US3535897A - Clothes washing machines - Google Patents

Clothes washing machines Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3535897A
US3535897A US726019A US3535897DA US3535897A US 3535897 A US3535897 A US 3535897A US 726019 A US726019 A US 726019A US 3535897D A US3535897D A US 3535897DA US 3535897 A US3535897 A US 3535897A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
base
tub
transmission
shaft
clothes
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
US726019A
Inventor
Peyton W Douglas
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.)
Valeo Engine Cooling Inc
Original Assignee
Blackstone 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 Blackstone Corp filed Critical Blackstone Corp
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3535897A publication Critical patent/US3535897A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06FLAUNDERING, DRYING, IRONING, PRESSING OR FOLDING TEXTILE ARTICLES
    • D06F37/00Details specific to washing machines covered by groups D06F21/00 - D06F25/00
    • D06F37/20Mountings, e.g. resilient mountings, for the rotary receptacle, motor, tub or casing; Preventing or damping vibrations
    • D06F37/24Mountings, e.g. resilient mountings, for the rotary receptacle, motor, tub or casing; Preventing or damping vibrations in machines with a receptacle rotating or oscillating about a vertical axis

Definitions

  • a clothes washer having an extractor tub and a concentric collector tank mounted on a vertical shaft mounted in a gear box movable vertically on a stub shaft in a base and rotatable relative to brake and dampener means on said base, generally vertical arms extending from a movable conical member frictionally engaging a stationary conical portion on said base to the periphery of the collector tank and resilient means connecting said arms intermediate their length with the base.
  • This invention relates to clothes washing machines and particularly to domestic washing machines in which both washing and centrifugal water extraction operations are carried out in a single perforate tub.
  • a clothes washing machine having a clothes tub rotatable about a vertical axis, a tank surrounding said tub and normally concentric therewith, a base spaced from the tank, a stub shaft mounted at one end in a resilient bearing member in said base, a transmission on said stub shaft adjacent the base, a support shaft concentric with said stub shaft extending from said transmission to said tub and journalled for rotation in the tank, brake means on the base engaging the transmission, annular bearing means on said base, an annular resilient bearing member on said annular bearing means, spaced generally vertical arms extending from a support member to the tank, and resilient means connecting said spaced arms intermediate their length with a support member on the base.
  • Resilient means connecting the spaced arms and base are springs lying alongside and generally parallel to said arms.
  • Lift means as disclosed in my Pat. No. 3,215,232 are preferably provided in said transmission adjacent the lower end of said vertical support shaft engageable with said transmission during the extraction cycle to raise the transmission from the brake means.
  • FIG. 1 is an elevational view, partly broken away and partly in vertical section, showing a clothes washer according to my invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a segmental section showing the transmission in the extraction position.
  • the cabinet 10 has four sidewalls, a top 11 and base 12.
  • the top is provided with a central opening 13 providing access into the interior of the cabinet.
  • the base 12 is provided with depending peripheral flanges 14 secured to the cabinet walls by welding or some equivalent means.
  • a central opening 15 is provided in a generally cup-shaped central depression 15a in an upstanding conical portion 16 of the base 12 to receive a part of the structure hereafter described.
  • a stub drive shaft 17 is mounted at its lower end in a resilient bearing member 18 which is fixed to the cupshaped portion 15a of the conical base portion at the opening 15.
  • An annular generally frusto-conical member 19 is fixed to supporting arms 50 and is movable relatively to the conical portion 16 of base 12.
  • a bearing pad 20 is fixed to conical portion 16 between it and conical mem ber 19.
  • the upper end of the stub drive shaft 17 projects into a transmission unit 21.
  • the lower end of the shaft 17 is of reduced diameter and is mounted in an annular thrust and radial bearing 22 fixed in resilient bearing member 18.
  • the lower end of shaft 17 below bearing 22 carries a drive pulley 23 connected by a belt 24 to motor 25 on base 12.
  • the transmission unit 21 is constructed and functions in the manner described in Lodge Pats. No. 2,733,610, dated Feb. 7, 1956, and No. 2,841,260, dated July 1, 1958, and Douglas Pat. No. 3,215,232, dated Nov. 2, 1965.
  • Tube 29 Projecting upwardly from the transmission unit 21 is tube 29 which passes through a bearing and seal 30 mounted in a resilient member 31 which is in turn mounted in an axial opening 32 in collector tank 33.
  • a tub 34 is mounted on the upper end of tube 29.
  • a shaft 35 extends from the interior of transmission unit 21, through tube 29 and suitable bearings 36 and 37 and projects out of the upper end of tube 29 to receive agitator 38.
  • the transmission unit 21 normally rests on brake shoe 26 on base 12.
  • the motor 25 is of the reversing type and when operated in one direction it acts through transmis sion unit 21 to oscillate the agitator 38 within the tub 34.
  • the motor rotates in the opposite direction it raises the transmission unit 21 and tub 34 by means of clutch 40 which is constructed and operates as described in my Pat. No. 3,215,232, issued Nov. 2, 1965.
  • the transmission unit is raised away from brake shoe 26 and rotates with shaft 17 to provide the extraction operation for removing water from clothes in tub 34.
  • a resilient member 51 preferably in the form of a spring is connected to base 12 at one end and to arms 50, intermediate their length, at the other end.
  • an adjustment means 52 is provided between the resilient member 51 and the arms 50 so as to permit adjustment of and balancing of the forces exerted around the collector tank or fixed tank 33.
  • the structure of the present invention provides many advantages over prior art structures. It removes the transmission out of contact with any water containing receptacle and is not contacted by water in any receptacle at any time. It moves the transmission down to the base and thus the spinning transmission acts as a dynamic stabilizing influence and prevents the tub from excessive nutation by contacting the brake members and thus retarding the extraction speed until the source of the unbalance is corrected. It provides a very simple and inexpensive but very effective stabilized support for both the fixed receptacle as well as for the clothes containing and extraction tub. It eliminates the need for dynamic balancing rings and reset cut-off switches previously used on extraction tubs, the weight of the collection tanks or fixed tank 33 acting as a static damper in conjunction with the stabilizing springs 51 and the base position of the transmission.
  • a clothes washing machine comprising a clothes tub rotatable about a vertical axis, a collector tank surrounding and normally concentric with said tub, a base spaced below said collector tank, a vertical stub shaft mounted at one end in a resilient member in said base, a drive transmission on said stub shaft adjacent the base, a support shaft concentric with said first shaft extending from said transmission to said tub and journalled for rotation in the collector tank, brake means on the base engaging the transmission to hold it against rotation, annular bearing means on said base, an annular bearing member on said bearing means, spaced generally vertical arms extending from the bearing member to the collector tank, and resilient means connecting said arms intermediate their length to said base.
  • stub shaft extends into the transmission and the support shaft includes an outer tube fixed to said transmission and to the tub and an inner shaft extending into the transmission and out of said outer tube to receive an agitator and reversible drive means drivingly connect to the stub drive shaft for selectively rotating it in opposite directions.

