Claims
- 1. A vacuum assist toilet for connection to a drain comprising:
- a water and vacuum apparatus within which water is held and which has an outlet through which water exits during a toilet flushing;
- a bowl which can be flushed, said bowl having an inlet and an outlet, said bowl outlet including an upper trap device extending from said bowl, a trapway extending generally downwardly from said upper trap device, and a lower trap device extending from said trapway to extend to said drain;
- a flush valve which couples said water and vacuum apparatus outlet to said bowl inlet;
- said water and vacuum apparatus including a vacuum source which is coupled to said trapway and which is constructed to apply a vacuum thereto during at least part of the time when water flows from said flush valve into said toilet bowl and from said toilet bowl to said trapway;
- said lower trap device is unobstructed to the flow of gas therethrough when no water is flowing through said lower trap device, but is obstructed to the flow of gas therethrough during at least a portion of a flushing when water is flowing into said bowl outlet, to contain said vacuum in said trapway so said vacuum can help draw water and debris out of said bowl.
- 2. The toilet described in claim 1 wherein:
- said lower trap device includes an upwardly inclined conduit portion extending at an upward incline in a downstream direction, said inclined conduit portion having an upper wall and a lower wall, with the upper wall having an upstream end whose lowest location lies slightly higher than the bottom of the downstream end of said lower wall, to provide a pool of water whose top lies slightly below said lowest location of said upper wall when no water flows through said conduit portion.
- 3. The toilet described in claim 1 wherein:
- said water and vacuum apparatus comprises a water tank;
- said flush valve is of the type that includes a primarily upwardly facing valve seat, a valve member that can move from a closed position against said seat to an open position above said seat, and a flush handle mounted on said water tank and coupled to said valve member to raise it off said seat;
- said water and vacuum apparatus includes a container with upper and lower portions, said container lying stationary within said tank with only said container lower portion communicating with the rest of the tank so a drop in tank water level during a flushing creates a vacuum in said upper portion of the container, said vacuum source also including a conduit coupling the upper portion of said container to said trapway;
- said flush valve is horizontally spaced from the bottom of said container to lie outside said container.
- 4. The toilet descried in claim 1 wherein:
- said bowl is a urinal bowl,
- said water and vacuum apparatus includes an outer water tank and said water and vacuum apparatus includes a container which lies within said water tank and which has a lower end opening to said water tank and an upper end, and said water and vacuum apparatus includes a largely vertical vacuum pipe having an upper end open to the top of said container, said vacuum conduit extending through said tank and having a lower end that is open to said trapway.
- 5. A method for operating a toilet by rapidly flowing water into a bowl and rapidly flowing water and any debris out of the bowl through an upper trap and down along a trapway toward a drain during a flushing, characterized by:
- establishing a lower trap device between the bottom of said trapway and said drain, including maintaining a pool of water in said lower trap device which blocks the passage of air between said trapway and drain at least during part of a flushing, but allowing air to pass between said trapway and drain between flushings;
- applying a vacuum to said trapway during at least part of a flushing, to help draw water and debris out of said toilet bowl.
- 6. The method described in claim 5 wherein:
- said step of establishing a lower trap device includes maintaining said pool of water at a level which is slightly less than required for a complete trap so air can pass above said pool when the toilet is not being flushed, and during the early stages of a flushing, flowing water rapidly through said lower trap device to raise the level of said pool to create a complete trap that blocks the passage of air.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED CASES
This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/870,569 filed Apr. 17, 1992, which is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 07/618,170 filed Nov. 26, 1990 now U.S. Pat. No. 5,142,712.
US Referenced Citations (11)
Foreign Referenced Citations (5)
Number |
Date |
Country |
1207 |
Jan 1874 |
GBX |
889 |
Jan 1882 |
GBX |
172 |
Jan 1905 |
GBX |
397066 |
Aug 1933 |
GBX |
485689 |
May 1938 |
GBX |
Continuation in Parts (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
870569 |
Apr 1992 |
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Parent |
618170 |
Nov 1990 |
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