The present invention relates to a lever-operated dispensing unit for use in espresso machines, as well as an espresso machine comprising one or more lever-operated dispensing units.
Lever-operated units, also known as piston dispensers, are well known in the field of espresso machines as they promoted the birth and development of espresso coffee, whereby a machine with such dispenser is known by many operators in the field as the real Italian espresso machine.
The term lever-operated dispenser unit for an espresso machine, is intended to designate a device comprising a housing, mainly extending in a vertical direction, between a lower base and an upper cross member, a shaft located within said housing and freely translating along said vertical extent. The shaft has an upper end and a lower end. A first opening is formed in said lower base of the housing and the lower end of the shaft extends through said opening below the base. A disk, acting as a piston, is attached to the lower end of said shaft perpendicularly to the vertical axis thereof. A second opening formed in the upper cross member of said housing, is aligned with the upper end of said shaft that protrudes therefrom.
An elastic element, practically a helical spring, is fitted coaxial with the shaft between said disk carried by the lower end of the shaft and said upper cross member of the housing. A lever in the form of a rod, is operably connected, with one of its ends, to said upper end of said shaft with the interposition of a cam mechanism mounted to a pin whose axis is perpendicular to the vertical axis of the shaft.
Finally, the device is equipped with coupling members located at said first opening of the base of the housing and adapted to receive and retain a portafilter for a given dose of coffee grounds, as well as members adapted to actuate the hot water supply in the portafilter, when the latter is placed against the opening of the base.
In order to prepare coffee with the above discussed lever-operated dispenser, once the portafilter has been positioned, with the prescribed dose of coffee grounds, under the opening of the base of the housing, the operator will manually pull down the lever thereby imparting an angular displacement thereto relative to the housing.
By the aforementioned cam mechanisms, the lever will lift the shaft whose end has the disk attached thereto. The latter will compress the elastic member in the housing between the disk and the upper cross member of the cage-like housing.
The angular displacement of the lever is stopped by the cam mechanism when the compression of the elastic element reaches a predetermined value and the cam mechanism reaches a section of the profile that corresponds to a stall position for the lever.
Then by imparting a slight angular displacement to the lever, the operator will exit the stall position and start dispensing of the beverage.
This will occur by automatic actuation of the hot water supply members, which supply hot water toward the portafilter and by expansion of the elastic element which releases the energy accumulated during compression on the disk, which now acts as a piston.
As the beverage is being dispensed, the expansion of the elastic element also causes the lever to return to its initial or stand-by position.
When the dose of coffee grounds is in the portafilter and the hot water flows through the dose to form the beverage, i.e. during normal operation of the dispenser, the angular return movement of the lever occurs gradually and slowly without causing any danger to the operator, who is close to the machine.
It was found in practice that, particularly when several operators use the coffee machine, the lever may be displaced and the elastic element may be compressed, with no suitable dose of coffee grounds in the portafilter or with the portafilter not properly coupled under the opening of the base of the housing.
In this case, as the lever is moved away from its stall position, which automatically will start beverage dispensing, the lever will be suddenly and quickly returned to its initial position, as its travel cannot be slowed down by the opposition of the hot water flow through the beverage forming dose upon the disk-piston.
This will potentially create a danger for the operator, who may be hit by the free end of the lever, as the latter abruptly return to its initial or stand-by position.
In view of the above, an object of the present invention is to provide a lever- or piston-operated dispensing unit for use in espresso machines that does not cause the aforementioned danger if no dose of coffee grounds is located in the portafilter or if the portafilter is inadequately positioned or is not placed at all on the dispenser.
A further object of the invention is to provide a lever- or piston-operated dispensing unit for use with an espresso machine that provides the operator with an auxiliary force, if required, in carrying out the elastic element loading operation by imparting a power-assisted angular displacement of the lever.
These and other objects, as better explained hereafter, are fulfilled by a lever-actuated dispenser unit for espresso machines as defined in the accompanying claim 1.
The invention will be now described in greater detail with reference to a preferred embodiment thereof, given by way of exemplary illustration and without limitation, and shown in the annexed drawings, in which:
Referring to the aforementioned figures, and particularly to
A shaft 5 with an upper end 6 and a lower end 7 is placed in said housing 2, and freely translates along said vertical extent. A first opening 8 is formed in said lower basement 3 of the housing 2. The lower end 7 of the shaft 5 extends through said opening 8 below the base 3 by penetrating in a chamber 9 of a body 9a, having a passage 10 aligned with the opening 8 of the base 3.
