Used capsule collector for beverage devices

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 8695484
  • Patent Number
    8,695,484
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, May 6, 2009
    15 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 15, 2014
    10 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Original Assignees
  • Examiners
    • Atkisson; Jianying
    Agents
    • Winston & Strawn LLP
Abstract
A device for preparing a beverage from a capsule containing an ingredient of the beverage, includes a housing with a cavity to which used capsules are evacuated; and a collection receptacle in the cavity of the housing. The receptacle has an opening for receiving the evacuated used capsules and collecting the capsules. The receptacle has a reception orientation in which the receptacle is arranged to be filled with capsules up to a maximum level of fill in the cavity which extends above the opening of the receptacle in the reception orientation of the receptacle. The receptacle being tiltable or pivotable in the cavity into a removal orientation for allowing removal of the collection receptacle filled with capsules from the cavity.
Description

This application is a 371 filing of International Patent Application PCT/EP2009/055464 filed May 6, 2009.


FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The field of the invention pertains to used capsule collectors of machines for preparing beverages from an ingredient of the beverage supplied within a capsule to the machine.


BACKGROUND ART

Beverage preparation machines are becoming very popular whether at home or in offices. For instance, there are machines for the preparation of beverages such as coffee, tea, soup or other similar beverages, in which at least one ingredient of the desired beverage, for example ground coffee, is supplied within a capsule into a capsule extraction chamber of the machine.


The use of capsules, such as plastic and/or aluminium-based capsules for the preparation of beverages has many advantages. Capsules, in particular aluminium-based capsules, are hermetic or gas tight and thus can protect the beverage ingredient effectively during an extended period of time against the environment such as air, humidity or light, before use of the ingredient and thus prevent premature degradation of the ingredient. Furthermore, capsules of a beverage ingredient are easy to handle, hygienic, and their use involves less cleaning of the beverage preparation machine, in particular no significant part of the machine's extraction chamber comes into contact with the beverage ingredient contained in the capsule during the extraction process.


Capsules are usually inserted individually into the machine's extraction chamber, manually or automatically from a capsule stack. Hot or cold water is then passed through the capsule for brewing or otherwise extracting the ingredient(s) contained within the capsule and form the desired beverage. The prepared beverage is supplied via an outlet of the machine into a cup, mug or other receptacle to the user.


Used capsules may either be removed individually from the beverage preparation machine after each beverage preparation or they may be collected in a machine's used capsule collector for instance as mentioned in EP 1 731 065 (in the name of the present Applicant).


Typically, the capsule collector is located underneath the capsule chamber so that the capsules may fall by gravity into the collector upon extraction. In the latter case, the collector has to be emptied by the user when full. The collector may be a drawer-type removable receptacle located in a cavity of the beverage preparation machine typically under the extraction chamber. The used capsule collector may be slid in and out of the machine's housing.


A problem may arise with such capsule collectors, in particular in conjunction with rigid capsules, when used capsules accumulate in the receptacle form a heap of capsules whose top extends above the receptacle in such a manner to come into conflict with the housing when the receptacle is slid out of the machine's housing for emptying.


A solution to avoid the jamming of the collector by used capsules is to provide an optical level detector for measuring the level of capsules in the used capsule collector and inviting the user to empty the collector when the level of capsules comes close to the level of the machine's housing. Another solution involves counting the number of capsule extractions after emptying the collector and inviting the user to empty the collector after a predetermined number of capsules has been collected, an excess of which may possibly cause jamming.


A drawback with the level detector system involves the use of expensive electronic detectors, in particular optical detectors. Furthermore, since the accumulated capsules naturally form a heap in the receptacle a waste of space is usually also involved around this heap. A drawback of the capsule counting system lies in the fact that, in order to avoid jamming at all time, it is necessary to set a maximum number of collectible capsules in the receptacle that will often lead to a poor filling of the collector at the time when the user will be invited to re-empty the collector and to an even greater waste of space around the heap of collected capsules in the receptacle than with the above described level detector.


