1. Field of Invention
This invention generally relates to charcoal starters having a housing which provides an upper chamber to contain the charcoal, a lower chamber to provide a space for a charcoal igniter such as wadded up newspaper, and a grate to separate the upper and lower chambers and to hold the charcoal in position. They also typically provide a plurality of ventilation holes that allow air to pass through the housing and up through the perforated grate plus a handle for dispensing and portability. This type of charcoal starter is preferred over the charcoal lighter fluid method, which is a slow process and can leave a petroleum taste in the food cooked later.
2. Description of Prior Art
Charcoal starters or chimneys are well known and readily available in a variety of shapes and sizes, all having the same intent to deliver incandescent coals for heating or cooking. The typical charcoal starter consists of housing with vertical walls that has an opening at the top and the bottom. Located inside of the housing is a perforated grate that creates an upper chamber and a lower chamber. The upper chamber is used to store the charcoal that is to be heated. The lower chamber is used to store some type of burnable material, such as wadded up paper. The paper is ignited and burns long enough to ignite the charcoal that is at the bottom of the upper chamber. Then over a period of time, the charcoal at the bottom of the upper chamber heats and ignites the rest of the charcoal in the upper chamber. A handle is attached to the outside of the housing to allow the user to manipulate the charcoal chimney to move it from one location to another and to turn it over to deposit the hot coals into the grill. Some charcoal chimneys include a heat shield located between the handle and the housing to protect the users hand from the heat generated by the burning coals. The majority of devices require the dangerous method of pouring incandescent coals into a barbeque grill with no protection from the incandescent embers and ash that are splashed about in the bottom of the grill and possibly injuring the user of the device.
One such device is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,230,325 to Stanley J. Williams. This excellent invention describes a method to protect the user from the dangerously hot sidewalls of the charcoal starter. Although this invention does provide a certain level of safety to the user, it does not protect the user from the splashing of incandescent embers and ash because it requires the user to pour them into the grill.
In another excellent invention as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,638,807 to Judith Flamenbaum, a method to prevent the splashing of incandescent coals and ash is described by having a 2 piece fold down or drop down grate. Although this creates a path for the incandescent coals and ash to drop out of the bottom of the device and eliminate the need for the pouring of the incandescent coals and ash, this method requires a 2 piece fold down grate plus, its support members which are placed in the path of the incandescent coals and creates an obstructed exit path for the coals. The obstruction in the charcoal exit path means the incandescent coals can become lodged or stuck inside of the charcoal chimney. This would cause the user to shake the charcoal chimney too loosen them from their stuck position or turn the charcoal chimney over to deposit the incandescent coals and ash into the barbeque grill. Either scenario puts the user in the same danger it was trying to avoid. Although this invention could provide for a certain level of safety for the user from splashing incandescent coals and ash, if no coals become lodged, it is also significantly more complex to produce than the present invention by adding substantially more cost to the charcoal chimney due the number of components required to activate the release mechanism and to allow the two-piece grate to fold down. The improvements described in the present invention not only allow for an unobstructed exit path for the charcoals, but does so with the least amount of parts needed, but does it in a more safe and cost effective manner.
In another excellent invention as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,282,854 to Garner B. Byars describes a method for heating charcoal to incandescent and using a hinged grate to drop the incandescent charcoals out the bottom of the charcoal starter and into the grill. The Byars patent employs the use of a single piece hinged grate. The grate automatically opens by gravity when the charcoal starter is lifted. This limits the dispensing of the incandescent coals to the exact location the charcoal starter is set down when the wadded up paper is ignited. In addition, because the grate is round and flat, by design, the flat hinged grate cannot drop open completely vertical, because of this, it creates an obstructed exit path which can cause the incandescent coals to become lodged or stuck within the housing. The flat grate will rotate downward until it hits the inside of the housing. The point at which the flat grate hits the inside of the housing is when the outside diameter of the grate equals the distance across the inside diameter of the housing. The improved charcoal starter described in this patent, because the release mechanism locks the hinged grate in place until activated, allows the charcoal starter to be moved from one location to another location for the dispensing of the incandescent coals. In addition, the contoured grate allows the grate to drop open completely vertical creating an unobstructed exit past for the incandescent coals.
In another excellent invention as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,321,907 and 4,461,270 to Richard A. Sutter in which a hinged grate is described and uses a trigger mechanism to release the hot embers safely into the grill. Although innovative by use of the trigger mechanism, the release of the trigger requires the use of two hands, one hand to hold the charcoal starter and the other hand to release trigger, thus allowing the hinged grate to rotate about the hinge and deposit the hot embers into the grill. However using the second hand to release the trigger mechanism puts the second hand dangerously close to the hot charcoal starter housing. Also, the heat from the hot embers will be transferred down the metal wire frame and cause the trigger to become hot to the touch. In addition, because the grate is round and flat, it will create an obstructed exit path for the incandescent coals. The charcoal starter described in this patent not only allows for a one handed operation with a thermally insulated release handle, used to activate the release mechanism, but also creates an unobstructed exit path for the incandescent coals, thus making the operation easy and safe to use.
Yet another excellent invention as described in Pat. No. 5,469,835 to James C. Stephen, Erich J. Schlosser and Ewald Seig in which a bale type or second handle is described to aid in the handling of the charcoal starter while transporting the coals to another location to another and for depositing the hot coals into the grill. The invention describes the second handle as being attached to either the housing itself or the heat shield. Attaching the second handle to the housing puts the handle in direct contact with the side wall of the housing that is in direct contact with the hot embers and thus transferring the heat to the handle making it hot to touch. It also allows for the second handle to be attached to the heat shield of the charcoal starter. The problem with this design is that it requires the heat shield to be made of heavy gauge material in order to handle the weight of the charcoal starter with a full load of charcoal. This adds unnecessary cost to the charcoal starter. The second handle as described in this patent is pivotally attached to the main handle of the charcoal starter. This not only removes the second handle from direct contact with the hot sidewalls of the housing, but it also attaches it to the main handle which already designed to hold the weight of the charcoal starter loaded with coals.
