The invention relates to a valve for a water faucet according to the preamble of patent claim 1.
As a rule, water faucets are opened or closed by means of rotating disks or mixing levers, which are located directly on the water faucet or next to the water faucet on a wash basin. Of disadvantage is herein, for example, that the water faucet in the case of a mixing lever is opened with dirty hands or the water faucet cannot be closed while washing one's hands without operating the rotating disk or the mixing lever with wet hands.
To be able to open and close a water faucet without manual operation, electronic controls are known which operate with sensors. These sensors detect the presence of a person at a wash basin or the like and open the water faucet automatically. When the person leaves the wash basin the water faucet is automatically closed. Of disadvantage is here that the user cannot make the decision to open or close a water faucet.
However, foot-operated water faucets are already known which include a special valve (U.S. Pat. No. 5,263,684). This valve comprises a turning mechanism coupled to a water faucet valve in a water line responsive to a foot pedal. An example of a turning mechanism is a cord looped around a drum.
It is furthermore known to operate a diaphragm valve by means of a permanent magnet (DE 39 27 611 A1). Herein a main water channel and a pilot water channel are provided as well as a partially elastic diaphragm, whose underside serves for shutting off and turning on the main water channel. However, the pilot water channel does not represent a bypass to the main water channel and it also does not lead across the top side of the diaphragm.
A regulating device for regulating cold and hot water by means of a water faucet is known, the operation of which taking place with the foot or the like (EP 0 654 628 A1). This device comprises an elastic diaphragm, which can shut off the hot water and cold water inflow. A main and a pilot water channel are also provided. However, the pilot water channel does not represent a bypass to the main water channel.
In another known valve a main water channel with a water inbranch which can be shut off and a water outbranch, one surface of the elastic diaphragm serving for shutting off and turning on the main water channel (WO 96/11350). The valve also comprises a pilot water channel, which leads to another surface of the diaphragm and which is connectable with the water inbranch as well as with the water outbranch of the main water line. A movable closure element can also be moved back and forth between a first and a second portion.
The invention addresses the problem of providing a valve for a water faucet, which can operate without an electric energy supply and without a rotating mechanism.
This problem is resolved according to the characteristics of patent claim 1.
The invention consequently relates to a valve for a water faucet. This valve comprises a main water channel through which the water flows to a water faucet or the like. This main water channel can be shut off by an elastic diaphragm, the diaphragm always opening when the pressure on its top side is lower than on its bottom side. The particular pressure on the top side is generated by a bypass line, which can conduct water from the main water channel onto the top side of the diaphragm. The diaphragm is controlled by a foot pedal. The fact that the bypass line is comprised of two zones with the one zone being open while the other zone is closed, makes operation pososible even at very low as well as also very high water pressure. The use of two permanent magnets for the force transfer to open and close the two zones of the bypass line makes possible the perfect sealing of the valves against the environment.
The advantage attained with the invention comprises in particular that a water faucet can be activated with the foot or other parts of the body. This invention moreover is suitable for retrofitting systems already installed. For example with the available fittings of a wash basin, temperature and quantity of the water can be preset such that the only decision to be made with the foot is water flow ‘Yes’ or ‘No’. In contrast to an electronic fitting, the user himself makes the decision about the opening and closing of the water flow. Application areas of the invention are inter alia public buildings, such as theaters, airports and department stores, semipublic buildings and facilities such as offices, factories and restaurants, houses and rooms in the health field, such as medical offices, hospitals and laboratories, buildings and rooms in the field of food services, such as butcher stores, bakeries or canteen kitchens, kitchens and bathrooms in private residences and areas intended for use by the disabled.
An embodiment example of the invention is depicted in the drawings and will be described in further detail in the following. In the drawings show.
On the connecting sleeve 10 is provided a Bowden cable 11, which corresponds to the Bowden cable of a bicycle brake and which comprises an outer sheathing and an inner synthetic or steel cord. This Bowden cable 11 is guided across a roller 12 and is connected with a foot actuation means or a pedal 13. The pedal 13 can be freely positioned on the floor 14. Since the Bowden cable 11 is a cable such as is used in bicycle handbrakes, a deflection roller 12 is actually not necessary, e.g. the Bowden cable 11 can be freely placed between the pedal 13 and the valve 6.
Through the operating element 3, visible in
By actuating the pedal 13 by foot, hot and cold water can be made to flow as long as the pedal is depressed. By taking the foot off the pedal 13 the water flow is stopped. When the pedal 13 is pressed all the way down, the pedal remains fixed in this position and water flows continuously through the valve 6. By actuating the pedal 13 again, the latter is released and returns into its original position. The water flow through the valve 6 is stopped. The pedal 13 can be implemented with or without latch-on function. With latch-on function it is preferably employed in private homes, in the area of food services, in medical offices and in laboratories, while without latch-on function it is preferably employed in the public area and in hospitals.