Hence, there is still a need to provide an inexpensive simple solution for avoiding jamming of a used capsule collector in a coffee machine while allowing optimal filling of the collector.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention thus relates to a device for preparing a beverage from a capsule containing an ingredient of the beverage to be prepared. The beverage preparation device comprises: a housing having a cavity to which extracted capsules are evacuated; and a collection receptacle in the cavity of the housing, the receptacle having an opening for receiving the evacuated extracted capsules and collecting the capsules. Furthermore, the receptacle has a reception orientation in which the receptacle is arranged to be filled with capsules up to a maximum level of fill in the cavity. For emptying the capsules collected in the receptacle, the collection receptacle is removable from the cavity.


The beverage preparation device may have an extraction chamber for receiving such capsules, for extracting their beverage ingredient to form the beverage, and for evacuating extracted used capsules to the cavity of the housing, in particular by gravity. The capsules, even after use, typically have a certain rigidity that will inhibit their deformation. For example, the capsules are made of metal, such as aluminium, and/or of a plastic material, in particular a thermoplastic material.


In accordance with the invention, this maximum level of fill of capsules in the cavity extends above the opening of the receptacle when the receptacle is in its reception orientation. Moreover, the receptacle is tiltable or pivotable in the cavity into a removal orientation for allowing removal of the collection receptacle filled with capsules out of the cavity.


As mentioned above, used capsules that drop into the collection receptacle via the receptacle's opening accumulate in the form of a heap in the receptacle. This heap of capsules may rise up to the maximum level of fill. This maximum level of fill is located above the opening of the receptacle when the receptacle is in its reception orientation.


If a state of the art collector arrangement is used, typically a drawer-type receptacle, pulling the receptacle out from the cavity will be inhibited by the top of the heap of capsules extending above the receptacle's opening, which top will collide with the fixed outer wall of the device's housing that more or less matches the upper edge of the front wall of the movable capsule receptacle. In this situation, the receptacle will be jammed by the capsules in the cavity and the user will be faced with the problem of unjamming the receptacle.


By tilting or pivoting the receptacle in the cavity for the removal of the receptacle from the cavity in accordance with the present invention, the heap of capsules in the receptacle is tilted or pivoted at the same time so that the top of the heap is lowered with respect to the cavity and/or the heap of capsule is redistributed in the receptacle by the tilting or pivoting motion whereby the height of the heap is lowered in the receptacle. In both cases, the level of the accumulated capsules is lowered with respect to the housing's cavity so as to avoid, during removal of the receptacle from the cavity, a collision between the capsules and the device's housing that would lead to jamming problems of the receptacle in the cavity.


In an embodiment, the housing comprises a beverage conditioning part and a drip tray part, the cavity being delimited by the beverage conditioning part and the drip tray part. The drip tray part may be separable from the beverage conditioning part, the collection receptacle being optionally arranged to be tiltable or pivotable and removable by the separation of the drip part from the beverage conditioning part. The drip tray part typically comprises a drip tray, a rear part of the drip tray part forming a bottom part of the cavity for the collection receptacle, the drip tray being in particular covered with a support member, such as a grid, for holding a beverage recipient. Typically, the drip tray forms a reservoir for collecting liquid passing through the support member. The support member may be arranged to secure the capsule collection receptacle in its reception orientation.


The cavity of the housing may have: a front opening for inserting and removing the collection receptacle; and a bottom with a generally upright protruding portion, wall or wedge forming a pivot axis adjacent the front opening around which the collection receptacle is tiltable or pivotable in the cavity. Optionally, the collection receptacle has in its reception orientation a bottom that is angled up from adjacent the pivot axis so as to increase the angle by which the collection receptacle can be tilted or pivoted.


The cavity may have a bottom that supports a bottom part of the collection receptacle, the bottom part of the collection receptacle being tiltable or pivotable with the bottom of the cavity. In this case, the bottom of the cavity and the bottom of the receptacle move together from the reception orientation into the removal orientation, and vice versa.


Instead of providing the tilting or pivoting point at the bottom of the cavity in the housing, the collection receptacle can for example be suspended in the cavity along a top axis that extends substantially parallel to the opening in the top part of the receptacle, the collection receptacle being tiltable or pivotable around the top axis.


The cavity may have at least one cam cooperating with at least one corresponding cam follower of the collection receptacle, or vice versa, the cam(s) and cam follower(s) being arranged to guide the receptacle in a tilting or pivoting movement in the cavity.


