The present invention relates to refillable markers. In particular, the invention relates to systems and methods for filling refillable marker-fluid cartridges from fillers of marker-fluid.
Markers such as pens, paint brushes, printers and the like are used to leave recordable traces upon surfaces. Typically, the recordable traces are left by the application of a marker-fluid, such as paint, an ink or the like onto the surface.
Traditional chalk for blackboards is messy and white board pens have gradually replaced the chalk. However, when the ink is used up the entire pen can only be discarded, causing a great waste of resources and environmental pollution, but also greatly increasing the cost of the pen. CN96202527 to Qiu Jinsheng describes a model for an automatic ink-suction erasable whiteboard pen. However, it is not leak-proofed and thus is messy and wasteful, both from ink spillage and ink evaporation.
The amount of marker-fluid carried by the marker is limited and therefore, as marker-fluid is applied to the surface, the supply of marker-fluid in the marker is periodically exhausted. When insufficient marker-fluid remains in the marker, the marker-fluid supply must be replenished or the marker must be thrown away.
By their nature, marker-fluids are generally pigmented and free flowing. Accordingly, the refilling of markers is typically a messy process. For convenience, therefore, disposable markers are most popular. However it will be appreciated that frequently disposing of markers is wasteful and costly.
Some printer cartridges, such as inkjet cartridges, may be refillable. Typically, this is done by filling a syringe with ink, removing a cover from an ink cartridge presumed to be empty, and injecting printer ink from the syringe via a syringe needle fitted on the syringe, through a septum in the cartridge into the cartridge. Refilling is performed until the ink starts to bubble out of the septum. Such filling does require some dexterity, prior knowledge of the structure of the cartridge, and time and effort to perform. Thus typically it is performed at a factory dedicated for refilling.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,473,097 to Seaguist Valve Company describes an apparatus for receiving and measuring a quantity of fluid from a filling device comprising a container having a substantially flat container bottom for resting on a horizontal surface. The container is preferably flexible, to allow an operator to press the container to discharge fluid in the form of a sprinkle from the dispensing orifice, and has a translucent sidewall with markings disposed on the sidewall enabling an operator to determine the quantity of fluid therein by viewing the fluid level in the container relative to the markings. A sealing valve is disposed proximate the container bottom and adapted to receive fluid from the filling device enabling the container to be filled to a desired fluid level from the fluid filling device. A dispensing orifice is in fluid communication with the interior of the container for dispensing fluid therefrom. The bottom portion of the bottle is a detachable container base having several walls: an outer sidewall, an inner sidewall, and a lip that forms flat bottom. Moreover, container means is provided with an opening in the bottom portion that is sealed by another wall of the base when the base is attached to the container. The base is threaded to the container by threads of the container wall and a thread of the inner sidewall. The sealing valve is deflected by pressure of the propellant fluid.
US 20090194191 to C.T.I describes a refill bottle adapted to repeatedly receive and dispense liquids such as perfume. The refill bottle includes a bottle having a bottom portion and an upper portion, an opening provided in the upper portion wherein the opening is adapted to be covered, and a refill mechanism provided in the bottom portion. The liquid is received through the refill mechanism from a regular bottle, for example via a spraying mechanism, and is dispensed through the opening.
The regular bottle is for example a regular spray bottle, and the spray mechanism includes for example a stem. The refill mechanism includes for example a check valve that is adapted to open when a stem is pushed through a bottom opening provided in the bottom portion, the stem pushing open the valve, and the liquid is pushed inside the refill bottle through the stem.
Chinese utility model ZL 200720051806.9 to Dongguan YiXin Magnetic describes a portable and refillable spraying bottle which can be reused after refilling. The bottle includes a nozzle assembly, an inner bottle and housing, the nozzle assembly installed on the top of the inner bottle. In the bottom of said inner bottle installed a refilling construction. Said refilling construction consists of a refill inlet in the bottom of said inner bottle, an abutting rod installed in said refill inlet, a restoration construction for said abutting rod and sealing construction. Said inner bottle is further equipped with an exhaust construction.
It should be appreciated that leakage of liquids such as perfume, while wasteful, typically is harmless; whereas leakage of marking fluids such as ink from a marker-fluid or a refill bottle must be avoided. In addition, bottles for refilling marking fluids are not available, as there was no recognized need for such.
There is a need for a clean, efficient, sealable, environment-friendly, and convenient system and method for refilling marking-fluid cartridges such as markers. Embodiments disclosed herein address this need.
For a better understanding of the invention and to show how it may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, purely by way of example, to the accompanying drawings.
With specific reference now to the drawings in detail, it is stressed that the particulars shown are by way of example and for purposes of illustrative discussion of the preferred embodiments of the present invention only, and are presented in the cause of providing what is believed to be the most useful and readily understood description of the principles and conceptual aspects of the invention. In this regard, no attempt is made to show structural details of the invention in more detail than is necessary for a fundamental understanding of the invention; the description taken with the drawings making apparent to those skilled in the art how the several forms of the invention may be embodied in practice.
In the accompanying drawings:
a depicts a section through a refillable marker-pen in some embodiments of a system for filling marker-fluid cartridges;
b is an exploded view of the bottom portion of the marker-fluid cartridge shown in
a is a representation of a system including the bottom portion of the cartridge of
b shows the system depicted in
a is a cross-sectional representation of a cartridge in other embodiments;
b is an exploded view of the bottom portion of the marker-pen shown in
c is an exploded view of an air release valve in a marker-pen in some embodiments;
d is an exploded view of an air release valve in a marker-pen in some other embodiments;
a is a cross-sectional representation of a cartridge in yet some more embodiments;
b is an exploded view of the bottom portion of the marker-fluid cartridge shown in
According to one aspect, a system for filling marker-fluid cartridges comprises:
The system of claim may have a cartridge with a wall comprising an
According to another aspect, a portable refillable marker-fluid cartridge is provided, comprising:
The cartridge may comprise a wall comprising an invagination therein, wherein the filling mechanism is held in said invagination.
Pumping said marker-fluid in said filler may be achievable by intermittently and repeatedly pushing the delivery tube against the filling mechanism.
Preferably, the cartridge further comprises air-release means configured to allow expelling air from the marker-chamber during filling the marker-chamber with marker-fluid, and to not allow expelling of marker-fluid from the marker-chamber.
In some embodiments, said marker-chamber comprises a marker-fluid absorbent fluidly communicable with both the filling mechanism and the applicator.
Preferably, when the applicator of the cartridge is applied to a surface, thereby applying marker-fluid to the surface, the absorbent and the marker-fluid of the cartridge allow replacement of the marker-fluid in the applicator at a rate faster than the rate the marker-fluid is applied to the surface.
The cartridge may further comprise a removable valve cap for the cartridge, configured to seal off the filling mechanism of the cartridge from air when the valve cap is fit onto the cartridge.
The marker-chamber preferably comprises in a wall thereof a transparent volume indication window indicative of the extent the marker-chamber is filled with the marker-fluid.
Some system embodiments further comprise at least one presentation board. Preferably in those embodiments, each filler is colour-coded to match each cartridge. Said marker-fluid applicator may be selected from a group consisting of: print heads, nibs, roller-balls, ball-points, felt-tips, fiber-tips, brushes, reeds, nozzles and combinations thereof.
The cartridge may be for example selected from one or more of the group comprising: pens, paint brushes, whiteboard markers, permanent markers and inkjet cartridges, highlighters, laser printer toner cartridges and correction fluid cartridges.
The marker-fluid may be selected for example from one or more of a group comprising: inks, paints, whiteners, thinners, solvents, dyes and combinations thereof. The marker-fluid may be selected from a group comprising: solutions, gels, suspensions and emulsions.
According to another aspect, a method for filling a marker-fluid cartridge is provided, the method comprising:
drawing marker-fluid with said pump from said filler into said marker-chamber via said filling mechanism, while preventing release of marker-fluid from said marker-chamber.
coupling said delivery tube to said filling mechanism and drawing said marker-fluid may comprise: repeatedly pushing said delivery tube against the filling mechanism such that said filling mechanism opens to allow the marker-chamber to receive said marker fluid.
The filling mechanism may comprise a holder with a channel passing therethrough, slideable and held with at least one seal-ring in the invagination.
The channel may have an internal diameter adjacent to the wall comprising the invangination, the diameter allowing a close fit of the delivery tube therein.
The filling mechanism may further comprise a filling port leading from the wall to the channel.
The filling port may allow a close fit of the delivery tube therein.
The cartridge may further comprising a removable cap, configured to seal off the applicator from air when the cap is fit onto the cartridge.
The filling mechanism may comprise a piston comprising a bottom pliable and resilient part and a top hard part permanently attached thereto, the top part being pushed up by the bottom part, the pliable and resilient part, when not forced by a tube, sealing the chamber; when forced by a tube, the force of the tube compresses the bottom part whereby marker fluid may enter the chamber via at least one gap between the piston and the invagination.
The invagination comprises at least one tooth to hold the piston.
