The invention is directed to an intake nozzle that is placed on the end of a vacuum hose and is inserted into a septic tank or other reservoir of liquid waste so that the liquid waste can be sucked up into a vacuum tank on a pumper truck of the type that are used throughout the septic service industry.
Typically, the truck has a vacuum tank with a capacity of e.g., 3,600 gallons. A vacuum pump evacuates the tank to about minus 18 to minus 21 inches of mercury (about minus 10 psig), and the hose inserted into the septic tank sucks the waste up through the hose into the tank on the truck. It typically take about an hour to remove the liquid from a typical septic tank this way. Often, there are blockages in the vacuum hose that have to be dealt with and that delays the process. For deeper, vertical septic tanks, the weight of the liquid waste in the hose slows the suction action, and also creates weight that the pumper operator has to contend with when manipulating the hose. At the end of this process, the pumper operator has to clean out the hose, put the hose back on the truck, and drive to a septic disposal facility to dump the contents of the tank.
There is thus a need to increase the efficiency of the septic service process, i.e., reduce the time to empty the customer's septic tank, and to avoid problems with blockages in the suction hose and with having to manipulate the hose.
Accordingly, it is an object to provide an improvement for suction pumping of liquid waste to avoid the drawbacks present in the current systems.
It is another object to provide an intake nozzle for the suction hose that eases the flow of the liquid waste through the suction hose into the storage tank on the vacuum pumper truck, which reduces the time to pump out the customer's septic tank, and which reduces the problems of blockage and spillage.
According to an important aspect of the present invention, an intake nozzle is fitted onto the distal end of the suction hose, and incorporates a mechanism that mixes air into the liquid at the intake point. This action also floats the nozzle at or near the top surface of the liquid waste which makes it easier for the employee to manipulate the vacuum hose. This tool has been found to decrease the loading time from the typical one hour to about 24 minutes.
In a practical embodiment, the vacuum intake nozzle of this invention has a generally vertical tubular body, with a hollow rotor (or canister) inside, with the rotor having a number of twist or spiral vanes on its perimeter. An air intake tube on the outside of the tubular body penetrates the body or housing and connects with a hollow upper spindle or axle of the rotor. The intake tube can have a valve for regulating air flow. A bottom axle can also be present to serve as a rotary bearing for the lower end of the canister or rotor. There are one or more air outlet ports on the bottom part of the canister. The tubular body continues down a short ways and may have a perforated guard cap or cover to allow the liquid in but to block large solid chunks from getting into the nozzle. In some versions, the air outlet ports can be nozzles directing the air flow to produce rotation.
In operation, the hose is lowered into the septic tank, and the nozzle penetrates below the top surface. The vacuum pump in the pumper truck is turned on, which evacuates the tank, and eventually creates a suction inside the hose. This suction causes the liquid waste to start to move up into the nozzle and up the vacuum hose towards the pumper truck. The flow of the liquid past the rotor vanes causes the hollow canister to rotate, and the reduced pressure inside the nozzle causes the air inside the canister (which is at one atmosphere) to exit out the air outlet nozzles where it mixes with the liquid waste. The mixed-in air reduces the weight of the column of liquid waste within the hose, so there is a quicker and more consistent flow up into the waste storage tank on the truck. Once the liquid waste reaches the tank, the air quickly separates from it and is exhausted out by the vacuum pump. A water jet can be included at the lower end of the nozzle, to inject water into the liquid waste. This can facilitate pumping out of denser, heavy waste material near the bottom of the septic tank. The shape and dimensions of the nozzle can vary.
Most generally stated, the nozzle has an elongated tubular body or housing that defines a housing axis, which is usually oriented vertically. The housing has an upper end adapted to secure to a distal end of the suction hose, a lower end having at least one opening (to permit inflow of the liquid waste) so that the waste can be drawn up through the intake nozzle and suction hose into the storage tank of the pumper truck.
The rotor is disposed within the housing and has its rotational axis aligned with the housing axis. The rotor includes a hollow generally cylindrical canister which has an upper end, a generally cylindrical side wall, and a lower end, with the lower end being provided with one or more air outlet ports communicating the interior of the hollow canister with the quantity of liquid waste that is present in the nozzle.
An air inlet tube enters the side wall of the housing and has its outer end adapted to communicate with ambient air. The inner end of the air inlet tube is aligned with the axis of the canister to communicate with the interior thereof to permit ambient air to be drawn into the interior of the canister and thence into the liquid waste in the lower end of the housing. This action serves to aerate the liquid waste being drawn through the intake nozzle to facilitate passage of the waste through the suction hose into the storage tank.
