1. Field
This invention concerns a method and apparatus for mixing any of a wide variety of liquid or particulate materials such as colorant, e.g., a small amount, e.g., 1-10 cc. of the paint the color of which is to be imparted to caulking material contained in a conventional tube, pigment or organic dye, sand, grout; catalyst for two part caulking, or adhesive, or the like preferably in solution or suspension form, into viscous work material, particularly any of a variety of chemically composed base materials of caulking or sealing compound which may already be colored, or clear or white, and which may be used for caulking any structures, wherein the structural components of the apparatus are of unique but simple design and are adapted to accomplish the mixing very rapidly and directly within the work material retail container, i.e., in-situ in an off-the-shelf caulking tube, if so desired.
The word “caulk” as used herein encompasses air drying as well as catalyst curing sealant, adhesive beading and bordering, or insulating caulk or grout, or the like material, including polyurethane construction adhesive, acrylic/silicone the same color as the room. Where the paint is of a light shade in particular, it may be difficult to cover the material completely without multiple paint coats. Also, it is often necessary to do some additional caulking after the final coat of paint has been applied. In that event, the white caulking has to be painted over as the final step. Consequently, some paint dealers have undertaken to mix colorant into the caulking material by hand for certain customers, but considerable time and effort is involved and often results in inferior mixing and considerable clean up time.
The present invention provides a quick, effective, convenient and cleaner method and apparatus for substantially automatically performing the mixing operation.
2. Prior Art
Applicant is unaware of any prior apparatus or method of the type disclosed and claimed herein which is designed to mix colorant directly into caulking compound or the like contained in its retail tube.
The present invention, in one of its preferred embodiments comprises a mixer head means having a mixer shaft rotatably or non-rotatably mounted axially therethrough and having a mixing impeller or blade means affixed to a distal end thereof, a proximal end of said shaft being adapted for engagement with a power source for reciprocating said shaft and impeller means axially, said head means having a first annular sealing surface adapted for making a sealing connection to a second annular sealing surface on an open filler end portion of a tube of viscous caulking compound or the like whereby the combination of said head means and tube is completely portable and independent of other structure, and wherein said shaft with said mixing impeller or blade means is adapted to be reciprocated thru the viscous compound contained in the tube substantially the entire length of the tube to rapidly and intimately mix the compound with colorant or other additive material placed in the tube.
In certain preferred embodiments:
(a) the blade means is provided at its periphery with a wiping surface adapted to rotatably and longitudinally slide against or in close proximity to the inner surface of the tube whereby no significant amount of unmixed compound or colorant remains;
(b) a colorant supply means is provided to inject the colorant into the compound during reciprocation of the shaft and blade means thru the compound;
(c) the supply means of (b) above comprises passage means extending longitudinally thru the shaft whereby colorant can be either pressure injected or gravity fed at a desired rate therethrough into the compound either before or during rotation and/or longitudinal mixing movement of the shaft thru the compound;
(d) the shaft with mixer blade means is rotatably mounted and supported on rotative power means in a longitudinally stationary position wherein mixer head means is provided for holding the tube filler end and wherein linear power means is provided for longitudinally reciprocating said head means and tube relative to the shaft and mixer blade means;
(e) power means is provided for selectively reversing rotation of the shaft and blade means during the mixing operation to afford maximum mixing turbulence to the compound;
(f) said head means includes rotative power means connected to said proximal end of said shaft for rotating said shaft; and
(g) said head means is provided with structure for connecting it to an apparatus which can reciprocate the head and tube relative to said shaft and impeller.
The present mixing method in one preferred embodiment employing a retail, off-the-shelf tube of caulking material wherein the tube has a puncturably sealed dispenser end section, a filler end section having surface portions defining a fill opening into the tube, a thrust cap sealingly, slidably mounted in said filler end section, and further employing a mixer head means adapted to seal against said surface portions of said filler end section during the mixing operation, wherein said head means has mixer shaft means rotatably and axially slidably mounted therethrough, and wherein a mixer impeller means is fixed to a distal end of said mixer shaft means for rotation and/or axial movement therewith, said method comprising the steps of (a) removing said thrust cap from said tube, (b) adding additive into said tube, (c) connecting said head means to and sealingly against said surface portions of said filler end section to seal said fill opening with said blade means inside of said tube and to provide a portable independent combination of said head means and tube, (d) starting rotation and/or relative reciprocation of said mixer shaft means within said tube and continuing the rotation and/or reciprocation for a desired mixing period, (e) removing said tube and the colored compound therein from said shaft, impeller means and head means, and (f) replacing said thrust cap in said filler end section to retain the mixed compound and additive in said tube until use.
