This application is a U.S. National Phase of International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2009/052825, filed Mar. 11, 2009, which designates the U.S. and claims priority to German Patent Application No. DE 10 2008 044 897.4, filed Aug. 29, 2008, the entire contents of each of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to an automatic ice dispenser for mounting within a refrigeration device, in particular a domestic refrigeration device, and to a refrigeration device fitted with such an icemaker. Conventionally, such an ice dispenser comprises two functional groups, namely the actual ice generator, which comprises at least one cooled hollow mold and optionally means for metering water into the hollow mold and for ejecting the finished pieces of ice, and an ice storage container in which the finished pieces of ice are stored until use, optionally with means for ejecting the pieces of ice out of the container.
These two functional groups are each mounted separately in a refrigeration device. If they are not used, they should be easily removable by a user, and their reinstallation should also be possible conveniently and safely. One problem here is that the ice generator generally has significantly smaller dimensions than the ice storage container and tends to be mounted at a rather inaccessible point close to the back wall in a refrigeration device. This makes its installation and removal difficult. For a user who needs space in the refrigeration device temporarily, it is simplest to remove just the ice storage container and to leave the ice generator in place. This is unsatisfactory, because the ice generator cannot be used and is merely taking up space. In order to ensure that the ice generator does not produce any ice when the ice storage container is not there to receive it, a sensor has to be provided which automatically switches off the ice generator in the absence of the ice storage container.
The object of the present invention is to provide an ice dispenser which is easier to install and remove and in which there is no risk of the ice generator operating in the absence of the ice storage container.
The object is achieved firstly in that, in an ice dispenser comprising an ice storage container housing and an ice generator which comprises at least one hollow mold which can be filled with water, the ice storage container housing and the ice generator are combined into one modular unit. In this way, both can be installed and removed together, and the outlay associated with the installation and removal of the ice generator no longer applies. Since the ice generator is always taken out together with the ice storage container housing, there is no need for any means to prevent operation of the ice generator in the absence of the ice storage container.
In order to ensure that the ice storage container housing and the ice generator are assembled correctly, the two can have intermeshing contours which, if possible, permit assembly only in a single configuration.
For cooling the hollow mold, a cold-air duct can be provided on the ice generator. This cold-air duct preferably has an outlet opening which opens into the ice storage container housing so that the air guided through the duct can also cool the stored ice downstream of the hollow mold.
The intermeshing contours can in particular be formed in that a wall of the ice generator, said wall delimiting the cold-air duct, engages with a complementary recess of the ice storage container housing.
The cold-air duct preferably runs beneath the hollow mold. In this way, firstly, the hollow mold is cooled efficiently and, secondly, the cold air, after passing the hollow mold without being diverted substantially, can pass into the ice storage container, which is preferably arranged somewhat lower than the hollow mold so that ice from the hollow mold can pass under the effect of gravity into the ice storage container.
The ice storage container housing and the ice generator are preferably fastened to a common support member. The common support member may in particular form a back wall of the ice dispenser.
An upstream portion of the cold-air duct, via which cold air can be fed to the ice generator, may usefully be formed on the support member.
If the support member is a back wall of the ice dispenser, then it is useful if the upstream portion is delimited on the one hand by the back wall of the ice dispenser and on the other by a back wall of the refrigeration device housing.
To seal the upstream portion, a wall of the upstream portion may usefully be formed by two adjacent ribs and a sealing strip inserted into an intermediate space between the ribs. This sealing strip may tightly adjoin the back wall of the refrigeration device or another suitable wall surface.
The ice storage container housing is preferably divided into a first cavity for accommodating the ice and a second cavity in which a drive motor of a conveyor tool, which is arranged in the first cavity and serves to eject the ice out of the storage container, is arranged.
This second cavity may be closed off by the support member, for example in order to protect the motor or other components installed in the second cavity from moisture.
For ejecting ice out of the hollow mold, the ice generator preferably has a pusher which can be moved through the hollow mold. This eliminates the need to move the hollow mold itself to eject the ice, and space which would otherwise have to be kept free for the movement of the hollow mold can be used for other purposes.
Between two hollow molds, an inclined surface sloping toward the ice storage container can be provided, onto which inclined surface pieces of ice pushed out of the hollow mold by the pusher can fall in order to slide down from there into the ice storage container.
A level sensor crossing an inlet opening of the ice storage container can be movably provided. When movement of the level sensor is obstructed by ice, the holding capacity of the ice storage container is exhausted. In this case, the ice generator has to be switched off.
A further object of the invention is a refrigeration device comprising an ice dispenser of the type described hereinabove, to the housing of which the ice generator is connected indirectly via the ice storage container housing or via a support member shared with the ice storage container housing. Since the ice generator cannot be mounted in the refrigeration device without the ice storage container housing, there is no possibility of it being operated inadvertently without it being possible for the ice produced to be received by the ice storage container.
Further features and advantages of the invention will emerge from the description of exemplary embodiments hereinbelow referring to the enclosed figures, in which:
The ice dispenser 3 essentially comprises two modules connected via a common back wall: an ice generator 5, in which pieces of ice are produced, and an ice storage container housing 6, in which they are stored until use.
