This invention relates to roll towel dispensers and more particularly to environmentally sensitive means for providing recycled toweling for wiping/drying uses having a minimum carbon foot print. With the increasing attention being paid to global warming and the attendant environmental factors believed to be causing the warming it has become increasingly important to reduce to the minimum the creation of pollution and consumption of natural resources. Recycling has thus become important in all aspects of modern life. The toweling/wiping industry is one such activity and the present invention is an attempt to improve significantly the long term environmental impact thereof.
Continuous roll towel dispensers have been available for many years. Generally they have involved a loop of cloth towel material fed out of a first slot of a cabinet and taken up through another slot. Various manually operated and power operated devices have been developed and there are literally hundreds of patents covering this art. Recently the towel material has included various paper and synthetic products as well as the traditional cotton and linen products. Machines dispensing individual sheets of paper and sheet portions tom from rolls of paper are also well known in the industry. All of these machines have become increasingly sophisticated and complicated in part to address their impact on the environment, and while the effect of paper in its various forms versus cloth has been and continues to be debated in the industry, the need for an environmentally friendly low carbon footprint wiping/drying solution has become preeminent.
Accordingly it is a primary object of the present invention to provide a greatly simplified roll towel dispenser that can be made largely of recycled material and will permit easy reuse of the toweling/wiping material.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a roll towel dispenser device in which the clean toweling is easy to install and the used toweling is easy to remove and reprocess for additional use.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a roll towel dispenser in which the toweling is contained totally within the dispenser cabinet with no exposure to the user except when actually required for a drying/wiping operation.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide a roll towel dispenser in which the used toweling material is completely retracted into the dispenser cabinet after use so that it can not be accessed from the outside by vandals or other unauthorized users.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a simplified take up reel spindle that may be easily installed in the dispenser and easily removed from a roll of used toweling.
It is a still further object of the present invention to provide a dispenser in which gravity feeds the clean toweling out of the cabinet after unrolling from the supply.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a roll towel dispenser that can dispense a variety of web materials without machine modifications.
These and other and further objects of the invention are achieved in an embodiment in which an enclosure has a pair of spaced apart vertical end plates therein joined by an horizontal shelf forming an upper compartment for a roll of clean toweling; a horizontal feed roll is rotatably mounted between said end plates along the front edge of said plate; a used material take-up spindle is rotatably mounted between said plates below said shelf; a pivotably mounted wall plate is hung below said shelf on the bottom front edge of the shelf extending to adjacent the rear edge of an opening in the bottom of the enclosure; individual gear motors are mounted on said end plates to power said feed roller and take-up spindle; computer control means are used to operate the motors and a battery is used to power the apparatus.
Referring now to
Mounted between the plates 20 is a shelf 22 which at it front edge has a lip portion 24 (see also
The simplicity of the mechanism can be more fully appreciated by referring to
Roller 26 powered by motor 30 feeds toweling from the bottom of roll 34 out off the shelf 22 and by gravity causes it to fall down the inside of front housing 16 and out the slot 46 to form the loop 44. Tension in the toweling is released while the toweling is being fed out by roll 26 to form the loop 44 and, door 40, tends by gravity to move from the “fully rewound position” of
After the toweling loop 44 has been used and the sensor 50 no longer senses any motion, a signal is sent to motor 32 to rotate spindle 28 to wind up and retract all the previously exposed toweling loop. This retract cycle is completed when the tension in the toweling causes shaft 36 to be raised and trip a sensor mounted on the right hand end plate to shut off motor 32 resulting in the condition shown in
Referring now to
The computer board 52 is mounted on the right side end plate and is programmed to perform at least the following steps namely: power up; check for cover open; check for towel fully rewound; check for movement pulses; turn on towel feed; check for movement pulses; turn off towel feed; turn on towel rewind; check for towel fully rewound; disable movement and turn on “call attendant” upon preselected conditions occurring. Other operations may be added as required.
While there are given above certain specific examples of the invention and its application in practical use, it should be understood that they are not intended to be exhaustive or to be limiting of the invention. On the contrary, these illustrations and explanations herein are given in order to acquaint others skilled in the art with this invention and the principles thereof and a suitable manner of its application in practical use.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1353416 | Orcutt | Sep 1920 | A |
1765504 | Steiner et al. | Jun 1930 | A |
2140440 | Chidsey, Jr. | Dec 1938 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080302901 A1 | Dec 2008 | US |