The cavity of the housing may have a front opening for inserting and removing the collection receptacle and a rear passage, opposite the front opening, for allowing the passage of a rear part of the collection receptacle when the receptacle is tilted or pivoted in the cavity into its removal orientation. The rear passage may be delimited by an upright wall of the cavity, in particular an upright wall extending upwards from a bottom part of the cavity. The collection receptacle can have a rear wall with a shoulder, ledge or protrusion that cooperates with an upper edge of the upright wall of the cavity to secure the receptacle in its removal orientation or in its reception orientation.


The cavity and the collection receptacle may have a fastening arrangement for securing the receptacle in its reception orientation in the cavity. For instance, the fastening arrangement comprises one or more snap fasteners, and/or the fastening arrangement comprises a support opening or member in the cavity that cooperates with a corresponding suspension flange, protrusion or pin of the collection receptacle, or vice versa.


The collection receptacle in the cavity of the housing may have an apparent wall, i.e. a wall that is not fully hidden in the cavity, which has over its height a transparent or translucide portion. Hence, the user may visually check through this transparent or translucide portion the level of used capsules in the collection receptacle and remove the collection receptacle when he finds out that the receptacle is full or nearly full.


On the other hand, by using the tiltable or pivotable receptacle of the invention, a user may let the receptacle be filled with used capsules beyond the rim or opening of the collection receptacle and possibly up to the extraction chamber. When the amount of collected used capsules in the receptacle is so important that a further capsule may not be evacuated anymore from the extraction chamber, the heap of collected used capsules reaching the extraction chamber, the user will have to tilt or pivot the collection receptacle in such a way to redistribute the heap of capsules within the receptacle and to allow evacuation of the extracted capsule from the extraction chamber and removal of the collection receptacle from the cavity for emptying the used capsules collected in the receptacle.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention will now be described with reference to the schematic drawings, wherein:



FIG. 1 shows a state of the art capsule collector arrangement of a beverage preparation device;



FIG. 2 shows a capsule collector arrangement of a beverage preparation device in accordance with the invention; and



FIG. 3 illustrates the removal of the capsule collector of the arrangement shown in FIG. 2.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION


FIG. 1 schematically shows part of a beverage preparation device 1 with a beverage outlet 2 above a drip tray 3 that supports a cup 4 to be filled with beverage via outlet 2.


Beverage preparation device 1 has an extraction chamber (not shown) for receiving capsules containing an ingredient of the beverage to be prepared, for extracting the beverage ingredient to form the beverage and supplying the formed beverage via outlet 2 to cup 4. The extraction chamber is arranged to drop the extracted used capsules 5 into a cavity of the housing containing a capsule collection receptacle 10.


The cavity containing receptacle 10 is delimited by a two-part housing 1a,1b made of an upper beverage conditioning part 1a, an upper front wall 6 of which being shown in FIG. 1, and a lower drip tray part 1b made of a base tray 3a that supports drip tray 3 and collection receptacle 10. Base tray 3a, drip tray 3 and collection receptacle 10 are removable en bloc like a drawer from beverage preparation device 1 in the direction of arrow 3′. A lower edge 6a of upper front wall 6 delimits an upper boundary of opening 7 in beverage preparation device 1. Through opening 7, collection receptacle 10 may be removed from device 1. Collection receptacle 10 has a transparent front wall 10b that is more or less in the continuity of upper front wall 6 and comes close to or into contact with edge 6a.


Drip tray 3, base tray 3a and collection receptacle 10 may be made of different elements or may be joined into one or two elements. When drip tray 3 is assembled to collection receptacle 10 or integral therewith, base tray 3a may become redundant.


During use of beverage preparation device 1, capsules 5 are extracted in an extraction chamber and then dropped through the receptacle's opening 10a into receptacle 10 where they accumulate into a heap, the upper boundaries of which are schematically shown by dotted lines 5a.


When no particular system is provided to manage the accumulation of capsules in receptacle 10, this heap of capsules 5 may rise up to a level, that is indicated by dashed line 5b, which is located above opening 10a of receptacle 10, or the heap may rise even above level 5b. As shown in FIG. 10, level 5b is located above edge 6a of wall 6 and thus above opening 7 for the removal of collection receptacle 10.