A disk 11, which also acts as a piston, is attached to the lower end 7 of the shaft 5, by means of a threaded section 12, perpendicular to the vertical axis of the shaft. The piston disk 11 is equipped with conventional sealing rings 13, which are adapted to cooperate with the inner cylindrical wall of the chamber 9, while the beverage is being dispensed, as further explained below.
A second opening 14 formed in the upper cross member 4 of said housing 2, is aligned with the upper end 6 of the shaft 5 that projects out of it.
An elastic element, practically a helical spring 15, is placed coaxial with the shaft 5, between said disk 11 carried by the lower end 7 of the shaft 5 and said upper cross member 4 of the housing 2. A lever in the form of a rod 16, with a free end 16a and an opposite fork-shaped end 17, is mounted to the housing 2 via a pin 18 and is adapted to be angularly displaced about the axis X-X, coinciding with said pin 18, between a first stand-by position “A”, as shown in
The cams 19 and 20 are mounted to the same pin 18, and their profiles 21 and 22 are slidingly engaged with respective ball bearings 23 and 24 carried by the pin 25 which is transversely engaged in the hole 25a in the end 6 of the shaft 5.
The cams 19 and 20 mounted to the pin 18, and rigidly joined thereto, and the bearings 23 and 24 carried by the shaft 25 form a cam and cam follower mechanism that provides functional connection between the lever 16 and the upper end 6 of said shaft 5.
According to the invention, the rotor of a DC electric motor, generally referenced 26 in
According to a non-limiting embodiment, the aforementioned rotor is of the type comprising permanent magnets.
Referring to
The chamber 9 is in communication with a hot water source 30, via a conduit 31 that is shut off by a controllable valve 32.
The dispensing operation is set up by the operator by angularly displacing the lever 16 about the axis X-X, from its stand-by position A, as shown in
The latter causes the helical spring 15 to be compressed against the cross member 4 of the housing 2. The spring remains in this compressed position as long as the lever 16 remains in its stall position S as determined by a particular section of the profiles 21 and 22 of the cams 19 and 20.
When a beverage is to be prepared, a small thrust exerted on the lever 16 will cause it to exit the stall position, thereby releasing the spring 15 from its compression state, and causing the disk 11 to fall down into the chamber 9 and press the hot water through the dose of coffee grounds in the underlying portafilter 28. The dispensed beverage is collected in the cup 33.
At the same time as the disk-piston 11 moves down, the lever 16 is angularly moved back to the stand-by position A at a slower speed, due to the opposition against the disk 11 of the hot water flow that is forming the beverage within the chamber 9.
With such kind of movement, the angularly moving free end 16a of the lever 16 does not cause dangerous situations for the operator.
Conversely, if the portafilter 28 has been placed in a wrong position or with no dose of coffee grounds therein, the displacement of the lever 16 from the stall position “S” for dispensing the beverage will cause a quick return thereof to the stand-by position “A”, because no opposition force is exerted upon the disk-piston 11.
According to the invention, in these circumstances, the displacement of the lever 16 is braked by the DC motor 26, whose stator, in case of an entirely manual operating selection, is short-circuited. This is because the rotor which is fitted on the pin 18, is rotated by the rising shaft 5 and by the movement of the cams 19, 20, whose profiles are engaged with the cam followers formed by the ball bearings 23 and 24, and generates a magnetic field that is counteracted by the one induced in the short-circuited stator.
The safety of the operator is thus ensured even in this case of wrong placement of the unit.
According to an alternative embodiment of the invention, the motor 26 does not only act as a brake to counteract the fast upward movement of the lever 16 when the portafilter 28 is not properly attached or when there is no dose of coffee grounds, but may also act, being powered, as a servomotor acting on the lever 16 as it moves down under the load of the helical spring 15, when selected by the operator, e.g. with a selector 26a placed on the lever 16 itself. Here the axial coupling device 27 should afford rotary coupling in both directions of rotation.
According to a further alternative embodiment of the invention, the lever 16 may include a stress sensor, which senses the amount of force applied to the lever for angular displacement thereof and provides a corresponding signal, a receiving unit for receiving the signal corresponding to the amount of stress that has been sensed, a processing and transmitting unit for processing and transmitting a control signal for controlling power supply to said motor in proportion to the amount of the stress signal that has been sensed.
Accordingly, the coupling device 27, when the motor 26 is powered to provide partial servo assistance for manual actuation of the lever 16, must also include the possibility of a frictional operation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
102018000003883 | Mar 2018 | IT | national |