This application claims the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 2002-39693 filed on Jul. 9, 2002, in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a washing machine and a method of controlling the same, and more particularly, to a washing machine which washes laundry by wobbling a washing board thereof and a method of controlling the same.
2. Description of the Related Art
Generally, a washing machine is an apparatus which washes laundry by rotating a cylindrical rotating tub containing the laundry and washing water. Such washing machines may be divided into drum-type washing machines and vertical-axis washing machines. A drum-type washing machine allows a rotating tub to be horizontally disposed, and washes laundry using impact that is obtained as the laundry is lowered by gravitation, after being raised up along an inner surface of the rotating tub, while the rotating tub is rotated around a horizontal axis in forward and reverse directions. In contrast, a vertical-axis washing machine allows a spin-drying tub equipped with a pulsator therein to be vertically disposed, and washes laundry using water currents generated by the pulsator, while the spin-drying tub is rotated around a vertical axis in forward and reverse directions. In conventional drum-type washing machines and vertical-axis washing machines, the amount of laundry is ascertained by detecting a number of rotations of a motor that are caused by inertia, once a driving of a rotating spin-drying tub or a pulsator is stopped.
Another type of vertical-axis washing machine has a wobbling device and washes laundry by exerting a mechanical impact to the laundry, in upward and downward directions, through the use of the wobbling device which reciprocates in upward and downward directions. Such a wobbling washing machine uses a mechanical impact energy generated by the wobbling device, instead of currents of wash water, and requires a smaller amount of wash water and detergent as compared to the general vertical-axis washing machine described above.
As shown in
A drain hose 8 is provided under the water tub 2 and extends to the outside so as to drain wash water contained in the water tub 2 to the outside of the washing machine after a washing operation. A pump motor 11 and a restoring pipe 12 which circulate the wash water supplied to the water tub 2 to an upper portion of the water tub 2 are provided as shown, so as to reduce the amount of water used. Additionally, a water supply valve 13 is disposed in a water supply conduit connected to an outside hydrant (not shown).
A spin-drying shaft support 9 is mounted on an outer surface of a bottom 3a of the spin-drying tub 3. A spin-drying shaft 6a of the power transmission unit 6 is fitted into a center of the spin-drying shaft support 9 and rotates the spin-drying tub 3. A washing shaft 6b is positioned in the spin-drying shaft 6a. An upper end of the washing shaft 6b extends over an upper end of the spin-drying shaft 6a by a predetermined length to be coupled to the wobbling device 20.
Where the wobbling device 20 is situated in the wobbling position, the wobbling device 20 is rotated by a rotating force of the drive motor 5. However, the rotating movement of the wobbling device 20 is converted into a rectilinear movement, and this rectilinear movement is transmitted to the laundry. Accordingly, detecting an amount of the laundry through detecting a number of rotations of the drive motor 5 is not effective in such a case. Additionally, where the wobbling device 20 is situated in the level position, the wobbling device 20 and the spin-drying tub 3 are rotated together by a rotation of the drive motor 5. Accordingly, in this case, the amount of laundry cannot be effectively detected by detecting a number of rotations of the drive motor 5.
Accordingly, an aspect of the present invention is to provide a wobbling washing machine and a method of controlling the same, which is capable of precisely detecting an amount of laundry by detecting an amount of current flowing through a drive motor while the drive motor is operated.
Additional aspects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention.
To achieve the above and other aspects of the present invention, there is provided a washing machine comprising a housing which defines an outer appearance of the washing machine, a spin-drying tub to receive laundry, a washing board which is mounted on an inner surface of a bottom of the spin-drying tub and wobbles to wash the laundry, a drive motor which drives the spin-drying tub and the washing board, a weight detection unit which detects a weight of the laundry according to an amount of current flowing through the drive motor to drive the spin-drying tub and the washing board, and a control unit which controls an entire washing operation of the washing machine to correspond to the detected weight of the laundry.
To achieve the above and other aspects of the present invention, there is provided a method of controlling a washing machine having a spin-drying tub, a washing board which is mounted on an inner surface of a bottom of the spin-drying tub and wobbles to wash laundry, and a drive motor which drives the spin-drying tub and the washing board, the method comprising detecting a weight of the laundry using an amount of current flowing through the drive motor while the drive motor is operated to drive the spin-drying tub, having the laundry, and the washing board, supplying a proper amount of washing water corresponding to the detected weight of the laundry, and carrying out a washing operation, a rinsing operation and a spin-drying operation of the washing machine by wobbling the washing board in response to the supplying of the washing water being completed.
These and other aspects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to the like elements throughout. The embodiments are described below in order to explain the present invention by referring to the figures.
Referring to
A key input unit 101, a weight detection unit 152, a water level sensor 102, and a door switch 103 are connected to input terminals of the control unit 100. The key input unit 101 receives washing information including a washing course from, for example, a user. The weight detection unit 152 operates a drive motor M of the washing machine prior to a supply of wash water, and detects an amount of laundry contained in a spin-drying tub of the washing machine using an amount of current flowing through the drive motor M. The water level sensor 102 detects a water level of the wash water supplied to a water tub of the washing machine. The door switch 103 detects an opening and closing of a door of the washing machine.
