The present invention relates to a tap head for connecting to a keg, according to the features in the preamble to claim 1.
For the purposes of dispensing beverages, from the prior art it is known first of all to prepare these beverages in a keg and then to extract them from this keg. This process is also known colloquially as tapping. Such tapping of beverages occurs in particular in the case of carbonated beverages. These are usually beer, carbon dioxide-containing soft drinks, and the like.
In this case, the beverage itself is prepared in a keg. The keg arrives at the bar location from a brewery or a keg-filling station in a closed condition. If the keg is positioned in its intended setup location, a tap head is attached to/hammered into the keg and the beverage in the keg can be extracted. To this end, the tap head has a pressurisation-gas supply line, so that a pressurisation gas prepared, for example, in a gas bottle is introduced into the keg, the keg is thereby subjected to pressure and the beverage exits from the keg via a rising line. CO2 is usually used as the pressurisation gas.
In addition to kegs composed of metallic materials, in particular aluminium kegs, recently more and more “single-use” kegs have gained a foothold in the market. Single-use kegs are as a rule made of plastics and are not re-used after the single use, but are disposed of. However, there are also multiple-use plastic kegs. If the keg is nearly empty, it is exchanged for a full one. However, the keg is still in a pressurised condition from the introduced pressurisation gas.
From DE 43 16 457 C1 a pressure-release valve is known to be incorporated in a tap head, which valve is, however, only actuated once the operation to release the tap head has started. But In the case of single-use kegs in particular, with this arrangement even the actual keg closure can be gas-tightly closed so that, although some of the pressurisation gas present escapes, the keg itself remains under an undesirable residual pressure. This residual pressure exceeds the ambient pressure.
The aim of the present invention is to propose a method of completely degassing a keg, in particular a single-use keg, wherein the user can see without further testing that the degassing function has been carried out.
In the case of a tap head for connecting to a keg, the aforementioned aim is achieved according to the invention with the features in claim 1.
Advantageous variant embodiments are the subject of the dependent claims.
The tap head is suitable for connecting to or positioning on a keg, in particular for a bar system, wherein the tap head itself has a tap-head body and a pressurisation-gas supply line and a beverage draw line are formed in the tap-head body. As a rule the tap-head body is made of a metallic material. A push tube may optionally also be present in the tap-head body, and a pivoted lever coupled to the tap-head body. When attaching the tap head to the keg, the tappet can then be displaced in an axial direction by the pivoted lever.
According to the invention the tap head is characterised in that a 3/2-way valve is formed directly on or in the tap-head body in the pressurisation-gas supply line, which 3/2-way valve, when the tap head is attached and in particular locked, either connects the pressurisation-gas supply line from a gas source to the interior chamber of the keg, or connects, in a gas-conducting manner, the interior chamber of the keg to the environment. Within the meaning of the invention, a 3/2-way valve thus has three connectors and two switching positions.
Due to the 3/2-way valve it is therefore possible to assume two positions, i.e. two settings. The keg is either connected to the gas source in a gas-conducting manner. Operation of the tap or bar can therefore take place. If the keg has to be exchanged or swapped, for example because it is empty or because a technical defect has arisen, or if cleaning is necessary, the 3/2-way valve may be moved to a position according to which the interior chamber of the keg is connected to the environment in a gas-conducting manner, but at the same time further supply of pressurisation gas from the gas source is blocked. This is to ensure that the interior pressure in the keg is discharged or falls to the ambient pressure. The keg could thus be disposed of without risk. There therefore remains no residual pressure in the keg itself. For example, escape of liquids when the tap head is removed is thus avoided. In particular when used on a single-use keg, the single-use keg may be disposed of without residual pressure.
The fact that the 3/2-way valve is coupled directly to the tap-head body or integrated into the tap-head body increases operational safety in particular. The tap head itself must be removed from the keg, so that a user always also has direct access to the 3/2-way valve on the tap head.
The present invention thus also relates to an arrangement comprising a keg, a tap head, a gas bottle and a tap, as well as the respective component-connecting lines, and to use of a tap head according to the invention with 3/2-way valve, and to a method for operating a bar system.
The 3/2-way valve is designed in particular as a slide valve, or the 3/2-way valve is designed as a rotary valve. The 3/2-way valve is especially preferably coupled either to the tap-head body itself, especially preferably coupled with positive fit, and in particular connected using a driven-screw technique. This offers the advantage that the 3/2-way valve may also be retro-fitted to tap heads already present or, in the event of wear or defect, the 3/2-way valve may simply be exchanged without the whole tap head having to be exchanged. In particular, the individual components of the 3/2-way valve may be made of metallic material, for example brass or stainless steel, but at least partially also of plastic.
The 3/2-way valve may however also be designed of a piece with and especially preferably of the same material as the tap-head body itself. In particular, the 3/2-way valve may thus be integrated into the pressurisation-gas supply line of the tap-head body itself. This may be achieved, for example, in a casting or forging process during manufacture of the tap-head body.
Within the framework of the invention, the 3/2-way valve in the form of a slide valve has proved especially advantageous. In this arrangement, the 3/2-way valve has a longitudinal tubular valve seat or valve body. A sliding sleeve is arranged on the valve seat. The sliding sleeve is preferably in the form of a collar. The valve seat itself is especially preferably designed so as to be laterally projecting from the tap-head body.