Hence, by pulling collection receptacle 10 out from the cavity in direction 3′, capsules 5 will collide with wall 6 of the housing's upper beverage conditioning part 1a. Depending on the disposition and amount of accumulated capsules 5 in receptacle 10 and extending above opening 7, the removal or receptacle 10 will be inhibited by the top of the heap of capsules 5, which top will collide with the fixed outer wall 6 of the device's housing 1a. In this case, receptacle 10 may be jammed by capsules 5 and the user will be faced with the problem of unjamming receptacle 10.


In order to allow a smooth removal of collection receptacle 10 shown in FIG. 1, capsules 5 should not accumulate beyond the receptacle's opening 10a. However, this leads to filling receptacle 10 with fewer capsules 5 which means a greater waste of space due to unoccupied areas 10c around heap 5a in receptacle 10 and thus this necessitates a receptacle with an increased size for coping with this waste of space.


A solution to this problem is shown in FIGS. 2 and 3, in which the same references designate generally the same elements, which illustrate part of a beverage preparation device 1 according to the invention.


As opposed to the state of the art device shown in FIG. 1, the beverage preparation device shown in FIGS. 2 and 3 has a collection receptacle 10 that may take two different orientations in the cavity delimited by the two-part housing 1a,1b. More specifically, collection receptacle 10 is shown in FIG. 2 in a generally upright reception orientation, as indicated by vertical dashed line 10′, and in a tilted or pivoted removal orientation, as indicated in FIG. 3 by inclined dashed line 10″, that is at an angle to the reception orientation. The angle between the reception orientation and the removal orientation may be in the range of 5 to 60 deg, usually 10 to 45 deg, in particular 15 to 30 deg.


As generally illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3, receptacle 10 may be filled in its reception orientation (FIG. 2) with capsules 5 to a level 5b beyond the receptacle's opening 10a and above edge 6a delimiting opening 7. This filled receptacle 10 may still be able, upon tilting or pivoting receptacle 10 into its removal orientation 10″ (FIG. 3), to be removed for emptying and pass below the level 6′ of edge 6a despite an accumulation of capsules 5 extending out of opening 10a of receptacle 10, without risk of jamming of receptacle 10 in housing 1a,1b.


In the schematic illustration of FIG. 3, the capsule arrangement forming a heap indicated by doted lines 5a, appears to be unchanged in receptacle 10 with respect to the arrangement of capsules 5 in receptacle shown in FIG. 2. It is clear that the capsule arrangement in receptacle may be modified in the tilting or pivoting motion, indicated by arrow 3″. In particular, capsules 5 located in an upper region of the arrangement may move to previously unoccupied areas 10c of receptacle 10, underneath the receptacle's opening 10a. Thus a greater compactation of used capsules 5′ may be achieved in receptacle 10 and less space is need in the beverage preparation device 1 to accumulate and handle the same number of used capsules 5 as with prior art arrangements of used capsule collection receptacles.


The device's housing 1a,1b comprises a beverage conditioning part 1a containing an extraction chamber and a liquid management system, such as a water reservoir, pump and heater (not shown), and a drip tray part 1b. Cavity 1c containing receptacle 10 is delimited by the beverage conditioning part 1a and the drip tray part 1b. Drip tray part 1b is separable from the beverage conditioning part 1a, collection receptacle 10 being arranged to be tiltable or pivotable and removable by the separation of the drip part 1b from the beverage conditioning part 1a, as shown by arrows 3′ and 3″ in FIG. 3.


Drip tray part 1b includes a base tray 3a, a drip tray 3, a rear part of base tray 3a forming a bottom part 3c of the cavity 1c for collection receptacle 10. Drip tray 3 is covered with a support member 3d, such as a grid, for holding a beverage recipient 4. Drip tray 3 forms a reservoir for collecting liquid passing through support member 3d.


In area 3e, support member 3d urges recipient 10 in its reception orientation against upright wall 3f of base tray 3a. Indeed, as illustrated in FIG. 3, receptacle may not be tilted or pivoted in cavity 1c without interfering with support member 3d in area 3e if support member 3d is not first removed to set recipient 10 free in rotation.


