The present invention generally relates to pressure washer assemblies, and more particularly to a pressure washer assembly with a surface cleaner including a guide, wherein the guide allows for one handed operation while substantially maintaining a distance from the spray nozzle to the surface.
Assemblies having a spray nozzle such as pressure washers, spray wands, spray lances, and the like are used for delivering a pressurized fluid stream to many different surfaces. For example, a spray wand connected to a pressure washer assembly may be used for cleaning a deck, a driveway, a roof, siding on a house, and the like. The pressure washer assembly may be supplied with water from a standard type outlet such as a garden hose. After pressurizing the water, the pressure washer assembly supplies the pressurized water stream to a spray wand which expels the pressurized water stream from a spray nozzle, delivering the pressurized water stream to a surface such as a deck for cleaning. Typically, the spray wand may include a gun having a trigger for regulating the flow of the pressurized water stream.
The use of a pressure washer assembly for the safe, effective, and even cleaning of different surfaces may require that the spray nozzle be held at varying distances from the different surfaces being cleaned. For example, during the course of a typical workday, a user may use a pressure washer assembly to clean stone, concrete, brick, and wood. While the spray nozzle of the pressure washer assembly may be held much closer to the stone, concrete, and brick, when cleaning the wood surface, the spray nozzle must be held farther away. If a proper distance from the wood is not maintained, the surface of the wood may splinter, damaging the wood and causing it to lose finish. Also, if a relatively constant distance is not maintained throughout the course of cleaning a surface, an uneven surface clean may result. Achieving an even surface clean may become increasingly difficult over the course of a typical workday, as a user of a pressure washer assembly may experience fatigue from swinging a spray wand, spray lance, or the like back and forth while attempting to maintain a relatively constant distance from a surface being cleaned.
For instance, a user cleaning a wooden deck with a spray wand and a pressure washer assembly may typically swing the spray wand back and forth in an arc. At either side of the arc, the spray nozzle will be farther away from the wooden deck than at the center. The wood at the center of the arc, closest to the spray nozzle, may be damaged by the pressurized water stream, while the wood to either side of the arc may not be effectively cleaned, leaving a striped pattern visible on the surface of the deck. In addition, it may be impossible for a user of a spray wand to maintain a constant distance from a vertical surface when using a longer or extensible spray wand. In the case of cleaning wooden siding on a house, the tiring motion of holding the spray wand aloft while swinging it back and forth to clean the siding may prevent a user from keeping the spray nozzle at a safe and effective distance from the siding, damaging the wooden siding and leaving an uneven clean.
To address the problem of maintaining an even distance from a surface and lessening user fatigue, surface cleaners have been used for providing a more even finish and for maintaining a constant distance from the spray nozzle to the surface being cleaned. Typically these surface cleaners have included a spray wand fixed at some angle and connected to a skirt, having a rotating set of nozzles beneath the skirt and a set of wheels attached to the outside of the skirt. However, these surface cleaners do not allow for the convenient adjustment of the distance from a spray nozzle to the surface, and the wheels on the side of the skirt make the footprint of the surface cleaner large and unwieldy for cleaning corners or tight spaces. Additionally, the size and weight of such a surface cleaner, in combination with the fixed angle of the spray wand attached to it, do not allow it to be used for cleaning vertical surfaces.
Consequently, the present invention is directed to a surface cleaner for a pressure washer assembly. The surface cleaner includes a guide, which may be made of plastic or other lightweight material, making it useful for cleaning vertical surfaces. The guide includes wheels in line with the spray nozzle, giving the surface cleaner of the present invention a small footprint for cleaning corners and tight spaces and substantially maintaining the distance from the spray nozzle to the surface through a variety of angles assumed by the spray wand or the like. In exemplary embodiments of the present invention, the guide is capable of being moved up and down the spray lance or the like for control of the cleaning force, and a set of markings may be provided on the guide, the spray lance, or the like for indicating the appropriate distance for the spray nozzle from many different surfaces. Additionally, the guide allows for one handed operation of the spray wand assembly.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and are not necessarily restrictive of the invention as claimed. The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate an embodiment of the invention and together with the general description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
The numerous advantages of the present invention may be better understood by those skilled in the art by reference to the accompanying figures in which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the presently preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
The use of a pressure washer assembly for cleaning a surface may offer several advantages. One such advantage offered by a pressure washer assembly is that the increased force of the pressurized water stream impacting the surface provides greater cleaning power. This may allow for the use of less water in cleaning the surface. Another advantage offered by a pressure washer assembly is that the force of the water impacting the surface may be controlled by adjusting the distance of the spray nozzle from the surface. The use of a rotary lance for expelling a rotating stream of pressurized fluid may agitate a surface, further increasing cleaning power. Additionally, many pressure washer assemblies have the ability to inject soaps, detergents, and the like into a pressurized water stream for added cleaning power.
