Shower device having a resiliently depressible jet disk for removing mineral deposits

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6209799
  • Patent Number
    6,209,799
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, April 6, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 3, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
A shower device having a flexible, flat jet or spray disk is created, in which at least one surface zone is curved outwards and on exceeding a specific pressing in force (E) exerted thereon springs round suddenly with the curvature inwards into a space located behind it and automatically springs back to the starting position when the force is relieved.As a result of the springing or springing round, it is possible to detach lime deposits from the jet disk.
Description




FIELD OF USE AND PRIOR ART




The invention relates to a shower device having a flexible, flat jet or spray disk.




Shower devices with a flat jet disk are very widely used. U.S. Pat. No. 3,383,050 discloses a shower head, which has a flexible jet disk for adjusting the shower jets. The convexity can be varied by means of a central screw. A similar jet disk is described in DE-OS 2 235 217.




German utility model 79 04 756 discloses a shower having an elastically deformable jet disk. As a result of the deformability of the jet disk, it can be zonally, manually pressed in, permitting the detachment of disturbing lime deposits on its surfaces and in the vicinity of water passage channels formed by holes. As a result of the pressing in of the jet disk, the latter is deformed to such an extent that deposits are detached and can be flushed away.




Besides impairing the optical impression of the shower, lime deposits suffer from the disadvantage of clogging and even blocking the water passage channels, so that in certain circumstances the operation of the shower can be very significantly impaired. In addition, lime and other deposits are not hygienic.




PROBLEM AND SOLUTION




The problem of the invention is to provide a shower device in which lime and other deposits can be easily and reliably removed.




This problem is solved by a shower device having a flexible, flat spray or jet disk, in which at least one surface zone of the jet disk is curved outwards and on exceeding a specific pressing in force exerted thereon springs round suddenly with the curvature inwards into an area located behind it and on relieving the force automatically springs back into the starting position.




These springing or jumping processes during a deformation of the jet disk bring about, in addition to the deformation of the latter, both acceleration forces and also a vibration of said jet disk. As a result of the special nature of the invention, three factors aid a detachment of lime or other deposits. In particular, the vibration of the jet disk and the complete shower device brings about a detachment of rigid lime deposits in the vicinity of the jet disk. The jet disk can be given widely differing shapes and in particular contours. As a result of the springing out of the jet disk, it is ensured that it automatically returns in all cases to the starting position.




In order to permit a deliming of the shower device according to the invention without great effort and expenditure for a user, the at least one surface zone can be pressed in with one finger. This can e.g. take place during the use of the shower device, so that detached lime or other deposits are flushed by the shower water out of the shower device. To facilitate the initiation of the deliming process, the surface of the jet disk and in particular the at least one surface zone which can be pressed in, can be larger than a finger tip.




Advantageously, a jet disk has a clearly defined contact surface for the application of a force, e.g. by finger pressure. The contact surface is preferably smaller than the surface zone and in particular has a diameter, which is somewhat less than half the diameter of the surface zone. The contact surface can have a random shape.




In a preferred development of the invention, a jet disk is provided with at least one material weakening, particularly along a substantially closed line. The material weakening can extend over a width roughly located in the vicinity of the average thickness of the jet disk and can be produced in various ways.




Advantageously, the wall thickness of the material weakening, particularly a material thinning, is in a range between 10 and 60% of the average jet disk thickness and is preferably approximately 30%. Such a material weakening permits a clearly defined springing round of the domed jet disk. The material weakening is preferably constructed as a film hinge.




It is also possible to have the material weakening along a line through recesses or holes along said line.As a result of the spacing and diameter of said holes, it is possible to vary the material weakening. As a result of the design possibilities for the material weakening, it is possible to influence the springing round of at least one surface zone of the jet disk both with respect to its surface area and with respect to the springing round process.