Furthermore, drip tray part 1b forming a bottom part 3c delimiting cavity 1c has a generally upright protruding wedge 3g forming a pivot axis adjacent front opening 7 around which collection receptacle 10 is tiltable or pivotable in cavity 1c. Moreover, collection receptacle 10 has in its reception orientation 10′ a bottom 10d that is angled up from adjacent wedge 3g. As apparent in FIG. 3, such an angled receptacle's bottom 10d allows receptacle 10 to be tilted or pivoted over a greater angle before its bottom 10d hits bottom part 3c of housing 1a,1b.


Cavity 1c of the housing 1a,1b has a rear passage 8, opposite front opening 7, for allowing the passage of a rear wall 10e of collection receptacle 10 when the receptacle is tilted or pivoted into its removal orientation 10″ in cavity 3c. Rear passage 8 is delimited by upright wall 3f of base tray 3a. Moreover, rear wall 10e of collection receptacle 10 has a shoulder 10f that may cooperate with an upper end of upright wall 3f to secure receptacle 10 in its removal orientation 10″ or in its reception orientation. Rear wall 10e of collection receptacle 10 may also have a protrusion or ledge, indicated in dotted line 10g, that may cooperate with an upper end of upright wall 3f to secure receptacle 10 in its reception orientation 10′.


Cavity 1c and collection receptacle 10 have a fastening arrangement 9 in the form of a snap for securing receptacle 10 in its reception orientation 10′ cavity 1c.


As long as collection receptacle 10 does not contain an accumulation of used capsules 5 that extends beyond its rim or opening 10a, receptacle 10 together with base tray 3a, drip tray 3 and support member 3d may be separated en bloc from upper beverage conditioning part 1a of the device's housing 1a,1b without tilting or pivoting receptacle 10. In other words, as shown in FIG. 2, lower drip tray part 1b and receptacle 10 may be removed en bloc, in the direction of arrow 3′, with the receptacle in its reception orientation providing receptacle 10 does not contain an accumulation of capsules 5 that significantly emerges above opening 10a of receptacle 10.


When collection receptacle 10 contains an accumulation of used capsules 5 that noticeably emerges beyond its rim or opening 10a, support member or grid 3d should be removed and then receptacle 10 together with base tray 3a, drip tray 3 may be pulled away, in the direction of arrow 3′, from upper beverage conditioning part 1a of the device's housing 1a,1b. By pulling base tray 3a with receptacle 10 away from conditioning part 1a, capsules 5 emerging from receptacle 10 will collide with wall 6 and push the upper part of receptacle 10 backwards so that receptacle 10 is naturally tilted or pivoted around protruding wedge 3g, in the direction of arrow 3″ in FIG. 3, so as to allow the filled receptacle 10 to pass smoothly underneath wall 6. Alternatively, upon removal of support member or grid 3d, receptacle may be first tilted or pivoted in the direction of arrow 3″ and then pulled with base tray 3a in the direction of arrow 3′.

