The invention relates to a vacuum cleaner nozzle, and to a vacuum cleaner provided with such a nozzle.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,979,959 discloses an accessory for a cleaning appliance includes a head having a housing, a downwardly-directed suction opening in the housing and a neck adapted for attachment to a hose or wand of the cleaning appliance. A rotatable connection is provided between the neck and the head for allowing rotation of the neck relative to the head. A wheel arrangement maneuverably supports the accessory on a surface to be cleaned and is mounted on the neck of the accessory. The wheel arrangement may normally be in contact with the surface to be cleaned, but the point or points of contact between the wheel arrangement and the surface to be cleaned are dependent upon the rotational position of the neck with respect to the head.
EP2929821 discloses a vacuum-cleaner suction tool that has a suction-tool body, a joint tube section, and a wheel section having two wheels. If the nozzle is turned, one wheel is lifted from the floor while the other stays in contact with the floor.
WO2005/110179 discloses an accessory for a cleaning appliance having a head comprising a housing and a downwardly-directed suction opening and a neck adapted for attachment to a hose or wand of the cleaning appliance. A rotatable connection is provided between the neck and the head for allowing rotation of the neck relative to the head, and a wheel arrangement is provided for manoeuvrably supporting the accessory on a surface to be cleaned. The wheel arrangement is mounted on the neck of the accessory. In a preferred embodiment, the wheel arrangement is normally in contact with the surface to be cleaned, but the point or points of contact between the wheel arrangement and the surface to be cleaned are dependent upon the rotational position of the neck with respect to the head. Again, if the nozzle is turned, one wheel is lifted from the floor while the other stays in contact with the floor.
EP2064978 discloses a floor nozzle for a vacuum cleaner. Again, if the nozzle is turned, one wheel is lifted from the floor while the other stays in contact with the floor.
Known vacuum cleaner nozzles have rear wheels at a rear end of the nozzle, i.e. the end facing a user of the vacuum cleaner in a normal way of operating the nozzle. While these rear wheels are great in moving the nozzle forward and backward in the normal way of operating the nozzle, these rear wheels hamper the nozzle's movement if the user wants to move the nozzle side-wards, i.e. in a direction substantially parallel to the long sides of the nozzle, in order to make the nozzle move into narrow spaces because the relatively small side of the nozzle now becomes the front of the nozzle.
It is, inter alia, an object of the invention to provide an improved vacuum cleaner nozzle. The invention is defined by the independent claims. Advantageous embodiments are defined in the dependent claims.
One aspect of the invention provides a vacuum cleaner nozzle comprising one or more rear wheels, in which a hinge is arranged to lift all one or more rear wheels from a floor when a suction tube connected to the nozzle is rotated around a longitudinal axis of the suction tube, e.g. after the nozzle has been rotated by more than 45° by means of a further hinge in order to position a relatively short side of the nozzle at the front of the nozzle in the nozzle's motion direction so that the nozzle is able to clean relatively small spaces that could not be entered if a relatively long side of the nozzle is at the front of the nozzle in the nozzle's motion direction. If the one or more rear wheels comprise at least two rear wheels, the hinge is arranged for simultaneously lifting the rear wheels from the floor. Preferably, the hinge is bi-stable, to which end the hinge may be provided with magnets or a bi-stable spring to fix the hinge either in a first position in which the one or more rear wheels are arranged to touch the floor, or in a second position in which the one or more rear wheels are arranged to be lifted from the floor. A vacuum cleaner advantageously comprises such a nozzle.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
A vacuum cleaner nozzle may have one or more rear wheels in the rear of the nozzle for supporting the weight of the vacuum cleaner (i.e. the tube in case of a canister) and enable the steering of the nozzle. Therefore, these rear wheels have grip/friction towards the floor to prevent sliding and uncontrolled behavior. The nozzle may further have front wheels to support the weight of the nozzle, prevent the bottom of the nozzle (soleplate) from touching and scratching the floor, and reduce the motion resistance when moving back and forward. A hinge connects the nozzle to the tube (and vacuum cleaner). The hinge enables that the tube can be tilted up and down and enables the rotation of the nozzle when the suction tube (vacuum cleaner) is rotated. When the nozzle has a very flexible hinge, the nozzle is able to rotate by more than 45°, and preferably more than 60°, or more than 75°, or (close to) 90°. In this rotated position, the nozzle would fit in narrow spaces because the relatively small side of the nozzle becomes now the front of the nozzle. A problem is that in this rotated position, the nozzle cannot be smoothly pushed back and forward because the grippy rear wheels block the movement as the wheels are oriented at an angle to the motion direction. Reducing the friction between rear wheels and floor would allow for the nozzle to be smoothly pushed backward and forward also when it is rotated by more than 45°, but doing so would hamper normal steering behavior because the rear wheels would slide rather than roll over the floor when a user tries to steer the nozzle. Uncontrolled steering behavior would be the result.
