Motorized vehicles of all kinds, including cars, trucks, recreational vehicles, heavy equipment vehicles, buses, boats, and private aircraft, are invariably impacted by insects colliding with the vehicle windshield. The resulting insect residue on windshields can be messy and especially difficult to remove if the insect debris has become desiccated.
The windshields of moving vehicles encounter many different species of insects, but larger numbers are associated with particular ones including mayflies of the northern US, midges or small flies (including aquatic midges known as blind mosquitos and no-see-ums) and mosquitoes found throughout the US. Particularly bothersome is the love bug (Plecia nearctica), a species of March fly found in the southeastern United States, especially along the Gulf Coast.
Often, the insect debris is of sufficient volume that the windshield and wiper blades need to be toweled in addition to using wiper motion with dispensed wiper fluid. Quite often, wipers will simply smear the insect debris across the windshield. In the event the wiper fluid is depleted, things are even more difficult. When remote from a gas station there is the inconvenience of the need to locate a source of water for cleaning the windshield. Methyl alcohol (the chief ingredient of wiper fluid) alone, often is ineffective in removing tenacious desiccated insect and other debris from windshields.
To date, methods to address difficult-to-remove windshield dirt comprise use of windshield wiper fluid, dispensed while operating windshield wipers (this often smears the dirt deposits), and Ice scrapers and squeegees, which usually must be used in concert with paper towels or rags.
US patent application number 2004/0156991 to Brown et al. discloses a dispenser that is attached to or made part of a wiper blade that dispenses hydrophobic or hydrophilic surface treatment material to the windshield for either repelling water or wetting the windshield, respectively. This involves a modification of the actual wiper blade that could accumulate debris.
The product called Scrubberblade (https://gadgetsgo.com/scrubbing-wind-shield-wipers.html) comprises a wiper double blade design that exhibits small protuberances on the blades. Even this improved wiper blade design will have trouble with desiccated debris.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,687,946 discloses a wiper blade attachment with pressurized inflatable scrubbing member. The device is pressurized by windshield wiper fluid and permits seepage of fluid onto the windshield. This is a semi-permanent attachment and is not disposable.
US patent application number 20130000802 provides an example of coverings for windshield wiper blades designed to impede ice formation on the blades. Other such covers are for the purpose of preventing ultraviolet light damage to the blade rubber.
It would be advantageous to have a mechanism that uses the windshield wipers for efficient insect debris removal that a) does not involve modification of the wiper blade, ie. adhoc modification of the existing wiper or replacement with blades of a different design, b) minimizes the user's exposure to the dirt and debris to be removed, and c) is disposable.
Presently disclosed is a disposable windshield wiper blade attachment that incorporates chemicals that will expedite insect and other debris removal when attached to the wiper blades and the wiper action is performed. In a preferred embodiment, the attachment takes the form of fabric, foam, or other porous enclosure of synthetic or natural material that is impregnated with chemicals that will facilitate rapid removal of the windshield debris.
A disposable sleeve or enclosure for removable application to windshield wipers that contains chemicals that expedite the removal of dried material from windshields such as insect debris, especially dried insect debris is disclosed below.
Debris Removal Chemistry
There are a number of chemical compounds and mixtures that can be used in the present invention and are within the scope of this disclosure. Among them are methyl alcohol, petroleum distillates, ethylene glycol mono butyl ether, other degreasers, Mr. Clean Magic Eraser, WD-40, and Avon Skin-So-Soft. Additionally, it has been found that dampened laundry dryer sheets are exceedingly efficient at removing dried insect debris from automobiles without the need for scrubbing. In a preferred embodiment, a device is disclosed which permits application of such chemicals to the windshield by windshield wipers.
Fabric conditioning agents within dryer sheets are transferred to laundry to impart fabric softening or other conditioning properties; they exhibit surfactant properties useful in the present invention. Typical compounds impregnated in dryer sheers are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,943,566 to Uitenbroek et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 5,080,810A to Smith et al, which disclose methods of manufacturing dryer sheets and are incorporated herein by reference thereto. Among such agents including surfactants found in dryer sheets, are silicone oils or tallow or vegetable-based quaternary ammonium compounds, these include alkylated quaternary ammonium compounds, ring or cyclic quaternary ammonium compounds, aromatic quaternary ammonium compounds, diquaternary ammonium compounds, amidoamine quaternary ammonium compounds, ester quaternary ammonium compounds, and mixtures of these. The categories of surfactants delineated in UK patent application number GB2185752A are hereby incorporated by reference thereto. These and other compounds that can promote efficient removal of insect and other debris from windshields are within the scope of the present invention.
For the purposes of the present invention, other chemicals found in dryer sheets that have been identified as potential carcinogens, hazardous pollutants, or endocrine disruptors are unnecessary.
Various embodiments of the present invention are herein disclosed. All are a form of impregnated material removably attachable to windshield wiper blades or blade assemblies. The wide variety of feasible shapes for the removably attachable device are within the scope of the presently disclosed concept. Accommodation must be made for the variation in wiper blade sizes from vehicle to vehicle and, as described below, for embodiments that work with dynamic changes in wiper blade assembly geometry. These embodiments emphasize avoidance of hand contact with dirt, ease of application, and ease of disposal.
Reference is made to
Bag geometries of the invention are shown in
Cleaning wipes can be made from porous material impregnated with the surfactant composition for insect and debris removal.
A final implementation comprises the use of the aforementioned chemicals in a wiper fluid that would be dispensed in the same way as conventional windshield wiper fluid.
Various other embodiments of the disclosed concept not delineated, but which derive from this disclosure are deemed within the scope of the present invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application Patent Application Ser. No. 62/920,738 filed May 13, 2019 for “Windshield Cleaning Appliance” by Dennis W. Davis and James G. Wallin.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62920738 | May 2019 | US |