This invention relates to a hair brush of the type having a member slidably moveable along the bristles thereof, for the purpose of cleaning the brush by removing hair therefrom.
Hair brushes of this type, for use on both humans and animals, are well known in the art. Such brushes are exemplified by U.S. Pat. No. 5,600,865 to Morrison; U.S. Pat. No. 4,517,703 to the inventor in the present application, U.S. Pat. No. 2,529,927 to Fisk; U.S. Pat. No. 3,108,305 to Peilet; U.S. Pat. No. 3,110,053 to Surabian; U.S. Pat. No. 1,290,554 to Healey; U.S. Pat. No. 1,050,103 to Clemens; and U.S. Pat. No. 1,164,204 to Mullett et al.
In the arrangement of Fisk a foraminous cleaning plate 11 has holes through which the bristles extend. The cleaning plate is slidably movable along the bristles, and is prevented from being removed from the ends of the bristles by hooks 13 which are secured to opposite ends of the cleaning plate and which also engage the base of the brush. The other arrangements described in the aforementioned references (other than the prior patent of the inventor herein) similarly employ various mechanisms to limit the movement of the cleaning plate, and some employ additional mechanisms to return the cleaning plate to its rest position adjacent the base of the brush.
Such prior art arrangements are relatively complex and expensive to manufacture, and are susceptible to jamming and other mechanical malfunctions.
In the inventor's prior U.S. Pat. No. 4,517,703 a laminated cleaning plate is used which has a resilient layer with holes that tightly grip the bristles but which enlarge when moved to the bristle tips, so that the plate can be removed from the bristles while preventing strands of hair from staying on the bristles. However, this arrangement is not as easy to use as is desired, and requires a considerable amount of force to be applied to remove the cleaning plate. It is not suitable for making a hair brush with bristles which are not all parallel to each other, but which extend outward in a generally radial manner, as if preferred by most users of hair brushes.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide an improved hair brush including effective hair removal means which is easy to operate.
A hair brush is provided which has an arrangement for removing hair from it. The brush has a frame with an arcuate surface portion. An arcuate bristle retaining plate has a frame engaging major surface which conforms to the shape of, and is adapted to overlie the arcuate surface portion of the frame. The plate has multiple bristle receiving holes through it, with an elongated generally cylindrical bendable bristle slidably mounted in each of the holes.
Each bristle has an enlarged end adjacent a frame engaging lower surface of the plate, and an enlarged bulbous end adjacent an upper surface of the plate, each end having a diameter slightly greater than that of the corresponding hole, so that each bristle may slide within the corresponding hole until one of its ends engages an adjacent major surface of said bristle retaining plate.
The bristle retaining plate is secured to the frame with the arcuate frame engaging major surface thereof disposed in juxtaposition with the arcuate surface portion of the frame. The bristle retaining plate can be disengaged from the frame to facilitate removal of hair from the plate and bristles. When the plate is disengaged from the frame, the bristles may slide through the corresponding holes in the bristle retaining plate until the bulbous ends engage the upper major surface of the bristle retaining plate, and may also slide through the corresponding holes in the bristle retaining plate until the frame engaging ends engage the corresponding holes in the bristle retaining plate so as to facilitate re-positioning of the frame engaging surface of the bristle retaining plate in juxtaposition with the arcuate portion of the brush frame.
An optional arcuate hair removal plate with holes which align with the holes in the bristle retaining plate may be positioned atop the bristle retaining plate so that the bristles extend through coinciding holes in both plates.
The bristle retaining plate is preferably hinged to the brush frame at one edge and latched to it at an opposite edge, so that hair can be removed by releasing the latch, rotating the bristle retaining plate (and the hair removal plate, if one is used) away from the frame about the hinge, removing and replacing the hair removal plate, if one is used, returning the plate (or plates) to the original position, and re-engaging the latch.
As seen in
A bristle retaining plate 16 has an arcuate shape conforming to the shape of the bottom surface 14 of the recess 13, an upper major surface 17 and a lower or frame recess engaging surface 18 which rests on and contacts the convex bottom surface 14 of the recess 13.