The shower device can have a solid component, which is outwardly connected to an outer material weakening, particularly of the jet disk. It preferably frames the jet disk. In order to give the jet disk the necessary strength, said component can be constructed in a particularly torsionally strong manner, e.g. by a wall thickness, which is considerably greater than the average thickness of the jet disk. The construction of the shower device is simplified if the solid component is directly connected to the material weakening. The solid component serves as a type of frame, which contains both the jet disk and material weakening, as well as in particular absorbing the forces occurring during its deformation, especially those occurring roughly radially without giving way thereto.




For a compact and in particular stable construction of the shower device, the jet disk is preferably connectable or connected to the solid component. In particularly advantageous manner both are constructed in one piece as an assembly, which facilitates manufacture, installation and handling.




In a preferred development of the invention, the jet disk is made from plastic, preferably a thermoplastic. As a result the jet disk can be produced by injection moulding. The flexibility of the jet disk is obtained by its construction with a limited wall thickness. Through the use of a plastics material, a construction of the jet disk is obtained with a film hinge in the form of the material weakening, which surrounds at least one inwardly pressable surface zone. The latter is variable along said film or ring hinge in its position relative to the remaining shower device, particularly the solid component.




The solid component can have a cylindrical pipe section, which is preferably connectable to a shower casing. A one-piece construction of the component with the pipe section is considered particularly advantageous. The connection to the shower casing is e.g. possible via a screw thread. The solid component can have a solid flange externally connected to the jet disk and which is preferably connectable to the shower casing. Such a flange improves the stability of the component, particularly with respect to radial forces emanating from the jet disk during the pressing in or back process.




Advantageously, the material weakening is annular. It can have a diameter of approximately 10 to 60 mm, a diameter of approximately 20 to 40 mm being considered particularly favourable.




Advantageously, the jet disk has an average wall thickness of approximately 0.4 to 1 mm, particularly approximately 0.7 mm. Such a material thickness is considered to give adequate flexibility in the case of the preferably used plastics. It gives the jet disk the necessary strength for use in a shower device. Thus, the jet disk can withstand the force exerted by an unknowing or careless user, which is a multiple of the pressing in force preferably used on pressing in.




The material thickness of the material weakening is preferably between 0.1 and 0.5 mm, particularly between 0.2 and 0.3 mm. This allows a clear reduction in the wall thickness of the material, limited to a small width, in the vicinity of the material weakening, compared with the remainder of the jet disk and accompanied by the formation of a film hinge. If, in an alternative construction, the material weakening is in the form of a perforation, the wall thickness in the vicinity of the webs of the surrounding material between the holes, can roughly correspond to the material thickness of the jet disk.




It is considered advantageous for the function and handling of the shower device for the contact surface to be positioned within the material weakening and preferably the surface centres are close to one another or may coincide. In this way a precise and uniform snapping round of the pressed in surface zone of the jet disk is obtained, because the radial forces caused when applying a pressing in force are distributed roughly uniformly along the material weakening.




The jet disk can be rotationally symmetrically shaped or made and preferably maintains said rotational symmetry both in the starting position and the maximum inwardly curved state. Preferably, the rotational symmetry is also maintained during a correctly performed pressing in or back process. In the manner of a click stop, the jet disk, in a particularly preferred embodiment, not only suddenly springs round, but produces as a result of said sudden springing round a preferably clicking noise. This noise indicates to a user, that the jet disk is springing round and lime and other deposits are blown off. Thus there is an acoustic back indication concerning the springing round process.




The contact surface is preferably provided with a stiffening or the like, which can in particular be in the form of a stiffening ring or rib. The stiffening aids the uniform springing round and in particular the automatic springing back of a pressed in jet disk. If the stiffening is on the outside of the contact surface, particularly in the form of a rib, it can serve as a centring aid for a finger applied to the contact surface, so that the pressing in force takes place intuitively at the optimum point for the snapping round process.




The contact surface preferably has a diameter of approximately 5 to 15 mm, particularly approximately 10 mm. This size range is particularly suitable for the intuitive feeling with the finger and for an adequately precisely defined application of the pressing in force.




In a preferred development, the contact surface is not curved outwards. It can be zonally or sectionwise planar or curved inwards.




