1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to vacuum systems, and more particularly to a wall mounted vacuum system with a portable vacuum unit.
2. Description of the Related Art
While not as popular as portable vacuums, central vacuum systems are found in many residential homes. Central vacuums have a fixed location vacuum unit, which many users find convenient since they do not have to pull the vacuum unit throughout the house. There are two common hose systems for central vacuums. One of which is the movable hose, where a detachable hose can be moved from one vacuum port to another. The vacuum ports are located at strategic locations in the house. In a movable hose system, the user only has to carry the hose from room to room.
The other common hose system is a retractable hose that is stored within a housing at a central location in the house. The hose housing can be located within a wall or appear as a cabinet in the wall. The retractable house is more convenient regarding the storing of the hose.
Most users of central vacuum systems prefer them over portable vacuums in that they are less burdensome to use in that the vacuum unit need not be carried or pulled around the house. However, a lot of owners of central vacuum systems also own a portable vacuum in that there is inevitably some place in the home where the central vacuum cannot reach or they desire to vacuum outside the home, say a car or garage, where the central vacuum was not designed to reach.
In the case of vacuuming areas such as a garage or shop, most users have yet another type of vacuum, which is design to vacuum larger particles, such as wood chips, and even water, unlike the standard household vacuum. These types of vacuums are generally referred to as shop vacs. They tend to have a more robust motor, stronger vacuum, and a filter system that permits the vacuuming of water.
There is a need to provide the benefits of both a central vacuum system and a portable vacuum cleaner. Moreover, there is a need to do so while providing the benefits of a shop vacuum.
This need is met in the present invention of a vacuum system comprising a cabinet adapted to be mounted to a wall, a hose extendable from the cabinet between a retracted position and an extended position and having a proximal end fixed within the cabinet, and a portable vacuum unit detachably mountable to the cabinet. The portable vacuum unit has a tank, an inlet port in fluid communication with the tank, and a vacuum source to draw air from the inlet port into the tank. The proximal end of the hose is connectable with the inlet port when the portable vacuum unit is docked to the cabinet, so that the hose can be used to vacuum waste into the tank when the portable vacuum unit is docked to the cabinet with the proximal end connected to the inlet port. But also, the portable vacuum unit can be used to vacuum waste into the tank when the portable vacuum unit is detached from the cabinet.
The cabinet can include a hose storage compartment where the hose is stored when the hose is in the retracted position. The system can also have a retraction stop mechanism to limit retraction of the hose. Preferably, the reaction stop mechanism includes a sleeve mounted to the hose and a limit switch mounted to the cabinet so that the sleeve will activate the limit switch to halt retraction of the hose. Similarly, the system can also have an extension stop mechanism to limit extension of the hose. Preferably, the extension stop mechanism includes a projection on the hose and a limit switch mounted to the cabinet so that the projection will activate the limit switch to halt extension of the hose.
A handle can be mounted to the hose, preferably retained out of the cabinet when the hose is in the retracted position. The handle can have an LED. Preferably, the handle has a nozzle portion and a grip portion, with the nozzle portion being angled relative to the grip portion. Also, preferably, the handle nests within a collar on a top wall of the cabinet. Ideally, the handle is canted relative to the cabinet for ease of access.
In another aspect of the invention, a portable vacuum hose is mounted to the portable vacuum unit for use when vacuuming with the portable vacuum unit. Preferably, the portable vacuum unit has an outlet port. If so, the outlet port can be configured to receive a blower hose to direct air from the outlet port as a blower.
In a further aspect, the proximal end of the hose and the inlet port are automatically connected when the portable vacuum unit is docked to the cabinet. Similarly, the cabinet has a power outlet and the portable vacuum unit receives power from the power outlet when it is docked with the cabinet. Preferably, the portable vacuum unit will have a power switch operable to actuate the vacuum source when the portable vacuum unit is detached from the cabinet. If so, then it can also have a bypass mechanism to bypass the power switch when the portable vacuum unit is docked with the cabinet. In yet a further aspect, the vacuum source and the power outlet are automatically connected when the portable vacuum unit is docked with the cabinet.
In another aspect of the invention, the vacuum system can include a hose drive assembly wherein the hose can be selectively driven automatically between the retracted and extended positions. Preferably, the hose drive assembly includes a reversible drive motor, and further preferably, the reversible drive motor is operable in response to actuation of switches on the hose.
In this configuration, the hose may have a handle and the switches can be in the handle. The switches can actuate the reversible drive motor by wireless signals. If so, the hose can have a transmitter and the cabinet can have a controller with a receiver. The controller is electrically connected to the reversible drive motor so that signals from the switches are transmitted to the receiver for actuation of the reversible drive motor by way of the controller.
