The present invention relates to the liquid filtration method and means of a liquid filtering lid placed on a liquid dispensing container.
There are many different styles of personal individual consumed water or liquid filter containers available in the market and patented that include plastic and/or metal containers or bottles with various styles of water filters. The personal water or liquid filters either go down inside the water or liquid container or are part of the cap system of the water/liquid filtering container. There is some separate lid or cap water or liquid filters that can be attached, usually screwed on, to various bottles. In most all of these personal water filtering dispensers the water or liquid is drawn out either through a straw type device; sucked out; squeezed out the top center of the container or partially gravity fed out the top center of the personal water or liquid filtering container. There is not a personal individual consumed tilt-to-pour gravity flow liquid filtering lid patented or on the market.
The present invention is a tilt-to-pour snap-on; screw-on and/or multi-size stretch and snap over personal consumed or nasal flushing liquid filtering lid. Tilt-to-pour lids are those lids that are usually snapped on to the lip of plastic cups or mugs, such as the Tervis brand, and also seen as lids placed onto plastic or paper coffee cups at fast food restaurants or convenience stores. The liquid consumer tilts the liquid container with lid over and the consumer drinks or pours from the lid outlet at or near the edge of the lid, with the majority of the liquid gravity flowing out the lid outlet. These same tilt-to-pour lids can be placed on soft drink dispenser cups. Childs “sippy cups” is another example of a tilt-to-drink liquid dispenser. Another application is where the liquid might not be directly consumed but rather personal nasal poured such as in a “neti pot” style application where there is the need for a one micron or smaller filter (NSF 53 or 58) to filter out harmful bacteria and germs that may infect the nasal lining.
This personal water or liquid tilt-to pour filtering lid (tilt filter lid) can be placed on any cup, tumbler, mug or container that the lid is sized and has the correct dimensions to fit snugly onto the lip of the container. In patent U.S. Pat. No. 8,464,633 and Application US 2008/0067120 both of the filtering caps are center suction or squeeze type filtering bottle or container caps and are not tilt-to-pour style lids. The lid top of the tilt filter lid in many instances has a slide stopper device to block the containers liquid from coming out the top liquid outlet.
The design of the tilt-to-pour filter system and liquid delivery to the user is different than other personal top center liquid filtering dispensers. The filter system of the tilt-to-pour filter lid needs to be specifically configured so that when the tilt filter lid is placed onto the tilt-to-pour container the unfiltered liquid that comes from the container can flow efficiently and effectively into the liquid filtering section, then out the tilt-to-pour filter outlet that is near or on the top edge of the lid. As the container is tilted over and the user drinks or nasal pours the liquid, the majority of the liquid flowing out the lid outlet or nasal spout is gravity fed. The inlet of the underneath filter lid filtering section is placed close to the “sipping” drinking or nasal pouring side of the container so that the unfiltered container liquid flows into the filter section when the tilt filter container is tilted over by the user. This tilt over liquid catching filter inlet configuration is especially effective when the liquid in the tilt filter is low and there is the need to get most of the final liquid into and through the filter and out the tilt filter outlet to the tilt-to-pour lid user. When drinking the tilt-to-pour filter lid container user will in most case not need to apply much, if any, sucking of the containers liquid out the tilt filter lid outlet to have the tilt filter lid liquid flow in a comfortable mostly gravity fed liquid delivery.
One embodiment of the present invention is to have semi disposable tilt-to-pour filter lids that are used at fast food or convenience stores. The tilt filter lid may be given to or sold to the user. The tilt-to-pour lid filter user can then get tap water or other liquid in the provided container and then places the tilt-to-pour filter lid on to the liquid container. The use of the tilt-to-pour filter lid would be very useful in geographies where the drinking water may be considered unpleasant or possibly harmful to drink.
Another embodiment of the present invention is to have an additive dispenser added to the manufactured tilt-to-pour lid assembly. The additive dispenser is usually designed where the additive is added to the liquid after the liquid has been filtered, but not yet poured by the tilt filter lid user. The tilt filter lid additive may be in a tablet, powder or possibly liquid form and the additive filter may have a dispensing control screen or sieve.
Still, another embodiment is to have the tilt-to-pour filter lid placed upon a neti pot container that is used to flush out nasal sinuses through a pouring spout that is at or near the top of the neti pot container. The filter, usually a one micron or less filtering mechanism, is placed between the flushing container liquid and the outflow entrance of the spout where the flushing liquid is filtered as the filter-to-pour lid covered neti pot container is tilted over and the flushing fluid flows out of the spout outlet.
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