The present invention relates generally to underwater cleaning devices, and specifically to devices for cleaning the inner surfaces of a swimming pool or other liquid container.
A variety of devices are known in the art for automated cleaning of swimming pools. Some of these devices comprise wheels or treads with an internal propulsion system, so that the device travels autonomously along the floor (and sometimes the walls) of the swimming pool, while sucking contaminants from the floor (and walls) into an internal filter element. Devices of this sort are referred to commonly as “robots.” Removal and cleaning of the filter element can be a difficult and time-consuming job. A number of patents describe filter arrangements that are supposed to make the job easier.
For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,409,916, whose disclosure is incorporated herein by reference, describes a filter element for a pool-cleaning device. The pool-cleaning device itself comprises an outer shell with a detachable lid and an inner shell, which is open at its upper end and accommodates an impeller and a clean-water exit tube. The filter element has a basket-like shape including a tubular central stem configured to be seated on the exit tube. The central stem is surrounded by an annular trough, which constitutes the active filtering portion of the filter element. During operation of the device, solids-entraining water drawn by the impeller enters the annular trough from above and, passing the active filtering portion, emerges as clean water to be expelled through the exit tube and returned to the pool. The filter element may be removed for cleaning or replacement by opening the lid.
As another example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,473,927, whose disclosure is incorporated herein by reference, describes a swimming pool cleaning device in which the filter can be exchanged and contamination-exposed parts can be cleaned without it being necessary to raise or tilt the device. This cleaning device comprises a housing and at least one intake aperture at the base of the housing. A liquid to be cleaned is conveyed by a pump into an inner chamber within the housing and via a filter to an outlet aperture. The filter separates a contamination-exposed part from a clean part of the inner chamber. For cleaning, the cover of the device is removed, and the filter is withdrawn vertically upward.
Embodiments of the present invention provide devices and methods for underwater cleaning, which are designed for ease in removal and cleaning of the contaminant-capturing filter assembly.
There is therefore provided, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, cleaning apparatus, including:
a housing, which includes a lower side including an opening, and an upper side including an egress port and a lid, which opens to provide access to an interior of the housing;
an impeller, which is disposed within the housing so as to draw water into the housing through the opening and to expel the water through the egress port; and
a filter assembly, which is contained within the housing and is of a size and shape suitable for removal from the housing via the lid, the filter assembly including separable upper and lower segments having a wall that includes a filter material, the lower segment having an ingress port that communicates with the ingress port so that the water drawn in through the opening enters the filter assembly through the ingress port and exits the filter assembly through the filter material.
In some embodiments, the filter assembly includes a quick-connect mechanism for holding the upper and lower segments together during operation of the apparatus, whereby contaminants in the water are trapped inside the filter assembly, and for permitting the upper and lower segments to be separated so as to enable an operator to clean the trapped contaminants out of the filter assembly after opening the lid and removing the filter assembly from the housing. In one embodiment, the quick-connect mechanism includes a hinge.
In a disclose embodiment, the lower side of the housing includes a plurality of openings, and the filter assembly includes a plurality of filter assemblies, having respective ingress ports, each of which communicates respectively with one of the openings. The filter assembly may include a frame, to which the filter material is attached.
There is also provided, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, cleaning apparatus, including:
a housing, which includes an upper side including an egress port and has an open lower side;
an impeller, which is disposed within the housing so as to draw water into the housing through the lower side and to expel the water through the egress port; and
a filter assembly, which includes:
In some embodiments, the apparatus includes a catch for holding the cover against the lower side of the housing during operation of the apparatus, whereby contaminants in the water are trapped inside the filter assembly, and for permitting the filter assembly to be removed from the housing so as to enable an operator to turn the filter inside-out for removal of the contaminants by pulling the rim away from the cover and over the upper end of the frame after releasing the catch and removing the filter assembly from the housing. Optionally, the apparatus includes a handle, which is attached to the rim so as to enable the operator to pull the rim away from the cover and turn the filter inside-out by pulling the handle.
There is additionally provided, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, a method for cleaning, including:
submerging a robot at a bottom of a container of water, the robot containing a filter assembly, which includes upper and lower segments having a wall that includes a filter material, the lower segment having an ingress port at a lower side of the robot in communication with the bottom of the container;
operating the submerged robot to draw water in through the ingress port so that the water enters an interior of the filter assembly through the ingress port and exits the filter assembly through the filter material;
following operation of the robot, opening an upper side of the robot, and removing the filter assembly from the robot through the upper side; and
after removing the filter assembly from the robot, separating the upper and lower segments of the filter assembly in order to remove contaminants trapped in the interior of the filter assembly.
