The present invention relates generally to pop-up cleaning heads for use in automatic swimming pool cleaning systems to eject jets of water in successive angular directions about a central point along the bottom of a swimming pool as water pressure applied to the cleaning head is intermittently cycled on and off.
More particularly, the present invention relates to improvements in pop-up cleaning heads which facilitate convenient disassembly and cleaning of the heads, improved fluid flow of pool water pumped through the cleaning heads, convenient modification of the nozzle aperture for the high velocity streams of cleaning water pumped through the cleaning heads, and convenient changing of the desired color of the cleaning heads and associated floor fittings to match the interior pool surface finish.
The closest prior art is thought to be commonly owned patent U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,860 (referred to as the '860 patent) by Henry D. Gould, issued Apr. 6, 1982, entitled “Pool Cleaning Head with Rotary Pop-up Jet Producing Element”, incorporated herein by reference. The pop-up cleaning head assembly described in the '860 patent includes a hollow cylindrical lower section open at its bottom and an enlarged cylindrical hollow upper section closed at its top. An outlet opening is disposed in a vertical cylindrical wall of the upper section, and a stainless steel camming pin extends from the vertical cylindrical wall of the lower section to engage opposed, staggered upper and lower sawtooth-like camming surfaces disposed along an inner cylindrical wall of a stationary section of the cleaning head. The stationary section of the cleaning head engages a housing installed in the bottom surface of the swimming pool and is coupled to an intermittent or cyclical high-pressure water supply.
As the water pressure is cyclically applied (by means of a conventional multi-port distribution valve), the pop-up jet-producing element of the cleaning head pops up against the force of a compression spring in response to applied water pressure. The pop-up jet-producing element of the cleaning head then is retracted by the force of the compression spring when the water pressure is no longer applied. The camming pin engages upper and lower edges of the saw-tooth-like camming elements which are located along the inner surface of the outer cylinder. This causes an operation wherein the rotary pop-up element pops up and rotates a predetermined amount each time the water pressure is turned on, and is retracted each time the water pressure is turned off. The structure of the pop-up cleaning head is rather complex, and requires use of drills and pins for initial assembly. The pop-up cleaning head includes a vertical, axial shaft or center pin that supports the camming pin. The camming pin must be removed using an appropriate tool in order to disassemble the pop-up cleaning head to allow maintenance or routine cleaning which may be necessary after an extended period of use. The vertical shaft is supported by transverse members that are located in the path of flow of the pool water.
Most of the prior pop-up cleaning heads are not capable of convenient, easy disassembly for cleaning and maintenance and re-installation. However, a prior pop-up pool cleaning head made in Spain has a cap section that is removably attached to a hollow pop-up jet-producing cylinder that pops up and down similarly to the above-mentioned hollow cylinder sections of patent U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,860. The cap section can be easily removed to allow cleaning or other maintenance of the cleaning head. The cleaning head does not use a compression spring as described in patent U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,860, and instead uses a heavy weight installed in the bottom of the hollow cylinder. The downward force of the weight retracts the pop-up jet-producing hollow cylinder when water pressure is no longer applied. Because of its gravity-based operation, this cleaning head must be installed in a generally vertical orientation in order to operate properly, and cannot be used to clean a steeply sloped or vertical pool surface.
A problem with all known prior art pop-up cleaning heads is that if a different diameter nozzle opening is required to increase or decrease the diameter of the cleaning jet in order to “fine tune” the pool cleaning system, the entire pop-up cleaning head assembly must be replaced with one having the desired aperture diameter.
Another problem in use of the prior pop-up cleaning head assemblies and floor fittings has been that swimming pool customers often initially choose one interior pool finish, such as white plaster, and later change their minds and request a different type and color of interior pool finish after the floor fittings have already been installed in the concrete forming the swimming pool floor. When that happens, it is necessary to ream or jack-hammer out the installed floor fittings and reinstall new ones that match the color of the newly selected interior pool surface finish. This is an undesirably time-consuming, costly procedure.
Thus, there is an unmet need for an improved pop-up cleaning head that avoids the need to utilize tools to disassemble/reassemble a pop-up cleaning head for the purpose of cleaning it after extended use and can be used to clean a horizontal or steeply sloped or vertical pool surface.
