Not Applicable
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is directed to surface cleaning equipment, and more particularly to a low profile side squeegee assembly for surface cleaning equipment.
2. Background
Surface maintenance vehicles and cleaning devices have a long history subject to gradual innovation and improvement toward improved and oftentimes automated performance in removing debris and contamination from floors. These vehicles and devices may be self-powered, towed, or pushed, and/or manually powered and may carry a human operator during cleaning operations. Such vehicles and devices include scrubbers, extractors, sweepers and vacuums, as well as combinations thereof, intended for cleaning, scrubbing, wiping and/or drying a portion of a substantially flat surface both indoors and outdoors. Many such vehicles and devices employ a combination of squeegee assemblies for wiping dry a floor which has been cleaned by application of a cleaning solution of water and a detergent in conjunction with scrubbing action of one or more moving brushes. The squeegee assemblies are generally placed in various locations on the vehicle, including the rear and the sides.
The vertical profile of the side squeegee assembly generally limits how close the vehicle can get to walls and other objects. Particularly troublesome are so-called “toe kicks”, which are typically present in where cabinetry or the like does not touch the floor, but has a recessed area to partially accommodate a persons foot (allowing one to stand close to the cabinet). They are also found in supermarkets to prevent damage from shopping carts to displays and freezer doors. A toe kick may have a vertical clearance beneath it of perhaps 100 mm, and the recess may extend from the wall by perhaps 100 mm. Generally, a surface maintenance vehicle is unable to clean under the toe kicks, requiring that floor underneath the toe kicks be swept and mopped manually by hand. In a large grocery store or warehouse, the additional cleaning step required by the toe kicks can be inconvenient, time-consuming and expensive.
The difficulty in accommodating toe kicks stems in part from the manner in which the side squeegee assembly is supported. Generally, the side squeegees are held in place by a four-bar suspension, which is usually mounted directly above the center of the squeegee blade. The suspension is typically spring-loaded using tension springs, and ensures that the squeegee blade maintains proper contact with the floor as the vehicle travels over any irregularities in the floor. In addition, the squeegee suspension ensures that the squeegee blade is also maintained in the proper angular orientation with respect to the floor, in order to optimize the effectiveness of the squeegee. Further, the squeegee suspension should be self-adjusting, to accommodate pad and brush wear.
Although an obvious modification might be to move the four-bar suspension from directly above the center of the squeegee blade, away from the sides and toward the center of the vehicle, leaving the squeegee blade protruding out the sides of the vehicle, it turns out to be ineffective, and a modified four-bar suspension performs poorly.
Accordingly, there exists a need for a side squeegee suspension with a limited height total, with a low profile extending out to a minimum distance, which conforms to different brush heights and pad thicknesses, which self-adjusts to accommodate pad and brush wear, which is protected from obstacles, which has a minimum gap between the squeegee blade assembly and the pad or brush, and which contains substantially all the cleaning solution within the range of straight forward travel to a 90-degree turn.
The present embodiment is a device for maintaining a ground surface, comprising: a housing with a peripheral edge; a squeegee assembly; a plurality of torsion elements connected between said peripheral edge and said assembly, and configured to apply a downward biased force to maintain the squeegee assembly in contact with the ground.
A further embodiment is a device for maintaining a ground surface, comprising: a housing having a front, rear and side peripheral edges; at least one squeegee assembly having first and second longitudinal ends; and a plurality of connecting elements connecting said first and second ends to said housing, said connecting elements providing a bias force between said housing and said assembly to urge said assembly into contact with said surface.
A further embodiment is a device for maintaining a ground surface, comprising: a housing; and a squeegee assembly having a blade with an attachment edge and a ground contact edge, said ground contact edge being inclined inwardly toward said housing.
There are other features of the invention defined by the claims. This summary is for convenience of the reader in becoming familiar with the subject matter.
In effect this embodiment shows how the housing may be configured as two housing, an upper 111, and lower 113. The upper housing being joined at edge 114 to the lower and the lower having a peripheral edge 115 where the squeegee 24 is typically attached, thereby defining a space partially enclosed by the squeegee.
In order to clean under the toe kick of a cabinet, or the like, the lower housing must be able to clear the limited space defined between the ground the and the occluding object/cabinet. This is possible if the lower housing has an upper surface 117 whose distance from the ground is less than that of the defined space. Prior art devices could not accomplish this and, at the same time, provide a bias force of the squeegee on the ground because the mechanism for applying the bias force could not fit in the defined space within the lower housing, or in some other way it would create interference with that housing being able to clear the toe kick space and clean thereunder.
Note that the exemplary torsion spring assemblies 32 can be substituted with any other variants to provide a low-profile and downward force from the nozzle housing 11 to the squeegee holders 23. For instance, a torsion bar can be biased to provide the biasing downward force. For instance, a torsion bar or element (resilient element attached at its ends) can be substituted for the assembly 32 though it is not the preferred solution.
An exemplary torsion spring assembly 32 is shown in exploded view in
Analogous to parts described in the previous paragraph, a bolt 48 extends through a spacer washer 45, through a spacer tube 46 located in a hole 47 in the slotted link 44, through another spacer washer 45, and screws into threads located in the squeegee holder 23. In
Once the parts in
It should be noted that the embodiment of the torsion spring 41 in
In some known vehicles, the squeegee assembly is generally supported at the center, usually by a four-bar suspension. This center support distributes a downward force roughly uniformly over the squeegee blade, and as a result, the blade is well supported, and generally good performance is achieved. In order to provide a low-profile squeegee assembly that can fit under toe kicks, the linkages that provide a connection to the frame may be moved away from the center to the ends of the squeegee assembly. It is found that there potentially may be some undesirable twisting of the blade at the center, if it is supported only at the ends. It is also found that a slight inclination of the squeegee assemblies may counteract any potential twisting at the center, by changing the geometry at which the blade contacts the floor.
This inclination is difficult to see in
The description of the invention and its applications as set forth herein is illustrative and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Variations and modifications of the embodiments disclosed herein are possible, and practical alternatives to and equivalents of the various elements of the embodiments would be understood to those of ordinary skill in the art upon study of this patent document. These and other variations and modifications of the embodiments disclosed herein may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/550,884, filed Mar. 5, 2004.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60550884 | Mar 2004 | US |