US1502641A - Cleaner for tumblers or the like - Google Patents

Cleaner for tumblers or the like Download PDF

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Publication number
US1502641A
US1502641A US521721A US52172121A US1502641A US 1502641 A US1502641 A US 1502641A US 521721 A US521721 A US 521721A US 52172121 A US52172121 A US 52172121A US 1502641 A US1502641 A US 1502641A
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United States
Prior art keywords
brush
shell
brushes
outside
tumblers
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Expired - Lifetime
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US521721A
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John L Dahl
Robert H Frech
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ELECTRISAN Corp
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ELECTRISAN CORP
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47LDOMESTIC WASHING OR CLEANING; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47L15/00Washing or rinsing machines for crockery or tableware
    • A47L15/0065Washing or rinsing machines for crockery or tableware specially adapted for drinking glasses
    • A47L15/0068Washing or rinsing machines for crockery or tableware specially adapted for drinking glasses with brushes or similar scraping members

Definitions

  • This invention relates to apparatus for washing or cleansing tumblers, cups, or other analogous articles, and has particular reference to means for performing this function both rapidly and eectively in such places as restaurants, hotels, or the like.
  • a tumbler adapted to be operated at high speed by power means and including one or more brushes for the inside or both the inside and outside of a tumbler, the brush or brushes to be rotated around a central axis while the tumbler is held mo mentarily in contact therewith for cleansing purpose, special means being provided to protect the tumbler from damage as well as the operator from injury.
  • Another ob'ect of the invention is to provide a machine including a plurality of cleansing units operated simultaneously from a single source of power and so arran ed that the operator may present two tum lers at the same time for cleansing by two independent units whereby the output of the machine is facilitated in a practical manner.
  • a further object of-the invention is to improve the arrangement of the brushes at each unit of the machine, each group of brushes including a central brush for the inside of the tumbler and one or more outside brushes for the outside surface of the tumbler, the outside brush or brushes being adjustable closer to 0r farther from the axis of the central brush according to the diameter of the tumblers to be cleansed or the wear on the brushes, a further object being to'provide means for the simultaneous radial adjustment of the brushes when a plurality of them are employed and whereby they may not only be adjusted closer to the axis of the central brush but will be caused to present new sets of bristles for action.
  • a still further object of the invention is to provide an improved hood or cage for each brush group or unit, the same serving not only as a safety guard butalso as a ieans to prevent splashing of the washing
  • Fig. 2 is a front elevation of the same, not including the supporting bracket or shelf, and parts being in section on the line 2 2 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 is a rear elevation on a reduced scale indicating especially the driving mechanism and the supporting shelf.
  • Fig. 4 is a vertical sectional detail on the line 4-4 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 5 is a detail perspective of .one of 'the outside brush supports.
  • Fig. 6 is a fragmentary detail view of one of the guard members before being applied to the hood shell.
  • a substantiallyvertical frame 10 which may be made as an integral casting and including a pair of spaced parallel horizontal hubs 11 surrounding each of which is a concentric front circular flange 12.
  • a base 13 adapted to be secured, as by means of clamping bolts 14, to a shelf 15 having slots 16 through which the exact position of the frame l10 on the shelf may be determined according to local conditions.
  • the shelf is designed to be secured against any convenient vertical wall such as the side or back of a tank 17, by'means of lag screws 18 or their equivalent.
  • a shelf 19 upon whie any suitable motor M may be sup orted.
  • a stud 23 Mounted or secure in any suitable mantop ⁇ of the frame l and projecting rearward therefrom is a stud 23.
  • journaled in each pair of bushings 20 in each hub 11 is a shaft 24 having a socket 25 tapped into the front end thereof and carrying at its rear end a transmission member 26.