Water passage channels for the water flowing through the shower device are preferably formed by holes within the material weakening, particularly also within the contact surface. The holes can have different configurations, e.g. different cross-sectional shapes or diameters. In this way, the water can be split up into a plurality of water jets, created as a function of the design of the water passage channels. It is also possible to have massage jets, which are in particular discharged discontinuously with a high exit speed from the jet disk. The holes can be arranged in a random manner, but preferably in concentric rows. The centre of the concentric rows can coincide with the axis of symmetry of a rotationally symmetrical jet disk. The holes of one row can be displaced with respect to the holes of neighbouring rows.




In a preferred development of the invention, in a central area, particularly a circular and preferably uninterrupted central area, the jet disk can be inwardly curved. This central area can be located in the centre of the jet disk or the contact surface. Such a curved central area centres the pressing in force applied by finger pressure by the user. The snapping round process of the jet disk is improved by said central area, because through the inward curvature thereof, the jet disk material surrounding it, on exceeding a springing round point, is automatically curved inwards with a specific pitch. Preferably, the central area has a diameter of 1 to 8 mm and with particular advantage approximately 4 mm. The vertical clearance of the centre of said central curvature over the plane of the contact surface is between 0.2 and 0.8 mm, particularly approximately 0.5 mm. The material thickness in the vicinity of the central curvature is roughly the average thickness of the jet disk. The inwardly curved central area is preferably free from holes.




Preferably, the at least one domed surface zone or the jet disk in the starting position has no pretension. As a result of the relieved position of the jet disk, it maintains its position optimized for the normal shower process, in the absence of external influences. A springing back from the pressed in state by removing the pressing in force, takes place in a particularly defined and established manner, if the jet disk can spring back into a position, where it is exposed to no significant force influences.




An outward curvature of the at least one surface zone can preferably amount to approximately 2 to 15% of the surface zone diameter, i.e. the vertical clearance of the curvature maximum over the plane of the material weakening is consequently roughly this surface zone diameter proportion. With particular advantage the figure is 7 to 10%.




A curvature of the at least one surface zone following the inward pressing in can be roughly the same as the outward extension of the curvature. A springing round between two such positions produces a jump or click action, which is looked upon as adequately fulfilling the many advantages of the invention with respect to lime removal. The jump or click occurs in a force maximum passed during each springing round. The path of the curvature, in particular the significantly conically tapering part of the jet disk, can form an angle of approximately 10° with the plane of the material weakening.




The pressing in force for a surface zone is preferably between 10 and 120 N, particularly between 30 and 90 N and with particular advantage approximately 77 N. This is looked upon as a force range, in which on the one hand the force can be applied without significant effort by finger pressure by a user and on the other where a snapping round process adequately removing lime deposits is achieved. A restoring force of the surface zone is between 5 and 60 N, particularly approximately between 10 and 50 N and with particular advantage at approximately 45 N.




In a preferred development of the invention, the jet or spray disk can be made from a halogen-free thermoplastic with a dimensional stability up to 100° C., preferably up to 120° C., e.g. of polyoxymethylene or polypropylene. Its modulus of elasticity is between 800 and 1600 N/mm , preferably at approximately 1200 N/mm , and is considered advantageous for the design and use of the jet disk in a shower device. These plastics can be produced with a very smooth surface, which makes it difficult for deposits to form and facilitates the removal thereof by a snapping round process according to the invention.




The shower device is preferably constructed as a shower head, particularly as a head or side shower, for connection to a fixed wall connection, which is directionally adjustable in a certain range by means of a spherical joint and has a circular jet disk, whose diameter is approximately 26 mm.




These and further features can be gathered from the claims, description and drawings and the individual features, both singly and in random subcombinations, can be implemented in an embodiment of the invention and in other fields and can represent advantageous, independently protectable constructions for which protection is hereby claimed. The subdivision of the application into individual sections and subheadings in no way restrict the general validity of statements made thereunder.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




An embodiment of the invention is described hereinafter relative to the drawings, wherein show:





FIG. 1

A section through an inventive shower device with a jet disk having water passage channels.





FIG. 2

A view from below of the shower device with a jet disk positioned centrally in a flange.





