an inlet for receiving food waste and water. The food conveying section conveys the food waste to the grinding section, and the motor section includes a motor imparting rotational movement to a motor shaft to operate the grinding mechanism.
The grinding section in which comminution occurs typically has a rotating shredder plate with lugs and a stationary grind ring received in a housing of the grinding section. The motor turns the rotating shredder plate and the lugs force the food waste against the grind ring where it is broken down into small pieces. Once the particles are small enough to pass out of the grinding mechanism, they are flushed out into the household plumbing. Size control is primarily achieved through controlling the size of the gap through which the food particles must pass. In some cases, the housing of the grinding section and the housing of the food conveying section are integrally formed as a single housing. In other cases, they are not. Such a prior art food waste disposer is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,007,006, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The food waste disposer may be mounted in a well-known manner in the drain opening of a sink using mounting members of the type disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,025,007, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The food conveying section 102 conveys the food waste to the grinding section 104. The food conveying section 102 includes an inlet housing 108 and a conveying housing 110. The inlet housing 108 has an inlet 109 at the upper end of the food waste disposer 100 for receiving food waste and water. Inlet 109 is surrounded by a gasket 111. The inlet housing 108 is attached to the conveying housing 110, such as by an antivibration mount 113.
The conveying housing 110 has an opening 142 to receive a dishwasher inlet 144. The dishwasher inlet is used to pass water from a dishwasher (not shown). The inlet housing 108 and conveying housing 110 may be made of metal or molded plastic. Alternatively, inlet housing 108 and conveying housing 110 may be one unitary piece.
The grinding section 104 includes a housing 112 surrounding a grinding mechanism 114 having a rotating shredder plate assembly 116 and a stationary grind ring 118. Housing 112 is formed as a clamp ring and clamps conveying housing 110 to an upper end bell 136 of motor section 106. Stationary grind ring 118, which includes a plurality of spaced teeth 120 (only two of which are indicated by reference number 120 in
The shredder plate assembly 116 may include a rotating shredder plate 124 mounted to a rotatable shaft 126 of a motor 128 of motor section 106, such as by a bolt 130. Motor 128 also includes a rotor 129 to which rotatable shaft 126 is affixed and a stator 131. A plurality of fixed lugs 132 (only one of which is shown in
Motor section 106 includes an upper end bell 136 affixed to a bottom 138 of grinding section 104. Upper end bell 136 includes a discharge chamber 140 having a discharge outlet 141 for coupling to a tailpipe or drainpipe (not shown).
In an aspect, food waste disposer 100 may include a trim shell 146 that surrounds food conveying section 102, grinding section 104 and motor section 106. A layer of sound insulation 148 may be disposed between trim shell 146 and conveying housing 110 of food conveying section 102 and housing 112 of grinding section 104.
In the operation of the food waste disposer 100, the food waste delivered by the food conveying section 102 to the grinding section 104 is forced by lugs 132, 134 of the rotating shredder plate assembly 116 against teeth 120 of the stationary grind ring 118. The sharp edges of the teeth 120 grind or comminute the food waste into particulate matter that combines with water, such as water that entered the food waste disposer through inlet 109, to form a slurry that drops into discharge chamber 140. This slurry is then discharged through the discharge outlet (not shown) into the tailpipe or drainpipe (not shown).
The food conveying section 102 (which includes inlet housing 108 and conveying housing 110) serves as the conduit for the food waste from the drain opening of the sink to the grinding mechanism of the grinding section. In a food waste disposer that operates in a batch feed mode, the amount of food waste that can be ground at a time is dictated by the volume of the food conveying section, mainly the conveying housing 110.
As discussed, conveying housings such as conveying housing 110 can be made of different materials. The most common are a molded reinforced polymer such as glass filled polypropylene, or stainless steel. The advantages of stainless steel are higher durability and higher perceived consumer value. The primary disadvantage of stainless steel compared to a polymer is that is more difficult to form complex shapes of stainless steel compared to a polymer.
The shape of the conveying housing 110 has an influence on the performance of the grinding mechanism. It is known in the art that a conveying housing with a conical or curved wall will redirect food waste expelled upwardly by the grinding mechanism back into the grinding mechanism more quickly than a housing with a straight wall. It is relatively easy to form a conveying housing having a conical or curved wall if molding a polymer to form the conveying housing. It is more difficult to do so if forming the conveying housing from stainless steel.
Typically, conveying housings made of stainless steel have been formed primarily as straight wall tubes. In certain prior art food waste disposers including one marketed under the InSinkErator® brand as Model 555, the food conveying housing was formed as a stainless steel tube where the lower portion of the stainless steel tube which contained the stationary shredder ring was expanded to a slightly larger diameter than the upper portion. This created a small shoulder over the stationary shredder ring which served as a food deflecting feature. In another prior art food waste disposer disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,360,729, the food conveying housing was formed as a stainless steel tube with a flange on the lower end. The stationary shredder ring was contained in a plastic adaptor ring that extended above the stationary shredder ring and incorporated a food deflecting overhang and bevel. The adaptor assembly and stainless steel tube were mated through a gasket and an external clamp ring. U.S. Pat. No. 7,607,599 discloses a food waste reduction mechanism for a food waste disposer that has a ledge that overhangs a periphery of a rotating shredder plate assembly of the grinding mechanism of a food waste disposer.
