CA1307242C - Apparatus and method for storing and dispensing particulate ice - Google Patents

Apparatus and method for storing and dispensing particulate ice

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Publication number
CA1307242C
CA1307242C CA000544239A CA544239A CA1307242C CA 1307242 C CA1307242 C CA 1307242C CA 000544239 A CA000544239 A CA 000544239A CA 544239 A CA544239 A CA 544239A CA 1307242 C CA1307242 C CA 1307242C
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
ice
hopper
seal cap
packing case
shaft
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
CA000544239A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
John R. Bradbury
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Lancer Corp
Original Assignee
Lancer Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Lancer Corp filed Critical Lancer Corp
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1307242C publication Critical patent/CA1307242C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F25REFRIGERATION OR COOLING; COMBINED HEATING AND REFRIGERATION SYSTEMS; HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS; MANUFACTURE OR STORAGE OF ICE; LIQUEFACTION SOLIDIFICATION OF GASES
    • F25CPRODUCING, WORKING OR HANDLING ICE
    • F25C5/00Working or handling ice
    • F25C5/20Distributing ice
    • F25C5/24Distributing ice for storing bins

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Filling Or Emptying Of Bunkers, Hoppers, And Tanks (AREA)
  • Confectionery (AREA)
  • Beverage Vending Machines With Cups, And Gas Or Electricity Vending Machines (AREA)

Abstract

ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
An apparatus for dispensing particulate ice including a case with an ice hopper therein for storage of ice. The ice hopper is provided with a downwardly sloped floor. An auger assembly is provided for moving ice within the ice hopper upwardly along the sloped floor from the lower end to dispense the ice from an opening at the upper end thereof. The apparatus is also provided with a lever arm, electric circuitry, and a motor mounted within the case in the space inside the walls thereof and under the sloped floor of the ice hopper for selectively activating the auger assembly. The auger assembly includes a rotating shaft which is sealed against the stationary ice hopper in a packing case, the packing case having a hole therethrough for receiving the rotating shaft, a seal cap and a thrust bearing. The sealing cap is provided with a seal for sealing against both the packing case and the rotating shaft. Also provided is a method of dis-pensing particulate ice including the steps of loading an ice hopper with ice, directing the ice to the lower end of the sloped floor of the ice hopper, and agitating the ice contained within the ice hopper while moving the ice upwardly along the sloped floor of the ice hopper from the lower end thereof to dispense the ice from an opening in the upper end of the sloped floor while draining the melt water from the ice at the lower end thereof.