The invention will be further understood from the following description and drawings herein wherein the structures depicted are not drawn to scale or actual relative proportions and wherein portions thereof are cross-sectioned or broken away for clarity, wherein:
Referring to the drawings and with particular reference to the claims hereof, the present apparatus in one preferred form and generally designated 10 is well adapted for mixing liquid, solid or suspension colorant or other material with viscous work material 12 such as caulk which is contained in a reservoir 14 of an elongated tube 16, typically of plastic, between a puncturably sealed dispensing end 18 and a filler end 20 normally sealed by a thrust cap seal such as 17. The reservoir is provided by a cylindrical inner surface 22 of the tube and has a substantially uniform diameter throughout its length. One typical caulk tube size is approximately 1⅞ O.D. and 8½ in., long.
With reference to all of the embodiments shown herein the apparatus in its generic sense comprises mixer head means of metal or plastic material and generally designated 23 having a tube end seal means generally designated 24 adapted to be brought into static engagement by pressure cap means generally designated 41 with wall portions such as the top rim 26 or the upper portions 27 of the interior or outer surfaces of the filler end 20 of the tube to prevent leakage of the work material from the tube during the mixing operation. Bore means 28 is formed thru the seal means 24 substantially on a longitudinal axis 30 of the tube, and an elongated mixer shaft means 32 is mounted thru 28 for both rotational and axial motion with respect to the seal means 24 and tube 16. This shaft means has a proximal end 34 lying axially outwardly of the seal means and has a distal end 36 lying within the reservoir 14. Mixer impeller means 38 is mounted on said distal end and has a periphery 40 adapted to lie closely adjacent to or in sliding contact with cylindrical inner surface 22 of the tube. The above seal means 24, bore means 28, shaft means 32, impeller means 38 and pressure cap means 41 constitute the basic structure of the head means 23. Power means such as 42 is provided for axially moving, in a relative sense, shaft means 32 and impeller 38 substantially completely thru the reservoir of material in a reciprocating manner, and power means such as 44 is provided for rotating the shaft 32 and impeller 38 as they are being moved axially thru the material.
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment of
Shaft means 32 is rotatably mounted thru seal body 56 in all of the embodiments shown, which body is preferably provided with a mixer shaft seal 64 such as an O-ring or other annular ring type seal of composition and configuration which affords an axially sliding seal as well as one which wipes the viscous material from the shaft during reciprocating of the caulking tube.
The upper or proximal end 34 of the shaft preferably is mounted thru a rotative power means 44 which can rotate the shaft 32 selectively and substantially instantly in either direction and at any desired rpm, e.g. 600-800 rpm, such that maximum mixing turbulence can be imparted to the work material. One preferred power means is shown in
The outermost end 80 of shaft 32 preferably is funnel shaped for facilitating the loading of colorant into passage 82 which is generally axially provided thru shaft 32 and exits thru the inner end 84 of 32. A colorant injection piston rod 88 and annular seal ring 90 affixed to the inner end portion 92 thereof is slidable down into passage 82 and may be employed to forcibly eject colorant which has been loaded into passage 82, into the work material. Rod 88 is preferably provided with a stop means such as collar 94 affixed thereto to allow ring 90 to substantially completely wipe passage 82 clear of colorant but not to allow 90 to pass beyond end 84 of 32 and become damaged. Shaft portion 34 is preferably split and provided with a socket 35 and set screw 37 to allow removal of the shaft from 44 for facilitating cleaning or replacement with a different size impeller blade means 38 and seal means 24.
The mixer impeller or blade means 38 preferably has multiple, e.g., 2-5 blades 96 of any desired shape such as shown in
Referring to
In this embodiment, cylinder 108 is mounted on a foot member 118 which is clamped to a stanchion 120 of base or frame means 72 by bolt means 122 slidable thru an aperture in leg 124 and threaded thru a threaded aperture in leg 126. When 122 is loosened, member 118 and attached cylinder 108 and holder 46 can be rotated to the side to allow easy removal or loading of a tube in holder 46. Member 118 can also be slid up or down on stanchion 120 to position holder 46 in the precise vertical position to receive a tube. In this regard, ruler markings 128 can be provided on the stanchion to make easier the proper vertical positioning of 118 for each size tube.