FIG. 3

A section through the lower part of a shower device according to

FIG. 1

with a jet disk curved inwards by a pressing in force.





FIG. 4

A deflection-pressing in force diagram, which in exemplified manner shows a configuration of a force to be applied to the jet disk relative to the deflection as a path.











DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT





FIG. 1

shows in section a shower device


11


constructed as a shower head according to the invention, which has a conically widened casing


12


. In said casing


12


is placed in partly countersunk manner a substantially spherical joint


13


, which passes upwards into a substantially cylindrical socket


14


. In the interior of said socket


14


there is a thread


15


, into which can be screwed a connecting piece


16


provided with a matching counterthread. This connecting piece


16


provided with a through bore can e.g. be a water connection for a head shower projecting out of a wall. Shower water, which can have a temperature desired by a user as a result of an upstream mixer battery or the like, passes through the hollow connecting piece


16


into the joint


13


having a through bore. The connection between the connecting piece


16


and the socket


14


can be sealed to the outside by a sealing washer


17


. The bore


18


through the spherical joint


13


can be stepped with decreasing bore diameters as from the socket


14


shaped in one piece therewith. As a result it is possible to introduce into the joint


13


inserts or the like, which can be held by the projecting shoulders of the tapering bore diameter against the water pressure occurring from above in FIG.


1


.




From below, the joint


13


is inserted through an opening


19


in the casing


12


with the socket


14


at the front. The diameter of the opening


19


somewhat exceeds that of the socket


14


, but is slightly less than the diameter of the preferably rotationally symmetrical joint


13


. Thus, the joint


13


strikes against the circumferential rim of the opening


19


. For sealing the connection between the joint


13


and the casing


12


, a toroidal sealing ring


21


is placed in a groove


20


, which downwardly passes round the opening


19


following onto the casing


12


. It is preferably made from rubber or the like. The toroidal sealing ring


21


is held in the groove


20


formed by striking against both an upper rim of a cup-shaped insert


22


and against an upper rim of a cylindrical pipe section


23


. As a result the cylindrical pipe section


23


surrounds the cup-shaped insert


22


, the walls of the two parts being at least zonally in contact. By means of a projecting shoulder in the inner wall of the pipe section


23


, which engages in a corresponding diameter reduction of the outer wall of the insert


22


in frictional manner, the insert


22


is pressed by the pipe section


23


against the toroidal sealing ring


21


.




Moreover, as a result of a conically, downwardly tapering internal diameter in the upper region, the insert


22


has a contact zone


24


, which engages on the outside diameter of the joint


13


. Thus, the joint


13


is firmly seated in the casing


12


and has neither an axial, nor a radial free motion. However, it can be turned or pivoted within a certain range about the centre of its spherical outer face, the exit opening of the joint


13


remaining completely free in each pivoting position. Through the opening of the stepped bore


18


in the joint


13


, the shower water passes out downwards and into the cup-shaped insert


22


. The latter is provided with a ring of holes


25


, made centrally in the insert. The diameter of said ring


25


is larger than that of the opening of the bore


18


in the downwards direction. In the space between the insert


22


and the joint


13


, it is possible to calm down the shower water, in order to finally pass through the ring of holes


25


in the downwards direction and in a substantially calmed state.




In the downwards direction is connected to the cylindrical pipe section


23


a substantially vertically projecting flange


27


, which engages at its outer end on the casing


12


. A thin-walled jet disk


28


is inwardly contained in the pipe section


23


. The three parts are shaped in one piece, as an assembly, by injection moulding from a thermoplastics material. The transition between the pipe section


23


and the jet disk


28


is formed by a material weakening


29


, which surrounds the circular jet disk


28


. In its outer region, the roughly conically, outwardly curved jet disk


28


has an inclination to the plane of the material weakening


29


of approximately 10°. In this substantially, slightly conical region, the jet disk


28


has three rows of concentric holes


31


, which essentially form the water passage channels for the shower device


11


. Following onto the same, the jet disk passes into a region forming a contact surface


32


. In its outer region, it runs substantially perpendicularly to the longitudinal axis


30


. At the transition between the bevelled region with the holes


31


and the contact surface


32


is formed an all-round stiffening ring


33


on the underside or outside of the jet disk


28


.