Description

~ 2~

BAC~GROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to an apparatus and method o~
storing and selectivel~ dispensing particulate ice. More partic-ularly, the present invention pertains to an ice Btorage and dis-pensing apparatus which provides easy accessibility to a large quantity of particulate ice but occupies a relatively s~all amount of counter space in a food ~ervice establi~hment.
A number of devices for ~toring and dispens~ing particulate ice are currently available~ Such devices include a hoppex for storage of ice therein, generally of xectangular shape, having 10 ! generally perpendicular walls. Such a construction generally ¦ includes some mechanical means which is selectively activated by pressing against a lever arm pivotally mounted t~ the front of , the hopper for movin~ the ice out of the hopper through a gate as ¦I shown in ~.S. Patent No~ 4,346,824. ~owever, such di~pensers are ¦ generally either l~rye and bulky, thereby taking up a large ¦¦ amount of space, or so small that they contain ~o little ice that ~¦ they must often be re-filled; thereby requi.ring additional employee time to supply them with ice. Reference to two design l,patents illustrates this dilemma: ~.S. Des. 265,203 describes a ilarge, free-standing dispenser and U.S. Des. 269,785 describes a much smaller, counter-top aispenser. On information and belief, either or both of the dispensers disclosed in those two design patents would include a mechanism such as i8 disclosed in U.S.
I Patent No. 4,346,824.
I In many modern food service establishments, ~pace and man power re~uirements are significant factor~ in the profitability of the business. Such i6 especially the case in restaurants such as those which are known as fast food-type restaurants, particu-larly in those fast food outlets which have hecome particularlY
attractive in recent year~ which are located, for instance, in ~ I
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the parking lot~ of other business establishment8 which require only two or three person crews to operate, and which erve rela-tively high volumes of food in ~hort periods o~ time. ~ood ser-vice apparatus which occupies a small amount of space and which requires only occasional re-filling or service i~ particularly well ~uited, if not essential, for such restaurant8. Consequent-ly, device~ such as those shown in U.S. Patent No. 4,346,824 and Patent Nos. Des. 265,203 and ~es. 269,785, are of~limited utility in such restaurants.
10 ¦¦ The present invention is based upon the discovery that sig-llnifi~ant sRace ~avings are made possible by the use of a ~lop~d ¦ifloor in the ice hopper of the dispenser and the use of structure ¦Iwhich allows the motor and means for activating the motvr to move ¦Ithe ice out of the hopper to be located in the space ~ormed be-¦ltween the walls of the device and the underside of the l~pper end !iof the sloped floor of the ice hopper~ The use of a ~canted~floor in an ice hopper i~ disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,423,830, but the cant in the floor ~f the ice hopper disclosed in that ! pa~ent is to provide ~or the draining of water therefrom and the 20¦¦motor and means ~or activating the motor to move ice out of the ¦'hopper is not located under the canted floor. 'rherefore, that device suffers from the same disadvantages and limitations as the above-characterized dispensers; namely, the relatively large size or, if built ~maller, the limited capacity for storage of particulate ice.
Another problem with the construction of ice dispensers such as those di6close~ in U.S. Patent Nos. 4,346,824 and 4,423,830 is that the means f~r moving the ice within the ice hoppex ~ends merely to move the mass of ice around in a ~ircle inside the ice 30 hopper rather than to mechanically break apart the particulate ice. Breaklng the ice apart prevents the bridging and~or ¦¦01/MFM3 -3-~3~
' congealing of the ice in a manner which causes the apparatus to either ~top dispensing ice from the hopper before the ice hopper i6 empty or which cau~es the ice bridges to iam between tbe means for moving the ice and the interior wall6 of the ice hopper itselfO In either situation, the apparatu~ must be 6erviced, which is exactly the 6ituation which the operator of the ~ood service establishment desires to avoid. ~he present invention overcomes that limitation and disadvant~ge of ~prior art ice dispensers by pro~iding a means for mechanically breaking up the ice before it is moved out of the ice hopper by the means for moving the ice out of the hopper.
Another disadvantage and limitation of prior art ice dispensers is their tendency to dispense ice which is relatively ~wet" in the sense that the ice dispensea is partially melted.
Generally, the ice dispensed from such dispensers is wet because the ice is dispensed from the bottom of the ice h~pper. The ice at the bottom of the ice hopper i wet because all the water from the ice in the upper part of the ice hopper runs to the botto~ of ~he hopper as it melts. The present inventîon overcomes that limitation by providing a ~loped floor in the ice hopper, a drain at the lower end of the sloped floor, and means for moving the ice at the bottom of the ice hopper upwardly along the sloped floor, out of any melt water which may have collected there, and out of the ice hopper. The drain is located at the lower end of the 610ped floor ~o that water from the melted ice will run down-wardly along the sloped floor and out of the hopper. The fact ~hat the drain is set at an angle to the horizontal, i.e., in the sloped floor~ make~ ~the drain less likely to clog or freeze up from partially melted ice.
I~ is, ~herefore, an objec~ of the present inven~ion to pro-vide an apparatus for storing and dispensing particulate ice 0l/MF~53 -'1-I1 ~307;~4;: 1 comprising a subst~nt1~11y rect~ngular case having ~n ice hopper~
therein for storage o~ particulate ice, the ca~e having ~ubstan-tially vertical sid~ walls and the floor of the ice hopper ~lop-~ng downwardly within the case, means for moving particulate ice c~ntained within the ice hopper upwardly along the sloped floor from the lower end of the floor to the upper end thereDf, means at the upper end of the ~loped floor of the ice hopper for dispensing partic,ulate ice therefrom, and means ~ounted to said case in the ~pace in~ide the ~ubstantially xectangular walls ¦ thereof and under the sloped floor of the ice hopper for selec-¦ tively activating the ice moving means, thereby moving îce up-j wardly along the sloped floor of the ice hopper to the ice dis-¦ pensing means at the upper end thereof ~nd out of the ice hopper ¦ therethrough.
¦ Another objec~ of the present invention to provide an appa ¦l ratus for ~toring and dispensing particulate ice which is sani tary and which dispenses ice without requiring a user to touch the ice.
¦ Another object of the present in~ention is to provide an lapparat~s for ~toring and dispensing particulate ice which does Inot generate excessive amount~ of heat, motor noise, or vibration when in use~ the mechanism being activated only when ice is being dispensed.
A further object of the present invention is ~o provide an apparatu~ for storing and dispensing particulate ice having a drain which i5 les~ likely to free~e over or plug up ~han the drains of those dispensers which are currently available ~ecause the drain is ~et in the floor of the ice hopper at an angle from Ithe horizontal~
¦ Yet a~other object of the presen~ invention is to provide a .

