SANITARY SINGLE-LEVER MIXER

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20090120518
  • Publication Number
    20090120518
  • Date Filed
    August 03, 2006
    18 years ago
  • Date Published
    May 14, 2009
    15 years ago
Abstract
A sanitary single-lever mixer (1) comprises a housing (2), known per se, having a receiving compartment (5) which is open towards the top. The housing (2) is associated with a closing part (39) which covers the upper opening of the receiving compartment (5) and comprises a center passage (40). The adjusting lever (34) or the handle (35) extends through said passage. The closing part (39) has a convex, spherical top when seen from above. The handle (35) is associated with a cover element (42) that has an outer exposed part (42a) with an exposed surface and a sliding element (42b) connected to the exposed part (42a).
Description

The invention relates to a sanitary single-lever mixer having:

    • a) a housing which has a receiving compartment which is open towards the top;
    • b) a control apparatus which is disposed in said receiving compartment and has at least one movable control element which determines the flow of water, and an adjusting lever which extends upwards and can be tilted about two axes which are perpendicular to one another;
    • c) a handle which is connected, at one end, to the adjusting lever;
    • d) a closing part which is associated with the housing, covers the upper aperture in the receiving compartment and has a central through-aperture through which the adjusting shaft or the handle extends, and which closing part possesses an upper side which, viewed from above, is convex and spherical;
    • e) a covering part which is associated with the handle and has an underside which is essentially complementary to the upper side of the closing part and slides on said upper side when the handle moves.


Sanitary single-lever mixers of the abovementioned type are obtainable on the market in the most varied configurations. In spite of a multiplicity of production variants in design and in the detailed configuration of the control apparatus, these have one problem in common: in order to be able to fit and service the control apparatus, it is necessary for the receiving compartment containing the control apparatus to be accessible. The upper aperture provided for that purpose in the receiving compartment must be covered in a suitable manner for two reasons. For one thing, this is a requirement from the aesthetic point of view; for another, dirt and water must be prevented from penetrating into the interior of the single-lever mixer. A closing part which is provided with a spherical upper side is therefore put on above the aperture in the receiving compartment. Either the adjusting lever or the handle must pass through said closing part, for which reason the latter possesses a central through-aperture.


In order to enable the adjusting lever or the handle to perform the movements required when adjusting the control element, this central through-aperture must not be too small. A further measure is therefore required, as a result of which the through-aperture in the closing part, which aperture is already somewhat smaller—compared with the upper aperture in the receiving compartment—is covered in turn. This takes place with the aid of a covering part which is connected to the handle and which slides, with its spherical underside, on the upper side of the closing part. Said covering part is so dimensioned that it covers the through-aperture in the closing part in all the positions of the handle.


Since it is not possible to obtain ideal, play-free sliding of the covering part, which is connected to the handle, on the closing part, which is associated with the housing, and extremely small particles are able to penetrate, over and over again, into the gap between these two elements, in the case of the known single-lever mixers it is not possible, in the long term, to prevent those regions on the upper side of the closing part which are, at times, masked by the covering part and, at other times, left clear by said covering part, from being scratched or becoming unsightly in some other way.


For this reason WO 89/00275 A1, which likewise describes a sanitary single-lever mixer of the generic type, proposes that the closing part associated with the housing be concealed, once again, under a visible cap. This is naturally relatively expensive.


The object of the present invention is to refine a sanitary single-lever mixer of the initially mentioned type in such a way that an aesthetic appearance is guaranteed in the long term.


This object is achieved, according to the invention, through the fact that:

    • f) the covering part associated with the handle is made up of an outer, visible part which is provided with a visible surface, and a sliding part which is connected to said visible part and consists of a material having good sliding properties, and on which the spherical underside is constructed.


Because of the bipartite nature, which is proposed according to the invention, of the covering part which is associated with the handle, the two functions which are assigned to said covering part are apportioned to different elements which can be optimised in a manner specific to the particular function.


The outer, visible part may consist of any desired material, even a hard material, which is best suited to the application of a durable visible surface. The sliding part connected to the visible part, on the other hand, which cannot itself be seen from outside, is selected with a view to obtaining good sliding properties. When its spherical underside slides on the spherical, complementary upper side of the closing part associated with the housing, only very lower frictional forces are produced. The material of the sliding part may also be provided—at least in the region in which it rests on the closing part—with a certain degree of softness, so that particles which get into the gap between the covering part and the closing part can be pressed slightly into the said material. This effectively avoids scratching of the upper side of the closing part.


The visible part preferably consists of metal. The sliding part, on the other hand, preferably consists of plastic, in particular of polyoxymethylene.


That exemplified embodiment of the invention in which the visible part projects beyond the sliding part in the radial direction, but maintains a distance from the upper side of the closing part by means of the protruding rim, is particularly advantageous. In this case, the sliding part, which is not optimised with respect to visible properties, cannot be seen, even when viewed from the side, so that the aesthetics of the mixer's appearance are perceived in a particularly satisfactory manner.