A display 104, a motor driving unit 105, a circulation pump driving unit 106, a drain valve driving unit 107 and a water supply valve driving unit 108 are connected to output terminals of the control unit 100. The display 104 displays an operation of the washing machine. The motor driving unit 105 operates the drive motor M, which is used to operate the wobbling device and the spin-drying tub. The circulation motor driving unit 106 drives a pump motor P of the washing machine, which is used to circulate the wash water supplied to the water tub to an upper portion of the water tub to reduce the amount of the wash water being used. The drain valve driving unit 107 drives a drain valve V1 of the washing machine, which is used to drain the wash water, used to wash the laundry, to the outside of the washing machine. The supply valve driving unit 107 drives a water supply valve V2 of the washing machine, which is used to shower-rinse the laundry by feeding the wash water toward an inner surface of the spin-drying tub rotating at a low speed.
The current signal passed through the current amplification circuit 406 is input to the control unit 100 through an analog-digital conversion port A/D. The control unit 100 detects a weight of the laundry using the extent of the current signal converted into a digital signal, and sets washing conditions, including a level of supplied wash water, washing time, rinsing time, and spin-drying time according to the detected weight of the laundry.
A weight detection algorithm employed in the control unit 100 and the weight detection unit 152 is described below. First, current flowing through the drive motor M is measured while the drive motor M is operated in a forward direction for a certain period of time. In this case, data obtained for, for example, the first 500–1000 ms in an early stage of the operation are ignored because a current measurement error is great in this period of time. An average of data obtained for a predetermined period of time (for example, 10 seconds) after the early stage is taken. For example, final current extent data are obtained by taking data at intervals of 100 ms and calculating an average of ten pieces of data for each of 10 seconds, and calculating an average of the ten average samples calculated for the 10 seconds.
The control unit 100 calculates a minimum target water level corresponding to the primarily detected weight of the laundry, and primarily supplies water to the water tub by opening the water supply valve V2 in operation 506. Where the primary water supply has been completed, the control unit 100 secondarily detects a weight of the laundry while operating the drive motor M in the wobbling position, in operation 508. Where a new target water level is determined according to the secondarily detected weight of the laundry, the control unit 100 secondarily supplies the wash water to the water tub in operation 510.
The control unit 100 determines whether the water supply has been completed by checking a current water level against a determined target water level through the water level sensor 102 in operation 512. Where the wash water has been supplied to the determined target water level, the water supply is stopped and a washing operation is carried out with the wobbling device disposed in the wobbling position in operation 514. In this wobbling washing operation, a washing board of the washing machine is slantingly disposed by the wobbling device in the wobbling position. As a result, the washing board is wobbled in upward and downward directions while being slanted at a certain angle, thus washing the laundry using an impact generated by the wobbling of the washing board. In this case, the control unit 100 circulates the wash water and the detergent to an upper portion of the water tub by driving the pump motor P.
Once the wobbling washing operation has been completed in operation 516, the control unit 100 drains the wash water by opening a drain valve V1 in operation 518, and carries out a wobbling rinsing operation and a wobbling spin-drying operation in due course in operations 520 and 522, respectively.
An example of the wobbling rinsing operation of the present invention is carried out as described below. First, the control unit 100 switches the wobbling device to the wobbling position and carries out a wobbling, in which the washing board is wobbled several times to disentangle the laundry. After the wobbling is carried out, the control unit 100 switches the wobbling device to a level position while supplying rinsing water, and rotates the washing board at low speed, together with the spin-drying tub. Where the rinsing water has been supplied to a water level required for the rinsing operation, the control unit 100 rinses the laundry by wobbling the washing board. During the rinsing operation, the control unit 100 circulates the rinsing water in the water tub by driving the pump motor P.
An example of the spin-drying operation of the present invention is carried out as described below. The control unit 100 rotates the washing board together with the spin-drying tub while maintaining the washing board in the wobbling position, by operating the drive motor M in a forward direction. After a predetermined spin-drying time elapses, the control unit 100 terminates the spin-drying operation by stopping the drive motor M. Where the spin-drying operation has been completed as described above, the control unit 100 shakes the laundry contained in the spin-drying tub by wobbling the washing board, thus allowing a user to easily withdraw the laundry from the spin-drying tub. Additionally, the wobbling of the washing board, which is carried out after the spin-drying operation, decreases the amount of wrinkles in the laundry even though a certain period of time may have elapsed without the laundry being withdrawn from the spin-drying tub.
As described above, the present invention provides a washing machine that washes laundry by wobbling a washing board mounted on an inner surface of a bottom of a spin-drying tub and a method of controlling the same. The washing machines precisely detects a weight of the laundry by using an amount of current flowing through a drive motor of the washing machine, while the drive motor is operated to drive the washing board.
Although a few embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in these embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined in the appended claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2002-39693 | Jul 2002 | KR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2138501 | Miller | Nov 1938 | A |
2265516 | Chayie | Dec 1941 | A |
2645111 | Fields | Jul 1953 | A |
2715826 | Kirby | Aug 1955 | A |
2902851 | Fields | Sep 1959 | A |
4235085 | Torita | Nov 1980 | A |
4607408 | Didier et al. | Aug 1986 | A |
4862710 | Torita et al. | Sep 1989 | A |
5092140 | Matsuo et al. | Mar 1992 | A |
5161393 | Payne et al. | Nov 1992 | A |
5233847 | Tanaka | Aug 1993 | A |
5337431 | Kim et al. | Aug 1994 | A |
5460018 | Werner et al. | Oct 1995 | A |
6064165 | Boisvert et al. | May 2000 | A |
6115863 | Mason et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6442979 | Thorn et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6760942 | Lee et al. | Jul 2004 | B1 |
20020050011 | Cho et al. | May 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040006831 A1 | Jan 2004 | US |