The ice generator 5 includes a tray 7 in which a plurality of hollow molds having a circular-sector-shaped or semi-cylindrical cross section are formed. Finished pieces of ice which are ejected from the hollow molds by a drive mechanism (to be described in greater detail later) drop over a front edge of the tray 7 down into a storage chamber which fills a large part of the ice storage container housing 6. A motor 13 for driving a conveyor spiral 14, which extends through the storage chamber, and a grinder 15, which is arranged immediately above the passage 4, is accommodated in a second chamber of the ice storage container housing 6.
Forming the rear area of the ice storage container housing 6 is a chamber, open to the rear, of which a cover 12 and a partially obliquely sloping front wall 16 can be seen in
Formed on the lower edge of each side wall of the ice storage container housing 6 are two recesses 58, 59 which are provided in order to receive ribs projecting from side walls of the body of the refrigeration device and in this way anchor the housing 6 in the body.
Formed in a vertical region of the back wall 18 is a circular opening in which a flatly cylindrical coupling piece 19 is rotatably held. The conveying spiral 14 engages non-rotatably with the coupling piece 19 on the front side thereof. On a rear side of the coupling piece 19 (which cannot be seen in
Rotating the spiral 14 pushes the ice pieces in the drawer 10 to a dispensing opening (not visible in the figure) at the front end of the drawer. When the drawer is in the pushed-in position (
Two indentations 26, one of which is visible in
The motor 13 and the electromagnet 23 are followed in the representation of
A slightly forwardly sloping inclined surface 31 furnished here on its back edge with eight notches 32 in total is joined to the top edge of the front wall 29.
The shell 27 is provided in order to receive the previously mentioned tray 7 while maintaining an air gap between the underside of the tray 7 and the base of the shell 27. The tray 7 comprises eight hollow molds 33, corresponding to the number of notches 32, which are substantially semi-cylindrical in cross section. A shaft 34, on which eight fingers 35 (see
A back wall 37 of the ice dispenser is shown in
Ribs 41 projecting from the rear side of the back wall 37 delimit a cold-air duct 44 which is fed by an evaporator (not shown) arranged below the ice dispenser 3 in the refrigeration device. The ribs 41 are each arranged in pairs and delimit a groove in which a flexible sealing strip 42 is clamped. The sealing strip projects beyond the ribs 41 toward the back wall of the body of the refrigeration device so that when installed it touches this back wall and in this way seals off the cold-air duct 44.
An opening 43 formed between the ribs 41 in the back wall 37 opens into the depression 28 of the shell. In
A large part of the air blown in leaves the intermediate space via the slots 30 in the front wall 29 of the shell 27. Since the slots lie below the level of the cover of the ice storage container housing 6, the air passing through is for the most part guided into the drawer 10 and keeps the ice pieces stored therein frozen.
In front of the front wall 29 of the shell 27 a wire bracket 47 can be seen which is suspended on the one hand in the motor and circuit housing 36 and on the other in a frame plate 48 which is in turn screwed to a narrow side of the shell 7 facing away from the housing 36. The wire bracket 47 is connected in the housing 36 to a motor and to a switch. The control circuit is configured to raise the wire bracket 47 with the aid of the motor before each ejection of ice from the shell and to lower it again after each ejection. If with the aid of the switch it is detected that the wire bracket 47 does not reach the rest position shown in
The frame plate 48 also forms a bearing 49 for the shaft 34 and supports a spring-loaded pin 50 which engages with a small hole on a side cheek of the shell 27. When the pin 50 is pressed against the force of the spring into the frame plate 48, the shell 27 can be pulled down in a forward direction from a rib of the back wall 37 (hidden in the Figure), which supports it on its rear edge, and removed.
The ice generator 5 and the storage container housing 6 are combined mechanically via the back wall 37 to form a unit which can be inserted into the refrigeration device and removed again only as a whole. As a consequence of the shared electrical supply of the motor 13 and of the components in the housing 36 via the plug-in connector 57, the electrical connections for both functional groups can also be established and disconnected again in a single action.
With the aid of the view shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2008 044 897 | Aug 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2009/052825 | 3/11/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/14/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/022989 | 3/4/2010 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3952539 | Hanson | Apr 1976 | A |
6742353 | Ohashi | Jun 2004 | B2 |
7204092 | Azcarate Castrellon | Apr 2007 | B2 |
7509818 | Anselmino | Mar 2009 | B2 |
7614244 | Venkatakrishnan | Nov 2009 | B2 |
8196418 | Kim | Jun 2012 | B2 |
8683822 | Kang | Apr 2014 | B2 |
20060112715 | Chung | Jun 2006 | A1 |
20060260345 | Coulter | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20060260351 | Coulter et al. | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20060266067 | Anderson | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20070089441 | Ito | Apr 2007 | A1 |
20070227176 | Anell et al. | Oct 2007 | A1 |
20080148762 | Guarino et al. | Jun 2008 | A1 |
20090049858 | Lee | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20100161137 | Kim | Jun 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
202004016966 | Apr 2006 | DE |
102006017803 | Oct 2007 | DE |
WO2008020707 | Feb 2008 | KR |
WO 2008082129 | Jul 2008 | KR |
WO2008082129 | Jul 2008 | KR |
WO 2008082129 | Jul 2008 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110138841 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |