US3209680A - Control for compacting bag in household appliance - Google Patents

Control for compacting bag in household appliance Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3209680A
US3209680A US362591A US36259164A US3209680A US 3209680 A US3209680 A US 3209680A US 362591 A US362591 A US 362591A US 36259164 A US36259164 A US 36259164A US 3209680 A US3209680 A US 3209680A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
bag
bin
air
circuit
pressure
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
US362591A
Inventor
Gerald E Mcginnis
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.)
CBS Corp
Original Assignee
Westinghouse Electric 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 Westinghouse Electric Corp filed Critical Westinghouse Electric Corp
Priority to US362591A priority Critical patent/US3209680A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3209680A publication Critical patent/US3209680A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B30PRESSES
    • B30BPRESSES IN GENERAL
    • B30B9/00Presses specially adapted for particular purposes
    • B30B9/30Presses specially adapted for particular purposes for baling; Compression boxes therefor
    • B30B9/3082Presses specially adapted for particular purposes for baling; Compression boxes therefor with compression means other than rams performing a rectilinear movement
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B30PRESSES
    • B30BPRESSES IN GENERAL
    • B30B5/00Presses characterised by the use of pressing means other than those mentioned in the preceding groups
    • B30B5/02Presses characterised by the use of pressing means other than those mentioned in the preceding groups wherein the pressing means is in the form of a flexible element, e.g. diaphragm, urged by fluid pressure
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23GCREMATION FURNACES; CONSUMING WASTE PRODUCTS BY COMBUSTION
    • F23G5/00Incineration of waste; Incinerator constructions; Details, accessories or control therefor
    • F23G5/24Incineration of waste; Incinerator constructions; Details, accessories or control therefor having a vertical, substantially cylindrical, combustion chamber

Definitions

  • An object of the invention is to render the inflation and deflation of the compacting bag as nearly automatic as possible and to eliminate all technical operations beyond the simple capabilities of the housewife.
  • a household appliance to which the present invention may be applied is an incinerating device for the disposal of household waste.
  • the housewife In operation, the housewife must be able to stuff trash into the device at will, but since the trash must be compacted into an imporous mass forming a plug, the operation must be little more than raising the lid of the trash bin momentarily.
  • the compacting means within the trash bin consists of a bag which, through inflation, will move into an occupy all empty space within the bin while exerting enough pressure on thecom-pressible trash to form it into an imporous mass of sufficient structural strength to lodge against the funnel shaped sides of a restriction ring so that its bottom face may remain suspended without the help of a grate and thus form a wall of the combustion chamber.
  • the lid 'ofthe trash bin, against which the compacting bag also exerts and equal pressure must be clamped in place so that the operator must unlock this clamped lid before raising it in order to stuff more trash therein.
  • an on and off butt-on is provided so that the operator must turn the device off and this will bring inflation to a halt and start the deflation of the bag, in other words, the bag is switched from a source of compressed air to a vacuum.
  • the lid When the lid is unlatched and the operator has completed the stuffing of trash in the bin, the lid may be latched tight and the but-ton turned to the on position, whereupon the bag is switched from a vacuum to a source of compressed air.
  • Rapidity in operation may be achieved by making the source of compressed air and the source of vacuum of considerablecapacity which means good sized motors, but these are costly and sometimes noisy.
  • a small motor is used to charge a pair of storage tanks, one with compressed air and the other with air much below normal atmospheric pressure. These tanks may be charged slowly, but are emptied to inflate or deflate the compacting bag rapidly.
  • the small motor is economical in first cost and maintenance and is quiet in operation, surpassing in these respects the motor used in other household appliances, such as the conventional vacuum cleaner.
  • a feature of the invention may thus be stated to be means to prepare over a comparatively long period for an operation which, when effected, must be ideally close to instantaneous.
  • Another feature of the invention is a series of switches used with the on button of the main operating means of the device whereby the reservoir of compressed air cannot be connected to the compacting bag until the lid of the bin has been clamped in place or when the bag is fully inflated even though the circuit through the on button has been closed.
  • the second of these switches may be adjusted to respond to the pressure within the com- 3,209,680 Patented Get. 5, 1965 pacting bag so that when this pressure reaches or exceeds the required amount, the circuit for opening the valve leading from the reservoir of compressed air to the bag will be opened and communication between the reservoir and the bag will be shut off. When the pressure in the compacting bag falls in any degree below this value, the switch is closed so that the valve may be opened.
  • the first of these switches is an interlocking means used to prevent communication between the reservoir of compressed air and the compacting bag unless the lid is tightly secured.
  • the drawings consist of a single sheet having one figure consisting of a schematic diagram of the piping, the reservoirs, the valves the compressor and the trash bin partly in vertical cross section.
  • Switch 18 is an air pressure switch which only opens the circuit which it controls when the pressure in the inflated bag 3 becomes too high.
  • a relief valve 20 is provided (to operate practically at the same time as switch 18) when the pressure in the bag 3 becomes too high.
  • the reservoir 10 may also be piped by the pipe 21 to other means in this household appliance operated by compressed air such, by way of example, as jet means for cleaning the burning face 6 of the plug 5.
  • a compacting bag within the trash bin of a waste disposer said trash bin and a lid therefor having means to clamp said lid tightly to said bin to confine said bag to said bin when inflated, and means to inflate and deflate said bag rapidly consisting of a reservoir of air above normal in pressure and a reservoir of air below normal in pressure, electrically operated air valves to establish air flow communication between said bag and each of said reservoirs separately, mechanically interlocked circuit makers for operating said air valves separately, other electrical circuit makers in the said circuit for operating said air valve between said reservoir of air above normal in pressure and said bag, one of said circuit makers being constructed and arranged to close said circuit only when said lid is clamped to said bin and another of said circuit makers being constructed and arranged to open said circuit when the pressure in said bag has risen to a point above a predetermined value, means to establish and maintain said above normal and said below normal pressures in said reservoirs, said last means being comparatively low in capacity and slow in operation to provide quiet and economical operation whereby said reservoirs are charged slowly and
  • a compacting bag within the trash bin of a waste disposer said trash bin and a lid therefor having means to clamp said lid tightly to said bin to confine said bag when inflated to said bin, and means to inflate and deflate said bag rapidly consisting of a reservoir of air above normal in pressure provided with a relief valve for limiting the high pressure therein to a predetermined value, and a reservoir of air below normal in pressure provided with a relief valve for limiting the low pressure therein to a predetermined value, electrically operated air valves to establish communication between said bag and each of said reservoirs separately, mechanically interlocked circuit makers for operating said air valves separately, means to establish and maintain said above normal and said below normal pressures in said reservoirs, said last means being comparatively low in capacity and slow in operation to provide quiet and economical operation whereby said reservoirs are charged slowly and said bag is inflated or deflated rapidly.

Description

Oct. 5, 1965 cs. E. MCGINNIS CONTROL FOR GOMPACTING BAG IN HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE Filed April 27, 1964 PUSH BUTTON COMPRESSOR RESERVOIR VACUUM RESERVOIR INVENTOR Gerald E. McGinnis ATTORNEY United States Patent M 3,209,680 CONTROL FOR COMPACTING BAG IN HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE Gerald E. McGinnis, Plum Boro, Pa., assignor to Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Pittsburgh, Pa., 3 corporation of Pennsylvania Filed Apr. 27, 1964, Ser. No. 362,591 3 Claims. (Cl. 100211) This invention relates to household appliances and particularly to incinerators installed as a unit among other conventional appliances and employed and controlled by the housewife operator.
An object of the invention is to render the inflation and deflation of the compacting bag as nearly automatic as possible and to eliminate all technical operations beyond the simple capabilities of the housewife.
One example of a household appliance to which the present invention may be applied is an incinerating device for the disposal of household waste. In operation, the housewife must be able to stuff trash into the device at will, but since the trash must be compacted into an imporous mass forming a plug, the operation must be little more than raising the lid of the trash bin momentarily. The compacting means within the trash bin consists of a bag which, through inflation, will move into an occupy all empty space within the bin while exerting enough pressure on thecom-pressible trash to form it into an imporous mass of sufficient structural strength to lodge against the funnel shaped sides of a restriction ring so that its bottom face may remain suspended without the help of a grate and thus form a wall of the combustion chamber. The lid 'ofthe trash bin, against which the compacting bag also exerts and equal pressure must be clamped in place so that the operator must unlock this clamped lid before raising it in order to stuff more trash therein. In order to make the operation reasonably rapid an on and off butt-on is provided so that the operator must turn the device off and this will bring inflation to a halt and start the deflation of the bag, in other words, the bag is switched from a source of compressed air to a vacuum. When the lid is unlatched and the operator has completed the stuffing of trash in the bin, the lid may be latched tight and the but-ton turned to the on position, whereupon the bag is switched from a vacuum to a source of compressed air.
Rapidity in operation may be achieved by making the source of compressed air and the source of vacuum of considerablecapacity which means good sized motors, but these are costly and sometimes noisy. In accordance with the present invention a small motor is used to charge a pair of storage tanks, one with compressed air and the other with air much below normal atmospheric pressure. These tanks may be charged slowly, but are emptied to inflate or deflate the compacting bag rapidly. The small motor is economical in first cost and maintenance and is quiet in operation, surpassing in these respects the motor used in other household appliances, such as the conventional vacuum cleaner.
A feature of the invention may thus be stated to be means to prepare over a comparatively long period for an operation which, when effected, must be ideally close to instantaneous.
Another feature of the invention is a series of switches used with the on button of the main operating means of the device whereby the reservoir of compressed air cannot be connected to the compacting bag until the lid of the bin has been clamped in place or when the bag is fully inflated even though the circuit through the on button has been closed. The second of these switches may be adjusted to respond to the pressure within the com- 3,209,680 Patented Get. 5, 1965 pacting bag so that when this pressure reaches or exceeds the required amount, the circuit for opening the valve leading from the reservoir of compressed air to the bag will be opened and communication between the reservoir and the bag will be shut off. When the pressure in the compacting bag falls in any degree below this value, the switch is closed so that the valve may be opened. The first of these switches is an interlocking means used to prevent communication between the reservoir of compressed air and the compacting bag unless the lid is tightly secured.
Other features will appear hereinafter.
The drawings consist of a single sheet having one figure consisting of a schematic diagram of the piping, the reservoirs, the valves the compressor and the trash bin partly in vertical cross section.
The trash bin is an open bottom container 1, having a lid 2, which may be clamped tightly to the body 1 of the bin by any suitable quick-disconnect clamping mechanism, indicated schematically at C, and preferably located diametrically opposite a conventional hinge H. When so tightly clamped, a compacting bag 3 will be put in communication with a pipe or flexible hose 4, through which air for inflating or for deflating the bag 3 may be passed. When the bag 3 is fully inflated, it will act to compact the trash 5 which has been stuifed into the bin. The upper part of the combustion chamber 25 has ceramic funnel shaped sides 7, against which the plug of compacted material 5 comes to rest so that its bottom face 6 substantially constitutes one wall of the combustion chamber. There are means, not shown, for inducing and maintaining combustion of this face 6 and, as it becomes eroded and shrunken through combustion, the plug moves downwardly to maintain the burning face 6 constantly at the same location.
When more trash is to be stufi'ed into the bin, the bag 3 must be deflated and the lid 2 must be unlached and then lifted. When all the trash at hand has been stuffed into the bin, then the lid 2 is closed and latched and the bag is inflated. it will be understood that to carry out these operations rapidly enough to make this device practical for use by the housewife operator would require a heavy duty compressor and a heavy duty suction fan, both too costly and impractical for use in a house-hold appliance. Applicant therefore provides a light duty compressor 8 in the form of an electric motor operating means to compress air into the pipe 9 leading to the compressed air reservoir 10 and means to evacuate the reservoir 11 through the pipe .12. The reservoirs l0 and 11 will therefore be brought to the predetermined pressure slowly and maintained thereat through the use of relief valves 13 and 14 respectively.
Let it be assumed that the ON button of the push button switch 15 has been operated, that the valve 16 has been operated and that the bag 3 is fully inflated because it is in communication with the reservoir 10. It is desired to open the trash bin to stuff more trash therein. The housewife pushes the OFF button of the switch 15, whereupon the valve 16 is closed and the valve 17 is opened, thus putting the bag 3 into communication with the low pressure (evacuated) reservoir 11. The bag 3 will be deflated suddenly and swiftly so that the operator may proceed to unlatch the lid 2 and lift the lid and the will be deflated suddenly and swiftly so that the operator has been completed, the lid is replaced on the top of the bin and the ON button of the switch 15 is pushed. It will be understood that conventional power supply is connected to the switch 15 and to the compressor 8 and by the diagram it will be noted that the circuit from the ON button of switch 15 passes in series through switches 18 and 19 so that both must be closed before the valve 16 is operated. Switch 18 is an air pressure switch which only opens the circuit which it controls when the pressure in the inflated bag 3 becomes too high.
v When this occurs the circuit for the valve 16 is opened and communication between the bag 3 and the compressed air reservoir is cut off. The switch 19 is a mechanical interlock switch closed only when the lid 2 is in place and clamped to the bin 1. Thus it is not until the lid is adjusted to contain the bag 3 atop the trash that the bag may be inflated. It will be noted that when the valve 16 is opened and communication between the reservoir 10 and the bag 3 is established, the bag 3 will be inflated suddenly and swiftly.
It may be noted that a relief valve 20 is provided (to operate practically at the same time as switch 18) when the pressure in the bag 3 becomes too high. The reservoir 10 may also be piped by the pipe 21 to other means in this household appliance operated by compressed air such, by way of example, as jet means for cleaning the burning face 6 of the plug 5.
What is claimed is:
1. The combination of a compacting bag within the trash bin of a waste disposer, said trash bin and a lid therefor having means to clamp said lid tightly to said bin to confine said bag to said bin when inflated, and means to inflate and deflate said bag rapidly consisting of a reservoir of air above normal in pressure and a reservoir of air below normal in pressure, electrically operated air valves to establish air flow communication between said bag and each of said reservoirs separately, mechanically interlocked circuit makers for operating said air valves separately, other electrical circuit makers in the said circuit for operating said air valve between said reservoir of air above normal in pressure and said bag, one of said circuit makers being constructed and arranged to close said circuit only when said lid is clamped to said bin and another of said circuit makers being constructed and arranged to open said circuit when the pressure in said bag has risen to a point above a predetermined value, means to establish and maintain said above normal and said below normal pressures in said reservoirs, said last means being comparatively low in capacity and slow in operation to provide quiet and economical operation whereby said reservoirs are charged slowly and said bag is inflated or deflated rapidly.
2. The combination of a compacting bag within the trash bin of a waste disposer, said trash bin and a lid therefor having means to clamp said lid tightly to said bin to confine said bag when inflated to said bin, and means to inflate and deflate said bag rapidly consisting of a reservoir of air above normal in pressure provided with a relief valve for limiting the high pressure therein to a predetermined value, and a reservoir of air below normal in pressure provided with a relief valve for limiting the low pressure therein to a predetermined value, electrically operated air valves to establish communication between said bag and each of said reservoirs separately, mechanically interlocked circuit makers for operating said air valves separately, means to establish and maintain said above normal and said below normal pressures in said reservoirs, said last means being comparatively low in capacity and slow in operation to provide quiet and economical operation whereby said reservoirs are charged slowly and said bag is inflated or deflated rapidly.
3. The combination of a compacting bag within the trash bin of a waste disposer, said trash bin and a lid therefor having means to clamp said lid tightly to said bin to confine said bag to said bin when inflated, and means to inflate and deflate said bag rapidly consisting of a reservoir of air above normal in pressure and a reservoir of air below normal in pressure, a motor compressor to charge said first reservoir and said second reservoir, electrically operated air valves to establish air flow communication between said bag and each of said reservoirs separately, mechanically interlocked circuit makers for operating said air valves separately, other electrical circuit makers in the said circuit for operating said air valve between said reservoir of air above normal in pressure and said bag, one of said circuit makers being constructed and arranged to close said circuit only when said lid is clamped to said bin and another of said circuit makers being constructed and arranged to open said circuit when the pressure in said bag has risen to a point above a predetermined value, the motor of said motor compressor being comparatively low in capacity to provide quiet and economical operation whereby said reservoirs are charged slowly and said bag is inflated or deflated rapidly.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,471,091 10/23 Bessesen 222386.5 1,926,378 9/33 Getz 62-242 1,949,278 2/34 Johnson -211 X 1,993,201 3/35 Yandell 68242 2,074,959 3/37 Guest.
2,428,710 10/47 Jorgenson et a1. 68242 2,472,682 6/49 Rand 68242 X 2,679,059 5/54 Perkins et al. 100211 X 2,758,747 8/56 Stevens 222--386.5 X 2,817,228 12/57 Koplin 68242 2,923,130 2/60 Wheelon 113-44 X 3,133,492 5/64 Czulak et al. 6821 X WALTER A. SCHEEL, Primary Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. THE COMBINATION OF A COMPACTING BAG WITHIN THE TRAHS BIN OF A WASTE DISPOSER, SAID TRASH BIN AND A LID THEREFOR HAVING MEANS TO CLAMP SAID LID TIGHTLY TO SAID BIN TO CONFINE SAID BAG TO SAID BIN WHEN INFLATED, AND MEANS TO INFLATE AND DEFLATE SAID BAG RAPIDLY CONSISTING OF A RESERVOIR OF AIR ABOVE NORMAL IN PRESSURE AND A RESERVOIR OF AIR BELOW NORMAL IN PRESSURE, ELECTRICALLY OPERATED AIR VALVES TO ESTABLISH AIR FLOW COMMUNICATION BETWEEN SAID BAG AND EACH OF SAID RESERVOIRS SEPARATELY, MECHANICALLY INTERLOCKED CIRCUIT MAKERS FOR OPERATING SAID AIR VALVES SEPARATELY, OTHER ELECTRICAL CIRCUIT MAKERS IN THE SAID CIRCUIT FOR OPERAING SAID AIR VALVE BETWEEN SAID RESERVOIR OF AIR ABOVE NORMAL IN PRESSURE AND SAID BAG, ONE OF SAID CIRCUIT MAKERS BEING CONSTRUCTED AND ARRANGED TO CLOSE SAID CIRCUIT ONLY WHEN SAID LID IS CLAMPED TO SAID BIN AND ANOTHER OF SAID CIRCUIT MAKERS BEING CONSTRUCTED AND ARRANGED TO OPEN SAID CIRCUIT WHEN THE PRESSURE IN SAID BAG HAS RISEN TO A POINT ABOVE A PREDETERMINED VALUE, MEANS TO ESTABLISH AND MAINTAIN SAID ABOVE NORMAL AND SAID BELOW NORMAL PRESSURES IN SAID RESERVOIRS, SAID LAST MEANS BEING COMPARATIVELY LOW IN CAPACITY AND SLOW IN OPERATION TO PROVIDE QUIET AND ECONOMICAL OPERATION WHEREBY SAID RESERVOIRS ARE CHARGED SLOWLY AND SAID BAG IS INFLATED OR DEFLATED RAPIDLY.
US362591A 1964-04-27 1964-04-27 Control for compacting bag in household appliance Expired - Lifetime US3209680A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US362591A US3209680A (en) 1964-04-27 1964-04-27 Control for compacting bag in household appliance

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US362591A US3209680A (en) 1964-04-27 1964-04-27 Control for compacting bag in household appliance

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3209680A true US3209680A (en) 1965-10-05

Family

ID=23426707

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US362591A Expired - Lifetime US3209680A (en) 1964-04-27 1964-04-27 Control for compacting bag in household appliance

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3209680A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3337094A (en) * 1964-05-08 1967-08-22 Massey Ferguson Farm Services Grain storage container
US3478909A (en) * 1966-12-09 1969-11-18 Ray E Charles Refuse compaction handling equipment
US4487335A (en) * 1983-02-11 1984-12-11 Vincent C. Bonerb Valve assembly and control system for material handling and storage bin
US4583663A (en) * 1983-02-11 1986-04-22 Vincent C. Bonerb Valve assembly and automatic control system for material handling and storage bin
US4615455A (en) * 1985-11-04 1986-10-07 Tansill Horace A Explosion-resistant fuel tank device
US4657160A (en) * 1984-09-13 1987-04-14 Andy Woods Pressure infusion control
US4811658A (en) * 1987-05-19 1989-03-14 Arend B.V. Apparatus and system for draining whey from cheese curd for manufacturing cheese
US20140246446A1 (en) * 2011-10-12 2014-09-04 Accede B.V. Element for Eliminating Turbulent Behavior of Liquid in a Holder

Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1471091A (en) * 1922-03-27 1923-10-16 Alfred N Bessesen Fluid-pressure device
US1926378A (en) * 1931-07-22 1933-09-12 Benjamin E Gets Clothes drier
US1949278A (en) * 1931-06-12 1934-02-27 American Laundry Mach Co Combined pressure and centrifugal extractor
US1993201A (en) * 1927-03-21 1935-03-05 Williams White & Company Clothes drying apparatus
US2074959A (en) * 1936-09-10 1937-03-23 Guest Herbert Rainford Fuel tank gauge
US2428710A (en) * 1943-10-28 1947-10-07 Kling Bros Engineering Works Extractor
US2472682A (en) * 1946-07-09 1949-06-07 H J Rand Washing Machine Corp Washing machine with squeezer extractor
US2679059A (en) * 1952-07-26 1954-05-25 Judson W Perkins Shoe-sole laying press
US2758747A (en) * 1949-12-10 1956-08-14 Standard Oil Co Multiple compartment tank
US2817228A (en) * 1955-04-18 1957-12-24 Koplin Harry Extractor
US2923130A (en) * 1955-09-26 1960-02-02 Douglas Aircraft Co Inc High speed hydraulic press system and method
US3133492A (en) * 1962-05-17 1964-05-19 Commw Scient Ind Res Org Press

Patent Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1471091A (en) * 1922-03-27 1923-10-16 Alfred N Bessesen Fluid-pressure device
US1993201A (en) * 1927-03-21 1935-03-05 Williams White & Company Clothes drying apparatus
US1949278A (en) * 1931-06-12 1934-02-27 American Laundry Mach Co Combined pressure and centrifugal extractor
US1926378A (en) * 1931-07-22 1933-09-12 Benjamin E Gets Clothes drier
US2074959A (en) * 1936-09-10 1937-03-23 Guest Herbert Rainford Fuel tank gauge
US2428710A (en) * 1943-10-28 1947-10-07 Kling Bros Engineering Works Extractor
US2472682A (en) * 1946-07-09 1949-06-07 H J Rand Washing Machine Corp Washing machine with squeezer extractor
US2758747A (en) * 1949-12-10 1956-08-14 Standard Oil Co Multiple compartment tank
US2679059A (en) * 1952-07-26 1954-05-25 Judson W Perkins Shoe-sole laying press
US2817228A (en) * 1955-04-18 1957-12-24 Koplin Harry Extractor
US2923130A (en) * 1955-09-26 1960-02-02 Douglas Aircraft Co Inc High speed hydraulic press system and method
US3133492A (en) * 1962-05-17 1964-05-19 Commw Scient Ind Res Org Press

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3337094A (en) * 1964-05-08 1967-08-22 Massey Ferguson Farm Services Grain storage container
US3478909A (en) * 1966-12-09 1969-11-18 Ray E Charles Refuse compaction handling equipment
US4487335A (en) * 1983-02-11 1984-12-11 Vincent C. Bonerb Valve assembly and control system for material handling and storage bin
US4583663A (en) * 1983-02-11 1986-04-22 Vincent C. Bonerb Valve assembly and automatic control system for material handling and storage bin
US4657160A (en) * 1984-09-13 1987-04-14 Andy Woods Pressure infusion control
US4615455A (en) * 1985-11-04 1986-10-07 Tansill Horace A Explosion-resistant fuel tank device
US4811658A (en) * 1987-05-19 1989-03-14 Arend B.V. Apparatus and system for draining whey from cheese curd for manufacturing cheese
US20140246446A1 (en) * 2011-10-12 2014-09-04 Accede B.V. Element for Eliminating Turbulent Behavior of Liquid in a Holder
US9533826B2 (en) * 2011-10-12 2017-01-03 Accede B.V. Element for eliminating turbulent behavior of liquid in a holder

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3209680A (en) Control for compacting bag in household appliance
CN101545480B (en) A pneumatic controller for inflatable products
US3736863A (en) Trash compactor
CN101858356B (en) Inflation and deflation control device
US2243835A (en) Die casting machine
US4070962A (en) Refuse compactors
US3835769A (en) Refuse compactor
US3899967A (en) Trash compactor
US4081144A (en) Electrical household appliance such as a mincer or grinder
US2292846A (en) Electronic timer
US2836186A (en) Washing apparatus with tub sealing system
US3274922A (en) Refuse compactor
US3835767A (en) Refuse compactor
US3762312A (en) Refuse baler
US3996628A (en) Water closets
US3688689A (en) Refuse compactor
US3248001A (en) Elastic means for compacting compressible material
CN106989037A (en) A kind of button electric air pump
US2972774A (en) Mixers for plastic materials with liquid discharge means
KR100584857B1 (en) Vacuum packing machine evacuating and sealing a plastic bag by downwardly exhausting the air in it
JP2001224547A (en) Elevation type dish washing/drying machine
US3625139A (en) Refuse packing assembly for buildings and the like
KR0185778B1 (en) Hydraulic milking apparatus
EP3430190A1 (en) Ironing board with interconnection with a remote iron
CN207428955U (en) Cooking apparatus