The marker-fluid applicator may comprise a feeder shaft within the chamber, wherein the feeder shaft comprises a resilient material that urges the piston down and can be sufficiently compressed by the piston when the piston is pushed by a tube upwards to allow filling the cartridge with the marker-fluid.
Embodiments described herein are directed towards providing a refill system for conveniently supplying a marker or other marking utensil with marker-fluid. The refill system may be used with a variety of marker-fluid cartridges, such as pens, ink-jet cartridges, toner cartridges and the like, a selection of which are described in the embodiments below, for illustrative purposes only. It will be appreciated that other embodiments of refill system may be used to fill other markers with further marker-fluids as required.
Reference is now made to FIG. la which shows a section through a refillable marker-fluid cartridge 100 according to a first embodiment of the refill system.
The marker-fluid cartridge 100 includes an ink-chamber 120, an ink-applicator 140 in an upper portion 101 and a filling mechanism 110 in a bottom portion 102. The filling mechanism 110 in this embodiment is essentially a check valve. The bottom part has a bottom wall 125 with an invagination 128, forming a space (see
The ink-chamber 120 is provided to contain a supply of marker-fluid 122. The marker-fluid 122 is typically a pigment or dye based fluid such as ink, paint or the like, and is alternatively simply and collectively referred to below as ink. As required, the pigmented fluid may be a solution, suspension, emulsion, a gel, an aerosol or the like. It will be appreciated that according to various embodiments, the marker-fluid chambers, such as the ink-chamber 120 may be configured to contain alternative or additional materials, such as thinners, cleaning agents, whiteners, ink eradicators, solvents and the like.
The marker-fluid cartridge 100 typically has the dimensions of commercially available typical marker-pens. In particular, the size of the ink-chamber 120 is typically limited by the nature of use of the marker-fluid cartridge 100. Because the marker-fluid cartridge 100 is generally a hand-held device which a user must manipulate with considerable dexterity, a bulky and heavy ink-chamber would be inappropriate. An aspect of embodiments of the refill system is to provide an auxiliary supply of marker-fluid which does not impede normal usage of the marker-fluid cartridge 100.
The ink-applicator 140 is provided to apply the marker-fluid 122 to a surface. The applicator 140 of the refillable marker-fluid cartridge 100 of the first embodiment includes a fiber-tip nib 142 which is in fluid communication with the supply of marker-fluid 122 via a feeder-shaft 144 in the ink-chamber 120. The fiber-tip nib 142 and feeder-shaft 144 typically include a porous and/or fibrous marker-fluid absorbent material 123 such as felt, nylon or the like such that marker-fluid 122 is drawn up the feeder-shaft 144 by capillary action to the fiber-tip nib 142. A suitable removable cap 130 is provided to protect the nib 142 while not in use and to prevent unnecessary loss of ink 122 by fitting onto the upper part 101.
It will be appreciated that, although a fiber-tip nib 142 is presented in the above described embodiment, alternative marker-fluid applicators, such as nibs, roller-balls, ball-points, brushes and the like, may be preferred.
The applicator 140 is configured to apply marker-fluid 122, stored in the ink-chamber 120, to surfaces (not shown). As marker-fluid 122 is drawn from the ink chamber 120, the supply of marker-fluid 122 within the ink-chamber 120 is periodically exhausted during use. In contradistinction to prior art disposable markers, it is a particular feature of embodiments of the refill system herein disclosed that the marker-fluid cartridge such as the marker-fluid cartridge 100 includes a filling mechanism 110 configured to enable the supply of marker-fluid to be replenished when necessary.
As shown in
The sealing ring 119c is conical at its bottom surface and top surface, on the top surface to fit the top of the holder 114, which is formed in the shape of a restricting block with a conical lower portion, and on the bottom surface to fit the upper portion of said invagination 128, which is also conical.
There is a channel 112 in a holder 114, that extends to a bottom wall 125, or to the filling port 127. The channel 112 provides a conduit through which ink marker-fluid 122 may be introduced into the ink-chamber 120. The channel 112 may have either a diameter 113 adjacent to the bottom wall 125 allowing a close fit of a suitable delivery tube (not shown) therein, or the delivery tube has a larger diameter than the channel diameter 113, and filling port 127, which is preferably cylindrical, allows a close fit therein, so that during filling the cartridge 100 leakage of marker-fluid at the area of contact of the tube with the filling mechanism is minimal. The sealing ring 119a is preferably made of an elastomeric material, that the delivery tube tip is pushed against, or is inserted into.
In some embodiments, the filling mechanism is not disposed in the bottom wall, and may be held in a structure other than an invagination of a wall.