A central region


34


of the contact surface


32


is curved inwards. This central region


34


is surrounded by a ring of holes


35


, but does not itself have any holes. To it can be applied an injection access, which cannot be felt with the finger as a result of the depression in the curvature.




Shower water coming from above out of the insert


22


passes through the jet disk holes


31


and


35


out of the shower device


11


. The holes


31


and


35


can be made in the jet disk


28


in such a way that they transform the shower water passing through them into shower jets, which can be oriented within a certain range as a function of the design thereof. The holes


31


and


35


can be given different configurations for obtaining different types of shower jets and this more particularly applies to their diameter and direction through the jet disk


28


.




The pipe section


23


is connected to the casing


12


by means of an external thread


36


on the pipe section, which can be screwed into a corresponding thread on the inside of the casing


12


. With a conical construction of the casing


12


according to

FIG. 1

, the internal thread


37


of the casing


12


can be formed as an additional cylindrical portion on the casing. The pipe section


23


can be screwed into the casing


12


to such an extent that, together with the insert


22


, it engages frictionally on the toroidal sealing ring


21


. To facilitate the screwing of the pipe section


23


into the casing


12


, in the flange


27


can be provided attachment possibilities for tools. In

FIG. 1

they are constructed in the form of cup-shaped, substantially cylindrical depressions


38


in the form of blind holes.




The average wall thickness of the spray or jet disk


28


is approximately 0.7 mm, but is only approximately 0.2 mm in the vicinity of the material weakening. The width of the film hinge formed by the material weakening


29


is approximately 0.5 to 1 mm and roughly corresponds to the material thickness of the jet disk


28


. The circumferential stiffening ring


33


has a maximum material thickness of approximately 1.2 mm and with a semicircular cross-section can be mounted quasi-externally on the jet disk. The diameter of the contact surface is approximately 10 mm, the diameter of the upwardly curved central region being approximately 4 mm. The curvature of the central region


34


extends by a maximum of approximately 0.5 mm over the plane of the contact surface


32


. The holes


31


and


35


forming the water passage channels are given an identical diameter in the case of the shower device


11


of

FIG. 1

, said diameter being approximately 1.1 mm. The holes in the ring


25


of the cup-shaped insert


22


have a diameter of approximately 2 mm.




The diameter of the jet disk is approximately 26 mm and the external diameter of the flange


27


approximately 45 mm. The outside radius of the circumferential stiffening ring


33


is approximately 1.2 mm, its diameter approximately 11 mm, the inside radius of a hollow, forming the material weakening


29


compared with the jet disk


28


, being approximately 1 mm. The vertical clearance of the contact surface


32


of the jet disk


28


over the plane of the film hinge


29


is approximately 1.0 mm.




The connecting piece


16


and joint


13


, which is connected in one piece to the socket


14


, are preferably made from a metal. Brass is particularly suitable for this purpose and e.g. is given a surface treatment by chromizing. The remaining parts of the shower device


11


are made from plastic, polyoxymethylene and polypropylene being suitable.





FIG. 2

shows the shower device


11


from below, as distinguished by the user and the rotational symmetry is clear. The flange


27


has six depressions


38


for the application of tools for the screwing of the pipe section


23


into the casing


12


. Within the depressions


38


, the material weakening


29


has a width of approximately 2 mm. It surrounds the jet disk


28


, which is provided with three concentric rows of holes


31


. As can be seen, the holes of each row are displaced with respect to those of neighbouring rows. Within the concentric rows of holes


31


passes the circumferential stiffening ring


33


, which extends over a width of approximately 2 mm. It surrounds the contact surface


32


, which is provided with a ring of holes


35


. This ring surrounds the inwardly curved central region


34


.