There is further provided, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, a method for cleaning, including:
submerging a robot at a bottom of a container of water, the robot containing a filter assembly, which has an ingress port at a lower side of the robot in communication with the bottom of the container and which includes a lower cover containing the ingress port, a frame having a base that is attached to the lower cover, and a filter material attached to the frame and having a peripheral edge that surrounds the base;
operating the submerged robot to draw water in through the opening so that the water enters an interior of the filter assembly through the ingress port and exits the filter assembly through the filter material;
following operation of the robot, removing the filter assembly from the robot; and
after removing the filter assembly from the robot, turning the filter material inside-out in order to remove contaminants trapped in the interior of the filter assembly while the filter material remains attached to the frame.
In a disclosed embodiment, the peripheral edge of the filter material is fixed to a rim, which is sized and shaped to contact an inner side of the cover along a perimeter surrounding the base of the frame, and turning the filter material inside-out includes pulling the rim away from the cover and over an upper end of the frame.
The present invention will be more fully understood from the following detailed description of the embodiments thereof, taken together with the drawings in which:
Reference is now made to
Robot 20 comprises a housing 24, which contains filter assembly 22 and an impeller (not shown in these figures). The upper side of the housing comprises an egress port 26. The lower side of the housing is open. Filter assembly 22 comprises a cover 30, which closes the open lower side of the housing. Cover 30 comprises one or more ingress ports 32. In normal operation of the robot, the impeller draws water in from the bottom of the swimming pool through ports 32, into the interior of the filter assembly. The water passes through a filter 34 and out through egress port 26, while contaminants in the water are trapped inside the filter. The filter comprises a suitable, flexible filter material, such as a dense-weave cloth or porous synthetic. Typically, the robot comprises wheels 36, which are driven by a motor (not shown in these figures) inside housing 24 to propel the robot along the bottom of the swimming pool.
Periodically, it is necessary to clean out the accumulated contaminants from the inside of filter assembly 22. For this purpose, an operator removes the robot from the water and inverts the robot, as shown in
To clean filter assembly 22, the operator grasps an inner handle 52, which is attached to rim 50, as shown in
Thus, the novel design of filter assembly 22 simplifies and speeds the cleaning process. By contrast, in bottom-opening robot designs that are known in the art, the operator must typically remove the filter material completely from the frame before cleaning, and then reassemble the filter material on the frame thereafter. Although the elements of filter assembly 22, such as cover 30, frame 42 and rim 50, are shown in the figures as having certain particular shapes and relative sizes, the principles of the present embodiment may be implemented in elements of different shapes and sizes that permit the filter to be inverted for cleaning without detaching the filter material from the other elements of the filter assembly. All such alternative designs are considered to be within the scope of the present invention.
Reference is now made to
Robot 60 differs from robot 20 in the design of the filter assemblies and in the method used to remove and clean them. Robot 60 comprises a lid 70 on the upper side of housing 66. Filter assemblies 68 are removed from the robot for cleaning by opening lid 70 and pulling the filter assemblies upward and out of the housing. There is no need to turn the robot upside down and remove the bottom of the housing as in the preceding embodiment. (Optionally, however, robot 60 may have a separate side or bottom cover to provide access to other parts of the interior of the housing.) Details of the procedure for cleaning the filter assemblies in robot 60, as well as of the novel construction of filter assemblies 68, are described hereinbelow.
Assembly 68 comprises a frame 76, which is covered by or lined with a filter material 78. The frame may comprise any suitable rigid or semi-rigid material, such as a metal or plastic, which is formed in the desired shape to define the walls of the filter assembly, and is equipped with hinge 75 and/or other hardware for opening and closing the assembly. Filter material 78, as in the preceding embodiment, may typically comprise cloth or porous synthetic material.
Lower segment 72 comprises an ingress port 80, which communicates with opening 65 when filter assembly 68 is assembled inside housing 66. Thus, during operation of robot 60, the water that is drawn into the opening by the action of impeller 62 passes into the interior of the filter assembly via ingress port 80. When impeller 62 is not in operation, an optional door 82 closes off ingress port 80 (typically by action of gravity or spring loading) to prevent contaminants from flowing back out of the filter assembly and into the swimming pool. Door 82 opens to admit water into the filter assembly under the force of the inward water pressure that is created when the impeller is in operation.
Reference is now made to
After removal of filter assembly 68 from robot 60, the operator opens the filter assembly, as shown in
It will be appreciated that the embodiments described above are cited by way of example, and that the present invention is not limited to what has been particularly shown and described hereinabove. Rather, the scope of the present invention includes both combinations and subcombinations of the various features described hereinabove, as well as variations and modifications thereof which would occur to persons skilled in the art upon reading the foregoing description and which are not disclosed in the prior art.