  • each group of brushes comprises a central brush 27 having a spindle 28 to be screwed into the socket 25 of the shaft 24, the spindle having a shoulder 29 which is adapted to be turned snugly against the end j of the shaft and which is wide enough toy extend radially beyond the shaft and bear against the hub portion 30 of a disk 3l mounted upon the front end of the shaft and fixed thereto as by means of apin 32 passing through said hub and the shaft back of the socket 25.
  • each disk is provided with a pair of slots 34 arranged symmetrically on opposite sides of the center of the disk.
  • rI hese slo-ts are straight and are externally tangential to an imaginary circle located about Onethird of the way inward from the periphery of the disk toward its axis so that the outer end of each slot is relatively close to the periphery of the disk while the inner end of each slot is closest to the hub.
  • each slot 34 Mounted in each slot 34 is an outside brush support comprising a plate 35 having a pair of longitudinal ribs 36 on its side edges, the plate being formed with a plurality of screw holes 37. At one end of the plate is an angularly formed base 38 from which projects a yfin 39j having a central shank 40 externally screw threaded. The axis of the fin and the shank lies parallel to the plate 35. The fin is fitted for location in or adjustment along the slot 34, while the shank projects rearward beyond the disk and is furnished with a washer 41 and nut eol spider and so the brush support is clamped to the disk.
  • each brush support plate 35 Secured to each brush support plate 35 islan out-- side brush having a back 45 with a suitable configuration to receive the ribs 36, the con-- nection being effected by screws 47 passing throucrh the holes 37.
  • Each outside brush includaes a mass of bristles 48 the cross sectional form of which is in the form ofa segment of a circle,'the points of the bristles being directed toward or in normal mesh with the points of the bristles of the central brush.
  • each brush unit or group Surrounding each brush unit or group is a cylindrical shell 49 made preferably of sheet metal and'having a slot 50 on its incassi bottom. The rear end of this shell is fitted upon the'flange 12 and preferably secured there by some suitable means such as screws 51. From the nature of this element it is made with an inherent tendency to contract or collapse in diameter for the reception of the guard 52.
  • This guard is made preferably of a good quality of live rubber or its uivalent and comprises an annular web 53 aving a central opening 5l through which the operator projects the tumbler u n the central brush and whereby the tumb er is prevented from going in-to contact with the rapidly revolving outside brush backs vand also the operators lingers will be similarly guarded.
  • the guard also includes a rearwardly projecting flange 55 which due to the nature of the material has a tendency to assume the normal form indi'- cated in Fig. 6.
  • the flange portion 55 of the guard may easily be applied on the front end of the shell after which the rear end of the shell will be applied upon the flange 12 and secured in such sition expanding the shell accordingly.
  • T e operator then expands the front end of the shell to a similar extent, placing and locking the periphery of the shell in such expanded osition or orm by means of a strip of metal 56 fastened on opposite Sides of the slot by means of fasteners such as screws or bolts 57.
  • the guard will thus be held reliably in the position shown in Fig. 1.
  • any suitable means may be provided to rotate the shafts 24 and brush' unitsconnected thereto.
  • a motor M as indicated and to its shaft 58 is attached a pulley 59 over which operates an endless belt 60 for co-operation with the belt pulleys 26.
  • any other means might b e provided for operating the brush unltsgat high s eed.
  • To maintain suitable and substantial y uniform tension on the belt 60- and also to insure a suilicient amount of the belt in contact with the driving pulley 59 we provide a pair of idlers 61 journaled on arms 62 which in turn are, hung upon the stud y23.
  • a spring 63 is connected tov ⁇ an annular flan the arms 62 and tends to draw the idlels 61 2.
  • a device as set forth in claim 1 in' which the means for holding the shell expanded is a plate spanning the slot formed by the expanding of the bottom of the shell and fasteners passing through the late and the portions o the bottom of the s ell adjacent to said-slot, the slot serving in practice as a drainage for the bottom of the device.
  • the disk normally of general conical ormv but held in cylindrical gripping shape by the shell.