FIG. 3

shows in section the lower part of a shower device


11


according to

FIG. 1

, in which the jet disk


28


has been pressed inwards by a pressing in force E. As can be seen, it is curved inwards. The angle enclosing an area of the jet disk


28


, located between the material weakening


29


and the stiffening ring


33


and passing roughly linearly and slightly conically, with the plane of the material weakening


29


is approximately 12°, but can also be smaller. Thus, in the case of an inward springing round, the jet disk


28


is curved somewhat further inwards than outwards in the starting position. The vertical clearance of the stiffening ring


33


over the plane of the film hinge


22


is approximately 0.9 mm and the vertical clearance of the contact surface


34


is approximately 1.6 mm.




In the case of the inward curvature and in particular during the springing round process between both positions, there can be a slight change to the diameter of the holes


31


and


35


, but this is not shown in FIG.


3


. Such a diameter reduction helps to blow off deposits within the holes and is consequently looked upon as advantageous.




The path of the pressing in force E can be gathered from the deflection-pressing in force diagram of FIG.


4


. The deflection starts in the plane of the contact surface


32


in the starting position according to

FIG. 1

, particularly in the vicinity of the stiffening ring


33


. The curve of the pressing in force E starts in the origin and then rises steeply with decreasing gradient until it reaches a snapping in point


40


at an apex. The pressing in force E has risen to approximately 77 N, whilst the deflection in this point roughly corresponds to the vertical clearance of the contact surface


32


over the plane of the material weakness


29


, amounting to approximately 1.0 mm. As from this snapping in point


40


, with increasing deflection, the force curve runs steeply downwards. This means that after passing the snapping in point


40


, the further inward deflection of the jet disk with a much smaller force expenditure is possible, the force maximum having been passed. The curve ends in the position of the inward curvature of the jet disk according to

FIG. 3

, the total deflection being approximately 2.6 mm. The force necessary for keeping the jet disk


28


in this position is approximately 45 N.




The force curve forms a type of hysteresis, in that during the springing back process of the jet disk


28


, it has a different configuration compared with that during the pressing in process. Starting from the point of maximum inward curvature, the force rises again with decreasing deflection, but not as strongly as in the upper part of the curve. Thus, at the snapping back point


41


, the curve reaches a lower force than in the snapping in point


40


and said force can e.g. be approximately 55 N. It forms a further force maximum, namely that for the springing back process. On passing its two maxima


40


and


41


, the curve has a rounded configuration, but this can also tend to a pointed configuration.




The snapping in point


40


, passed by the jet disk


28


on pressing in, can occur for the same deflection as the snapping back point


41


. These are the points, which, as a function of the deflection, are passed in the moment in which the jet disk


28


snaps round and in certain circumstances produces a clearly audible noise. During the further course of the force curve, with decreasing deflection, the force decreases again and passes into the origin.




Despite the precise details concerning the force and deflection, the diagram of

FIG. 4

is to be considered diagrammatically, because the shape and configuration of the individual curve portions can be varied in the case of different design possibilities of the invention. It is also not absolutely necessary for the snapping in point


40


and snapping back point


41


to be at the same deflection.




It is important for the course of the force curve to have at least four sections. At least two sections are provided for the movement process of the jet disk


28


on springing in and out. They are linked at the origin and at the end point of the maximum deflection and are interrupted by the snapping round point


40


and snapping back point


41


. It is important that the force in the snapping in point


40


is above the force in the snapping back point


41


.




Thus, in a preferred construction of the invention, a head shower forms the shower device


11


and has a flexible, press-in jet disk


28


with an outward curvature. The jet disk is mounted by a film hinge formed by a material weakening


29


in a flange


27


of a pipe section


23


in the head shower casing


12


. As a result of the construction of the curvature and the mounting, by applying a pressing in force to the contact surface


32


, the jet disk can be pressed inwards in a jump process. After removing the force, it jumps back automatically in a further jump process to the starting position and in each case the force maximum is passed.




As a result of the jump processes, lime and other deposits at the jet disk holes


31


,


35


are blown off and removed.