In a prior art food waste disposer marketed under the InSinkErator® brand as Model 77, the conveying housing, which was made of stainless steel, had a two-chamber body in which the upper portion or chamber had a significantly smaller diameter than the lower portion or chamber. The transition between the small diameter upper portion and the larger diameter lower portion had a curved or arch-like profile that served to deflect food back into the grinding mechanism. The food waste disposer having this food conveying housing was a highly-aggressive, fast grinding food waste disposer compared to food waste disposers where the body of the food conveying housing was a straight wall stainless steel tube. The disadvantage of the food conveying housing having this two-chamber body was that the volume of the food conveying housing was reduced compared to straight wall bodies. Also, certain components such as the body top and trim shells had to be redesigned to accommodate the smaller diameter upper chamber.
This section provides a general summary of the disclosure, and is not a comprehensive disclosure of its full scope or all of its features.
In accordance with an aspect of the present disclosure, a food waste disposer has a food conveying section that receives food waste and water; a grinding section including a grinding mechanism, and a motor section including a motor. The grinding section is disposed between the food conveying section and the motor section. The grinding mechanism includes a stationary grind ring and a rotating shredder plate assembly that rotates in the grind ring to grind food waste to form ground matter that combines with the water to form a slurry. The slurry passes into a discharge area in an upper end bell below the shredder plate assembly. The food conveying section includes a housing having a food waste deflecting band with an angular profile at a lower end of the housing.
In an aspect, the food waste deflecting band includes diverters.
In an aspect, the diverters are projections that project downwardly from a lower sloped wall of the food waste deflecting band. In an aspect, the diverters are projections that project inwardly from a junction where upper and lower sloped walls of the food waste deflecting band meet.
In an aspect, the food deflecting band is discontinuous having a plurality of discontinuities spaced therearound which provide the diverters. In an aspect, the discontinuities are flattened sections of the food waste deflecting band wherein the lower sloped wall of the food waste deflecting band at each flattened section is flattened to provide a horizontally inwardly extending projection.
In an aspect, the food waste deflecting band is a continuous band.
In an aspect, the conveying housing is a conical wall housing and in an aspect, may be a plastic molded housing having the deflecting band integrally molded at a lower end thereof. In an aspect the deflecting band includes a plurality of diverters and in an aspect, each diverter includes a projection having a inwardly extending truncated triangular section and a downwardly extending truncated triangular section.
Further areas of applicability will become apparent from the description provided herein. The description and specific examples in this summary are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
The drawings described herein are for illustrative purposes only of selected embodiments and not all possible implementations, and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
Example embodiments will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings. Corresponding reference numerals indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
With reference to
In the illustrative embodiment shown in
Lower sloped wall 208 and upper wall 210 meet at a junction 214, which is at radially inner ends of each of lower sloped wall 208 and upper wall 210. In this regard, reference number 214 also identifies the radially inner ends of lower sloped wall 208 and upper wall 210.
Upper wall 210 extends between junction 214 and straight cylindrical sidewall 216 of conveying housing 110′. In the illustrative example shown in
In operation when shredder plate assembly 116 is rotating, food waste that is expelled upwardly from grinding section 104 is reflected by food waste deflecting band 202 back to grinding mechanism 114 in grinding section 104. It should be understood that some of the food waste that is expelled upwardly from grinding section 104 may be expelled inwardly as well, and thus may not be reflected by food waste deflecting band 202. However, the expulsion of food waste upwardly from grinding section 104 is typically caused by the contact of the food waste against stationary grind ring 118 and thus it is expelled upwardly from a periphery of rotating shredder plate 124, such as along stationary grind ring 118. This food waste is thus likely to contact food waste deflecting band 202 and be reflected back into grinding section 104.
Food deflecting band 202 may optionally include diverters 220. Diverters 220 prevent food waste from riding on food deflecting band 202, particularly lower sloped wall 208, and helps it more rapidly tumble back into grinding section 104. “Riding” as that term is used in the art is where food waste spins but does not grind. In an aspect, diverters 220 may illustratively be projections that project downwardly from lower sloped wall 208 and may be formed in lower sloped wall 208, such as dimples, truncated triangular members, or other projecting members. Diverters 220 may alternatively be members attached to lower sloped wall 208. In an illustrative aspect, lower sloped wall 208 includes three diverters 220 spaced equidistantly around food deflecting band 202. It should be understood that food deflecting band 202 can have more or fewer than three diverters 220, or none at all. It should also be understood that diverters 220 could additionally or alternatively be projections that project inwardly from junction 214, such as projection 300 shown in
In an aspect, the food waste deflecting band may be discontinuous with the diverters 220 being provided by discontinuities in the food waste deflecting band.
In the illustrative embodiments shown in
While conveying housing 110′ in the embodiment shown in
Spatially relative terms, such as “inner,” “outer,” “beneath,” “below,” “lower,” “above,” “upper,” and the like, may be used herein for ease of description to describe one element or feature's relationship to another element(s) or feature(s) as illustrated in the figures. Spatially relative terms may be intended to encompass different orientations of the device in use or operation in addition to the orientation depicted in the figures. For example, if the device in the figures is turned over, elements described as “below” or “beneath” other elements or features would then be oriented “above” the other elements or features. Thus, the example term “below” can encompass both an orientation of above and below. The device may be otherwise oriented (rotated 90 degrees or at other orientations) and the spatially relative descriptors used herein interpreted accordingly.
The foregoing description of the embodiments has been provided for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the disclosure. Individual elements or features of a particular embodiment are generally not limited to that particular embodiment, but, where applicable, are interchangeable and can be used in a selected embodiment, even if not specifically shown or described. The same may also be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the disclosure, and all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of the disclosure.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/505,558, filed on Jul. 8, 2011. The entire disclosure of the above application is incorporated herein by reference.
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Entry |
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International Search Report and Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for PCT/US2012/045659 mailed Oct. 22, 2012. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130175375 A1 | Jul 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61505558 | Jul 2011 | US |