It is apparent that for this embodiment, where tubes of different lengths are used, the travel of piston 43 must be adjusted to give the proper reciprocating stroke length to holder 46, relative to the vertically stationary mixer impeller 38. For this purpose, a cylinder 108 is selected which can readily give the maximum piston stroke required for the longest retail caulking tube which might be used by tradesmen. At the time of this writing about 12 to 14 inches of piston stroke would appear to be more than is needed for the most common reservoir length of retailed tubes of caulking material.
In order to adjust and control the piston stroke length and direction, electrical limit switches 130 and 132 vertically adjustably mounted on frame 72 are adapted to engage their arms 131 and 133 respectively with the bottom 134 and top 136 respectively of holder 46 at the prescribed limits of its reciprocation and, by means of solenoid valves in the hydraulic or air system which are electrically connected to the switches, reverse the direction of hydraulic or air fluid flow and the direction of the piston stroke. Control means are also provided to adjust the speed of the piston reciprocation. In practice, a stroke speed of from about 4 to about 20 seconds per complete up-and-down cycle is desirable, but slower or faster speeds may, of course, be used.
In the operation of the apparatus, a holder 46 of proper dimensions for receiving a particular size caulking tube is connected to piston 43. Foot member 118 is vertically adjusted on stanchion 120 to vertically position the holder where the piston stroke can accommodate the required full up-and-down travel of the holder with room to spare such that impeller 38 can be extracted from the tube after mixing is complete. The limit switches 130, 132 are then vertically adjusted on stanchion 120 of frame 72 and locked into position for being actuated by the bottom and top alternately of the holder at the precise moment that impeller 38 is at the prescribed ends of its reciprocation stroke or travel. The device is now ready to receive a caulking tube 16 from which a thrust cap seal 17 has been removed by, e.g., applying pressure to the tube sides which pops 17 out of the tube.
In order to facilitate vertical loading of the tube into the holder and removing it therefrom, the foot member 118, after loosening bolt 122, is swung to the side 123 such that the holder and tube can clear impeller 38 and any other structure of the device which might be in the way. When it is desirable to maintain the precise vertical position of 118 such as when the device is needed to mix several tubes of the same size, a positioning collar 140 as shown by dotted line in
As shown in
In the embodiment of
In a related embodiment, tube 149 may be rigid or semi-rigid plastic, or metal or ceramic and used, e.g., by inserting it down into the open caulk tube and substantially all the way thru the work material, and the syringe then actuated to inject the colorant into the material as tube 149 is slowly withdrawn therefrom to leave a column of colorant longitudinally in the material. The mixer head means 23 may then be fixed into the open tube end by, e.g., the mechanism of
It is noted that the configuration of the head means 23, the seal means 24 and the pressure cap means 41 can be varied in accordance with the present invention, such as, for example those shown in
In
In
In use, shaft 32 is mounted thru bore 168 with the mixer impeller lying adjacent plate or second shoulder means 166. With the mixer impeller then inserted into a tube thru the tube filler end thereof, body 160 is slid into the filler end to a desired position therein. A wrench is then mounted on flats 173 to hold bushing 164 and washer 166 stationary, and nut 172 is tightened sufficiently to bulge the body 160 radially outwardly to seal and grip against inner surface 22 of the caulking tube. The elastomeric material of body 160 is selected to allow it to sealingly bulge under just a few pounds of pressure from the tightening nut 172.
With the seal means 24 and mixer impeller means thus positioned in the tube, and with the colorant injected, e.g., deposited in the tube, on or into the work material by drop bottles, syringe, spatula, gel capsules, color packets, mechanical dispenser, or the like, the tube can be hand held or placed within a holder or carriage 77, and the shaft 32 rotated either by a power means such as 44 or, e.g., an electric drill having its chuck fixed to 32. Reciprocation of the mixer head thru the work material relative to the caulking tube can be done by power means such as 42 or by hand.