Claims
  • 1. A shower device with a jet disk having openings for forming jet sprays and at least one surface zone,wherein the surface zone has a starting position with a space provided behind said jet disk in the starting position, the surface zone being curved outwards in the starting position, the surface zone having an inward position in which the surface zone is inwardly curved into the space behind it, the surface zone being structured to spring into the inward position upon application of a force (E) against the surface zone into the direction of the space behind it, the surface zone being structured to spring back into the starting position when the force is relieved and wherein the surface zone passes a force maximum when springing from the starting position to the inward position.
  • 2. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the jet disk is structured to be spring from the starting position to the inward position when pressed in with one finger.
  • 3. The shower device according to claim 2, wherein the jet disk has a defined contact surface for the finger for applying said force.
  • 4. The shower device according to claim 3, wherein the contact surface is smaller than the surface zone which springs between the starting position and the inward position.
  • 5. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the jet disk comprises at least one material weakening along a closed line such that the surface zone hinges at the material weakening.
  • 6. The shower device according to claim 5, wherein the material weakening comprises a reduction in thickness in a range between 10 and 60% of an average thickness of the disk.
  • 7. The shower device according to claim 5, wherein the jet disk has an outer rim and said material weakening is disposed between the surface zone and the outer rim.
  • 8. The shower device according to claim 5, wherein the material weakening is annular and has a center substantially coinciding with a radial center of the contact surface.
  • 9. The shower device according to claim 5, wherein said jet disk has holes at the material weakening.
  • 10. The shower device according to claim 5, wherein a plurality of said openings for forming spray jets are in the material weakening.
  • 11. The shower device according to claim 1, further comprising a solid component, outwardly coupled to and supporting the jet disk.
  • 12. The shower device according to claim 11, wherein the jet disk is removably mounted on the solid component.
  • 13. The shower device according to claim 11, wherein the jet disk is connected in one piece with the solid component.
  • 14. The shower device according to claim 11, wherein the solid component comprises a pipe section connectable to a shower fitting.
  • 15. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the jet disk comprises plastic and a flexible connection with the surface zone is formed by a limited material thickness of the plastic.
  • 16. The shower device according to claim 3, further comprising a stiffening ring framing the contact surface.
  • 17. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein a plurality of said openings for forming spray jets are in the contact surface.
  • 18. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the contact surface is inwardly curved in a central region of the surface zone.
  • 19. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the contact surface is at a central region of the surface zone that is free from the openings for forming spray jets.
  • 20. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one surface zone is curved outwards in the starting position in absence of pretension.
  • 21. The shower device according to claim 20, wherein an outward curvature of the at least one surface zone is approximately 2 to 15% of a diameter of the surface zone.
  • 22. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one surface zone has an inward curvature when the force is applied, of approximately 2 to 15% of a diameter of the surface zone.
  • 23. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the surface zone snaps to the inward position when said force reaches a force maximum when springing between the starting position and the inward position.
  • 24. The shower device according to claim 23, wherein the force (E) for springing the surface zone from the starting position to the inward position is between 10 and 120 N and a restoring force permitting the surface zone to spring from the inward position to the starting position is between 5 and 60 N.
  • 25. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the jet disk comprises a halogen-free thermoplastic which is dimensionally stable up to approximately 1200° C.
  • 26. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the jet disk comprises a thermoplastic including at least one of polyoxymethylene and polypropylene.
  • 27. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the shower device comprises a shower head with a fitting for connection to a fixed wall connection and is directionally adjustable by means of a spherical joint in the fitting.
  • 28. The shower device according to claim 1, wherein the jet disk is round and flexible and has a diameter of approximately 26 mm.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
197 33 291 Aug 1997 DE
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/120,543, filed Jul. 22, 1998 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,113,002.

US Referenced Citations (7)
Number Name Date Kind
2281499 Herzbrun et al. Apr 1942
3104819 Aghnides Sep 1963
3109591 Moen Nov 1963
3383050 Crist et al. May 1968
3409717 Nozaki Nov 1968
3719328 Hindman Mar 1973
4244526 Arth Jan 1981
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
22 35 217 Feb 1973 DE
79 04 756 Jul 1980 DE
2 446 134 Aug 1980 FR
2177621 Jan 1987 GB
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 09/120543 Jul 1998 US
Child 09/544086 US