The rotor may include one or more spiral vanes affixed onto the cylindrical side wall of the canister and adapted to induce rotation of said rotor when the liquid waste is drawn through the intake nozzle past the rotor. In some possible embodiments, the air outlet ports can be in the form of air jets to direct the air so as to impart rotary motion onto the rotor.
Preferably, the lower end of the housing includes a guard cap in which are formed a multiplicity of perforations, such that the liquid waste enters the lower end of the housing only through said perforations. The perforations are small enough so that large chunks of solid waste are blocked from entering into the intake nozzle. These may be a series of holes, or may be a grid or screen.
An optional water jet nozzle can be disposed on the end cap and oriented to direct a water jet towards the rotor, which can facilitate movement of the liquid waste near the bottom of the septic tank where the waste is heavy and dense. In that case, a hose connection extends from water jet nozzle to permit connection to a water hose.
The guard cap can include a rotary support member, i.e., bearing disposed on the axis of the nozzle housing to engage the axis of the rotor and permit free rotation of the rotor.
The inlet tube includes a valve to permit control of flow of air through the air inlet tube. In a favorable embodiment, where the housing upper end has a diameter adapted to match the associated suction hose, the housing has a bell portion of the housing, where the rotor is contained, and the bell portion can be of a greater diameter than the upper end of the housing.
One particular preferred embodiment is illustrated in the accompanying Drawing figures, which illustrate one implementation of the main principles of the invention.
The intake nozzle may include a water jet nozzle 34 disposed on the end cap 38, here oriented to direct a water jet towards the rotor 40 within the nozzle body, and a hose connector 36 adapted to permit connection to a water hose (not shown here).
The lower end of the rotor 40 is shown in
In practice, the operator will attach the intake nozzle 20 to the suction hose 12, extend the suction hose 12 from the truck 10 and then turn on the vacuum pump. Several minutes are required to evacuate the vacuum tank of the truck down to the operating pressure, e.g., minus 18 inches of mercury. The operator lowers the hose down into the customer's septic tank 16 until the lower tip of the nozzle is submerged in the liquid. Once the pressure in the vacuum tank 14 and hose 12 are reduced sufficiently, the vacuum will start to draw the liquid waste into the nozzle and thence up into the hose. The reduced pressure within the intake nozzle 20 induces a flow of ambient air into the ambient air intake tube 30, and from there into the hollow canister 42 of the rotor. The air escapes from the canister through the outlet ports 54 into the liquid waste as it passes vertically upward past the rotor. The moving liquid waste contacts the vanes 44 and spins the rotor. The combination of the air injection from the air outlet ports 44 and agitation from the spinning rotor 40 mixes air bubbles into the rising liquid waste. This action reduces the weight of the column of liquid inside the hose due to the presence of the air bubbles and also assists in preventing coagulation of materials in the hose so that blockages do not from. The lighter weight of the column of fluid also makes it easier for the operator to lift and manipulate the hose during the pumping operation.
Once the liquid reaches the vacuum tank 14 on the truck, the air bubbles quickly separate from the liquid and the air is pumped back into the ambient. Because the presence of injected air makes the liquid less dense while in the vacuum hose, the liquid pumps much faster, so that the usual pumping time of one hour is reduced, usually to about 24 minutes.
When the septic tank 16 is pumped out to near the bottom, the operator may apply water under pressure to the optional water jet 34, which can assist in thinning out accumulations of denser waste at the bottom of the septic tank.
A number of variations of the intake nozzle of the present invention are possible. For example, a narrow nozzle having a three-inch diameter tubular body or housing, to match the diameter of the vacuum hose 12, can have a smaller rotor, e.g., with a 1½ inch diameter body or canister. The ambient air intake can connect at the lower side of the canister, instead of at the top end, and can serve as a main support spindle for the canister. As another alternative, the housing or body of the intake nozzle can have an elongated lower end portion that extends below the location of the rotor. In other versions, the air outlet ports may be present on the side wall of the canister rather than only at the bottom, and in other versions the air outlets may be in the form of air jets directing the air in a direction to assist in rotating the canister.
While the illustrated embodiment is adapted for use with a pumper truck, a nozzle of this construction could find other applications where material is to be picked up and moved through a vacuum hose or suction hose.
While the invention has been described in terms of a preferred embodiment, many additional variations thereof are possible and would present themselves to persons of skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3969446 | Franklin, Jr. | Jul 1976 | A |
4408724 | Meyer | Oct 1983 | A |
4685868 | Bodensteiner et al. | Aug 1987 | A |
4793386 | Sloan | Dec 1988 | A |
4919849 | Litz et al. | Apr 1990 | A |
5249688 | Hwang | Oct 1993 | A |
5916491 | Hills | Jun 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150376890 A1 | Dec 2015 | US |