The present invention relates to a refrigeration appliance, in particular a domestic freezer or fridge-freezer combination appliance, having an ice dispenser and an assembly for a refrigeration appliance of this kind.
An ice dispenser known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,176,627 A comprises a storage compartment for chunks of ice, a stirrer, which can be rotated about an axis extending through the storage container, a crushing compartment which lengthens the storage compartment in the direction of the axis, and a slide, rotatably coupled to the stirrer in the crushing compartment, in the form of a plurality of parallel blades secured to the axis, which during the course of its rotation conveys ice that has penetrated into the crushing compartment to a dispensing opening and optionally crushes it in the process. The stirrer is constructed over a portion of its length as a spiral and over another portion, adjacent to the dispensing compartment, as a conveyor worm, so a rotation of the stirrer conveys chunks of ice into the crushing compartment. If the stirrer were to rotate without it being possible to dispense ice from the crushing compartment, the ice would back up in the crushing compartment and block rotation. Rotation of the stirrer without simultaneous dispensing of ice is therefore not possible. If ice is not removed for a relatively long period of time there is the risk that the chunks of ice will freeze to one another in the storage container and block rotation, so the ice dispenser has to be removed from the refrigeration appliance and be de-iced in order to render it usable again.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,273,219 proposes an ice dispenser having an assembly that can be mounted in a refrigeration appliance, comprising a storage compartment for chunks of ice, a stirrer which can be rotated about an axis extending through the storage compartment in order to move chunks of ice contained in the storage compartment, and a dispensing compartment from which crushed or uncrushed chunks of ice are dispensed from the assembly as the user chooses. The stirrer has the form of a rod that is bent in the manner of a zigzag in one plane. A conveying and metering drum arranged between the storage compartment and the crushing compartment is coupled via a planet gear to the rotation of the stirrer and whenever the latter rotates conveys ice into the crushing compartment. The stirrer is therefore only allowed to rotate if ice is to be dispensed. The interval between successive actuations of the stirrer can therefore be very long and there is likewise the risk of chunks of ice freezing together in the storage compartment and blocking the stirrer.
To counteract the risk of the stirrer being blocked a very powerful drive motor can be provided for the stirrer and the entire assembly can be designed with high mechanical loading capacity to allow the chunks of ice to be broken off even after a period of relatively long non-use. While the risk of blocking of the ice dispenser may be reduced and/or the time of non-use following which a blockage occurs may be increased in this way, this approach is still associated with significant costs and there is the risk that chunks of ice will be undesirably crushed in the storage compartment. However, the greater the portion of small fragments of ice in the storage compartment is, the greater is its tendency to freeze solid and the greater the force required to break off the ice.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,856,381 proposes solving the problem of freezing solid by providing a stirrer and a conveyor worm in the storage compartment of an ice dispenser which are driven separately from each other and by a separate motor in each case. The stirrer can therefore be actuated to loosen chunks of ice from each other without ice simultaneously being dispensed through the conveyor worm. One problem with this construction is the large space requirement of the stirrer and the conveyor worm that is separate therefrom and their drive motors, which makes this solution of interest substantially only for commercial devices that are used exclusively for making ice.
One object of the present invention is to create a refrigeration appliance comprising an ice dispenser in which freezing solid of stored chunks of ice can be reliably prevented and in which the ice dispenser still has a compact, inexpensively achievable construction. A further object is to disclose an assembly for a refrigeration appliance of this kind.
The object is achieved by a refrigeration appliance with the features of claim 1 and an assembly as disclosed in claim 17.
By arranging a closable flap between the storage compartment and the dispensing passage in a refrigeration appliance comprising a housing enclosing an interior, and an assembly arranged in the interior and having a storage compartment for chunks of ice and a stirrer, which is rotatable about an axis that extends through the storage compartment to move chunks of ice contained in the storage compartment in relation to each other and toward a dispensing passage that extends through the housing, it is possible to actuate the stirrer without this simultaneously leading to ice being dispensed. In other words, the stirrer, depending on the state—open or closed—of the flap can be used for conveying and dispensing ice or for loosening chunks of ice stored in the storage compartment. Arranging the flap on the path of the ice upstream of the dispensing passage, i.e. inside the chilled interior, ensures that ice which is potentially resting against the flap does not thaw and therefore thawed water does not flow in an uncontrolled manner out of the dispensing passage.
The closable flap is expediently part of the assembly.
To make the dispensing of crushed ice possible, the assembly preferably has a crushing compartment in which tools for crushing the chunks of ice are accommodated. In this case the flap can be arranged between the storage compartment and the crushing compartment, so when closed it prevents ice from passing into the crushing compartment. However, it can also be arranged between the crushing compartment and the dispensing passage. The second variant has the advantage that closing the flap immediately stops the dispensing of ice while a flap provided between storage compartment and crushing compartment cannot prevent ice that has already passed into the crushing compartment before the flap was closed from still being dispensed even after the flap has been closed.