An exemplified embodiment of the invention will be explained in greater detail below with the aid of the drawings, in which:



FIG. 1 shows the side view of a sanitary single-lever mixer, partly in section;



FIG. 2 shows the front view of the sanitary single-lever mixer in FIG. 1; and



FIG. 3 shows a partial enlargement from FIG. 1 in the region which is cut away therein.





The sanitary single-lever mixer which is represented in the drawings and is identified, as a whole, by the reference numeral 1, comprises a cast housing 2 onto which an outlet 3 is formed. In contrast to conventional sanitary fittings, said outlet 3 does not contain a water duct which is closed as far as an outlet aperture, but possesses an outlet channel 4 which is open towards the top, that is to say, an outlet region which, viewed from above, is concavely curved. However, the details of the outlet 3 are not important in the present context.


Hollowed out of the housing 2 is a cup-shaped receiving compartment 5 which is open towards the top and in which a control apparatus, which is not visible in the drawings, is disposed. In the present case, said control apparatus is a control cartridge which contains, in known manner, the elements, generally control plates made of ceramics, which control the flow of water.


Projecting upwards from the control cartridge in known manner is an adjusting lever 34 which tilts about an axis perpendicular to the plane of the drawings for the purpose of varying the quantity of water running out, and which can be twisted about an axis lying in the plane of the drawings for the purpose of varying the temperature of said water. Detachably fastened to the adjusting lever 34, in a manner which is of no further interest here, is a handle 35 which passes upwards out of the housing 2 of the washstand fitting 1 and serves for actuation by the user.


Inserted in the upper end region of the receiving compartment 5 in the housing 2 is a ring 36, to the upper end face of which a closing part 39 possessing a spherical upper side is fastened, for example by clipping or bonding. Said closing part has a through-bore 40 which is coaxial with the axis of the receiving compartment 5 and through which the handle 35 extends.


Fastened to the handle 35 is a covering part 42 which is curved in a spherical manner on both the upper side and the underside. The radius of curvature on the underside is essentially identical to the radius of curvature on the upper side of the closing part 39. The covering part 42 comprises an outer, visible part 42a as well as a sliding part 42b which is bonded or clipped to the said visible part 42a.


Said visible part 42a preferably consists of metal and is provided with a visible surface, for example chromium plating. The sliding part 42b consists of a plastic having satisfactory sliding properties, in particular polyoxymethylene. Its diameter is slightly smaller than that of the visible part 42a. Whereas the sliding part 42b slides along, with its concave underside, on the closing part 39, the lower rim of the visible part 42a, which rim lies radially outside the sliding part 42b, is offset upwards slightly, so that the said rim does not rest against the closing part 39.


The abovedescribed configuration of the sanitary single-lever mixer 1, on the one hand, adequately guarantees the leakproof nature of the latter in the upward direction, but at the same time ensures that the movements of the covering part 42, which is connected to the handle 35, over the upper side of the closing part 39 do not lead to impairment of the latter's surface quality.

Claims
  • 1. A sanitary single-lever mixer comprising, a) a housing which has a receiving compartment which is open towards the top;b) a control apparatus which is disposed in said receiving compartment and has at least one movable control element which determines the flow of water, and an adjusting lever which extends upwards and can be tilted about two axes which are perpendicular to one another;c) a handle which is connected, at one end, to the adjusting lever;d) a closing part which is associated with the housing, covers the upper aperture in the receiving compartment and has a central through-aperture through which the adjusting shaft or the handle extends, and which closing part possesses an upper side which, viewed from above, is convex and spherical; and,e) a covering part which is associated with the handle and has an underside which is essentially complementary to the upper side of the closing part and slides on said upper side when the handle moves; whereinf) the covering part associated with the handle is made up of an outer, visible part which is provided with a visible surface, and a sliding part which is connected to said visible part and consists of a material having good sliding properties, and on which the spherical underside of said covering part is constructed.
  • 2. The sanitary single-lever mixer of according to claim 1, wherein the visible part consists of metal.
  • 3. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 1, wherein the sliding part consists of plastic.
  • 4. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 1, wherein the visible part projects beyond the sliding part in the radial direction, but maintains a distance from the upper side of the closing part by means of the protruding rim.
  • 5. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 2, wherein the sliding part consists of plastic.
  • 6. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 5, wherein the plastic includes polyoxymethylene.
  • 7. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 5, wherein the visible part projects beyond the sliding part in the radial direction, but maintains a distance from the upper side of the closing part by means of the protruding rim.
  • 8. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 7, wherein the plastic includes polyoxymethylene.
  • 9. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 2, wherein the visible part projects beyond the sliding part in the radial direction, but maintains a distance from the upper side of the closing part by means of the protruding rim.
  • 10. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 3, wherein the visible part projects beyond the sliding part in the radial direction, but maintains a distance from the upper side of the closing part by means of the protruding rim.
  • 11. The sanitary single-lever mixer of claim 10, wherein the plastic includes polyoxymethylene.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
10 2005 040 160.0 Aug 2005 DE national
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 371c Date
PCT/EP2006/007670 8/3/2006 WO 00 2/21/2008