With a hose drive assembly, the vacuum system can include a retraction stop mechanism to limit retraction of the hose, and/or an extension stop mechanism to limit extension of the hose. Also, the vacuum system can have a clutch mechanism to disengage the hose from the hose drive assembly.
In the drawings:
The invention is embodied in a vacuum system 10 illustrated generally in
Inside the storage compartment 24 is a considerable length of vacuum hose 28, preferably on the order of 40 feet in length. The vacuum hose 28 is typically corrugated or formed with a spiral rib, and may be extendable and compressible. The upper end of the vacuum hose 28 extends through a hose drive assembly 30 to a handle 32. The handle 32 nests within a collar 34 around an opening 35 in an upper wall 36 of the cabinet 12 with the vacuum hose 28 and/or handle 32 extending through the opening 35. The handle 32 is preferably canted relative to the cabinet when stored as shown. The lower end of the vacuum hose 28 fluidly communicates with a conduit 38 that projects into the lower portion 16 through a wall 40 that separates the lower portion 16 from the upper portion 14. A female coupler 39 can be provided on the end of the conduit 38.
The lower portion 16 has a door 42 that provides access to a lower compartment 44. The lower compartment 44 is also open at a lower end of the cabinet 12. A portable vacuum unit 46 is removably mountable to the cabinet 12 within the lower compartment 44. In this embodiment, a ledge 48 is mounted to each sidewall 20, 22 within the lower compartment 44. The portable vacuum unit 46 rests on the ledges 48 so that a portion of it is housed within the lower compartment, accessible by way of the door 42, and another portion of it extends through the open lower end of the cabinet 12. The cabinet 12 could just as easily be sized such that the portable vacuum unit is completely received within the interior of the cabinet.
The lower compartment 44 also houses one or more enclosures 50, 52 for supporting electrical circuitry and controllers that operate the hose drive assembly 30 and the portable vacuum unit 46 when it is mounted within the cabinet 12. In addition, the lower compartment 44 can also house additional vacuum attachments such as extension 54.
Preferably, the cabinet 12 will be mounted to a wall in a position so that the portable vacuum unit 46 will be more than 1½ to 2 feet off the floor. This is especially important in a garage where flammable vapors may accumulate closer to the floor. On the other hand, the cabinet 12 should not be mounted so high that the handle 32 is difficult to access. In this respect, it is within the scope of the invention for the handle 32 and the vacuum hose 28 to extend from the cabinet 12 at some point other than the top of the cabinet.
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It will be appreciated that the portable vacuum unit 46 can function as a wet/dry vacuum, and therefore the tank 60 will have a drain 66 disposed at a lower portion thereof. The drain 66 will be sealed by a removable cap 68.
Referring primarily to
A handle 84 extends upwardly from the motor housing 58, and may be formed of two clamshell halves 86, 88, and a bridge 90. One side of the handle 84 defines a vacuum port 92 and the other side of the handle defines a blower port 94. A vacuum conduit 96 extends from the vacuum port 92 to the inlet opening 74, and an exhaust conduit 98 extends from the outlet opening 80 to the blower port 94. A male adapter 100 extends out of the vacuum port 92 in fluid communication with the vacuum conduit 96. A power switch 102 is mounted in the handle 84 and is electrically connected to the vacuum motor 82. A conventional electrical cord 104 with plug 105 is also wired in conventional manner to the switch 102 and to the vacuum motor 82 to deliver power.
A cylindrical filter 106 depends from the platform 56 coaxially around the central outlet opening 70. Preferably, a longitudinally slotted support cup 108 is secured to the platform 56 around the central outlet opening 70. A leg assembly 110 comprising a central securing plate 112 and four radially extending legs 114 is secured to the support cup 108 by a threaded bolt 116. The cylindrical filter 106 is securely retained between securing plate 112 and the bottom of the platform 56. It will be appreciated that the leg assembly 110 enables the platform 56, motor housing 58, handle 84, and all the components enclosed therein to stand upright on the leg assembly when the tank 60 is removed from the platform 56.
The motor housing 58 can further be adapted with various slots and cradles to support assorted tools and attachments 117 customarily used in vacuuming operations. For example, a separate onboard hose extension 118 rests in a cradle 120 around the handle 84. It is also within the scope of the invention for the portable vacuum unit 46 to be cordless, i.e., having an onboard rechargeable battery that can, for example, the automatically recharged when the portable vacuum unit is docked in the cabinet 12.