There also is an unmet need for a pop-up cleaning head which allows fast, convenient “fine tuning” of the cleaning characteristics of an automatic swimming pool cleaning system, and also a need to avoid the need to replace a pop-up cleaning head in a swimming pool in order to obtain a cleaning jet of a different diameter.
There also is an unmet need for an improved pop-up cleaning head which allows for improved flow of water compared to the closest prior art pop-up cleaning heads.
There also is an unmet need for an improved pop-up cleaning head which can be assembled or disassembled without use of pins or tools and can be used to clean a horizontal or steeply sloped or vertical pool surface.
There also is an unmet need for a pop-up cleaning head and floor fitting assembly which avoids the need to ream or jack-hammer out already-installed floor fittings and reinstall new ones that match the color of a interior pool surface finish which has been selected after the original floor fittings were installed.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a pop-up cleaning head which can be easily removed from a swimming pool, easily disassembled and cleaned, and easily re-installed in the swimming pool and can be used to clean a horizontal or steeply sloped or vertical pool surface.
It is another object of the present invention to avoid the need to utilize tools to disassemble/reassemble a pop-up cleaning head which can be used to clean a horizontal or steeply sloped or vertical pool surface for the purpose of cleaning and/or repairing the head.
It is another object of the invention to provide a pop-up cleaning head which can be used to clean a horizontal or steeply sloped or vertical pool surface and which can be easily removed from the swimming pool and disassembled to allow easy field replacement of worn/broken components and easy reassembly and reinstallation of the cleaning head in the swimming pool.
It is another object of the invention to provide a pop-up cleaning head which allows fast, convenient “fine tuning” of the cleaning characteristics of an automatic swimming pool cleaning system.
It is another object of the invention to avoid the need to replace a pop-up cleaning head and a swimming pool in order to provide a cleaning jet having a different diameter.
It is another object of the invention to provide a pop-up cleaning head which is capable of producing a cleaning jet having any of a plurality of selectable diameters.
It is another object of the invention to provide an improved pop-up cleaning head which provides less resistance to flow of water than prior art pop-up cleaning heads.
It is another object of the invention to provide a pop-up cleaning head and associated floor fitting assembly which avoids the need to ream or jack-hammer out already-installed floor fittings and reinstall new ones that match the color of a interior pool surface finish which has been selected after the original floor fittings were installed.
It is another object of the invention to avoid the need to provide an inventory of complete pop-up cleaning head assemblies of a various colors.
Briefly described, and in accordance with one embodiment, the present invention provides a cleaning head for installation in a floor fitting (9) installed in the floor of a swimming pool. The floor fitting (9) has an upper surface generally flush with the surface of the interior pool finish material. The floor fitting receives pool water, the pressure of which is intermittently or periodically cycled between a relatively low value and a relatively high value, and includes a hollow pop-up cylinder (5) having a open lower end, an open upper end, a generally cylindrical outer wall, a clearance opening (20) extending through an upper portion of the outer wall, and a plurality of a camming elements (44) disposed on the outer wall. A lower spring retaining element (3) is attached to the lower end of the popup cylinder (5). A hollow outer cylinder (11) is adapted for removable installation in the floor fitting (9), and has a generally cylindrical outer wall (47) and a generally cylindrical inner wall (47A). A compression spring (6) is disposed around the lower portion of the pop-up cylinder (5) between the lower spring retaining element (3) and an upper spring retaining element (7) that engages the outer cylinder (11). A plurality of camming elements are disposed along the inner wall (47A) of the outer cylinder (11). In the described embodiment, the plurality of camming elements includes a first row of upper camming elements (42) disposed along the inner wall (47A) of the outer cylinder (11), a second row of lower camming elements (40) disposed along the inner wall (47A) of outer cylinder (11). A locking element is disposed on the outer wall (47) of the outer cylinder (11) for locking engagement with an inner surface of the floor fitting (9). In the described embodiment, a nozzle unit (15) is removably attached to the upper end of the popup cylinder (5), and includes a plurality of nozzle openings having various diameters, respectively, only one of the nozzle openings being aligned with the cleaning jet opening (20).
In the described embodiment, each of the upper camming elements (42) on the inner wall (47A) of the outer cylinder (11) has a sloped downwardly facing camming surface, and each of the lower camming elements (40) on the inner wall (47A) of the outer cylinder (11) has a sloped upwardly facing camming surface. Each of the camming elements (44) on the outer wall of the pop-up cylinder (5) includes a sloped upwardly facing camming surface for engaging the sloped downwardly facing camming surface of an upper camming element (42) and a sloped downwardly facing camming surface for engaging the sloped upwardly facing camming surface of a lower camming element (40).