!apparatu~ for storing and dispen6ing particula~e ice which I
Ol~MFM3 -5-I

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prevents ice from jamming i~ ~he disch~rge chute, the ice being' ¦ mechanically agitated by the dual actio~ of a screw and ~tirriDg ¦ bars located within the ice hopper of the ~torage and dispensing apparatus.
Another object of the present invention i5 to provide an ice dispensing apparatus which stores enough ice therein so as not to require frequent re-filling.
Another object of the present invention is t~ provide an ice I dispensing apparatus which stores relatiYely large quantities of ice therein but which does not occupy a large amount of c~unter space in a food 6ervice establi~hment.
Ano~her o~ject of the present invention is to provide a i method of dispensing particulate ice from a storage and dispensing apparatus compri~ing loading an ice hopper wi~h particulate i~e, directing the ice within the ice hopper to the lower end of the ~loped floor ~f the ice hopper, and agitating the ice contained within the ice hopper and m~ving the ice ¦ upwardly along the ~loped floor o~ the ice hopper from the lower ¦ end thereof to dispense the ice from an opening in the upper end 20 ¦¦ of the sloped floor while draining the melt water from the ice at the lower end thereof.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for storing and dispensing particulate ice which per-mits the user to control the ~uantity of ice dispensed.
A further object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for fitoring and dispensing particulate ice which dis-penses relatively dry ice in that the apparatus permits melt wa-ter to be drained from the i~e before the ice is~~dispensed there-fr~.

01/MF~3 -6-I ~ further ~bject of tbe present invent1on 18 to provide ~n ¦ apparatu~ for storing and dispensing particulate ice which is easy to clean and practical to use.
Other objects and advantages Will be appareDt to th~se skilled in the art who have the benefit of thi~ ai5closure from the following description of a presently preferred embodiment of ¦ he inventlon nnd the drawings referred to therein;