Reference is now made to
Marker-fluid fillers, such as the ink-filler 200 are configured to supply marker-fluid, such as ink, paint, thinner or the like, into a marker-fluid cartridge, such as the refillable marker-fluid cartridge 100 of the first embodiment.
Referring to schematic
The marker fluid 122 may be drawn from the marker-fluid reservoir 220 by the delivery mechanism 210 which is configured to couple with the filling mechanism of a marker-fluid cartridge such as in the marker-fluid cartridge 100 described hereinabove in relation to
The delivery mechanism 210 of the ink-filler 200 comprises a delivery tube 212 and a pump 214. The delivery tube 212 is configured to provide a fluid communication between the marker-fluid reservoir 220 of the ink-filler 200 and the ink-chamber of the marker-fluid cartridge. Accordingly, the first end 216 of the delivery tube 212 is typically in fluid communication with the marker-fluid reservoir 220 and the second end 218 of the delivery tube 212 is configured to be introduced into the channel of the filling mechanism of the marker-fluid cartridge, to push against the filling mechanism and to open the filling mechanism as will be further shown and explained below. Alternative coupling methods may be used as required.
The pump 214 is configured to draw marker-fluid 122 through the delivery tube 212. Accordingly, when the ink-filler 200 is coupled to the marker-fluid cartridge ink or other marker-fluid 122 may be drawn from the reservoir 220 and into the ink-chamber 120. Typically the pump includes a springed mechanism or the like adapted to pump liquid. The pump has to be sufficiently powerful to allow pumping the typically viscous marker fluid 122 into the marker-chamber 120.
Referring to
As shown in
Referring back to
The marker pen may also include a valve cap (not shown) to keep the filling mechanism 110 clean.
The marker-pen also includes means for release of air 160 to allow removal of air from the ink-chamber 120 during the filling of the ink-chamber 120.
A part of a wall of the ink-chamber 120 is a transparent window 126 to allow following the extent the marker-chamber 120 is filled with the marker-fluid 122.
Reference is now made to
The simple filling mechanism 1110 includes, similar to the embodiment shown in
The supply of ink 122 in the ink-chamber 1120 is exhausted during use. Whenever necessary, the filling mechanism 1110 may be used to supply more ink into the ink-chamber 1120 of the cartridge 1100.
When the filling mechanism 1110 is not being forced by a tube, the seal 1119a may be compressed by the spring 1116 via smooth bead 1170, thereby further helping to seal the lower channel 1112′ off from the ink chamber 1120.
The applicator may be a ball-point, particularly suitable for use with viscous marker fluids as well as gels and the like. Accordingly, where necessary, ink-fillers may be provided with delivery mechanisms configured to dispense marker-fluids having a variety of fluid characteristics to suit requirements.
c shows an expanded illustration of an air release valve 1160′, similar in structure to the filling mechanism 1110. The valve 1160′ allows release of air from the ink-chamber 1120 during filling, thereby both facilitating the filling by lowering back-pressure in the cartridge 1100, and minimizing evaporation/oxidation of the marker-fluid. The valve also prevents entrance of atmospheric air therethrough.
Alternatively, the air release valve may have a different structure, such as a flap-valve 1160″ shown in
Yet another marker-fluid cartridge 2100 is shown in
With particular reference to
Referring now to
It will be appreciated, that it is a known problem with board markers 4100a-c that they quickly run out of ink, making the writing on the board hard to read especially from a distance. All too often, a board marker which appears to be full of ink at the start of a presentation is unusable by the end of the same presentation.
Accordingly, a marker refilling station 4060 is provided in association with the presentation board 4020 having a selection of ink-fillers 4062a-c which may be used to refill the board markers 4020a-c efficiently and quickly during a presentation. The ink-fillers 4200a-c and the markers 4100a-c are preferably coded, such as colour-coded, to allow matching the markers and the fillers for using the appropriate marker-fluid.
Reference is now made to the flowchart of
Optionally step 5060 involves pushing a check valve associated with the filling mechanism against the delivery tube such that the check valve opens to receive the marker fluid, and step 5080 involves pumping the marker-fluid from the filler into the cartridge as disclosed hereinabove.
The scope of the present invention is defined by the appended claims and includes both combinations and sub combinations of the various features described hereinabove as well as variations and modifications thereof.
In the claims, the word “comprise”, and variations thereof such as “comprises”, “comprising” and the like indicate that the components listed are included, but not generally to the exclusion of other components.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IL2011/000285 | 3/31/2011 | WO | 00 | 12/10/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61319269 | Mar 2010 | US | |
61319270 | Mar 2010 | US |