The present invention relates to a percolator for producing a beverage from powdered material in a container.
Though the percolator according to the present invention is suitable for producing any beverage by feeding pressurized hot water through powdered material in a container, reference is made in the following description, purely by way of example, to a percolator for producing a coffee beverage from a container containing a measure of ground coffee.
In beverage percolation, a coffee percolator is known, for example from U.S. Pat. No. 5,794,519, of the type comprising a cup-shaped support for the coffee container, the cup-shaped support having a first axis and a discharge conduit; a lid hinged to the cup-shaped support to rotate, with respect to the cup-shaped support and about a second axis crosswise to the first axis, to and from a closed position closing the cup-shaped support; pressurized-hot-water supply means carried by the lid and comprising a sprinkler facing the cup-shaped support; and locking means to lock in a fluid tight manner the lid in the closed position to the cup-shaped support; the locking means comprising a coupling device in turn comprising hook means fitted movably to the lid, and hook receiving means carried by the cup-shaped support and engaged by the hook means when the lid is in the closed position.
In known percolators of the type disclosed above, fluid tight connection of the lid in its closed position to the cup-shaped support is assured only by the aforementioned hook means force-engaging the hook receiving means. Since the percolation water is generally supplied to the percolator at a pressure of 9-10 bars, the force to be applied to the hook means to lock in a fluid tight manner the lid to the cup-shaped support is relatively high and normally implies the use of relatively complicated and expensive mechanical or hydraulic force amplifiers.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a percolator of the type described above, which is of extremely straightforward, strong design, is relatively cheap to produce and use, and is therefore particularly suitable for household and everyday use.
According to the present invention, there is provided a percolator for producing a beverage from powdered material in a container, as claimed in claim 1 and, preferably, in any one of the following claims depending directly or indirectly on claim 1.
The invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
Percolator 1 comprises a frame 4 comprising a parallelepiped-shaped box body defined by a substantially vertical front wall 5, and by two parallel, substantially vertical lateral walls 6 perpendicular to front wall 5.
As shown in
Supporting body 7 is fixed rigidly by screws to front wall 5, and has a cylindrical appendix 10 inserted inside a tubular insert 11, which extends through a through hole in front wall 5 and is connected integrally to front wall 5.
Supporting body 7 also has two diametrically opposite appendixes 12 tangent to cup 8, and each of which has a through slot 13 formed crosswise to axis 9 through respective appendix 12. Slots 13 have respective elongated rectangular cross sections, the respective major axes of which are parallel to each other and to axis 9.
Cup 8 is defined by a substantially cylindrical lateral wall 14, and by a downward-tapering conical bottom wall 15 having a central hole 16, which defines the inlet of a discharge channel 17 formed partly inside supporting body 7 and partly inside an L-shaped spout 18 carried by supporting body 7.
Cup 8 houses a removable percolating cup 19 for partly housing a wafer 2, and which comprises a cup-shaped body defined by a cylindrical lateral wall 20, and by a conical bottom wall 21 tapering outwards of cup 19 with a slightly smaller taper than bottom wall 15 of cup 8. As shown in
A central portion 22 of bottom wall 21 is thicker than the rest of bottom wall 21, projects inwards of cup 19, and is bounded on the inside of cup 19 by a flat surface which, in use, defines a supporting surface for a wafer 2 housed inside cup 19, and, during percolation, prevents wafer 2—as it is impregnated with hot water and pressed against bottom wall 21 by the pressure of the water—from clogging a number of coffee outlet holes 23 formed through bottom wall 21, about the whole of central portion 22, and communicating with discharge channel 17 via said gap between bottom wall 21 of cup 19 and bottom wall 15 of cup 8.
The top free edge of lateral wall 20 has an outer annular flange 24 which, when cup 19 is inserted inside cup 8, rests on the free edge of cup 8, and in turn defines a supporting surface for flange 3 of a wafer 2 housed, in use, inside cup 19.
Lateral wall 20 is fitted with a hand-operated external handle 25 which, when cup 19 is inserted inside cup 8, engages a cavity 26 formed on the free edge of cup 8 (
As shown in
With reference to
Cup-shaped body 30 defines the outer sleeve of a. hydraulic cylinder 33, which, in addition to cup-shaped body 30, also comprises a piston 34 mounted to slide along cup-shaped body 30 and defining, with cup-shaped body 30, a variable-volume chamber 35 sealed fluidtight by an annular seal 36 interposed between a lateral wall of cup-shaped body 30 and a lateral wall of piston 34. From a known boiler (not shown) fixed to frame 4, chamber 35 is supplied with pressurized hot water, along a feed conduit 37 formed through cup-shaped body 30, to move piston 34 along cup-shaped body 30.
On the end facing cup 8, piston 34 is fitted rigidly with a concave sprinkler 38, which receives pressurized hot water from chamber 35 through piston 34, and is moved, by piston 34 and when lid 27 is in the closed position, to and from a connected position connected in fluidtight manner to cup 19 housed inside cup 8 (
Pressurized-hot-water flow from chamber 35 to sprinkler 38 is regulated by a known one-way valve 40 housed inside a central hole 41 through piston 34, and calibrated to open when the pressure in chamber 35 and in feed conduit 37 reaches a given value.
Sprinkler 38 is defined by a cylindrical body of substantially the same diameter as cup 19, and having, on a bottom surface facing cup 8, a cavity 42 which defines a top half-chamber of percolating chamber 39 and is equal in depth to roughly half the thickness of a wafer 2. Cavity 42 communicates with chamber 35 via hole 41 and via a hole 43 formed through sprinkler 38 and coaxial with hole 41. An annular, downward-open groove is formed along the periphery of cavity 42 and houses a seal 44.
As shown in
As shown in
In actual use, after loading a wafer 2 inside cup 19 and inserting cup 19 inside cup 8, the user, positioned facing front wall 5, draws handgrip 4, back to rotate lid 27 about axis 29 and down onto cup 8. When lid 27 is in the closed position (
In this connection it is worth pointing out that, during insertion of hooks 52 inside slots 13, no real pressure is applied since hooks 52, when coupling lid 27 to cup 8, do not generate any axial pressure between lid 27 and cup 8, but only fix lid 27 in the lowered closed position.
When the user turns on machine 1 by means of an external control (not shown), pressurized hot water is pumped along feed conduit 37 into chamber 35, which, on expanding, moves piston 34 down and so moves sprinkler 38 into the engaged position mentioned above, in which sprinkler 38 presses flange 3 of wafer 2 in fluidtight manner against flange 24 of cup 19 (
When percolating chamber 39 is closed, the pressure inside chamber 35 rises rapidly, so that valve 40 opens and pressurized hot water flows through holes 41 and 43 into percolating chamber 39 to produce the coffee, which then flows out through holes 23 in cup 19 and along discharge channel 17.
User operation of a stop button (not shown) cuts off pressurized-hot-water supply and closes valve 40 thus reducing the axial contact pressure between hooks 52 and slots 13 substantially to zero. The user then pushes back, without any real effort, cross member 47 to release hooks 52 from respective slots 13 and move lid 27 back into the open position, in which cup 19 can be removed from cup 8 to unload the used wafer 2 from cup 19.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TO2004A000480 | Jul 2004 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/53335 | 7/12/2005 | WO | 00 | 11/26/2007 |