¦ SUMMARY OF T~IE INVENTION
I These objects are accomplished by pr~viding an apparatus for 101l ~toring and dispensing particulate ice comprising a substantially rectangular case having an ice hopper therein fox storage of particulate iceO the ice hopper having ~ubstantially ver~ical side walls and ~ floor which ~lopes downwardly within the case, ¦and means for moving particulate ice contained within the ice hopper upwardly along the ~loped floor rom the lower end of the floor to the upper end thereof. Means is provided at the upper end of the sloped floor sf he ice hopper for di~pensing partic-ulate ice therefrom, and means is mounted to the case in the li~pace formed by the substantially rectangular walls and the 20 !~loped floor of the ice hopper for selectively activating the i~e ¦moving means to move ice upwardly along the sloped floor of the ¦ice hopper to the ice dispensing means at the upper end thereof and out of the ice hopper therethrough.
The ice hopper is prov ded wi~h an apparatus for sealing the rotating shaft of the ice moving means in ~he stationary ice hopper comprising a packing case mounted in the gtationary ice hopper and having a hole therethrough for re~eiving a rotating shaft. A seal cap i~ received within the hol~ in the packing ca~e an~ i8 provided with means for sealing ~he seal cap against 30 ~the packing case and means for ~ealing the seal cap against the Ol/MFM3 -7-1307Z4~ 1 rotating sh~ft. A thrust bearing i~ al~o mounted to the~
stationary ice hoppex and is received within the hole in the packing case and has a hole therethrough for receiving ~he rota~ing shaft.
Also provided is a method of dispending particulate ice from an ice storage apparatus comprising loading the ice hopper of an ice dispensing apparatus with particulate ice, ~electively me-I ~hanically agitating the ice contained within -the ice hopper, ¦ directing the ice w~thin the ice h~pper to the lower end of the ¦ ~loped floor of the ice hopper, and moving the ice upwardly along ¦ the sloped floor of the ice hopper while the ice is being mechan-j ically agitated to di~pense the ice from the upper end of the sloped floor while draining the melt water from the ice at the lower end of the sloped floor, I BRIEF DESCRIP~ION OF THE DRAWINGS
¦ ~ig. 1 is a perspective view of a presently preferred embod-iment of an apparatus constructed according to the tea~hings of ~he present invention.
I Fig. 2 is a ~ectional view taken along the lines 1~ f the 20 I apparatus chown in Fig. 1.
Fig. 3 is an enlaryed, cross-sectional view of the packing case shown in Fig. 2.
D~TAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
. ~
Referring to ~ig. 1, there is shown a~ apparatu~ for storing and dispensing particulate ice, designated generally at reference numeral 10~ which is s~omprised of a case 12 having a.n ice hopper 14 contained therein. A~ be~t ~hown in ~lg. 2, ice hopper 14 is provided with substan~ially vertical side wallg~16 and a sloped floor 18 at the bottom thereof having a lower end 17 and an upper end l9. The side walls 16 and floor 18 of ice hopper 14 are . comprised of a shell member 20 and an insulating material 22 01~MFM3 -8 ! ' i I1 ~ 3~

