Not Applicable.
1. Field of Invention
This invention relates specifically to smokers who wish to give up that habit.
2. Description of Prior Art
A lot of people try to give up the addiction to smoking every year; they focus mainly on will power, which requires a great effort by an individual. Other methods, which supply nicotine or other substances, have been tried. In most cases, several trial were required to give up that dependency.
Inventors have created several kinds of pipes to give up the craving to smoke. U.S. Pat. No. 3,695,275 to Hayward (1972) discloses a pipe, which performs as a vacuum pump to draw smoke from a cigarette and discharge it to the ambient air without the user inhaling any of that smoke. That invention stimulates the senses of tact and sight but it doesn't stimulate the sense of smell and taste as does smoking. U.S. Pat. No. 4,184,496 to Adair (1980) discloses a pipe which enables the user to circulate the air around his nose and mouth. However, this invention does not stimulate the sense of smell, sight or taste. U.S. Pat. No. 4,732,167 to Nagano (1988) discloses a pipe that allows the user to control smoke concentration. However, Nagano's invention lets the user inhale a great amount of smoke, which would cause damage to his or her health. U.S. Pat. No. 3,482,580 to Hollabaugh (1969) discloses a pipe, which produces an electrical shock in the user's lips, but this pipe draws smoke as does a regular pipe.
This invention is a Sensory Smoking Simulator, which calms the craving to smoke and reduces greatly the risk of contracting tobacco-related illnesses. It also simulates the effect of smoking, but the smoker consumes far less smoke. Thus, it provides an easy way to quit smoking.
The Sensory Smoking Simulator also performs in a superior manner than prior art, since it stimulates all of the relevant senses that the smoker associates with smoking at once: touch, smell, taste and sight.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide a novel and useful device to assist a person to give up smoking without appeal to will power.
It is a further objective of the present invention to provide a device for enabling a person to calm the craving to smoke by simulating the act of smoking, with minimal risk of catching illness caused by tobacco.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a device that can hold a cigarette or bite burner and which allows a person to satisfy his or her craving to smoke by only smelling the aroma.
Briefly, the present invention achieves the foregoing and other objectives by a smoking device having a main body, which includes both an air motor and a vacuum pump, connected by the same shafts and performing in two separate chambers. Each chamber is connected separately to ambient air. The lower chamber has both a window on one of its sides and a mouthpiece attached on the opposite side; the upper chamber has both a cigarette receiver and two narrow exhaust pipes attached on the opposite side. The upper chamber also includes one wider exhaust pipe on top. The cigarette receiver includes both a circular opening and an adjustable air mixer valve.
In normal use, a cigarette is secured by the cigarette receiver with the mouthpiece in the smoker's mouth. Then, when a person inhales, the impellers in the lower chamber rotate and draw ambient air directly to the person's lungs through a mouthpiece while a bitter taste, similar to tobacco smoke, is being secreted by the mouthpiece. The rotation of the impeller causes the vacuum pump to rotate, which reduces the pressure in the upper chamber and draws the cigarette smoke, which is discharged to the ambient air. Most of that smoke goes, via the widest pipe, to the ambient air away from the person and the least of that smoke goes, via the narrowest pipe, to the ambient air near the user's nose. Thus, it can readily be seen that a device is provided which enables a person to simulate the act of smoking, while not actually inhaling smoke.
Other objects, aspects, and features of the invention will be apparent in the description.
The invention, accordingly, includes features of construction, a combination of elements, and the arrangement of parts, which will be shown in the Sensory Smoking Simulator herein after described.
Accordingly, besides the objects and advantages of the Sensory Smoking Simulator described in my above patent, several objectives and advantages of the present invention are:
Further objects of the Sensory Smoking Simulator will be brought out in the following parts of the specifications, wherein a detailed description is given for the purpose of filly disclosing the invention without placing limitations thereon.