The flap arranged between the crushing compartment and the dispensing passage is preferably arranged to close an opening in a circumferential surface of the substantially cylindrical crushing compartment. To convey ice through the crushing compartment the latter preferably contains a slide that can be rotated about its cylinder axis.
It is also preferred for the slide to have a first set of fingers, and for a second set of fingers to be provided in the dispensing compartment, at least one of the sets having at least two axially spaced fingers, and for one finger of the second set to pass a gap between the two fingers of the first set when the slide is rotated. Chunks of ice which arrive between two sets of fingers are crushed between the fingers and therefore arrive in the form of small fragments for dispensing. To improve conveying for crushing, the fingers preferably have sharp edges, in particular in the form of knife blades.
The flap can be displaceably guided between its open and closed positions.
To keep the construction of the assembly compact it may be expedient for the flap to be guided on a curved path.
To make such guidance possible it may be expedient for the flap to be flexible so as to correspond to the course of the curved path.
Alternatively the flap can also be pivoted about a first axis between its open and closed positions.
A flap of this kind can preferably be locked in its closed position by a self-locking mechanism.
A self-locking mechanism of this kind can easily be achieved by an arm that can be pivoted about a second axis, wherein in a position of the arm locking the flap, an imaginary line, which connects a point of the arm that contacts the flap to the second axis, is substantially parallel to the direction of movement of a point of the flap contacted by the point of the arm when the flap is not locked. The pivoting movement of the flap can be driven by a rotation of the arm, the flap always reaching an end point of its freedom of movement corresponding to the closed position, when the imaginary line is exactly parallel to the direction of movement of the contacted point. Small deviations from parallelism are acceptable as long as they do not lead to a marked open state of the flap in the locked state.
The arm can be rotated about the second axis without a stop. This allows for example the arm to be moved by rotations in the same direction respectively into the locking position and back into a non-locking position, and this simplifies the drive of the arm movement.
Alternatively the arm can be rotated about the second axis between two stops in an angular interval. While it is then necessary to be able to switch the direction of rotation of a drive for the arm, the need to monitor the position of the arm in order to detect when it is in the locking position is dispensed with. The angular interval in which the arm can be rotated expediently includes an orientation of the imaginary line exactly parallel to the direction of movement of the contacted point of the flap.
To be able to drive a movement of the flap in opposite directions the pivotable arm expediently engages in a connecting link formed on the flap.
Further features and advantages of the invention result from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the accompanying figures, in which:
The refrigeration appliance shown in a schematic section in
The stirring rod 9 is a metal rod which in its portion extending through the storage compartment 6 is bent in the manner of a zigzag in a plane parallel to its axis of rotation. Blades 11 of a grinder are secured to the portion of the stirring rod 9 engaging in the crushing compartment 10, so they rotate when the stirring rod 9 is rotated.
As may be seen in particular in
Blades 12 are also accommodated in the crushing compartment 11 and can be switched between a state in which they can be rotated together with the blades 11 in which, like these, they merely act as slides for the chunks of ice located in the crushing compartment 10, and a stationary state in which they grind ice located in the crushing compartment 10 in cooperation with the blades 11. The blades 12 have the form of sharp-edged, substantially quadrant-shaped plates. At their outer circumference the plates are rigidly connected by two cross struts 46 and their tips that face the stirring rod 9 are clamped in the gaps between the impact rings 45, as shown in
A flap (not visible in
A water tank 16 is embedded in the insulating material of the door 2 on the back wall of the recess 14. Like the ice maker 5 the water tank 16 is connected on the one hand via a supply line 17 and a stop valve 18 to the drinking water network and on the other hand to a tap connection 19 in the recess 14.
The storage compartment 6 has a base 27 that slopes in the longitudinal direction from the back wall 25 to an end wall 26 and is semi-circular in the section transverse to the axis of rotation of the stirring rod 9. The semi-circular cross-sectional shape of the base 27 prevents chunks of ice from becoming wedged in a corner of the storage compartment 6 and being able to block rotation of the stirring rod 9. The sloping course toward the end wall 26 means that chunks of ice set in motion as a result of the rotation of the stirring rod 9 tend to slide toward the end wall 26 and via a circular window 28 formed therein enter the crushing compartment 10 (not shown in
A pin 29 that projects forward from the end wall 26 is used as a pivot axis for the flap which closes the crushing compartment 10 and has already been mentioned.
In the configuration shown in
In the configuration shown in
It is not always possible to lower the flap 61 when the stirring rod 9 is idle because chunks of ice are generally located in the region of the window 28 and will block the path of the flap 61. However, by rotating the stirring rod 9 during lowering of the flap 61 it is possible to lower the flap 61 gradually until the window 28 is completely closed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 061 079.2 | Dec 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/62719 | 11/22/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/8/2009 |