The nozzle unit (15) includes a locking mechanism (26B,C) for allowing the nozzle unit (15) to be removed from the upper end of the pop-up cylinder (5), rotated to align any selected nozzle opening with the clearance opening (20), and reattached to the upper end of the pop-up cylinder (5) in order to change the diameter of the cleaning jet ejected from the nozzle unit (15). A circumferential lip (9E) is provided within the upper end of the floor fitting(9). A removable snap on color ring (17) has a flange engaging the circumferential lip (9E) to effectuate snapping of the color ring onto the upper end of the floor fitting (9) to match the desired color of the interior pool finish.
Referring to the drawings, especially the exploded view shown in
A portion 3B (
Rotary nozzle cap 15, the details of which are shown in
Referring to
Referring to
The 4 camming elements 44 co-act with camming teeth 40 and 42 shown in
The upper end 49 of pop-up cylinder 5 is inserted into the opening 28 at the lower end of outer cylinder 11. Retaining washer 7 engages the right end of compression spring 6 and consequently is pressed by spring 6 against the lower edges of the 4 parallelogram-shaped camming elements 44. As pop-up cylinder 5 is advanced further into outer cylinder 11 into the “popped up” configuration shown in
Referring to
When the upper edge 49 of pop-up cylinder 5 has been advanced far enough through outer cylinder 11 that upper edge 49 extends beyond the upper edges of upper camming teeth 42, then a lower locking section of nozzle cap 15 is inserted into the open upper end of pop-up cylinder 5 and rotated relative to pop-up cylinder 5 to cause 4 bosses such as 5B and 5C attached to the inner cylindrical wall of pop-up cylinder 5 to engage and retain edges such as 26B and 26C of corresponding locking tabs on the lower locking section of nozzle cap 15. An O ring 16 is retained between the lower surface of the annular peripheral portion 15C of the disk-shaped cover 15B of nozzle cap 15 and an inwardly sloped annular inner edge surface of the upper edge 49 (
Spring cap 3, pop-up cylinder 5, compression spring 6, outer cylinder 11, and nozzle cap 15 constitute a unitary cleaning head structure which can be easily installed in and removed from the floor fitting 9 in the bottom of the swimming pool. The assembly including spring cap 3, pop-up cylinder 5, compression spring 6, outer cylinder 11, and nozzle cap 15 is installed in floor fitting 9 by inserting it into the open upper end of floor fitting 9 and then rotating the assembly so that the locking tabs (such as 11A and 11B) equally spaced around the outer wall 47 of outer cylinder 11 engage and are locked to corresponding locking tabs (such as 9C and 9D) on the inside wall of floor fitting 9. Floor fitting 9 includes an annular flange 9A located approximately ⅜ inches below its upper edge to act as a water leakage stop, and also to securely anchor floor fitting 9 in the floor material of the swimming pool.
Spring cap 3, pop-up cylinder 5, outer cylinder 11, nozzle assembly 15, and floor fitting 9 preferably are composed of polyester material that does not deteriorate as a result of exposure to sunlight and also matches the desired color of the interior pool finish. Floor fitting 9 and nozzle cap 15 preferably also match the desired color of the interior pool finish.
Color ring 17 can be snapped-fit into the slot performed by the upper lip 9E of floor fitting 9.