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It will be apparent that when the reversible drive motor 132 is actuated in an extending direction, the worm causes the drive spur gear 134 to rotate in the direction shown by the arrow A in
The hose drive assembly 30 further comprises a retraction stop mechanism 154 to stop the reversible drive motor 132 when the vacuum hose 28 reaches a predetermined retraction limit, preferably with the vacuum hose completely within the storage compartment 24, and the handle 32 nested within the collar 34. It also comprises an extension stop mechanism 156 to stop the reversible drive motor 132 when the vacuum hose 28 reaches a predetermined extension limit.
Exemplary embodiments of a retraction stop mechanism 154 and an extension stop mechanism 156 are illustrated in
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The extension stop mechanism 156 includes an open cup 182 depending from the lower aperture 130 of the gearbox 122. A limit switch 184, preferably in the form of a microswitch, is mounted within the storage compartment 24 adjacent the open cup 182. A trigger 186 is mounted within the open cup 182 and movable between a first position where it engages the limit switch 184 and a second position where it does not engage the limit switch. The trigger 186 is preferably biased to the second position. A projection 188, preferably in the form of the spherical mounting on the exterior of the vacuum hose 28 is sized to enter the open cup 182 and move the trigger 186 to the first position as the vacuum hose 28 approaches its maximum extension, thereby engaging the limit switch 184. The limit switch 184 is electrically connected to the reversible drive motor 132, preferably by way of the PCB in a manner that when it is engaged, the reversible drive motor 132 is deactivated. Moreover, the size of the projection 188 is such that further extension of the vacuum hose 28 is prohibited by the contact the projection 188 with the open cup 182 or the lower aperture 130 of the gearbox 122.
It is within the scope of the invention for the retraction stop mechanism 154 or the extension stop mechanism 156, or both, to be utilized with a hose drive assembly 30 in any vacuum system, whether or not incorporated in the present embodiment. For example, they can be used in portable vacuum systems, wall-mounted vacuum systems, and central vacuum systems.
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It is contemplated that control of the vacuum motor 82 and control of the hose drive assembly 30 will be wireless from the handle 32. Thus, a transmitter enclosed in the handle 32 will transmit signals from an “on” switch to turn on the vacuum motor 82, and an “off” switch to turn off the vacuum motor 82, a “forward” switch to actuate the reversible drive motor 132 in the extending direction, and a “reverse” switch to actuate the reversible drive motor 132 in a retracting direction. There may also be an “off” switch to turn off the reversible drive motor 132 between the extension and retraction limits. In the present embodiment of the handle 32 illustrated in
The handle 32 also has a light 191, preferably an LED, which activates whenever the “on” switch is activated. The light 191 is preferably directed in same direction as the nozzle 182 to provide illumination to the area to be vacuumed by the nozzle. It is within the scope of the invention for the handle light 191 to be utilized in any vacuum system, whether or not incorporated in the present embodiment. For example, it can be used in portable vacuum systems, wall-mounted vacuum systems, and central vacuum systems.
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In this embodiment in order to use the portable vacuum unit 46 with the vacuum hose 28 of the cabinet 12, the user must do three things, manually, once the portable vacuum unit is installed in the cabinet: (1) connect the conduit 38 to the vacuum port 92, (2) plug the electrical cord 104 into the power socket 196, and (3) turn on the power switch 102. It will be understood that when the portable vacuum unit 146 is so docked, no power is delivered to the power socket 196; the portable vacuum unit is placed only in a condition of readiness for operation.
All control of the vacuum system 10 can thereafter be accomplished entirely from the handle 32. Pressing the toggle key 185 to actuate the “on” switch sends a coded signal to the receiver 190, whereupon the processor 192 decodes the signal and energizes the power socket 196. Conversely, pressing the toggle key 185 to actuate the “off” switch sends a coded signal to the receiver 190, whereupon the processor 192 decodes the signal and de-energizes the power socket 196. Similarly, pressing the forward key 187 sends a coded signal to the receiver 190, whereupon the processor 192 decodes the signal and turns on the reversible drive motor 132 in the extending direction. The vacuum hose 28 will be automatically extended from the hose storage compartment 24 during actuation of the hose drive assembly 30, and the user can guide the extension of the hose with the help of the handle 32 to the fully extended position, whereupon the hose drive assembly 30 will be shut off by the extension stop mechanism 156. If the user wanted the vacuum hose 28 to be partially extended, pressing the forward key 187 again will stop the hose drive assembly 30. By continually pressing the forward key 187 or the reverse key 189, as needed, the user can position the vacuum hose 28 is desired.
