The present invention relates to a liner for a waterless toilet. More particularly this invention concerns a liner bag and method of making it.
A standard water-flush toilet has an upwardly open bowl provided with a seat for the user. Waste is carried off from inside the bowl by a flush using at least several liters of water.
In many situations such a water flush is not possible. This is the case in regions where water is in very short supply, in applications where the weight of the flush water cannot be managed (such as on moving vehicles, e.g aircraft), and where the toilet is only needed for temporary use and a water hookup is not available.
A standard waterless toilet uses a liner tube or bag, and is described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,619,822 and 6,052,842. Such toilets have a holder below and outside the bowl for a large-diameter tube of stretchable plastic, e.g. polyethylene. The tube is guided up and over the seat, then down into the bowl and out through an opening at the bottom of the bowl. Spreaders are provided inside the bowl to hold the tube open below the seat, and other guides pinch the bag shut at the bottom of the bowl above the opening. The-user thus sits on the bag where it passes over the seat and waste drops into the section of tube underneath the seat. After use the waste-containing section and tube part atop the seat is pulled downward and pinched of to seal in the waste and provide a fresh seating surface for the next user.
Such a system is fairly effective, but is complex and requires the use of a fairly expensive toilet system. furthermore the disposable bag-forming tube is quite expensive also.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved liner bag for a waterless toilet.
Another object is the provision of such an improved liner bag for a waterless toilet that overcomes the above-given disadvantages, in particular that is of simple and inexpensive construction.
Yet another object is the provision of an improved method of making such a liner.
A waterless-toilet liner has according to the invention a seat panel adapted to lie atop a waterless-toilet seat and formed with a central hole of a size and shape generally corresponding to a size and shape of the hole of the seat, and a bag having an upper rim secured to the seat panel around the hole therein.
This liner is made by first advancing a foil tube to a first work station and forming a cross-seam and cut in the foil tube to cut therefrom a bag having an open end. Then the open end of the bag is fitted between a pair of foil sheet. An opening is cut through the foil sheets and open end of the bag and the edges of the bag at the opening and there adjacent are bonded to the foil sheets. Then the foil sheets are cut through or perforated downstream of the bag.
The object of the invention is thus attained by providing a plastic foil bag consisting of a first foil section covering the toilet seat and provided with a hole corresponding to the inner perimeter of the toilet seat and a continuous second foil section completely lining the toilet bowl. Due to the design of the plastic bag according to the invention a form-fit to the toilet bowl of the plastic foil bag is now possible and hence a complete use of the toilet bowl underneath the toilet seat is guaranteed. The plastic foil bag according to the invention has a very simple design and therefore can be produced at low costs.
Thanks to the described method steps it is now possible to produce a plastic foil bag with high efficiency and minimal effort. Furthermore the method is advantageously and easily adaptable to most different toilet forms or toilet requirements, so that a flexible method for the production of plastic foil bags is provided.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages will become more readily apparent from the following description, reference being made to the accompanying drawing in which:
As seen in
The bag 2 is preferably made from a foil tube 12 so that the front panel 3 and the rear panel 4 of the bag 2 are one piece. The foil tube 12 is provided made in this shape in a separation welding procedure so that the bag 2 has a U-shaped welded seam 14 on its lower end 13. The weld seam 14 thus forms the bag bottom.
The hole 7 is cut with two different radiuses R1 and R2 from the bag 2 so that when open the bag 2 fits complementarily in a toilet bowl 30 (
The foil sheets 10 and 11 form a seat panel that, if unfolded, can be spanned over a toilet seat 29 to completely cover its inner edge and upper surface. In a further design of the invention this seat panel 10, 11 is of such length that the foil sheets 10, 11 extend well past the outer periphery of the toilet seat 29 and can be fixed over the toilet seat 29 or the toilet itself by means of an appropriate device or clip. If the seat panel is unfolded, the hole 7 forms an opening corresponding to the inner perimeter of the toilet seat 29 so that the full hole width and breadth of the toilet seat 29 are available for the user. Due to this design and exact adaptation of the hole 7 to a toilet seat 29 the hole does not reduce the perimeter of the seat 29.
As illustrated in
According to the invention it is furthermore conceivable that cutouts 18 and 19 could be cut in the foil flaps 10 and 11 necessary for a fully automatic transportation or handling or fitting of the plastic foil liner 1. The cutouts 18 and 19 are illustrated as a dotted lines. Of course it is furthermore conceivable to create other recesses, cut into the flaps 10 and 11 for instance by means of punching. Thus the foil flaps 10 and 11 can be formed with holes, perforations or combinations of holes and punchouts 18 and 19.
The seat panel formed by the foil flaps 10 and 11 according to the invention is laid as shown in
The holder 20 now swings in the direction of arrow P2 in an angle which can be set by the device 21 into another work station 23. In this station 3 the weld seam 14 is advantageously cooled. This cooling can for example be effected by compressed air. It is explicitly pointed out that although
In a following work step the holder 20 swings into the next work station 24, again in the direction of arrow P2. The bag 2 therefore is moved into position between the foil flaps 10 and 11 and even extends past these sheets 10 and 11 in some areas.
The foil flaps 10 and 11 are constantly fed in the direction of arrow P3. To allow a welding of the foil flaps 10 and 11 to the bag 2 it is conceivable for the holder 20 of the device 21 to telescope. In this connection the holder 20 or a front edge area 25 of the holder 20 extends out between the foil sheets 10 and 11 in the direction of arrow P4 so that the foil sheets 10 and 11 and the bag 2 lie one upon the other without the holder 20. At this point two alternative fabrication methods for the creation of the hole 7 and the bag edge 5 can be carried out. Thus it is conceivable according to the invention that a fan-shaped, openable welding plate is inserted between the front part 3 and the rear part 4 of the bag 2 and that the welding of the bag edge 5 and the hole 7 is carried out in one work step. The alternative is to carry out the welding of the bag edge 5 and the hole 7 in two work steps. In this connection a simple welding plate surrounding the hole 7 is at first put between the front panel 3 and the rear panel 4 with the bag 2 and the front panel 3 is welded to foil sheet 11 as well as the rear panel 4 is welded to the foil sheet 10. In a following not illustrated work step the bag edge 5 and the exterior seams 8 and 9 are formed.
In a last production step to complete the plastic foil liner 1 an at least partial separation of the foil sheets 10 and 11 in the areas 26 and 27 takes place or, dependent on the fabrication, respectively only in area 27, as shown in
In
For reasons of clarification
It is of course furthermore possible to completely separate the foil sheets during the production and to subsequently arrange them in piles or respectively one upon the other on a mandrel.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2005 026 358 | Jun 2005 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4354335 | Meyer | Oct 1982 | A |
6532605 | Howell | Mar 2003 | B1 |
20020132070 | Franzen et al. | Sep 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060272082 A1 | Dec 2006 | US |