integral therewith. Shell ~0 can be constructed of plastic or metal, ~uch as stainless steel~ and insulating material 22 can be ¦ any material ~uitable for insulating ice hopper 14~ and pref-erably water resistant.
A portion of the side wall 16, designated generally at reference numeral 24, of ice hopper 14 is slanted at the back end ¦ thereof to receive ~tirring bars 32-32' and shaft 42-42' as will be described. The outside 6urface of insulating~material 22 in ¦ the area of the 61anted portion 24, a~ well as the filoped floor 10 ~lB, is provided with an ou er shell 210~ Ice hopper 14 is closed by lid 26 which rests on the shell 20. Shell 20 is provided with an overhanging lip 28 having slot 30 therein for receiving the walls ~f case 12.
¦ Ice hopper 14 is al~o provided wi~h a pair of ~tirring ~ars lj32 having blades 34 ~ounted thereon for mechanically agitating ¦¦the ice contained in ice hopper 14. Ea~h of the ~tirring bars 32 i i5 journaled at one end in a thrust bearing 36 which is mounted in the side wall 16 ~f i~e hopper 14 IFig. 2~. The other end of l each stirring ~ar 32 passes through a packing box 38 set in the Iback slanted portion 24 of side wall 16. To facilitate ~heir ~removal from ice hopper 14, stirring bars 32 are comprised of two ,sections 32 and 32' held together by receipt of cone 33 integral with bar 32' within a complimentary cavity (not numbexed).
Packing boxes 3B prevent the passage of grease or other contaminants into the lnterior of ice hopper 14, and each is held in position against the back slanted portion 24 of 6ide wall 1 by fa6tening means 40.
Ice hopper 14 is al80 provided with means for moving ¦part.iculate ice c~ntained within ice hopper 14 upwardly along the Isloped floor 18 from the lower end 17 ~o the upper end 19 thereof in the form of an auger assembly 41 having a two piece shaft 01/MFM3 _9_ ~: ~3~ 2 42-42' whieh is mounted at one end in a thrust bearing 44 similarj to thrust bearings 36 and at the other end pas~es through a , packing box 38' of the ~ame type a~ packin~ boxes 38~ Like ~tirring bar~ 32-32', the shaft 42 of auger assPmbly 41 i~
~omprised of portions 42 and 42', held together by cone 46~in ~
¦ cavity (not numbered) a~ described above for stirring bars ¦ 32-32'~ Packing ~oxes 38 and 38' are comprised of flange 142 and neck 144 portions, and enclose a bearing assembly wh~ch is comprised of seal cap 201, thru~t washer 205 and thrust bearing 10¦ 209 (see Fig. 3). Seal cap ~01 i~ provided with shaft 6eal i~ O-ring 202 sealing against shaft 42i and O-ring face seal 203 1' ~ealing against the inside face of the flange 142 of packing boxes 38 and 38'. Seal cap 201 is prevented from rotating about ~haft 42' by means of locking tabs 211 receiYed within slot 212 , located inside the neck 144 of packing boxes 38 and 38'. The 'i flange 142 of packing boxes 38 and 38' is sealed against the Il surface of ~hell 20 by O-ring 204, and receives shaft 42' through opening 206 therein, shaft 42' al~o passing through seal cap 201 li and ~haft seal O-ring 202. Thrust washer 205 is mounted on shaft 20l¦ 42l through opening 206 therein, ~haft 42' also passing through ¦l ~eal cap 201 and shaft seal O-ring 202. Thrust washer 205 is mounted on shaft 42' behind seal cap 201 and is held in place by retaining rings 207 and 208. Thrust bearing 209 is also mounted around shat 42', and the flange 212 thereof bears against ~hrust ! washer 205 and the outside surface of the outer shell 210 of ice hopper 14~ being positively secured thereto by ~astening means 40 which extend through the flange 212 into the neck 144 of packing box 38. Thru~t bearing ~09 is provided with one-or more O-ringS
214 for sealing against the neck 144 of packing case 38 ~or 38')O
30Shaft 42-42' i5 provided with a plurality of flights 48l ~paced therealong. Ice hopper 14 is provided with means for¦

01/MF~3 -10 I

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I
i directing the ice c~ntained therein ~o the lo~er end 17 of sloped I floor 18 in the form o~ auger cover 50. Auger cover 50 covers ¦ the upper portion of auger assembly 41 and is integral with the ~ide walls 16 of ice hopper 14~
The low~r end 17 of floor 18 is provided with a drain 52.
Drain 52 is ~et in the lower end 17 of ~loor 18 at an angle from the horizoDtal, thereby helping to prevent the freezing and/or clogging of the drain opening thereto. As ice contained within ¦ ice hopper 14 i moved upw~rdly along the ~loped floo,~ 18 by the 10 I rotation. of shaft 42-42', water drains back down floor lB into drain 52 and out of ice hopper 14, through elbow 54, into hose 56 and elb~w 58, and into drain pan 60. Drain pan 60 is provided with an outlet 62 having a hose 64 connected thereto for draining ¦water received ~rom elbow 58 as well as through the grating 66 Iwhich re3ts on the shoulder 68 of ~ase 12.
¦ The upper end 19 of floor 18 is provided with means for dis-pen~ing particulate i~e from inside ice hopper 14 in ~he form of an ice chute 70 formed integrally in the floor 18. Ice ~hu e 7n lis provided with a tr~p door 72 which is biased by ~pring 90 as ,will be explained toward a first ~losed position in which trap ¦door 72 abuts the ~houlder 74 formed in the walls of ice chute 170. Biasing trap door 72 closed in this manner helps ~eep !insects and other unde~irables out of the interior of ice hopper 14. Trap door 72 is pivotally mounted on pin 76 to the wall~ of ice chute 70, a8 i~ lever arm 78, which is in~egral with trap door 72. Rod 80 i~ pivotally attached to laver arm 78 by rivet B2 at o~e end and by ri~et 84 to the ear 86 of ~olenoid 88 at the other *nd. Spring 90 is bottomed against tab ~2.
Referring once again to Fig. 2, ~he ~pace 92-inside the sub-~tantially rectangu1ar wall~ of case 12 and under the upper end 19 of floor lB of ice hopper 14 i provided with means mounted to ..,. I

