The invention concerns a spray arm bearing for the rotatable support of a spray arm on a liquid feeding system.
A conventional spray arm bearing includes a bearing ring with a bearing face or holder on which a spray arm is rotatably mounted. The bearing ring is connected to an impingement surface which deflects a stream of liquid flowing axially through the bearing ring from the axial to the radial direction, as a result of which the liquid flow enters the spray arm boom. The impingement surface is connected to the bearing ring so that the recoil is diverted by the deflection through the bearing ring and does not act on the spray arm itself. As a consequence the axial forces on the spray arm support system and the sticking and sliding friction is greatly reduced. During the production of a conventional spray arm bearing, the impingement area and the bearing ring are first produced separately and then joined together. Alternatively, an injection molding die is constructed in three parts of an upper plunger, a lower plunger and a slide. During the injection molding process, the slide is pushed into the space between the bearing ring and the impingement surface. After curing, the slide is pulled out simultaneously with the withdrawal of the upper and lower plungers from the intermediate space of the spray arm bearing. Both procedures are expensive since several operating steps or a complicated injection die are required.
Therefore it is the object of the invention to design a spray arm bearing in such a way that it can be manufactured economically.
This problem is solved by the features of claim 1. Advantageous variants are the subject of the subordinate claims.
According to claim 1, the base area of a flow-guide device that causes a deflection of a flow of liquid from the axial to the radial direction is at most as large as the base area of a through-opening in a bearing element of the spray arm bearing. The outer contour of the base area of the flow-guide device is therefore at most equal in coverage to the base area of the through-opening or lies within the base area range of the through-opening. For example, if the base areas of the flow-guide device and of the through-opening are round, then the diameter of the flow-guiding devices is smaller than or equal to the diameter of the through-opening in the bearing element and bearing ring respectively.
Under this condition, an injection-molding die with only two injection molds and injection plungers can be used for the production of a one-piece spray arm bearing, i.e., in a single injection molding process. In this process, an injection plunger is steadily advanced from the bearing element side partway through the through-opening in the direction of the flow-guide device, while a counter-plunger is advanced from the direction of the flow-guide device which matches the outer contour of the plunger advanced through the through-opening. It is therefore neither necessary to join the flow-guide device and the bearing element together in a separate step nor to provide a gate valve for the injection molding die that has to be driven out sidewise after the injection (in the radial direction) from the opening zone between the flow-guide direction and bearing element. On the whole, therefore, fewer sharp edges are formed since fewer boundary surfaces are present between the injection dies, and the flow-guide device can be structured in the inside rotationally symmetrically in the three-dimensional direction, which would not be possible if a side slide gate were used with the injection molding die.
One variant of the invention is explained in more detail by the figures. They show:
In rotational symmetry, a hyperbola-shaped or concavely formed guiding cone 6 extends from the inside of the roof 3. The guiding cone 6 serves to deflect dishwashing fluid entering essentially in the axial direction into the radial direction. The recoil caused by the deflection is absorbed by the roof 3 and passed on through the crossbars 4 to the bearing ring 2, which, in turn, is held firmly after being engaged/arrested at the inlet 10. As a result, the force exerted by the liquid inflow in the axial direction on the spray arm is minimized so that the friction of the spray arm 20 on the bearing surface of the bearing ring 2 is slight.
As
The spray arm 20 is shown in cross section in
In the assembly of the spray arm 20, before connecting the upper shell 21 with the lower shell 22, the spray arm bearing 2 is inserted and the connection formed only then so that the spray arm bearing 1, although freely rotatable in the axial direction, is inserted inside the spray arm while maintaining a small clearance between the top of the roof 3 and the inside of the upper shell 21. The spray arm bearing 1 enclosed in the spray arm 20 is then arrested at the inlet 10. The bearing arrangement shown in
To produce the one-part spray arm bearing 1 injection molding plungers are driven toward each other in the axial direction, see
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2005/009802 | 9/13/2005 | WO | 00 | 3/14/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/048074 | 5/11/2006 | WO | A |
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