With the above and other related objects in view, the Sensory Smoking Simulator consists of the details of construction and combination of parts, as will be more filly understood from the following description when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which:
5 Sensory Smoking Simulator 10 Screened window
12 Air motor impellers 14a Mouthpiece holder
14
b Mouthpiece inner passage 15 Mouthpiece
16 Shafts 17 Electric motor
20 No contaminated air 21a Cigarette
21
b Cigar holder 21c Pipe
21
d Special shaped cigarette holder 21e Body with smoke cigarette aroma
24 Cigarette receiver 25 Damper
26 Air mixer control valve 29 Vacuum pump impellers
30 Narrowest exhaust pipes 31 Nostrils
32 Button cover 33 Smoke
33
l Large billows of smoke 33s Minor billows of smoke
34 Top cover 35 Widest exhaust pipe
36 Mouth 39 Smoker
40 Main body 41 Upper chamber
42 Lower chamber 43 Chamber divider
44 Top cover slot 45a Slot in cigarette receiver
45
v Slot in adjustable valve B Cutting plane line
The upper chamber 41 has a cigarette receiver 24 attached on the right side and the two narrowest exhaust pipes 30 attached on the opposite left side. The cigarette receiver includes a slot 45a and a mixer air control valve 26; the mixer air control valve 26 includes a slot 45v. On top of the main body 40 is an attached cover 34 that includes the widest exhaust pipe 35 and a slot 44 to connect the upper chamber 41 to ambient air through the widest exhaust pipe 35. The widest exhaust pipe 35 also includes a damper 25. The top cover 34 is attached to the main body 40 to close the upper chamber 41.
It is noted that the cigarette receiver 24 might be coupled with a cigar receiver 21b, a special cigarette receiver 21d, a bite burner 21c, or a body with cigarette smoke aroma 21e, as shown in
As can be seen in the drawings, the widest exhaust pipe 35 exhausts to ambient air, opposed to the narrowest exhaust pipe 30 direction, to prevent smoke discharged via the widest exhaust pipe 35 being drawn near the nose of the user 39. In addition, the widest exhaust pipe 35 is located on top of the main body 40 to prevent smoke from being drawn into the screened window 10.
The present invention is not limited to the embodiments explained above; many modifications and alterations may be conceived within the scope of the invention. For instance, in the above embodiment, the impellers 12 rotate by air suction created when a user inhales by mouthpiece 15. However, those impellers 12 can be rotated by an electric motor 17 as shown in
Another instance in the above embodiment; an unlit body impregnated with cigarette smoke odor 21e could be placed in cigarette receiver 24, so that when the user inhales by mouthpiece 15, he could smell it in order to stimulate that sense.
The manner of using the Sensory Smoking Simulator 5 is identical to that of smoking using an ordinary pipe. As can be seen in
In the Sensory Smoking Simulator 5, according to the invention, it is possible to adjust the amount of clean air introduced into the upper chamber 41 by adjusting the air control mixer valve 26. Thus, the concentration of the tobacco smoke 33 can be adjusted at will. In this manner, concentration of poisonous substances contained in the tobacco smoke 33 can be reduced. The Sensory Smoking Simulator also includes a damper 25 to control the exhausting air when an unlit body with cigarette smoke aroma 24 is used. Obviously, when the damper 25 is closed, the air in the upper chamber 41 is concentrated at the narrowest exhaust pipe 30. Thus, the user avoids discharging offensive odor to other people in the vicinity. Thus, it can readily be seen that said device 5 provided enables a person 39 to simulate the act or experience of smoking, while not actually inhaling smoke, lessening the danger to his health. It can be noted that, while the user 39 is inhaling no contaminated air 20 by mouthpiece 15, he stimulates the sense of touch in his respiratory system; he gets the bitter taste yielded from that mouthpiece 15; he smells the aroma of smoke 33s; and he may watch the device 5 performing. Thus, the user 39 experiences a mental feeling similar to that of smoking.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3482580 | Hollabaugh | Dec 1969 | A |
3695275 | Hayward | Oct 1972 | A |
4184496 | Adair | Jan 1980 | A |
4193411 | Faris et al. | Mar 1980 | A |
4732167 | Nagano | Mar 1988 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040221857 A1 | Nov 2004 | US |