The present invention refers to an ice-crusher which can be used either at home or professionally and be useful in kitchens, hotels, restaurants, guesthouses and communities in general.
At present a great number of domestic and industrial apparatus is available which can be used to prepare and treat foods, e.g. beaters, blenders, slicers, meat choppers, juicers, mixers, etc.
In time, these apparatus have become more and more versatile and reliable, in particular with regard to the possibility of carrying out several operations with one multifunction device.
However, most tools used in apparatus for preparing and treating foods do not provide optimum functionality. For example, in the case of ice-crushers, conventional apparatus usually comprise a grinding hole made of melted aluminium, the hopper of the grinding hole including a semicircle feeding collar to the top of which a lever is hinged which pushes ice towards a cutting unit. The cutting unit includes a rotating disc to which a cutting blade is attached, said cutting blade being integral with a driving shaft horizontally positioned relative to the machine, whereas the product is released through an opening at the bottom of the grinding hole.
However, prior art devices do not permit to grind ice with different kinds of thickness, consistency and size, as requested in the last few years on the market; as known, the request is getting more and more widespread to use one single device to break up ice into pieces of different size and thickness, from the most small pieces (mainly requested to prepare water-ice) to the thickest and most consistent pieces (particularly used to prepare cocktails and to present some products and courses, such as those based on fresh fish).
Therefore, the general object of the present invention is to solve the above mentioned technical problems of prior art devices in a new, extremely simple, cheap and particularly functional way. In particular, the object of the invention is to provide an ice-crusher which permits to break up ice into pieces of different size and thickness by using a single tool.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an ice-crusher which permits to protect the drive motor against the possible seepage of water from the cutting unit and against the mechanical stresses produced by the ice blocks being ground, which usually compromise the normal motor life.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a particularly effective, handy and safe ice-crusher which, due to the achieved advantages, is extremely small and involves considerably reduced production costs relative to conventional ice-crushers.
These and other objects are provided by means of an ice-crusher according to claim 1, which is referred to for the sake of brevity; other technical features of the apparatus are set out in the alleged dependent claims.
The structural and functional features of the present invention and the advantages thereof with respect to prior art will become even clearer from the following description, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to the drawings, the whole ice-crusher is indicated with numeral 10 and it comprises a front portion 11 for inserting ice and collecting the ice pieces and a rear portion 12 consisting of a shaped covering 13 for an area containing the cutting unit and the motor driving such a unit.
A switch 14 for putting the apparatus 10 on and off is placed on the covering 13, said covering 13 resting on a shaped base 41 which absorbs the mechanical stresses transmitted by the apparatus 10 while working.
The front portion 11 of the ice-crusher 10 comprises a grinding hole 15, normally made of melted aluminium, into which the ice (usually in the shape of cubes of various sizes) to be ground is inserted.
The hopper of the grinding hole 15 consists of a semicircle feeding collar 16 onto to the top of which a lever 18 is hinged by means of a block 17. Said lever 18 is provided with a shaped handle 19 which, through the motion of a shaped plate 22, permits to push the ice into the cutting unit (which is provided inside the ice-crusher 10 and is described in detail below).
The lever 18 is interlocked with a microswitch 20 which prevents the user from approaching the inner grinding unit while the motor of the ice-crusher 10 is working. The ice being broken into pieces of different thickness, consistency and size is released through an opening at the bottom 21 of the grinding hole 15 which, in prior embodiments of the ice-crusher 10, is provided with a protection grid to prevent the user from inserting the user's fingers into the working area.
With reference to
In particular, the above mentioned cutting unit comprises a flange 27 supporting the driving shaft 26 on which a plurality of bearings 28 is attached which are serially set up onto respective spacers 29, 30 of elastic safety and seal rings 31, 32.
The bearings 28 are set up adjacent to the driving shaft 26, while the disc 23 rotates integrally with the shaft 26 by inserting one or more cylindrical plug 33. According to the present invention, the distance of the rotating disc 23 from the blade 25 can be axially adjusted by the user simply by means of a key, without having to open the covering 13 of the ice-crusher 10.
In this regard, a horizontal motor 34 is provided inside the covering 13, said motor 34 being staggered relative to the working and/or driving shaft 26. The horizontal motor 34 also transmits motion to the rotating disc 23 by means of a belt 39, thus leaving room, on the upper portion and opposite the cutting blade 25, inside the covering 13 of the ice-crusher 10 for the user to operate on the device for regulating the thickness of the ground ice.
Such a regulating device comprises, in particular, a ring nut 35 locking the pulley of the driving shaft 26. Inside said ring nut 35 a thickness regulation screw 36 is provided which is integral with the driving shaft 26 and with a thickness regulation bush 37 which is adjacent to the cutting blade 25.
The operator can thus act on the screw 36 by means of a key from outside the covering 13 to regulate axially the distance of the disc 23 from the blade 25.
Such an operation can be easily carried out by the user due to the presence of the hole 38 on the covering 13 axially with respect to the regulation screw 36.
This arrangement also protects the motor 34 against the possible seepage of water from the cutting unit and against the mechanical stresses produced by the ice pieces being ground, which would compromise the motor life.
Finally, the rev reduction of the motor 34 on the driving shaft 26 by means of the belt 39 also permits to employ a manifold motor 34 (not an induction motor, as in conventional ice-crushers), with considerable operating advantages, such as a high number of revolutions (therefore, the rev reduction increases the torque transmitted to the driving shaft 26, thus increasing the effectiveness thereof), better self-cooling (for an even harder use of the motor 34), reduced dimensions as well as production and operating costs.
According to the invention, in the ice release area corresponding to the lower portion 21 of the feeding hole 15 a cup 40 is provided to collect the crushed product, such a cup also being interlocked with a microswitch, so that, by removing the cup, the ice-crusher 10, if turned on, automatically stops.
The use of the collecting cup 40 helps to release ice which, otherwise (as in conventional ice-crushers), tends to get stuck in the protection grid which is placed adjacent to the lower portion 21 of the hole 15. The characteristics of the ice-crusher of the present invention, as well as the advantages thereof become apparent from the above description.
Anyway, it is clear that several variations can be made to the ice-crusher of the invention, without thereby departing from the scope of the invention, and that, when practically carrying out the invention, the materials, shapes and dimensions of the illustrated details can vary according to the user's needs and be changed with other technically equivalent ones.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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VI2003A0181 | Sep 2003 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2398933 | Grant | Apr 1946 | A |
2610803 | Bayston | Sep 1952 | A |
2648203 | Heuser et al. | Sep 1953 | A |
2865571 | Ferdon | Dec 1958 | A |
2905397 | De Angelis et al. | Sep 1959 | A |
3098613 | Hellyer | Jul 1963 | A |
3415457 | Echols, Jr. | Dec 1968 | A |
3534915 | Clark | Oct 1970 | A |
4113190 | Fudman | Sep 1978 | A |
4589599 | Williams et al. | May 1986 | A |
5261469 | Severson | Nov 1993 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050087635 A1 | Apr 2005 | US |