The invention relates to a porthole door for a front-loading drum washing machine with a hinged frame on the housing of the washing machine, consisting of a supporting ring and a retaining ring, and having an inspection glass which is recessed in the form of a cup in the direction of the interior of the drum, said inspection glass being protected by a cover against access at the level of the external retaining ring of the frame, wherein the edge of the cover is fixed to the frame.
Such a porthole door is known from DE 195 15 040 C2. This uses a slightly arched glass as the cover, whose edge is offset in a step-shaped fashion such that an annular space forms at its outer side wherein the flange of an aperture ring sits such that the outer surfaces of the aperture ring and the cover glass are approximately flush.
The glass for such a cover must be pressed in a mould which can leave behind annular grooves in the glass so that the refraction of rays produced at the grooves can produce an unaesthetic image. In addition, pressed glasses are extremely inaccurate in terms of their dimensions so that assembly parts must always have a relatively large clearance with respect to the glass body. Thus, large gaps between the individual components of a porthole door must be accepted according to the prior art.
The object of the invention is to construct a porthole door of the type specified initially such that less complex frame sections can be used, the fits between the individual parts of the porthole door can be made closer and the external appearance of the porthole door corresponds to modern aesthetic ideas.
This object is achieved according to the invention with a porthole door described initially by the cover being made of flat glass cooled by means of a model mould. Such flat glass can be drawn so homogeneously that irregular refractions of rays can be largely eliminated. When freshly drawn flat glasses are cooled on desired model moulds, e.g., cup moulds, they follow the surface shape and despite this, do not lose their homogeneous structure. Thus, covers of the type according to the invention can satisfy aesthetic requirements for a porthole door. In addition, they can be manufactured with considerably smaller tolerances because their external shape and their dimensions are only determined after cooling by using cutting techniques for hard glasses and consequently, considerably more reticulated parts can be held on the frame of the porthole door.
An advantageous further development of the invention is thus characterised by the fact that the cover is encompassed by a retaining ring at its narrow casing side. The retaining ring can thus be shaped at the periphery of the cover in such a reticulated and surface-flush fashion without any gaps between itself and the cover that a cover retained in this fashion can meet the demand for a new kind of aesthetic shaping of the porthole door.
In an especially advantageous fashion this demand can be supported by the fact that the retaining ring has a flat section which abuts against the edge of the cover from the inside. By this means the parts for fixing the cover can at the same time be reduced so that an overall cost advantage is achieved for the manufacture of the porthole door.
If, according to a further advantageous embodiment of the invention, the retaining ring is constructed in two parts and consists of a part containing the flat section and a thrust ring having an outer diameter equal to the inner diameter of the flat section and if, in addition, the thrust ring is clamped between the inner side of the cover on the one side and the outer side of a flange of the inspection glass and supporting surfaces at the front of the supporting ring, during assembly of the porthole door the cover can first be joined together with the part containing the flat section and the thrust ring, for example, by a bonding technique, without the need to pay attention to a plurality of loose parts and their correct placement during assembly. A more accurate join between the frame parts and the cover is thus made possible.
According to a further preferred embodiment, the porthole door contains advantageous optics in that the part of the retaining ring containing the flat section narrowly overlaps the edge of the cover to a width smaller than the thickness of the cover towards the front.
The aesthetic demands of the porthole door are especially supported by the fact that the cover is bonded to the retaining ring. Any fixing devices which may be visually disturbing are thus dispensed with. According to a particular further development of the invention, the retaining ring can also be bonded to the front surface of the inspection glass. By this means it is possible to have a gradual procedure during the assembly of the porthole door whereby attention can be paid to full-surface and centred fitting of the parts one to the other without any problems.
In another advantageous further development of the invention the cover is moulded with the edge section of the retaining ring which is made of thermoplastic plastic. For example, the cover can have a slightly conically shaped edge whose sloping surface is covered by the edge section of the thermoplastically moulded retaining ring and can thereby be held on the retaining ring.
The invention is explained in the following in detail with reference to an embodiment shown in the drawings wherein:
The washing machine 1 shown in
The porthole door 2 shown in
In a fashion not shown in detail here the narrow outer casing surface of the cover 9 at the edge 10 can be chamfered such that the circular outer surface of the cover has a smaller diameter than the inner surface. Then, the part of the retaining ring 8 containing the flat section 11 can be constructed as a moulding of the edge section 10 of the cover 9 whereby a flush arrangement of the narrow ring-shaped outer surface of the moulding with the outer surface of the cover 9 can be achieved. The cylindrical part of the supporting ring 6 can then also be arranged with the outer surface flush with the moulding or the cylindrical part of the supporting ring 6 can end at the inner surface of the retaining ring 8 and abut there, possibly being bonded there. Such narrow annular surfaces of the moulding of the part with the flat section 11 around the cover 9 are then obtained that an aesthetically demanding porthole can be achieved in an especially simple fashion.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 53 413 | Oct 2000 | DE | national |
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6228290 | Reames et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1460888 | May 1969 | DE |
43 04 009 | Aug 1994 | DE |
19515040 | Oct 1996 | DE |
198 28 242 | Dec 1999 | DE |
0343151 | Nov 1989 | EP |
737764 | Sep 1955 | GB |
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2 294 698 | May 1996 | GB |
4-114695 | Apr 1992 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040050117 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP01/11848 | Oct 2001 | US |
Child | 10422436 | US |