One popular type of spray wand assembly includes two separate spray lances for controlling the pressure of water streams delivered to a surface and/or for adding soaps and detergents to one of the pressurized water streams. A side handle may be used to selectively supply water to one or both of the spray lances, reducing the pressure of the water streams when both spray lances are in use. Such a spray wand assembly may be used in combination with a soap or detergent injector at the pressure washer, providing a user with control of soap or detergent application. The pressure washer may inject soap or detergent into the pressurized fluid stream when the pressure is lowered by use of the side handle, while the high pressure mode may be used to rinse off the surface after the application of soap or detergent.
Other popular types of spray wand assemblies include spray wands and spray lances capable of being extended to different lengths for cleaning vertical surfaces from ground level. For example, a spray wand may include a spray lance capable of being separated into several pieces, both for adjusting the height of the spray wand and for easy storage and transportation. Another type of spray wand may include a spray lance having several pieces capable of sliding relative to one another, for providing an extensible spray wand for cleaning vertical surfaces.
Referring generally to
As shown in
While the spray wand 110 shown in
Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that other interfaces between the guide 102 and the lance 112 may be utilized without departing from the scope and intent of the present invention. For instance, in further exemplary embodiments of the present invention, interference protrusions, teeth, grooves, and the like may be formed on or attached to the guide 102 and the lance 112 for providing locking positions for the guide 102 relative to the lance 112. The use of interference protrusions, teeth, grooves, and the like may have an added advantage of providing preset or manufacturer defined locking positions for setting the position of the guide 102 relative to the lance 112. For example, interference protrusions formed on the inside surface of the guide 102 may interface with grooves formed on the outside surface of the lance 112, providing a number of preset locking positions for the guide 102 relative to the lance 112. Preset locking positions may be desirable for supplying impingement distances appropriate for various surface types, surface orientations, and the like. In exemplary embodiments of the present invention, such preset locking positions may be provided in combination with descriptive markings on the guide 102 or the lance 112, for indicating desirable positions for various surface types, surface orientations, and the like.
As shown in
The wheels 104 and 106 are attached to the guide 102 such that the pressurized fluid stream 108 intersects the axis of rotation of the wheels 126. By aligning the wheels 104 and 106 with the spray nozzle of the lance 112 in this way, the impingement distance may be substantially maintained through a variety of angles between the spray wand 110 and the surface (hereinafter referred to as impingement angles). Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that while change in the impingement distance may be greater for large changes in the impingement angle (e.g. from 10 degrees to 80 degrees), change in the impingement distance may not be substantial for changes in the impingement angle encountered in the course of normal operation of the surface cleaner 100 (e.g. 40 degrees to 70 degrees); thus the impingement distance may be substantially maintained through a variety of impingement angles.
Referring generally now to
Referring generally to
In exemplary embodiments of the present invention, such a set of descriptive markings may also be applied to the surface cleaner 100. For instance, a set of surface types may be listed on the guide 102 (
Referring generally now to
It is believed that the present invention and many of its attendant advantages will be understood by the foregoing description, and it will be apparent that various changes may be made in the form, construction and arrangement of the components thereof without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention or without sacrificing all of its material advantages. The form herein before described being merely an explanatory embodiment thereof, it is the intention of the following claims to encompass and include such changes.
The present application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/398,342, filed Jul. 23, 2002. Said U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/398,342 is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3423027 | Ginther et al. | Jan 1969 | A |
3508709 | Serbousek et al. | Apr 1970 | A |
4892251 | Bresnen | Jan 1990 | A |
6247658 | Bakas | Jun 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040140379 A1 | Jul 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60398342 | Jul 2002 | US |