Description

Oct. 27, 1970 Filed May 2, 1968 P. W. DOUGLAS CLOTHES WASHING MACHINES 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 INVENTOR Peyton W. Douglas 2 Sheets-Sheet 8 Filed May 2, 1968 Fig.2.
mvemon Peyton W. Douql as 54am United States Patent Ofice 3,535,897 CLOTHES WASHING MACHINES Peyton W. Douglas, Bemus Point, N.Y., assignor to Blackstone Corporation, a corporation of New York Filed May 2, 1968, Ser. No. 726,019 Int. Cl. D06f 29/02 U.S. Cl. 6823.3 4 Claims ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE A clothes washer having an extractor tub and a concentric collector tank mounted on a vertical shaft mounted in a gear box movable vertically on a stub shaft in a base and rotatable relative to brake and dampener means on said base, generally vertical arms extending from a movable conical member frictionally engaging a stationary conical portion on said base to the periphery of the collector tank and resilient means connecting said arms intermediate their length with the base.
This invention relates to clothes washing machines and particularly to domestic washing machines in which both washing and centrifugal water extraction operations are carried out in a single perforate tub.
The art of clothes washing machines is well developed and there are many washing machines of the same general type as the present invention where both washing and extraction are carried out in a single tub. These machines are of two types, one having an imperforate tub and the other having a perforate tub and an external water container. Typical of the first group is the structure shown in my Pat. 3,083,558, issued Apr. 2, 1963.
There are basically two important problems in the clothes washing machine field. They are:
(a) Supporting the tub with the minimum of structural elements in such manner that off-balance tendency of the machine is overcome and excess vibration eliminated, and
(b) Driving the tub in a simple manner embracing two speed operation while protecting the drive from access by the washing water.
I have invented a new vertical tub washing machine structure which provides an elastic vertical support for the rotary tub and its surrounding water container and which reduces the problems of unbalance generally associated with such structures due to uneven wash loads.
Preferably, I provide a clothes washing machine having a clothes tub rotatable about a vertical axis, a tank surrounding said tub and normally concentric therewith, a base spaced from the tank, a stub shaft mounted at one end in a resilient bearing member in said base, a transmission on said stub shaft adjacent the base, a support shaft concentric with said stub shaft extending from said transmission to said tub and journalled for rotation in the tank, brake means on the base engaging the transmission, annular bearing means on said base, an annular resilient bearing member on said annular bearing means, spaced generally vertical arms extending from a support member to the tank, and resilient means connecting said spaced arms intermediate their length with a support member on the base. Resilient means connecting the spaced arms and base are springs lying alongside and generally parallel to said arms. Lift means as disclosed in my Pat. No. 3,215,232 are preferably provided in said transmission adjacent the lower end of said vertical support shaft engageable with said transmission during the extraction cycle to raise the transmission from the brake means.
In the foregoing general description of my invention I have set out certain purposes, objects and advantages of my invention. Other purposes, objects and advantages will 3,535,897 Patented Oct. 27, 1970 be apparent from a consideration of the following description and the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is an elevational view, partly broken away and partly in vertical section, showing a clothes washer according to my invention; and
FIG. 2 is a segmental section showing the transmission in the extraction position.
Referring to the drawings I have illustrated an external cabinet 10 enclosing the washing machine. The cabinet 10 has four sidewalls, a top 11 and base 12. The top is provided with a central opening 13 providing access into the interior of the cabinet. The base 12 is provided with depending peripheral flanges 14 secured to the cabinet walls by welding or some equivalent means. A central opening 15 is provided in a generally cup-shaped central depression 15a in an upstanding conical portion 16 of the base 12 to receive a part of the structure hereafter described.
A stub drive shaft 17 is mounted at its lower end in a resilient bearing member 18 which is fixed to the cupshaped portion 15a of the conical base portion at the opening 15. An annular generally frusto-conical member 19 is fixed to supporting arms 50 and is movable relatively to the conical portion 16 of base 12. A bearing pad 20 is fixed to conical portion 16 between it and conical mem ber 19. The upper end of the stub drive shaft 17 projects into a transmission unit 21. The lower end of the shaft 17 is of reduced diameter and is mounted in an annular thrust and radial bearing 22 fixed in resilient bearing member 18. The lower end of shaft 17 below bearing 22 carries a drive pulley 23 connected by a belt 24 to motor 25 on base 12.
