Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6382527
-
Patent Number
6,382,527
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Date Filed
Wednesday, January 3, 200123 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, May 7, 200222 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 239 333
- 239 335
- 239 343
- 239 358
- 239 390
- 239 391
- 239 392
- 239 394
- 239 436
- 222 190
- 222 380
- 222 3831
- D09 300
- D09 448
- D23 225
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
The selector wheel is mounted to rotate about the axis of the nozzle cap, and a spray window and foaming sleeve are formed in the wheel offset from the axis. The window or sleeve is registrable with the offset spray orifice by rotating the wheel. Either window or sleeve can be brought into registry so that the discharge is spray or foam.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to hand-operated dispensing pumps sometimes called trigger sprayers. More specifically, this invention relates to trigger sprayers adapted to selectively emit a spray cone or a foaming discharge.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The prior art is replete with trigger sprayers of various types. An example is disclosed in the McKinney U.S. Pat. No. 4,161,289 wherein the pump comprises a vertically disposed cylinder having a piston stroking as a trigger lever is pulled back and forth. This pumps the liquid from an attached container out a delivery tube to a nozzle.
Typically, trigger sprayers are provided with a nozzle including a rotatable nozzle cap. The delivery tube from the pump usually terminates in a bushing and the cap snaps over the bushing. The delivery tube passes the liquid toward the front end of the cap where it is usually introduced tangentially into a so-called “swirl chamber” on the rear face of the front end of the cap. In the chamber the liquid increases in angular velocity as it swirls toward the orifice and finally discharges in the form of a spray cone.
A shut-off valve may be provided between the bushing and nozzle cap wherein channels in the respective parts align in use, but the flow may be cut off by rotating the cap to a “stop” position wherein the channels do not align.
In some sprayers the orifice and swirl chamber have been offset from the axis of the cap. In the Hayes U.S. Pat. No. 4,247,048, for instance, the orifice is offset and the discharge may selectively be in the form of a stream or a spray, depending on the depth of the channel on the delivery tube where it communicates with the swirl chamber.
The concept of a foaming sleeve surrounding the spray cone emitting from a trigger pump orifice is disclosed in the Shay U.S. Pat. No. 4,669,665. Here the cone engages the inside of the foaming sleeve, mixes with air, and discharges as a foam.
The further Shay U.S. Pat. No. 4,768,717 issued Sep. 6, 1988 teaches the idea of introducing air inwardly about the outside of a foaming sleeve to the rear end of the sleeve to enhance the foaming.
A number of prior patents have suggested means in a trigger sprayer for selecting either a foam or a spray type discharge. An example is disclosed in the Shay U.S. Pat. No. 4,767,060 wherein a foaming collar is reciprocably mounted on an annular support extending forward from the nozzle. The sleeve can be moved into either a forward position wherein it is engaged by the emitting spray cone to produce foam, and a rearward position adjacent the orifice wherein the collar is not contacted by the spray, and the discharge is in the form of a spray.
A further disclosure of a selectable spray or foam discharge is found in the Corsette U.S. Pat. No. 4,779,803 wherein a centrally apertured plate has a plurality of rearward legs which telescope into the nozzle cap about the orifice. The plate is movable as the legs slide into the cap or out from it. The plate can be set in a position where the aperture is adjacent the orifice and does not interfere with the spray or is away from the orifice, forward of it, and is impacted by the spray to produce a foam.
More recently foam/spray discharge selectability is disclosed in the Tasaki et al U.S. Pat. No. 5,344,078 and the Foster et al U.S. Pat. No. 5,767,385. In these patents a foaming sleeve or bore is pivotally attached to the side of the nozzle cap on an axis generally perpendicular to the orifice axis so that it can be swung down from an idle position to close to the orifice so that the spray from the orifice contacts the sleeve and a foam discharge is produced.