It is within the scope of the invention for the forward key 187 and the reverse key 189 to provide continuous activation of the hose drive assembly 30. In other words, as long as the forward key 186 is pressed between the extension and retraction limits, the reversible drive motor 132 will be energized in the extension direction. When the forward key 187 is released, the reversible drive motor 132 will be shut off. Similarly, as long as the reverse key 189 is pressed between the extension and retraction limits, the reversible drive motor 132 will be energized in the retraction direction. When the reverse key 189 is released, the reversible drive motor 132 will be shut off. In any event, it is contemplated that when the vacuum hose 28 is fully retracted and the limit switch 162 or 172 is actuated, the reverse key 189 will be inoperative so as to prevent damage to the hose. Similarly when the vacuum hose 28 is fully extended and the limit switch 184 is actuated, the forward key 187 will be inoperative so as to prevent damage to the hose. In order to stabilize operation of the reversible drive motor 132, a step start of the motor is initiated preferably within the first second of actuation.
To prevent damage to the vacuum hose 28 and to the hose drive assembly 30 in the event the vacuum hose 28 becomes jammed during extension or retraction, an anti-jamming circuit 198 is provided. In the anti-jamming circuit 198, a Hall effect sensor 200 is disposed in the gearbox 122 near a magnetic ring on the shaft of the reversible drive motor 132. The Hall effect sensor 200 monitors the speed of the reversible drive motor 132 and sends a signal indicative of the speed to the processor 192. The processor 192 is programmed to recognize a lower limit of normal speeds for the reversible drive motor 132, say 3000 rpm. It is assumed that if the motor speed drops below 3000 rpm when neither an “off” switch nor a limit switch is activated, there is a jammed condition, and the controller 194 will turn off the reversible drive motor 132. Preferably, the controller 194 will permit the system to reset to an operative condition only when the jamming problem is resolved.
Any one or all of the three manual operations for connecting the portable vacuum unit 46 to the cabinet 12 can be automated. For example, a mechanism can be provided to automatically bypass the power switch 102 when the portable vacuum unit 46 is mounted to the cabinet 12, thereby obviating the need to turn on the power switch. Two variations of such a mechanism are illustrated in
As the portable vacuum unit 46 is mounted in the cabinet 12, as for example by resting on the ledges 48 as explained above, the motor housing 58 is brought near the rear wall 18 of the cabinet 12. The aperture 204 is located such that it goes over the protrusion 202. Simultaneously as the protrusion 202 extends through the aperture 204, it bears against the button 208, and urges the button to move against its bias toward the wall 210. As the button 208 moves, the magnet 214 passes the reed switch 212, activating it. Actuation of the reed switch 212 energizes a coil 216 that, in turn, triggers a relay 218 to close a circuit between the electrical cord 104 and the vacuum motor 82. Thus, upon placement of the portable vacuum unit 46 within the cabinet 12, the user need not perform the manual operation of turning the power switch 102 on because the power switch is effectively automatically bypassed by triggering the relay 218.
An alternative to the aforementioned bypass circuit is shown in
Another manual operation the can be automated is connecting the conduit 38 to the vacuum port 92. An example of a structure to accomplish this operation is shown in
It is further contemplated that an automatic power connection can be obtained upon docking the portable vacuum unit 46 to the cabinet 12 in at least a couple ways. In one alternative, the electrical cord 104 can be mounted on a spring-biased reel in the portable vacuum unit 46. When fully reeled in, only the plug 105 projects from the portable vacuum unit 46. The power socket 196 can be disposed within the lower compartment 44 so that as the portable vacuum unit 46 is docked (for example, to rest on the ledges 48), the plug 105 is simultaneously urged into the socket 196. In another alternative, a separate electrical coupling can be provided between the portable vacuum unit 46 and the cabinet 12, with a bypass circuit in the portable vacuum unit to bypass the electrical cord 104 for delivery of power to the vacuum motor 92.
It has been found desirable to provide a clutch mechanism to disengage the vacuum hose 28 from the reversible drive motor 132 so that it can be manually extended or retracted, for example in the event of the power failure. An embodiment of such a clutch mechanism is illustrated in FIGS. 18A-C.
A lever 272 is pivotally mounted to the gear box 122 so that one arm bears against the radial flange 258 and the other arm (either directly or by linkage) projects through a control plate 274 (see
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While the invention has been specifically described in connection with certain specific embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that this is by way of illustration and not of limitation, and the scope of the appended claims should be construed as broadly as the prior art will permit.