The transmission unit 21 is constructed and functions in the manner described in Lodge Pats. No. 2,733,610, dated Feb. 7, 1956, and No. 2,841,260, dated July 1, 1958, and Douglas Pat. No. 3,215,232, dated Nov. 2, 1965. Projecting upwardly from the transmission unit 21 is tube 29 which passes through a bearing and seal 30 mounted in a resilient member 31 which is in turn mounted in an axial opening 32 in collector tank 33. A tub 34 is mounted on the upper end of tube 29. A shaft 35 extends from the interior of transmission unit 21, through tube 29 and suitable bearings 36 and 37 and projects out of the upper end of tube 29 to receive agitator 38.
The transmission unit 21 normally rests on brake shoe 26 on base 12. The motor 25 is of the reversing type and when operated in one direction it acts through transmis sion unit 21 to oscillate the agitator 38 within the tub 34. When the motor rotates in the opposite direction it raises the transmission unit 21 and tub 34 by means of clutch 40 which is constructed and operates as described in my Pat. No. 3,215,232, issued Nov. 2, 1965. The transmission unit is raised away from brake shoe 26 and rotates with shaft 17 to provide the extraction operation for removing water from clothes in tub 34.
It is, of course, obvious that there will be a tendency for the tub 34 and supporting structure to nod or tilt somewhat during the normal washing operation. However, the problem of nodding or tilting becomes significant only when the tub 34 and transmission 17 are raised for the extraction operation. Even here the problem is drastically reduced by moving the transmission 17 to its position on the base rather than at the tub as has heretofore been common. At this point any unbalance in the weight of clothes or water at the higher extraction speed tends to throw the tub out of its normal axis. To overcome this, I provide spaced arms 50 connected at one end to the outer periphery of cone 19 and at the other end to fixed receptacle or collector tank 33 at its outer periphery. A resilient member 51 preferably in the form of a spring is connected to base 12 at one end and to arms 50, intermediate their length, at the other end. Preferably, an adjustment means 52 is provided between the resilient member 51 and the arms 50 so as to permit adjustment of and balancing of the forces exerted around the collector tank or fixed tank 33.
The structure of the present invention provides many advantages over prior art structures. It removes the transmission out of contact with any water containing receptacle and is not contacted by water in any receptacle at any time. It moves the transmission down to the base and thus the spinning transmission acts as a dynamic stabilizing influence and prevents the tub from excessive nutation by contacting the brake members and thus retarding the extraction speed until the source of the unbalance is corrected. It provides a very simple and inexpensive but very effective stabilized support for both the fixed receptacle as well as for the clothes containing and extraction tub. It eliminates the need for dynamic balancing rings and reset cut-off switches previously used on extraction tubs, the weight of the collection tanks or fixed tank 33 acting as a static damper in conjunction with the stabilizing springs 51 and the base position of the transmission.
While I have illustrated and described a presently preferred embodiment of my invention in the foregoing specification, it will be understood that this invention may be otherwise embodied within the scope of the following claims.
I claim:
1. A clothes washing machine comprising a clothes tub rotatable about a vertical axis, a collector tank surrounding and normally concentric with said tub, a base spaced below said collector tank, a vertical stub shaft mounted at one end in a resilient member in said base, a drive transmission on said stub shaft adjacent the base, a support shaft concentric with said first shaft extending from said transmission to said tub and journalled for rotation in the collector tank, brake means on the base engaging the transmission to hold it against rotation, annular bearing means on said base, an annular bearing member on said bearing means, spaced generally vertical arms extending from the bearing member to the collector tank, and resilient means connecting said arms intermediate their length to said base.
2. A machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein the resilient means connecting said arms to said base are springs having adjustment means for varying the tension exerted thereby.
3. A machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein the support shaft is provided with an inner concentric drive shaft carrying an agitator member.
4. A machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein the stub shaft extends into the transmission and the support shaft includes an outer tube fixed to said transmission and to the tub and an inner shaft extending into the transmission and out of said outer tube to receive an agitator and reversible drive means drivingly connect to the stub drive shaft for selectively rotating it in opposite directions.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,513,844 7/1950 Castner et al 6823.3 2,976,998 3/1961 Smith 6823.3 X 3,049,025 8/1962 Lannert 6823.3 X 3,083,558 4/1963 Douglas 6823.3 3,247,689 4/1966 Wasemann 6823.3 3,269,544 8/1966 Brucken et a1. 68-233 X ROBERT L. BLEUTGE, Primary Examiner US. Cl. X.R.
US726019A 1968-05-02 1968-05-02 Clothes washing machines Expired - Lifetime US3535897A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US72601968A 1968-05-02 1968-05-02

