The showerhead of this invention is generally of the type disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,918,811 issued to Speakman Company, the assignee of this application. Other Speakman patents related to such showerheads include U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,013,729; 3,005,917; 3,373,942; 3,383,059, 4,117,979 and 6,378,790. Speakman Company is a leader in the field of adjustable spray pattern showerheads sold under the ANYSTREAM® trademark. The adjustable spray pattern pioneered by Speakman is based upon axial movement of plungers within openings in a showerhead faceplate as explained in greater detail in the specifications of above-listed patents.
That movement of the plungers in existing ANYSTREAM showerheads is controlled by rotation of a handle laterally extending from the body of the showerhead. That handle is rotated by the user to change spray patterns emanating from the showerhead faceplate. Rotation of the handle is translated into vertical (axial) movement of the plungers within the faceplate using an off-center pin received in a slot formed in a plunger holder. With this arrangement, a small rotation of the handle is translated into axial movement of the plungers within the showerhead faceplate. That movement opens grooves of differing dimensions around the periphery of the plungers or openings in the faceplate to adjust flow of water from the showerhead. Those dimensional differences account for the variability in spray patterns and volume of flow achievable in the Speakman ANYSTREAM® showerhead.
While the use of a handle on the side of a showerhead to adjust spray patterns has met with tremendous commercial success and consumer acceptance over many decades, a need has arisen for more ergonomic and robust means for adjusting those spray patterns.
Means are thus desired that facilitate adjustment by a bather that has his/her eyes closed and is literally “feeling in the dark” to, first, find the showerhead and, second, to adjust the spray pattern emanating therefrom. Applicant has found that bathers generally, even with their eyes shut, can locate a showerhead faceplate by just tracing the water flow pattern to its origin as it exits the showerhead. This location for adjusting a showerhead spray pattern also obviates those situations where bathers have difficulty in locating a handle on the side of a showerhead, especially when the showerhead face (closest to the bather) is wide. These wider showerheads force a user to reach up and around the wide face of the showerhead to reach a handle. Accordingly, a control surface near the front of a showerhead has ergonomic advantages.
This arrangement also has aesthetic advantages over showerheads with side handles because the spray adjustment means can be incorporated into the shell of the showerhead rather than extending laterally therefrom.
In addition, it has been found that most showerheads that have a rotating control surface near the front of the showerhead have stops that prevent full 360° rotation of the surface. In non-domestic installations such as hospitals, fitness centers and the like attempts to force the control surface to rotate beyond its designed degree of rotation disabled the spray adjustment feature of the showerhead. This has created customer dissatisfaction with such showerheads having less than 360° rotation of the control surface.
Showerheads manufactured and sold by other than Speakman Company have also been found wanting because control surfaces adjacent the front of the showerhead were not linked to plungers movable within openings in the faceplate. That movement provides variable spray patterns so important to consumer acceptance of showerheads.
The invention of this application provides a new advance in showerhead technology by providing enhanced ergonomic and functional operation of ANYSTREAM®-type showerheads. More specifically, it discloses a control surface near the faceplate for this type of showerhead that can be continuously rotated in both directions (clockwise and counter-clockwise) through 360°. That rotation, through suitable interaction between cam surfaces in the interior stem of the showerhead and cam followers on a plunger holder, facilitates axial movement of plungers through openings in the showerhead faceplate. This movement of the plungers enables a wide variation in spray patterns flowing from the showerhead.
Optionally, a pulsating, vibrating spray head can be included in the showerhead of this invention, preferably in a central opening in the faceplate of the showerhead.
One embodiment of the present invention comprises a showerhead in which the spray pattern emanating therefrom is established by passing water through peripheral slots in faceplate openings surrounding movable plungers arranged within those openings as more fully described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,918,811. In another embodiment (not illustrated) the peripheral slots are formed in the plungers as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,378,790. Of particular importance is the improved mechanism used in the showerhead to move the plungers within those openings. That mechanism translates rotational movement of a control surface into axial (longitudinal) movement of the plungers within the openings of the showerhead.
The effect of this axial plunger movement within the faceplate openings upon shower spray patterns is described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,918,811 and 6,378,790. The disclosures of these patents are incorporated herein by reference. Those disclosures explain how large variations in the intensity and spread of the shower spray pattern can be adjusted by carefully controlling 1) the geometry of the individual grooves surrounding the discharge openings in the showerhead faceplate or in the plungers and 2) axial (longitudinal) movement of plungers within the openings.
An exterior perspective view the showerhead of this invention is shown in
The upper showerhead shell 26 at its end 28 closest to the water supply 16 surrounds at least a portion of the ball joint 14 and is maintained in water tight contact therewith by seal 24. Internal threads 30 on end 28 of upper showerhead shell 26 are designed to receive the mating threads on the upper stem of the ramp means 34 thereby securing the ramp means 34 in a fixed, non-rotating position relative to the upper showerhead shell 26.
Turning to means used to control movement of plungers within the showerhead, the lower showerhead body 38 has an inwardly directed flange 39 with a central circular opening that sits on a lower lip 35 of ramp means 34 (see
Control surface 40 is illustrated in an exploded view of the showerhead shown in
Completing the exterior of the showerhead is faceplate 50. The faceplate has multiple openings 54 surrounding moveable plungers 52 preferably located in a symmetrical circular array near the periphery of the faceplate 50. The plungers 52 are dimensioned to fit with sliding friction interference within the interior surfaces of the openings 54 in the faceplate. Those openings may be configured with internal grooves and/or wiping lip of the type disclosed in Speakman U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,918,811 and 6,378,790.
Optionally, faceplate 50 can include a central chamber in which a vibratory spray head 60 can be placed. A vibratory spray pattern can be generated by any of several known means including a “wobble plate” or a “turbine”, preferably the latter. In a turbine device, multiple holes 64 in the center of faceplate 50 are alternately blocked and opened by a turbine-like blade 62. This creates a massage-type impact on a bather's skin
Turning from the exterior of showerhead 10 to its interior parts, the upper and lower showerhead shell 26 and body 38, respectively, must be capable of rotating independently of each other. More particularly, the lower showerhead body 38 must be capable of 360 degree-plus rotation either clockwise or counterclockwise relative to the stationary upper showerhead shell 26. Lower showerhead body 38 is fixedly connected to control surface 40 when the faceplate 50 is screwed into the lower showerhead body 38 (
The principal components enabling this transition from rotational to axial movement are illustrated in
Between the interior opening 72 and outer periphery of plunger holder 70 are several keyhole shaped slots 76 which are dimensioned to hold the necks of the individual plungers in a manner disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,918,811.
Another component of the apparatus for translating rotational movement to axial movement is the ramp means 34 illustrated in
To enable positioning of plunger holder 70 and its cam followers 74 into camming track 84, the ramp means is initially manufactured in two parts 34 and 34′ as shown in the exploded view of
The faceplate 50 is fixed relative to control surface 40, with screw threads in an upstanding portion of the face plate (see