In operation, it can be seen that if no water pressure is being applied to the interior of pop-up cylinder 5 through opening 3C of spring cap 3 and the above-mentioned supply pipe (not shown), then compression spring 6 forces pop-up cylinder 5 into its retracted position shown in
If a high water pressure then is applied through the supply pipe to the interior of pop-up cylinder 5, the resulting upward force causes the assembly including spring cap 3, pop-up cylinder 5, and nozzle cap 15 to move upward, compressing spring 6 and extending the upper part of the assembly above floor fitting 9, as shown in
When the water pressure is removed, compression spring 6 expands to cause the pop-up cylinder 5 and the diamond-shaped camming elements 44 to be retracted, for example to the position indicated by X3 in
The size of the selected nozzle aperture of pop-up cleaning head 1 can be easily changed by aligning a different one of the four round nozzle apertures 24A–D of nozzle cap 15 with the clearance opening 20 of pop-up cylinder 5 without the need to replace the entire pop-up head assembly from floor fitting 9. To accomplish this, the pop-up assembly including pop-up cylinder 5 and nozzle cap 15 can be temporarily removed from floor fitting 9. Then, nozzle cap 15 can be rotated to unlock it from pop-up cylinder 5, rotated relative to pop-up cylinder 5 in order to effectuate alignment of a different one of the nozzle apertures 24A–D with clearance opening 20, and then re-inserted and locked into the upper end of pop-up cylinder 5. The four L-shaped locking slots 54A–54D in the lower, outer wall of nozzle cap 15 as shown in
Alternatively, various nozzle caps 15 each having only one nozzle aperture can be provided, with a variety of different nozzle aperture diameters, and the nozzle aperture diameter of any particular pop-up cleaning head can be changed by manually removing its present nozzle-cap 15 and replacing it with one having a different nozzle aperture diameter.
Thus, the invention provides a pop-up cleaning head which can be easily removed from a swimming pool, disassembled and cleaned, and re-installed in the swimming pool, with no need to utilize any tools to disassemble/reassemble a pop-up cleaning head for the purpose of cleaning it. The use of compression spring 6 to retract the pop-up cylinder 5 when water pressure is relieved allows the pop-up cleaning head to be used for cleaning horizontal or steeply-sloped pool surfaces. The described pop-up cleaning head also is capable of producing a cleaning jet having any of a plurality of selectable diameters, and therefore allows fast, convenient “fine tuning” of the cleaning characteristics of an automatic swimming pool cleaning system. The described pop-up cleaning head also causes less resistance to flow of water than the closest prior art pop-up cleaning heads, because the interior path through pop-up cylinder 5 is free of the various structures associated with the camming elements of the prior art. The described pop-up swimming pool cleaning head can be assembled without a gluing operation and without use of pins or tools.
The use of color ring 17 avoids the need for a parts supplier to provide an inventory of complete pop-up cleaning heads of various colors. Instead, only inventories of various colors of outer cylinder 11, nozzle cap 15, and color ring 17 need to be maintained.
While the invention has been described with reference to several particular embodiments thereof, those skilled in the art will be able to make various modifications to the described embodiments of the invention without departing from its true spirit and scope. It is intended that all elements or steps which are insubstantially different from those recited in the claims but perform substantially the same functions, respectively, in substantially the same way to achieve the same result as what is claimed are within the scope of the invention. For example, various other plastics than polyester can be used. The various locking elements disclosed for spring cap 3, nozzle cap 15, outer cylinder 11, and floor fitting 9 could be replaced by different locking elements. In some implementations, camming teeth 40 and 42 shown on the inside surface of outer cylinder 11 could instead be provided on the outside surface of pop-up cylinder 5 and the camming teeth 44 on outer surface of pop-up cylinder 5 could instead be provided on the inside surface of outer cylinder 11. A different arrangement for retaining spring 6 can be utilized. In some implementations, a suitably weighted pop-up assembly could be used instead of using compression spring 6, spring cap 3, and retaining washer 7. In some implementations, the spring cap 3 could be cemented to the bottom of pop-up cylinder 5 instead of using the disclosed locking elements. Also, if the entire assembly including outer cylinder 11, pop-up cylinder 5, spring cap 3, and nozzle cap 15 were to be disposable, both spring cap 3 and nozzle cap 15 could be cemented to pop-up cylinder 5. In some cases, color ring 17 could be glued into place rather than snapped into place. One or more of the nozzle apertures in nozzle cap 15 could be other than round in order to provide altered cleaning characteristics.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4322860 | Gould | Apr 1982 | A |
4347979 | Mathews | Sep 1982 | A |
4371994 | Mathews | Feb 1983 | A |
4391005 | Goettl | Jul 1983 | A |
4570663 | Gould et al. | Feb 1986 | A |
4817656 | Gould | Apr 1989 | A |
5058806 | Rupar | Oct 1991 | A |
5251343 | Goettl | Oct 1993 | A |
5365617 | Tarr | Nov 1994 | A |
6022481 | Blake | Feb 2000 | A |
6301723 | Goettl | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6393629 | Barnes et al. | May 2002 | B1 |