Referring to
Referring to
In the embodiments of
Head means 23 further comprises a bushing such as 164 but having a substantially oblong cross-section stem 73 threaded as at 165 and having flats 61 for preventing rotation of the bushing in the mating and substantially oblong bushing bore or aperture 65 provided thru the top 67 of cap means 41 and thin which the bushing can longitudinally slide. A circular tightening knob 69 having internal threads 71 is adapted to be threaded onto bushing 164 and tightened against proximal pressure surface 159 of cap top 67 such that the pressure plate portion or second shoulder means 166 of the bushing and distal pressure surface 175 of top 67 will compress body 56 between its top 182 and bottom 184 surfaces and bulge it radially to frictionally lock against the inner wall surface 188 of the tube and seal the tube between body 56 and recess wall 57. It is noted that body 56 may have various cross-sectional configurations and constructions such as the elastomeric, resilient air filled doughnut 75 shown in a compressed operational condition in
As shown in
In
The assembly of the head 23 on the carriage 77 with tube attached in operating condition with shaft 32 extending outwardly a desired extent is carried out by positioning the neck portion 113 of the head into channel 115 in the carriage, pulling pin 79 outwardly from aperture 89, moving 113 inwardly until wall portion 87 is laterally within the perimeter of aperture 89, thrusting the head upwardly until shoulder 117 thereon abuts the underside 119 of the carriage, releasing pin 79 to allow it to engage against wall portions 87, and rotating the head until the pin automatically inserts into recess 81 by way of spring 83. At this point the shaft 32 can be extended upwardly by the operators hand force to make the connection shown in
It is noted that for any of the embodiments shown herein the head 23, carriage 77 and tube 16 may be held stationary while the shaft 32 and motor 105 are reciprocated. Such a variation is readily made, for example, by attaching the carriage 77 in fixed position on a lower portion of stanchion 93 and disconnecting it from spindle 97, and removing motor 105 from header 95 and affixing it to a carriage such as 77 as the carriage and its mounting are shown in
Referring to
The most preferred shaft seal 64 is shown in
As shown in
Referring to
For these embodiments which afford quick and easy on-the-job mixing, the cap 41 is preferably provided with ridge projections 39 spaced around the cap for gripping such that in addition to pushing or pulling the tube, rotation of the cap on the tube can be facilitated to ensure proper sealing and to assist in removal of the tube from the head. Also for this embodiment the rotative power means preferably comprises a hand or palm held and small size battery operated electrical motor with its output shaft integral with shaft 32 such that all of the structures of head means 23 desired for convenient and expeditious mixing are integrated into a single hand held unit falling within the ambit of “combination” as used herein.
In another and highly preferred embodiment of the present invention, particularly the fully hand held and hand operated version as shown in
It is noted that the head variations of
In order for the preferred and best mode embodiments of the present invention to work properly and to produce the most convenient and expeditious mixing results, the pressure cap means 41 must be so constructed that it does not interfere with or impede the operators hand gripping of the tube 16 as the operator is assembling or disassembling the head 23 and tube and, if desired, as the operator is holding the tube during the mixing operation. To this end and with the cap affixed to the tube, the downwardly depending wall 178 or other portions of the pressure cap should allow at least about a hands width of at least about four inches of the tube dispensing end 18 to protrude beyond wall 178. Therefore, it is preferred that a total length of the cylindrical recess wall 57 of pressure cap means 41 does not exceed three inches even where a reciprocating apparatus as shown in
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications will be effected with the spirit and scope of the invention.
The present disclosure is a CIP of U.S. Pat. Appl. Ser. No. 10/293,850, entitled “Mixing Apparatus and Method,” filed on Nov. 14, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,910,799, which is a CIP of U.S. Pat. Appl. Ser. No. 09/563,465 entitled “Mixing Apparatus and Method, ” filed on May 2, 2000, now abandoned, and which is a CIP of U.S. Pat. Appl. Ser. No. 10/115,330 entitled “Mixing Apparatus and Method,” filed on Apr. 2, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,070,318, which is a CIP of U.S. Pat. Appl. Ser. No. 09/563,465 entitled “Mixing Apparatus and Method,” filed May 2, 2000, now abandoned; and is a CIP of U.S. Pat. Appl. Ser. No. 10/115,330entitled “Mixing Apparatus and Method, ” filed on Apr. 2, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,070,318, which is a CIP of U.S. Pat. Appl. Ser. No. 09/563,465 entitled “Mixing Apparatus and Method,” filed on May 2, 2000, now abandoned.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2831606 | Alters | Apr 1958 | A |
3514080 | Price et al. | May 1970 | A |
3606094 | Mills et al. | Sep 1971 | A |
3858853 | Rausch et al. | Jan 1975 | A |
4090612 | Lostutter | May 1978 | A |
4735509 | Rausch | Apr 1988 | A |
5044758 | Kurtz | Sep 1991 | A |
6302575 | Anderson et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6910799 | Renfro | Jun 2005 | B2 |
7070318 | Renfro | Jul 2006 | B2 |
20020036952 | Anderson et al. | Mar 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10293850 | Nov 2002 | US |
Child | 11139174 | US | |
Parent | 09563465 | May 2000 | US |
Child | 10293850 | US | |
Parent | 10115330 | Apr 2002 | US |
Child | 09563465 | US |