Claims
  • 1. A device for preparing a beverage from a capsule containing an ingredient of the beverage, comprising: a housing having a cavity to which used capsules are evacuated; anda collection receptacle located within the cavity of the housing, with the receptacle having an opening for receiving the evacuated used capsules and collecting the capsules, a reception orientation in which the receptacle is arranged to be filled with capsules up to a maximum level of fill in the cavity, and a removal orientation configured and dimensioned to allow removal of the collection receptacle filled with capsules from the cavity;wherein the cavity of the housing has a front opening for inserting and removing the collection receptacle, a pivot axis adjacent the front opening around which the collection receptacle is tiltable or pivotable within the cavity, the collection receptacle having a bottom that is angled up from the pivot axis when the receptacle is in its reception orientation, and a rear passage, opposite the front opening, for allowing the passage of a rear part of the collection receptacle when the receptacle is tilted or pivoted in the cavity into its removal orientation; andwherein the maximum level of fill of the collection receptacle extends above the opening of the receptacle in the reception orientation of the receptacle, while still allowing the collection receptacle to be tilted or pivoted into its removal orientation for removal of the collection receptacle filled with capsules from the cavity when the maximum level of fill in the cavity is reached.
  • 2. The beverage preparation device of claim 1, wherein the housing comprises a beverage conditioning part and a drip tray part, with the cavity being delimited by the beverage conditioning part and the drip tray part, the drip tray part being separable from the beverage conditioning part, and the collection receptacle being arranged to allow the drip part to be separated from the beverage conditioning part.
  • 3. The beverage preparation device of claim 2, wherein the drip tray part comprises a drip tray, a rear part of the drip tray part forming a bottom part of the cavity for the collection receptacle, the drip tray being covered with a support member or grid for holding a beverage recipient.
  • 4. The beverage preparation device of claim 3, wherein the support member is arranged to secure the capsule collection receptacle in its reception orientation.
  • 5. The beverage preparation device of claim 1, wherein the cavity of the housing has a bottom with an upright protruding portion, wall or wedge forming the pivot axis adjacent the front opening around which the collection receptacle is tiltable or pivotable in the cavity.
  • 6. The beverage preparation device of claim 1, wherein the cavity has a bottom that supports a bottom part of the collection receptacle, the bottom part of the collection receptacle being tiltable or pivotable with respect to the bottom of the cavity.
  • 7. The beverage device of claim 1, wherein the collection receptacle is suspended in the cavity along a top axis that extends substantially parallel to the opening in the top part of the receptacle, the collection receptacle being tiltable or pivotable around the top axis.
  • 8. The beverage preparation device of claim 1, wherein the cavity has at least one cam cooperating with at least one corresponding cam follower of the collection receptacle, or vice versa, the cam(s) and cam follower(s) being arranged to guide the receptacle in a tilting or pivoting movement in the cavity.
  • 9. The beverage preparation device of claim 1, wherein the rear passage is delimited by an upright wall of the cavity.
  • 10. The beverage preparation device of claim 9, wherein the collection receptacle has a rear wall with a shoulder, ledge or protrusion that cooperates with an upper edge of the upright wall of the cavity to secure the receptacle in its removal orientation or in its reception orientation.
  • 11. The beverage preparation device of claim 1, wherein the cavity and the receptacle have a fastening arrangement for securing the receptacle in its reception orientation in the cavity.
  • 12. The beverage preparation device of claim 11, wherein the fastening arrangement comprises one or more snap fasteners.