This enables the sliding sleeve to slide away and back again on the valve seat with an especially simple manual operation, since the sliding sleeve may be grasped in several fingers of a user, and moved. Moreover, the respective position of the sliding sleeve directly yields an instantaneous deduction as to its respective state. Either pressurisation gas is supplied to the keg, or the keg is degassed and the pressurisation-gas supply simultaneously interrupted. This is an advantage over a simple degassing or overpressure valve. In this case, although a keg is degassed, the supply of pressurisation gas is not simultaneously interrupted. The valve seat need not be designed so as to be projecting laterally from the tap-head body; it may also project beyond the upper surface of the tap-head body or jut laterally at an oblique angle. As mentioned, this is especially advantageous, since the sliding sleeve can thus be gripped in several fingers of the installer using it.
In particular, the slide valve is further designed in such a way that the sliding sleeve has two gaskets arranged in particular as O-rings in an inner casing surface or in grooves of the inner casing surface of the sliding sleeve. The gaskets may also be in the form of an X-ring, piston seal or rod seal. With these two gaskets, the sliding sleeve is glidably mounted on the valve seat, and on the valve seat may be steplessly displaced into or out of preferably two positions. A gas-tight channel is thereby formed between the two gaskets and between the outer casing surface of the valve seat and the inner casing surface of the sliding sleeve. The position of the channel can be altered by moving the the sliding sleeve accordingly. The gaskets may also be arranged on the valve seat.
In order now to create a gas-conducting connection, at least two radial boreholes aligned in a radial direction are provided within the valve seat, arranged spaced apart relative to one another in an axial direction. By displacement of the sliding sleeve, either preferably both radial boreholes can thus be covered, therefore the radial boreholes are connected to one another by the gas-tight channel in a gas-conducting manner. By axial displacement of the sliding sleeve, the latter can assume a position (such) that one radial borehole is exposed to the environment, while the second radial borehole is preferably covered. The exposed radial borehole is therefore able to discharge the internal pressure of the keg to the environment. The covered radial borehole is simultaneously connected to the channel in a gas-conducting manner, but on account of the position of the sliding sleeve the channel is gas-tightly closed, so that no gas can be released to the environment. In this way, for example, further supply of pressurisation gas through the 3/2-way valve is interrupted or sealed off, while simultaneously the interior space of the keg is degassed via the exposed radial borehole.
In an alternative variant embodiment, the valve seat may also have an axial through bore. This through bore can also be called a through-going axial borehole. In order that two connectors can now be gas-tightly separated from one another in an axial direction, a stopper is inserted into the through bore. The stopper is in particular gas-tightly inserted into the through bore. To this end, the stopper is in particular pressed into the through bore. The stopper may also be glued and/or screwed into the through bore. The through bore is thus divided into two portions, in particular longitudinal portions, by the stopper. Within each portion, a radial borehole is then connected in a gas-conducting manner. With the assistance of the sliding sleeve, the 3/2-way valve can thus be formed and assume various positions.
The through bore especially preferably has two longitudinal portions of diameters which differ from one another. Part of the longer portion with the smaller diameter is therefore formed between the radial boreholes. The stopper can thus be introduced through the longitudinal portion of larger diameter into the through bore and then, in the longitudinal portion of smaller diameter, be pressed into the part which lies between the two radial boreholes.
Further advantages, features, characteristics and aspects of the present invention are the subject of the description which follows. Preferred variant embodiments are shown in the schematic drawings. These serve for an easier understanding of the invention. The drawings are as follows:
In the drawings, the same reference numbers are used for identical or similar components, even when for reasons of simplicity a description is not repeated.
The variant embodiment according to the invention will now be elucidated in the cross-sectional views according to
Should the keg 9 now have to be changed, the tap head 1 is in the first instance still positioned on the keg 9 and therefore in the locked position. However, the 3/2-way valve 2 has been reset in accordance with
Preferably two axial boreholes 19 are made in the valve seat 12, which boreholes are mechanically and physically separated from one another within a mid range 20. The pressurisation gas must therefore be conducted via the radial boreholes 14.1, 14.2 and the gas-conducting channel 18 from one axial borehole 19 into the next axial borehole 19. Two radial boreholes 14.1, 14.2 are furthermore present on each of the left and right sides. The channel 18 is of a radially circumferential design.
According to the variant embodiment in
In the position represented in
This achieves the advantage described in what follows. The x-shaped gasket 12 has in cross-section a width B17, which is wider than the borehole diameter D14.2 of the radial borehole 14.2. An intermediate position is therefore taken up by the sliding sleeve 13. This means that the 3/2-way valve is not closed as shown in
1—Tap head
2—3/2-way valve
3—Tap-head body
4—Pivoted lever
5—Tappet tube
6—Beverage draw line
7—Pressurisation-gas supply line
8—Overpressure valve
9—Keg
10—Keg head
11—Keg interior
12—Valve seat
13—Sliding sleeve
14.1—Radial borehole
14.2—Radial borehole
15—Outer casing surface re 12
16—Inner casing surface re 13
17—Gasket
18—Gas-conducting channel
19—Axial borehole
20—Mid range
21—Threaded screw fitting
22—Ball/roller
23—Through bore
24—Borehole
25—Opening
26—Axial borehole
27—Longitudinal portion
28—Longitudinal portion
29—Stopper
30—Connector piece
31—Part of 28
pU—Environmental pressure
pI—Internal pressure
U—Environment
A—Axial direction
D1—Diameter
D2—Diameter
B17—Width re 17
D14.2—Diameter re 14.2
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2017 125 248.7 | Oct 2017 | DE | national |
10 2017 129 912.2 | Dec 2017 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/DE2018/100780 | 9/13/2018 | WO | 00 |