The structure of some earlier selectable discharge pumps interfere with the symmetry of the pump nozzle. The selectable feature of earlier uses often requires an awkward lateral or forward projection which can readily break off or catch on things. Further, some of these earlier structures are not easy to use.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention has for an object to provide a selector symmetrical about the nozzle axis, compact and easy to use. Briefly, the invention comprising a hand-activated pump having a nozzle cap rotatably disposed at the front end of the pump. The cap has a front end wall formed with a spray orifice offset from the axis. In the invention a sprayer/foamer selector wheel is rotatably mounted on the axis and adjacent the front end wall of the cap, the wheel incorporating a foam sleeve and a sprayer window offset from the axis. By manually rotating the wheel, the user can register the window or sleeve with the spray orifice to produce spray or foam.
In a modification the wheel may be provided with a plurality of alternating sleeves and windows, all offset from the axis. The attachment of the selector wheel to the nozzle cap may be by a snap-fastener-type connection disposed on the axis and serving as a spindle. The head may be integral with the cap, and the socket in the center of the wheel.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Further objects and features of the invention will be clear to those skilled in the art from a review of the following specification and drawings, all of which present non-limiting forms of the invention. In the drawings:
FIG. 1
is a side view of a trigger sprayer embodying the invention;
FIG. 2
is a greatly enlarged exploded perspective view of the nozzle cap and selector wheel embodying the invention;
FIG. 3
is an enlarged front elevation of the selector wheel;
FIG. 4
is a rear view of the selector wheel;
FIG. 5
is a rear view of the nozzle cap;
FIG. 6
is a sectional view taken on the line
6
—
6
of FIG.
5
and including the assembled selector wheel, cap and nozzle bushing; and
FIG. 7
is an exploded perspective view of the nozzle cap and a modified form of selector wheel.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
A trigger sprayer embodying the invention is generally designated
10
in FIG.
1
. It comprises a body
12
including an attachment closure
14
for a container, and a pivoted trigger
16
. At the forward end of the body is a nozzle including a rotatable nozzle cap
18
. This cap may be rotated to turn the liquid “off” or “on”.
FIG. 2
, an exploded view, shows the nozzle cap
18
as a tapered polygon having a front end
20
and a spray orifice
22
. On the axis a of the cap and nozzle at the front end
20
is a fastener head
24
. The head
24
has a frusto-conical forward surface
24
a
and includes a neck
26
. The head and neck are integrally molded with the cap and are radially slotted at 90° intervals to give the head resilience in its diametrical dimension. Preferably, the head includes a retaining shoulder
28
(
FIG. 6
) facing the end wall
20
. The shoulder is abrupt as taught, for instance, in the U.S. Pat. No. 3,210,820 to Humiston disclosing a “one-way” snap fastener wherein the head is permanently held on the socket after first snapping on.
Rotatably mounted on the axis of the cap
20
, or more specifically, on the head
24
, is the foam/spray selector wheel
30
. The head
24
and neck
26
serve as a spindle for the wheel. The wheel is formed with a central opening or socket
32
which, in assembly, is pushed over the head
24
. Because of its frusto-conical surfaces
24
a,
the head passes the socket
32
as the head segments cam inward. The socket then snaps past the head and the wheel comes to rest against the end wall
20
with the retaining shoulder
28
engaging an adjacent annular surface of the wheel (FIG.
6
).
Preferably, the selector wheel
30
also has its circumference in the form of a tapered polygon blending into the shape of the nozzle cap
18
. The dimensions of the neck
26
and socket are such that the shoulder
28
on the head
24
holds the wheel in position. The wheel is freely turnable on the head/neck
26
.
Formed on the wheel, a foaming sleeve
38
is disposed parallel to the axis a and spaced away from that axis at equal off-set with the orifice
22
so that it may be positioned co-axial with the orifice
22
. Opposite the foaming sleeve
38
is a recessed shelf
40
partly cut away to form an open window
42
, the middle of the window being generally the same distance away from the axis a as the orifice
22
.
Preferably, the side walls
44
of the wheel, except for the notched-out portion
46
adjacent the window
42
, are the same length as the foaming sleeve
38
. Thus, there are no forward projections as would be the case if the thickness of the wheel were less than the length of the sleeve
38
.