  • 13. The beverage preparation device of claim 11, wherein the fastening arrangement comprises a support opening or member in the cavity that cooperates with a corresponding suspension flange, protrusion or pin of the collection receptacle, or vice versa.
  • 14. The beverage preparation device of claim 1, wherein the collection receptacle in the cavity of the housing has a transparent or translucent front wall that-extends above the opening of the receptacle.
  • 15. A device for preparing a beverage from a capsule containing an ingredient of the beverage, comprising: a housing having a cavity to which used capsules are evacuated, the cavity including a bottom;a collection receptacle in the cavity of the housing having an opening for receiving and collecting used capsules, a reception orientation in the device in which the receptacle is arranged to be filled with capsules up to a maximum level of fill in the cavity, and a removal orientation which allows removal of the collection receptacle filled with capsules from the cavity;wherein the cavity has a front opening for inserting and removing the collection receptacle, the maximum level of fill extends above the opening of the receptacle in the reception orientation of the receptacle, and the bottom includes a upright protruding portion, wall or wedge forming a pivot axis, whereby the receptacle is tiltable or pivotable within the cavity and said pivot axis; andwherein the collection receptacle is removable from the cavity for emptying capsules collected in the receptacle; by being tilted or pivoted about the pivot axis in the cavity into the removal orientation, thereby allowing removal of the collection receptacle filled with capsules from the cavity when the maximum level of fill in the cavity is reached.
  • 16. The device of claim 15, wherein the collection receptacle is arranged to be slidably removable from the bottom of the cavity with the sliding movement urging the collection receptacle to tilt or pivot to facilitate removal from the cavity.
  • 17. The device of claim 16, wherein the the cavity is further configured and arranged to include a support member or grid adjacent to the front opening for inserting and removing the collection receptacle, which is configured and dimensioned to hold a beverage recipient, with the support member or grid positioning the waste receptacle for receiving spent capsules.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
08155753 May 2008 EP regional
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 371c Date
PCT/EP2009/055464 5/6/2009 WO 00 10/15/2010
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO2009/135869 11/12/2009 WO A
US Referenced Citations (60)
Number Name Date Kind
2927533 Luehrs Mar 1960 A
3218955 Lorang Nov 1965 A
3938492 Mercer, Jr. Feb 1976 A
4164306 Perrin Aug 1979 A
4253385 Illy Mar 1981 A
4377049 Simon et al. Mar 1983 A
4389925 Piana Jun 1983 A
4458735 Houman Jul 1984 A
4554419 King et al. Nov 1985 A
4757753 Pandolfi Jul 1988 A
4767632 Meier Aug 1988 A
4954697 Kokubun et al. Sep 1990 A
5036998 Dunn Aug 1991 A
5161455 Anson et al. Nov 1992 A
5193701 Bush et al. Mar 1993 A
5312020 Frei May 1994 A
5335705 Morishita et al. Aug 1994 A
5353692 Reese et al. Oct 1994 A
5372061 Albert et al. Dec 1994 A
5375508 Knepler et al. Dec 1994 A
5498757 Johnson et al. Mar 1996 A
5645230 Marogna et al. Jul 1997 A
5731981 Simard Mar 1998 A
5836236 Rolfes et al. Nov 1998 A
5855161 Cortese Jan 1999 A
5890615 Petras Apr 1999 A
5916351 Sintchak Jun 1999 A
5927553 Ford Jul 1999 A
5959869 Miller et al. Sep 1999 A
5992298 Illy et al. Nov 1999 A
6029562 Sintchak Feb 2000 A
6062127 Klosinski et al. May 2000 A
6123010 Blackstone Sep 2000 A
6182555 Scheer et al. Feb 2001 B1
6213336 Lin Apr 2001 B1
6325312 Karkos, Jr. Dec 2001 B1
6345570 Santi Feb 2002 B1
6354341 Saveliev et al. Mar 2002 B1
6582002 Hogan et al. Jun 2003 B2
6759072 Gutwein et al. Jul 2004 B1
7028603 Gremillion et al. Apr 2006 B1
7093533 Tebo, Jr. et al. Aug 2006 B2
7210401 Rolfes et al. May 2007 B1
7270050 Glucksman et al. Sep 2007 B2
7279660 Long et al. Oct 2007 B2
7350455 Vetterli Apr 2008 B2
20030070555 Reyhanloo Apr 2003 A1
20040015263 Chadwell et al. Jan 2004 A1
20050015263 Beal et al. Jan 2005 A1
20050258186 Hart et al. Nov 2005 A1
20070062378 Glucksman et al. Mar 2007 A1
20070157820 Bunn Jul 2007 A1
20070175338 Glucksman et al. Aug 2007 A1
20090101021 Tonelli et al. Apr 2009 A1
20090173235 Kollep et al. Jul 2009 A1
20100251900 Cahen et al. Oct 2010 A1
20100263543 Krauchi et al. Oct 2010 A1