Description

J. L. DAHL ZiT AL CLEANER FOR TUMELERS OR THE LIKE .Filed Dec.
l2 1921 2 Sheets-Sheet l .gully 22 J. L. DAHL. ET AL CLEANER FOR 'TUMBLERS OR THE LIKE Filed Dec. l2 1921 2 Sheets-Sheet. 2
Patented July 22, 1.924.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
JOHN L. DAHL, O'F TEANECK, AND ROBERT H. FRECH, OF BOGOTA, NEW JERSEY, ASSIGNORS TO. THE ELECTRISAN CORPORATION, O'F PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYL- VAN IA, A CORPORATION OF DELAWARE.
CLEANER ron. TUMBLERS on THE LIKE Application led December 12, 1921. Serial No. 521,721.
To all whom t may concer/n:
Be it known that we, JOHN L. DAHL and ROBERT H. FRECH, both citizens of the United States, residing at Teaneck and Bogota, respectively, and both in the county of Bergen and State of New Jersey, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Cleaners for Tumblers or the like, of which the following is a specification.
This invention relates to apparatus for washing or cleansing tumblers, cups, or other analogous articles, and has particular reference to means for performing this function both rapidly and eectively in such places as restaurants, hotels, or the like.
Among the objects of this invention is to provide brushing mechanism adapted to be operated at high speed by power means and including one or more brushes for the inside or both the inside and outside of a tumbler, the brush or brushes to be rotated around a central axis while the tumbler is held mo mentarily in contact therewith for cleansing purpose, special means being provided to protect the tumbler from damage as well as the operator from injury.
Another ob'ect of the invention is to provide a machine including a plurality of cleansing units operated simultaneously from a single source of power and so arran ed that the operator may present two tum lers at the same time for cleansing by two independent units whereby the output of the machine is facilitated in a practical manner. I
A further object of-the invention is to improve the arrangement of the brushes at each unit of the machine, each group of brushes including a central brush for the inside of the tumbler and one or more outside brushes for the outside surface of the tumbler, the outside brush or brushes being adjustable closer to 0r farther from the axis of the central brush according to the diameter of the tumblers to be cleansed or the wear on the brushes, a further object being to'provide means for the simultaneous radial adjustment of the brushes when a plurality of them are employed and whereby they may not only be adjusted closer to the axis of the central brush but will be caused to present new sets of bristles for action.
A still further object of the invention is to provide an improved hood or cage for each brush group or unit, the same serving not only as a safety guard butalso as a ieans to prevent splashing of the washing With the foregoing and other objects in view the invention consists in the arrangement and combination of parts hereinafter described and claimed, and while the invention is not restricted to the exact details of construction disclosed or suggested herein, still for the purpose of illustrating a practical embodiment thereof reference is had to the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters designate the same parts in the several views, and in which-- Figure 1 is a vertical sectional view of a complete apparatus, substantially on the broken line 1-1 of Fig. 2.
Fig. 2 is a front elevation of the same, not including the supporting bracket or shelf, and parts being in section on the line 2 2 of Fig. 1.
Fig. 3 is a rear elevation on a reduced scale indicating especially the driving mechanism and the supporting shelf.
Fig. 4 is a vertical sectional detail on the line 4-4 of Fig. 1.
Fig. 5 is a detail perspective of .one of 'the outside brush supports.
Fig. 6 is a fragmentary detail view of one of the guard members before being applied to the hood shell.
Referring now more specifically to the drawings we show our improved machine as embodying a substantiallyvertical frame 10 which may be made as an integral casting and including a pair of spaced parallel horizontal hubs 11 surrounding each of which is a concentric front circular flange 12. At the bottom of the bracket or frame is a base 13 adapted to be secured, as by means of clamping bolts 14, to a shelf 15 having slots 16 through which the exact position of the frame l10 on the shelf may be determined according to local conditions. The shelf is designed to be secured against any convenient vertical wall such as the side or back of a tank 17, by'means of lag screws 18 or their equivalent. At the to of the frame 10 is a shelf 19 upon whie any suitable motor M may be sup orted.
Mounted or secure in any suitable mantop `of the frame l and projecting rearward therefrom is a stud 23.
, Journaled in each pair of bushings 20 in each hub 11 is a shaft 24 having a socket 25 tapped into the front end thereof and carrying at its rear end a transmission member 26.
According to the illustration of this invention each group of brushes comprises a central brush 27 having a spindle 28 to be screwed into the socket 25 of the shaft 24, the spindle having a shoulder 29 which is adapted to be turned snugly against the end j of the shaft and which is wide enough toy extend radially beyond the shaft and bear against the hub portion 30 of a disk 3l mounted upon the front end of the shaft and fixed thereto as by means of apin 32 passing through said hub and the shaft back of the socket 25. I show also a washer 33 between the frame hub and the disk hub to reduce the possibility o-f leakage of grease from the bearing or washing fluid into the bearing. As shown best in Fig. 2 each disk is provided with a pair of slots 34 arranged symmetrically on opposite sides of the center of the disk. rI hese slo-ts are straight and are externally tangential to an imaginary circle located about Onethird of the way inward from the periphery of the disk toward its axis so that the outer end of each slot is relatively close to the periphery of the disk while the inner end of each slot is closest to the hub.