Above the second magnet 23 is a magnet roof 32, on which adjoins a soft main coil spring 33. Above this main coil spring 33 is provided a cover 34, which rests on a bracket 35. Bracket 35 serves as a guide for the cable 63 of the Bowden cable 11. The bracket 35 serves thus as a resistance against the sleeve of the Bowden cable 11. To the right of the cover 34 is provided a bridge 37, through which is placed a connecting pin 38. A clamp bolt 39 is located to the right of the connecting pin 38.
The bracket 35 in
The operating function of valve 6 in the condition depicted in
The right rubber seal 26 closes line 30, since the main coil spring 33 presses the upper magnet 23 to the right. This magnet 23 entrains the magnet 22 to the right, since both magnets 22, 23 have opposite polarity and consequently attract each other strongly.
Via the pipe fitting 8 water reaches the main water channel 17, 18 up to the lower side of diaphragm 20. The water flows parallel to the top side of diaphragm 20 across the pilot water channel 27 and the line 28. The water pressure acting on both sides of the diaphragm 20, is equal. Since the water in space 29 acts onto a larger diaphragm area than the water of main water channel 18, the force acting from above is greater than that acting from below, i.e. the diaphragm 20 remains closed, and therewith the entire valve 6 is closed.
When the pedal 13 is depressed, the Bowden cable 63 moves to the left and a spring reception 51, not shown in
When the pedal 13 is released, the main spring 33 presses the upper magnet 23 to the right, and therewith also the rubber seal 26 in the same direction, closing line 30. The rubber seal 25 simultaneously opens line 28 such that the initial state is restored again.
The spring 50 is a hard secondary spring. This spring 50 ensures that when the Bowden cable 63 is pulled, the main spring 33 has in fact reached its end position. It additionally absorbs possible excessive force if it is compressed.
The spring 50, which is harder than the main spring 33, is wound about the end of the Bowden cable 63 closed off by a head 46. The Bowden cable 63 is guided through a slot 45 in the secondary spring bed 51. When the Bowden cable 63 is pulled, first the movable secondary spring bed 51 is moved to the left up to the boundary limit 80 of bracket 35. Through this movement the magnet roof 32 also moves against the main spring 33 to the left, since this magnet roof 32 is coupled via bridge 37 with the secondary spring bed 51. In this process the secondary spring 50 is initially not markedly compressed, since it is harder than spring 33. If, however, the Bowden cable 63 is pulled further with greater forces, the secondary spring 50 is also compressed. However, valve 6 is already being opened when only the main spring 33 is compressed.
If the secondary spring 50 were to be omitted, a user could not be certain whether or not the valve is in fact fully opened when the pedal is fully pressed all the way, for the Bowden cable 63 could have become stretched. However, since the user has perceived a first response when the pedal has been depressed and, upon further depressing it, a second response, he knows that the valve is fully opened, because the second response ensures that the spring 33 is fully compressed.
Four phases of pedal 13 correspond to the above described spring movements. The first phase defines the starting state, i.e. the valve 6 is closed. In the second phase the pedal 13 is slightly depressed, such that only the soft main spring 33 is compressed. In the third phase the pedal is pressed more strongly such that the secondary spring 50 is also compressed. In the fourth phase the pedal 13 remains fixed in its lower position. With additional pressure on the pedal, it returns back into the starting state. It is consequently possible to go back with the valve to manual operation or to the previous state of the water faucet.
In
In the variant of
Outer magnet 23 is also located in a synthetic case and is set with it into a body 69.
On one side of the synthetic case of this outer magnet 23 abuts a ball 73, which forms the end of a Bowden cable 74, which is encompassed by sheathings 76, 77 abutting the body 69. When the ball 73 is pulled against the force of a spring 78, the permanent magnet 23 migrates to the left and entrains the permanent magnet 22, which thereupon closes the pilot water channel 27 and opens the pilot water channel 31. The ball 73 is connected with the synthetic case encompassing the permanent magnet 22.
Above body 69 is located a bracket 79, which is disposed mirror-symmetrically to bracket 49. It is understood that instead of two magnets 22, 23, also only one magnet can be provided, a ferromagnetic structural part taking the place of the other magnet.
While the above described Figures show only one valve for one water conduit,
Bodies 69, 64 and 100 of
With the arrangement according to
In addition, a connecting tube 116 is evident, which can be bolted with the pipe fitting 47, and between the end piece 117 of tube 116 and pipe fitting 47 a screen 118 can be provided.
With the single Bowden cable 74 cold water channels 47, 48 as well as also hot water channels 107, 108 can be opened or closed.
In comparison to valve 6 according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 15 926.6 | Apr 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP04/03763 | 4/8/2004 | WO | 10/5/2005 |