The present invention provides a means by which all of the above problems are satisfied. This improved charcoal starter provides a housing with vertical sidewalls making a complete enclosure with an open top and an open bottom, a contoured single piece hinged grate that separates the inside of the housing into an upper chamber, to hold the charcoal, and a lower chamber, for combustibles, like wadded up paper, a thermally insulated handle for safety and portability, and a release mechanism attached to the handle, that when activated, releases one side of the contoured single piece grate allowing it to rotate about the hinge which then creates an opening for the incandescent coals and ash to drop safely out the bottom of the device and into the barbeque grill.
An object of the improved charcoal starter is a simple hinged contoured single piece grate where the grate is contoured to compliment the inside of the housing, the release mechanism, when activated by pulling the release handle, permits the grate to rotate downward about the hinge to an open position and thus allows the incandescent coals and ash to drop safely into the barbeque grill. Although there are many ways to create a grate that compliments the housing, the preferred method as shown in the drawings, show a substantially circular grate that is flat in the middle for a distance and then is turned upward at an angle that compliments the diameter of the housing. Although one skilled in the art could create a plethora of grate profiles whose contour compliments the shape of the housing, two common designs might be a rounded profile or a “V” shaped profile.
The invention also provides for an upper chamber and lower chamber separated by the contoured single piece hinged grate. The upper chamber is provided to hold the charcoal or like material while heat is being applied until the charcoals become incandescent and ready for use. The lower chamber is provided as a location to provide a heat source to the charcoals. A typical material used as a heat source would be wadded up paper.
The invention also provides a handle for portability. Although the drawings show primarily a vertical handle attached to the sidewalls, one skilled in the art could provide several other options for making the charcoal starter portable. The method described in this patent was used to provide a one handed operation of lifting the charcoal starter to the desired location and activating the release mechanism, thus, opening the grate for depositing the incandescent coals safely into the grill.
The invention also provides for a second handle that is pivotally attached to the main handle which provides for additional stability. The second handle is attached to the main handle because it provides for the most support as compared to attaching it to the heat shield and provides a greater distance from the heat as compared to attaching it to the housing itself.
The invention also provides a release mechanism for the contoured single piece hinged grate. As shown in the drawings, the release mechanism consists of a horizontal release member where one end protrudes into the housing and prevents the contoured single piece hinged grate from rotating to the open position and a vertical release member that is fixedly attached to the horizontal release member. The release mechanism can be moved forward to allow the horizontal release member to block the contoured single piece hinged grate from rotating to the open position or moved backward to allow the contoured single piece hinged grate to rotate downward to the open position to provide an unobstructed exit path for the incandescent coals. The system can be reset by rotating the charcoal starter upside-down, then pulling the vertical release member backward and allow gravity to rotate the contoured single piece hinged grate to rotate back into a closed position. The vertical release member is then moved forward which moves the horizontal release member into a position that blocks the contoured single piece hinged grate and prevents it from rotating.
It should be noted that the operation of the release mechanism is operated manually, but could be assisted by the spring. A spring could be added to either the horizontal release member or the vertical release member to hold the release mechanism in a closed position that is biased to always blocks the contoured single piece hinged grate and prevents it from rotating.
It should additionally be noted that the resetting of the contoured single piece hinged grate could be aided by the addition of a spring to the hinge, with a spring force is greater then the weight of the grate itself so, it would rotate back into position when the charcoal starter is empty thus eliminating the need to flip the charcoal starter upside down. However, the spring force would need to be less than the weight of the grate plus a minimal amount of charcoal, so that all of the incandescent embers would be safely deposited into the grill.
An additional benefit to the present invention is the addition of a locking feature for the release mechanism itself. To prevent the accidental activation of the release mechanism, a locking feature can be added to prevent the user from accidentally moving the release mechanism from the closed position to the open position and thus prematurely releasing the coals. The preferred method is the implementation of a cutout in the lower main handle support that has two positions. Position one is the locked closed position and position two is the unlocked open position. Position one being a slot in the cutout that holds the release mechanism in the closed position that prevents it from moving toward the main handle and into the open position. This holds the horizontal release member under the single piece hinged grate preventing it from rotating. When the release mechanism is locked in place, the charcoal chimney can to be moved from one location to another without an accidental deployment of the charcoal. Position two would allow the release mechanism to move toward the main handle and into the open position such that the release mechanism will be moved out from under the contoured single piece hinged grate allowing it to rotate downward into the open position and depositing the coals into the grill. There would be a small channel that connects both positions allowing the user to move the release mechanism from one location to the other when needed. Although this is the preferred locking mechanism, one skilled in the art could provide several different methods to hold the release mechanism in the closed position, one being a locking tab. The locking tab would be attached to the main handle support by a pin, screw or other means that would allow the locking tab to rotate from position one to position two. Position one would align the locking tab with the release mechanism and prevent it from moving out the closed position and into the open position. When the locking tab is rotated out of alignment with the release mechanism, the release mechanism would then be able to move from the closed position to the open position and thus deposit the coals into the grill.
Referring to
With the contoured single piece hinged grate 2 in the closed position in this view the grate ventilation holes 19 are also seen. The heat and flames from combustible materials held in the lower chamber 13 (