Mounted in each slot 34 is an outside brush support comprising a plate 35 having a pair of longitudinal ribs 36 on its side edges, the plate being formed with a plurality of screw holes 37. At one end of the plate is an angularly formed base 38 from which projects a yfin 39j having a central shank 40 externally screw threaded. The axis of the fin and the shank lies parallel to the plate 35. The fin is fitted for location in or adjustment along the slot 34, while the shank projects rearward beyond the disk and is furnished with a washer 41 and nut eol spider and so the brush support is clamped to the disk. It will be understood that while we show two outside brush supports with a correspondingnumber of arms for the spider this number'might be greater or less and the disk would vary only in the difference in the number of'slots. Secured to each brush support plate 35 islan out-- side brush having a back 45 with a suitable configuration to receive the ribs 36, the con-- nection being effected by screws 47 passing throucrh the holes 37. Each outside brush includaes a mass of bristles 48 the cross sectional form of which is in the form ofa segment of a circle,'the points of the bristles being directed toward or in normal mesh with the points of the bristles of the central brush. When the brushes are new and unworn the points of the central and outside brushes substantially touch as shown in Fig.2 with the outside brushes adjusted farthest from the axis, so that when a tumbler or the like is applied directly over the/central brush its inner and outer surfaces will be brushed simultaneously by the central and outside brushes respectively. These brushes all rotate or revolve as a unit around the axis of the shaft 24, the central brush being removably attached to and in said axis while the outside brushes are clamped to the disk which in turn is fixed to the shaft. For the adjustment of the outside brushes either to compensate for the wear of the bristles thereof or to position them closer to the axis of the unit for the brushing of the outer surfaces of small tumblers the nuts 42 are loosened and with the movement of either outer brush along its slot 34, while the brush so moved is moved bodily along the slot, such movement acts through the spider, rotating it around the hub 30, and causing movement of the other outer brush to exactly the same extent along its slot. For this adjustment the Shanks 40 of the outside brushes will move inward along the slots 44 according to the difference in the effective length of the distance between the axes of said Shanks. When therefore either outside brush is adjusted the remaining outside brush or brushes will be similarly adjusted, and such adjustment will be fixed by tightening the nuts 42. It will be noted therefore, by observing Fig. 2 that this adjustment inward of the outside brushes will cause a new or fresh set of bristles to be brought into action adjacent to or shorter, their function being especially for brushin the outer surfaces of the rim portions o the tumblers."
Surrounding each brush unit or group is a cylindrical shell 49 made preferably of sheet metal and'having a slot 50 on its incassi bottom. The rear end of this shell is fitted upon the'flange 12 and preferably secured there by some suitable means such as screws 51. From the nature of this element it is made with an inherent tendency to contract or collapse in diameter for the reception of the guard 52. This guard is made preferably of a good quality of live rubber or its uivalent and comprises an annular web 53 aving a central opening 5l through which the operator projects the tumbler u n the central brush and whereby the tumb er is prevented from going in-to contact with the rapidly revolving outside brush backs vand also the operators lingers will be similarly guarded. The guard also includes a rearwardly projecting flange 55 which due to the nature of the material has a tendency to assume the normal form indi'- cated in Fig. 6. When however the shell 49 is contracted before being applied to the flange 12 the flange portion 55 of the guard may easily be applied on the front end of the shell after which the rear end of the shell will be applied upon the flange 12 and secured in such sition expanding the shell accordingly. T e operator then expands the front end of the shell to a similar extent, placing and locking the periphery of the shell in such expanded osition or orm by means of a strip of metal 56 fastened on opposite Sides of the slot by means of fasteners such as screws or bolts 57. The guard will thus be held reliably in the position shown in Fig. 1.
Any suitable means may be provided to rotate the shafts 24 and brush' unitsconnected thereto. For this purpose we mount a motor M as indicated and to its shaft 58 is attached a pulley 59 over which operates an endless belt 60 for co-operation with the belt pulleys 26. Obviously any other means might b e provided for operating the brush unltsgat high s eed. To maintain suitable and substantial y uniform tension on the belt 60- and also to insure a suilicient amount of the belt in contact with the driving pulley 59 we provide a pair of idlers 61 journaled on arms 62 which in turn are, hung upon the stud y23. A spring 63 is connected tov `an annular flan the arms 62 and tends to draw the idlels 61 2. A device as set forth in claim 1 in' which the means for holding the shell expanded is a plate spanning the slot formed by the expanding of the bottom of the shell and fasteners passing through the late and the portions o the bottom of the s ell adjacent to said-slot, the slot serving in practice as a drainage for the bottom of the device.
3. The combination with a cleaning unit, of an ex ansible shell surrounding the unit, and an e astio guard on the outer end of the shell having an annular flange around the end of the shell and held in place when the shell is expanded against the flange.
4; The combination with a cleaning unit, of an expansible shell surrounding the unit, a guard on the outer end of the shell, said guard being of flexible elastic material comprising -a disk having a central opening, and
e on the disk, normally of general conical ormv but held in cylindrical gripping shape by the shell.
5. The combination with a cleaning unit, of an expansible cylindrical shell surrounding the unit, said shell being split longitudinally along its lower portion forming a drain outlet, means holdin the shell in expanded form and a guard tting the outer end of the shell.
In testimony whereof tures.
we aln'x our signa- JOHN L. DAHL. ROBERT H, FRECH.
US521721A 1921-12-12 1921-12-12 Cleaner for tumblers or the like Expired - Lifetime US1502641A (en)

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2435240A (en) * 1944-03-08 1948-02-03 Semel David Dishwashing apparatus
US4014062A (en) * 1975-01-06 1977-03-29 Scott Thomas W Thread cleaner with rotatable and adjustably supported brushes
US5606759A (en) * 1995-11-16 1997-03-04 Yang; Jack Brush assembly of a cup washing machine

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2435240A (en) * 1944-03-08 1948-02-03 Semel David Dishwashing apparatus
US4014062A (en) * 1975-01-06 1977-03-29 Scott Thomas W Thread cleaner with rotatable and adjustably supported brushes
US5606759A (en) * 1995-11-16 1997-03-04 Yang; Jack Brush assembly of a cup washing machine

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