In view thereof, in accordance with an aspect of the invention, the rear wheels are lifted when the nozzle is rotated by more than 45°. If the one or more rear wheels comprise more than one rear wheel, not just one rear wheel needs to be lifted as in U.S. Pat. No. 7,979,959, as then still another rear wheel touches the floor and hampers a smooth movement in a direction perpendicular to that rear wheel's orientation; instead, the rear wheels should be lifted simultaneously, so that no rear wheel hampers a smooth movement. Preferably, this is done in combination with features that support the nozzle to smoothly roll or slide over the floor in this direction. Because the nozzle works in a dirty environment, the mechanism to tilt the rear wheels is preferably very robust. One of the main elements is to add an additional hinge point to the hinge.
An optimal setup of components to accommodate the best maneuvering nozzle with the function of moving the vacuum cleaner back and forward when the nozzle is in the 90° rotated position is the following. A nozzle is connected via a hinge arrangement which has three hinges H1, H2, H3, counting ascending from the suction tube side. The first two hinges H1, H2 rotate the nozzle and suction tube, thus enabling steering, and the third hinge H3 lifts the rear wheels (which have sufficient friction to the floor to enable steering) when the nozzle is rotated by more than 45°. The axis of the first hinge H1 is almost parallel to the floor and perpendicular to the axis of the second hinge H2 and the axis of the third hinge H3 which are also parallel to the floor. The axis of the first hinge H1 is parallel to the floor and to the axis of the third hinge H3. The axis of the second hinge H2 is perpendicular to the axes of the first and third hinges H1, H3. The nozzle N is supported by supporting elements in the front of the nozzle N and optionally but preferably also by supporting elements in the rear of the nozzle. These supporting elements can be wheels made out of low friction material like POM, POM+PTFE, HMPE etc. The wheels can alternatively have a layer of fluffy material like velour to prevent the wheels from scratching the floor. The supporting elements can alternatively be caster wheels which rotate always in the direction of movement. These caster wheels radiate the agility of the nozzle. A very simple supporting element can be formed by bristles.
It should be noted that the above-mentioned embodiments illustrate rather than limit the invention, and that those skilled in the art will be able to design many alternative embodiments without departing from the scope of the appended claims. If the vacuum cleaner is a stick vacuum cleaner with the vacuum cleaner body close to the nozzle, the notion “suction tube” should be understood to be the connection of the vacuum cleaner body to the nozzle. In the claims, any reference signs placed between parentheses shall not be construed as limiting the claim. The word “comprising” does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those listed in a claim. The word “a” or “an” preceding an element does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements. The invention may be implemented by means of hardware comprising several distinct elements. In the device claim enumerating several means, several of these means may be embodied by one and the same item of hardware. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims that do not refer to one another does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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18160067.7 | Mar 2018 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2019/054505 | 2/25/2019 | WO | 00 |