A multiplicity of bristle receiving holes 19 extends between the bristle retaining plate major surfaces 17 and 18. At the bottom surface 18 of the bristle retaining plate 16 the holes 19 have chamfers 20. At the upper surface 17 of the plate, the holes are surrounded by lands 21 which help to maintain bristles disposed in the holes, in an orientation perpendicular to the plate major surfaces.
Disposed in each of the holes 19 is an elongated bendable bristle 22, preferably made of plastic. As best seen in
As seen in
The hair removal plate 27 has an arcuate shape conforming to that of the upper surface 17 of the bristle retaining plate 16 and has a multiplicity of bristle clearance holes 28 which are coaxial with the bristle retaining holes 19 of the plate 16 when the plate 27 is placed atop the plate 16. Each of the holes 28 has a diameter slightly greater than that of the bulbous top end of the bristle which is in the aligned hole of the plate 16. Therefore when the plate 27 is on the plate 16, each of the bristles 22 extends through one of the holes 19 in the plate 16 and an aligned coaxial hole 28 in the overlying plate 27.
As seen in
The hair removal plate 27 may be used to keep the bristle retaining plate 16 in engagement with the recess 13 of the frame 10, by disposing the hinge prongs 29, which extend from one edge of the plate 27, in the hinge slot 30 and rotating or pivoting the plate 27 until the resilient latch member 31 which extends from an opposite edge of the plate engages a lip 32 adjacent an edge of the recess 13. The hair removal plate 27 may be removed by releasing the latch member 31 from the lip 32 and pivoting or rotating the plate about the hinge slot 30, and then pulling the plate 27 away from the slot.
The frame is preferably made of a relatively rigid plastic such as polystyrene or acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (“ABS”). The plates 16 and 27 are preferably made of a metal and formed to have some resilience, although rigid plates will also provide proper functioning. Suitable metals are aluminum and stainless steel. Alternatively, a strong plastic, preferably one exhibiting some resilience, could be used.
Where a somewhat resilient bristle retaining plate 16 is used, the plate and the recess 13 may alternatively be configured so that the width of the recess is slightly less than the distance between the longitudinal edges of the plate, and the plate can be bent slightly and then released, to cause it to selectively engage and disengage adjacent walls of the recess; which wall may if desired be provided with inwardly extending longitudinal lips to help retain the plate 13 in position. With this arrangement the hair removal plate 27 can, if so desired, be dispensed with.
To remove hair from the brush 10, the hair removal plate 27, if present, is first removed as previously described. Then the bristle retaining plate 16 with its bristles 22 is removed from the recess 13 and turned so that the bristles may slide through the holes 19 to a position where their bulbous tips 24 rest on the upper plate surface 17, as shown in
In the alternative embodiment shown in
The hair brush 10a shown in
When the latch 31a is released and the plate 16a is partially rotated away from the body portion 11a of the brush 10a, the bristles 16a begin to slide or fall down through the corresponding holes in the plate (being slightly pushed if necessary) so that any hair on the bristles is removed and the bulbous ends 24a of the bristles approach the upper plate surface 17a, as shown in
When the brush is inverted as shown in
Then the plate 16a is rotated or pivoted about the hinge 36 until the latch member 31a engages the lip 37, thus returning the plate 16a to its original position within the recess 13a.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/485,788 filed Jul. 10, 2003 and entitled Superclean Hair Brush.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1050103 | Clemens | Jan 1913 | A |
1164204 | Mullett et al. | Dec 1915 | A |
1290554 | Healey | Jan 1919 | A |
2482928 | Neff et al. | Sep 1949 | A |
2529927 | Fisk | Nov 1950 | A |
3108305 | Peilet | Oct 1963 | A |
3110053 | Surabian | Nov 1963 | A |
4517703 | Koke | May 1985 | A |
5519912 | Kawamura | May 1996 | A |
5600865 | Morrison | Feb 1997 | A |
5862563 | Hartmann | Jan 1999 | A |
5904150 | Caristo et al. | May 1999 | A |
6021542 | Norman | Feb 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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289465 | Nov 1988 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050051187 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60485788 | Jul 2003 | US |