In the operation of trigger sprayers embodying the invention, the nozzle cap is first turned until in the “on” indicia faces upward, causing the aforesaid internal channels to align. Next, the wheel
30
is turned so that either “foam” or “spray” (not shown) face upward, positioning either the sleeve
38
or the window
42
over the orifice
22
. To assure proper annular positioning registering of the wheel, detents, (not shown) such as nibs or dimples, may be provided on the face of the end wall
20
to cooperate with corresponding dimples or nibs on the rear wall of the wheel.
To provide for additional air to reach the rear of the foaming sleeve
38
, lateral inlets
48
may be provided in the rearward circumference of the sleeve.
FIG. 5
discloses the valving structure described hereabove. The delivery tube
50
is formed at its forward end with an enlarged flange over which the annular wall
52
inside the cap snaps. The forward end of the flange
50
is formed with inlet channels
54
which, when the pump is “on”, communicate to cut-out channels
56
in the inward annular boss
58
central of the cap. The end wall
20
is formed on its inside surface with swirl chamber
60
to which the channels
54
lead liquid tangentially of the chamber.
In the
FIG. 7
modification, the wheel
30
′ is formed with a plurality of sleeves
38
′ and windows
42
′ so that the discharge mode can be selected by rotating the wheel
30
′ on the axis a′. Because new modes come up every 90°, the adjustment requires less turning of the wheel than the
FIG. 2
embodiment. Appropriate indicia are formed on the wall
44
′. Appropriate air inlets (not shown) are notched onto the rear of the wheel for the sleeves
38
′ (as
48
in the first embodiment).
Variations in the invention are possible. Thus, while the invention has been shown in a limited number of embodiments, it is not so limited but is of a scope defined by the following claim language which may be broadened by an extension of the right to exclude others from making, using or selling the invention as is appropriate under the doctrine of equivalents.
Claims
- 1. A pump dispenser comprising:a. a hand-activated pump including a front end having an axis; b. a nozzle cap disposed at the front end, the cap having a front end wall formed with a spray orifice offset from the axis, and c. a sprayer/foamer selector wheel rotatably disposed on the axis and adjacent the front end wall, the wheel having offset from the axis a foam sleeve and a spaced sprayer window, the sleeve and window adapted to register selectively with the spray orifice as the wheel is rotated on the axis.
- 2. A pump dispenser as claimed in claim 1 wherein the axis is partly defined by a spindle on the cap formed with a head spaced from the front end wall to cooperate with a socket on the wheel to retain the wheel on the spindle.
- 3. A pump dispenser as claimed in claim 1 wherein the window is a cutout portion in the wheel.
- 4. A pump dispenser as claimed in claim 1 in which a plurality of windows and foam sleeves are alternately spaced about the wheel.
- 5. A pump dispenser as claimed in claim 1 wherein the cap is rotatable on the front end.
- 6. A pump dispenser as claimed in claim 1 wherein a portion of the sleeve proximate the front end of the cap is notched to permit air to enter the sleeve.
- 7. A pump dispenser comprising:a. a hand-activated pump having a forward nozzle bushing having an axis; b. a nozzle cap rotatably disposed on the bushing, the cap and bushing having supply channels which communicate for one rotary position of the cap and interrupt for another rotary position, the cap having a front end wall formed with a spray orifice offset from the axis of the bushing and a central forward spindle disposed on the axis, and c. a sprayer/foamer wheel rotatably mounted on the spindle and adjacent the front end wall, the wheel having offset from the axis a foam sleeve and a non-foam window adapted to register selectively with the spray orifice as the wheel is rotated on the spindle.
- 8. A pump dispenser as claimed in claim 7 wherein the spindle comprises a head spaced from the front end wall and a socket in the wheel.
- 9. A pump dispenser as claimed in claim 7 wherein the window is a cutout portion in the wheel.
- 10. A pump dispenser as claimed in claim 7 in which a plurality of windows and foam sleeves are alternately spaced about the wheel.
US Referenced Citations (17)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
63-193556 |
Dec 1988 |
JP |
1-110863 |
Jul 1989 |
JP |
2-61456 |
May 1990 |
JP |