q30~

ca~e 12 for 6electively activatin~ the ice moving means, thereby j moving ice upwardly along the ~loped floor 18 o ice hopper 14 to ~he ice chute 70 at the upper e~d 19 of floor 18 and out of ice hopper 14. The means fox activating the ice mo~i~g means com-prises a levex arm 94 pivotally mounted on pin 96 to ~ase 12 in the recessed portion of the æide ~alls of case 12 behind ice chute 70. Spring 97 biases lever arm 94 toward a first pOsition in which trap door 72 is cl~sed and motor 108 (see below) is not activated. Lever arm 94 is provided with a block 100 having a magnet 102, shown in shadow lines in Fig. 2, contained therein.
When lever arm 94 is pushed from the first position in the direc- .
¦I tion of arrow 104 to a second position, the magnetic field of magnet 102 is det~cted by halogen switch 106~ which ~loses a cir-cuit to activate motor 108. ~alogen ~witch 106 and mo or 108 are connect~d, and the circuit formed, by wires 110 through junction box 112. At the ~ame time that the circuit conne~ting th~
halogen switch 106 and motor 108 is ~ompleted to activate motor 10~, the circuit including wires 114 through junction box 112 is completed to actiYate ~olenoid 88, thexeby causing the rod 80 to ¦ move in the direction of arrow 116, ~ompressing ~pring 90, to pivot trap do~r 72 in the direction of arrow 118 to a second, open position. The electric circuit also includes wires 120 which are connected to Hall effect ~ensor 122, which is a mag-netic switch which is closed by the presence of the magnetic field of magnet 124 which is integral with the means for closing i~e hopper 14, i.~, lid 26. Only when the lid 26 o~ case 12 is closed is the circuit completed by Hall effect sensor 122, thereby preventing the opera~ion of ~tirring bars 32 and shaft 42-42' when the lid 26 i~ opened as a safety precau~ion. Motor 103 i~ pr~vided with a gear box 126 through which drive shaft 128 carrying idler 130 thereon is driven. Idlex 130 drives ~elt 132 . I
to operate shaft 42-42~ throu~h pulley 134. Shaft 42-42' is also 01/MF~3 -12-. , .

l l . provided with an idler 136 which drive~ belt 138 to turn bo~h stirring bars 32 through pulleys 140.
Having de6cribed the structure of a presently preferred em-bodiment of the invention~ the method of using the invention will now be described with reference to the ~i~ures. ~he ice hopper 14 is firEt loaded with particulate ice. The ice contained ~ith-in ice hopper 14 i~ then selectively mechanically agit~ted by ¦ ~tirring ~ars 32,having blades 34 there~n by pushing lever arm 94 I in the direction of arrow 104 to complete the electric ~ircuit through halogen switch 106, thereby activating motor 108 to turn stirring bars 32. The ice within ice hopper 14 is directed to the lower end 17 of the sloped floor 18 of ice hopper 14 by auger cover 50 and the ~lope in the floor 18 and, as shaft 42-42' turns in response to the completion of the circuit by halogen switch 106, the ice i8 moved by flishts 48 upwardly along the sloped ~loor 18 of ice hopper 14 to dispense the ice through ice chute 1 70 from the upper end 19 of sloped floor 18 while draining the il melt water from the ice through drain 52 at the luwer end 17 of l; sloped fluor 18. To prevent any bridging or congealing of the l ice above txap door 72, thereby preventing the opening thexeof in the direction of arxow 118, the flights 48 of shaft 42-42' are spaced at an interval defining a Yolume which is smaller than the volume of the opening of ice chute 70. Spacing flights 48 in that manner ~nsures that all of the ice which is moved into the area directly above ice chute 70 will fall out of ice hopper 14 throuyh chute 70, thereby eliminating the pos~i~ility of blockage of the chut2 70.
Although the invention has been described i~ term~ of the labove-characterized presently preferred embodiment, it will be under~tood by those skilled in ~he art who have the benefit of this di~closure that the embodiment described is but one device l~ ~
:-which may be c~nstructed according to thè teaching~ of the pre-sent invention and that other devices may be constructed without departing from the spirit of the present invention. It is con-templated that all ~uch devices will be covered by the following olaim~.