20100263547 Cahen et al. Oct 2010 A1
20100263550 Cahen et al. Oct 2010 A1
20100300301 Cahen et al. Dec 2010 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (70)
Number Date Country
410 377 Apr 2003 AT
682 798 Nov 1993 CH
2235252 Sep 1996 CN
1209041 Feb 1999 CN
2387836 Jul 2000 CN
1875831 Dec 2006 CN
44 29 353 Feb 1996 DE
20 2006 002 124 May 2006 DE
20 2006 019 039 Apr 2007 DE
102006060748 Jan 2008 DE
0 549 887 Jul 1993 EP
0 838 186 Apr 1998 EP
1 440 639 Jul 2004 EP
1 448 084 Aug 2004 EP
1 676 509 Jul 2006 EP
1 707 088 Oct 2006 EP
1 731 065 Dec 2006 EP
1772081 Apr 2007 EP
1 798 457 Jun 2007 EP
1 859 713 Nov 2007 EP
1 864 598 Dec 2007 EP
1 867 260 Dec 2007 EP
1 878 368 Jan 2008 EP
1 731 065 Jun 2008 EP
2 070 454 Jun 2009 EP
2 440 720 Jun 1980 FR
2 544 185 Oct 1984 FR
2 624 844 Jun 1989 FR
2 397 510 Jul 2004 GB
2 421 423 Jun 2006 GB
50054990 May 1975 JP
51135081 Nov 1976 JP
52138542 Oct 1977 JP
54065788 May 1979 JP
S59174120 Oct 1984 JP
61119218 Jun 1986 JP
H0638880 Feb 1994 JP
2001222761 Aug 2001 JP
2002191505 Jul 2002 JP
2004527893 Sep 2004 JP
2006341097 Dec 2006 JP
85318 Sep 1984 LU
2294875 Mar 2007 RU
1797482 Feb 1993 SU
WO9724052 Jul 1997 WO
WO 9725634 Jul 1997 WO
WO 9950172 Oct 1999 WO
WO 02059534 Aug 2002 WO
WO02070371 Sep 2002 WO
WO02097927 Dec 2002 WO
WO 02097927 Dec 2002 WO
WO 03039309 May 2003 WO
WO 03075629 Sep 2003 WO
WO 03093142 Nov 2003 WO
WO 2004030435 Apr 2004 WO
WO 2004030438 Apr 2004 WO
WO 2005099535 Oct 2005 WO
WO 2006050900 May 2006 WO
WO 2006063645 Jun 2006 WO
WO 2006082064 Aug 2006 WO
WO 2006090183 Aug 2006 WO
WO 2006122916 Nov 2006 WO
WO 2007003062 Jan 2007 WO
WO 2007003990 Jan 2007 WO
WO 2007141334 Dec 2007 WO
WO 2008046837 Apr 2008 WO
WO 2008104751 Sep 2008 WO
WO 2008138710 Nov 2008 WO
WO 2008138820 Nov 2008 WO
WO 2011092644 Aug 2011 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (22)
Entry
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,841, Non-Final Office Action, dated Dec. 18, 2012.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,794, Non-Final Office Action, dated Jan. 30, 2013.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,820, Restriction Requirement, dated Feb. 15, 2013.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,684 Non-Final Office Action dated Mar. 11, 2013.
Page 66 of the official Diary of Chile listing CL 3721-08 (corresponding to US 2010/0263543A1) dated Jan. 8, 2010.
Chilean Search Report for CL 372008 dated Feb. 7, 2011 (corresponding to US 2010-0263547A1).
CL-2023-07 cited in Chilean Search Report, CL 3720-08 dated Feb. 7, 2011 (corresponding to US 2009-0173235A1).
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,743, Non-Final Office Action, dated Apr. 11, 2013.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,794, Final Office Action, dated Jun. 6, 2013.
International Search Report for Application No. PCT/EP2008/067072 mailed Oct. 9, 2009.
International Search Report for Application No. PCT/EP2008/067075 mailed Aug. 27, 2009.
International Search Report for Application No. PCT/EP2008/067077 mailed Oct. 14, 2009.
International Search Report for Application No. PCT/EP2008/067079 mailed Apr. 9, 2009.
International Search Report for Application No. PCT/EP2008/067083 mailed Apr. 16, 2009.
Request for grant of a European patent, Application No. EP 08155753.0 filed May 7, 2008 entitled “Used Capsule Collector for Beverage Devices”.
Request for grant of a European patent, Application No. EP 08155851.2 filed May 8, 2008 entitled “Setting the Level of Fill in a Cup Used With a Beverage Dispenser”.
European Search Report for Application No. EP 10167803.5 dated Aug. 27, 2010.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,684, filed Jun. 11, 2010 entitled “Modular Manufacturing of Beverage Production Machines”.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,743, filed Jun. 11, 2010 entitled “Used Capsule or Pod Receptacle for Liquid Food or Beverage Machines”.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,794, filed Jun. 11, 2010 entitled “Liquid Food or Beverage Machine Having a Drip Tray and a Cup Support”.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,820, filed Aug. 11, 2010 entitled “Liquid Food or Beverage Machine with Combinable Accessories”.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/747,841, filed Jun. 11, 2010 entitled “One Hand Carriable Liquid Food or Beverage Machine”.
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20110041698 A1 Feb 2011 US