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Ol~MFM3 -14-

Claims (7)

The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. An apparatus for storing and dispensing particulate ice comprising:
an ice hopper for storage of particulate ice, said ice hopper further comprising a sloped floor;
a selectively actuable means for moving particulate ice contained within said ice hopper upwardly along said sloped floor from the lower end of said sloped floor to the upper end thereof, which ice-moving means has an axis of movement and is adapted to move particulate ice in a direction parallel to said axis of movement;
a first axial means for agitating ice contained within said hopper, which first agitating means is rotatably mounted within said hopper in an orientation having the axis of said first agitating means approximately parallel to said axis of movement of said ice-moving means;
an opening in said ice hopper for dispensing particulate ice from said ice hopper, which opening is positioned to receive ice moved by said ice-moving means;
and packing means mounted in a wall of said hopper, said first agitating means having a shaft along its axis which is rotatably mounted in said packing means, said packing means further comprising:
a packing case mounted in said wall and having a hole therethrough for receiving the shaft of said first agitating means;
a thrust bearing mounted in said wall and having a hole therethrough for receiving the shaft of said first agitating means; and a seal cap received within said hole in said packing case, said seal cap being provided with a means for sealing said seal cap against said shaft of said first agitating means and a means for sealing said seal cap against, said packing case.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said packing case has a flange, and said seal cap is received between said flange and said thrust bearing.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said seal cap is secured against rotational movement relative to said packing case.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said shaft of said first agitating means has a thrust washer mounted thereon, said thrust washer being received within the hole in said packing case between said seal cap and said thrust bearing.
5. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein said shaft of said first agitating means is further provided with means for holding said thrust washer in place along said shaft.
6. The apparatus of claim 8 further comprising means for fastening said thrust bearing to said packing case.
7. The apparatus of claim 1 or claim 5, wherein said seal cap is provided with a tab thereon and said packing case is provided with a slot for receiving the tab of said seal cap to secure said seal cap against:
rotational movement relative to said packing case.
CA000544239A 1986-12-18 1987-08-11 Apparatus and method for storing and dispensing particulate ice Expired - Lifetime CA1307242C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US94484586A 1986-12-18 1986-12-18
US06/944,845 1986-12-18

Publications (1)

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CA1307242C true CA1307242C (en) 1992-09-08

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Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA000544239A Expired - Lifetime CA1307242C (en) 1986-12-18 1987-08-11 Apparatus and method for storing and dispensing particulate ice

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DE (1) DE3743118C2 (en)
GB (1) GB2198713B (en)

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US5230448A (en) * 1991-07-24 1993-07-27 Lancer Corporation Complete system self-contained drink and ice dispensing
NO307716B1 (en) 1999-05-07 2000-05-15 Mikkelsen Odd Harry Ice storage device for dispensing ice
US6218241B1 (en) * 2000-03-28 2001-04-17 United Microelectronics Corp. Fabrication method for a compact DRAM cell
US6299026B1 (en) 2000-03-28 2001-10-09 The Coca-Cola Company Flexibly oriented ice dispenser
DE10114589A1 (en) * 2001-03-24 2002-10-10 Uwe Reifenhaeuser Device for the sealed passage of a rotatable shaft and / or an axially displaceable tappet
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US4498607A (en) * 1982-11-01 1985-02-12 The Manitowoc Company, Inc. Adjustable rate ice cube dispenser

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GB2198713B (en) 1991-06-05
GB2198713A (en) 1988-06-22
DE3743118A1 (en) 1988-06-30
DE3743118C2 (en) 1999-04-15
GB8727129D0 (en) 1987-12-23

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