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3535897A true US3535897A (en) 1970-10-27

Family

ID=24916885

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US726019A Expired - Lifetime US3535897A (en) 1968-05-02 1968-05-02 Clothes washing machines

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US3535897A (en)
FR (1) FR2007687A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1219725A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4250724A (en) * 1979-01-10 1981-02-17 Raytheon Company Suspension system for tub assembly in clothes washing machine
US5297403A (en) * 1992-12-03 1994-03-29 Whirlpool Corporation Rotatable wash basket for an automatic washer
US6354115B1 (en) 1999-10-21 2002-03-12 Clark Seals, Ltd. Two-component seal for a washing machine spin tub
US20130014547A1 (en) * 2011-07-15 2013-01-17 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Washing machine

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
ES8500641A1 (en) * 1983-07-28 1984-11-01 Mayc Sa Clothes washing machine

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2513844A (en) * 1946-08-14 1950-07-04 Solar Corp Washing machine with centrifugal extractor and stabilizer therefor
US2976998A (en) * 1956-12-03 1961-03-28 Maytag Co Damping system for a washing machine
US3049025A (en) * 1959-05-04 1962-08-14 Maytag Co Energy absorption stop
US3083558A (en) * 1961-07-07 1963-04-02 Blackstone Corp Clothes washing machine having a gyratory suspension system
US3247689A (en) * 1964-05-07 1966-04-26 Westinghouse Electric Corp Tub unit and suspension basic structure for agitator washer
US3269544A (en) * 1963-08-30 1966-08-30 Gen Motors Corp Domestic appliance

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2513844A (en) * 1946-08-14 1950-07-04 Solar Corp Washing machine with centrifugal extractor and stabilizer therefor
US2976998A (en) * 1956-12-03 1961-03-28 Maytag Co Damping system for a washing machine
US3049025A (en) * 1959-05-04 1962-08-14 Maytag Co Energy absorption stop
US3083558A (en) * 1961-07-07 1963-04-02 Blackstone Corp Clothes washing machine having a gyratory suspension system
US3269544A (en) * 1963-08-30 1966-08-30 Gen Motors Corp Domestic appliance
US3247689A (en) * 1964-05-07 1966-04-26 Westinghouse Electric Corp Tub unit and suspension basic structure for agitator washer

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4250724A (en) * 1979-01-10 1981-02-17 Raytheon Company Suspension system for tub assembly in clothes washing machine
US5297403A (en) * 1992-12-03 1994-03-29 Whirlpool Corporation Rotatable wash basket for an automatic washer
US6354115B1 (en) 1999-10-21 2002-03-12 Clark Seals, Ltd. Two-component seal for a washing machine spin tub
US20130014547A1 (en) * 2011-07-15 2013-01-17 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Washing machine

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
FR2007687A1 (en) 1970-01-09
GB1219725A (en) 1971-01-20

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP0716177B1 (en) A laundry tub of a drum type washing machine
US2836083A (en) Balancing ring system for rotatable receptacles
US2350218A (en) Washing machine
US2454112A (en) Support for spin basket for clotheswashing machines and the like
US2711297A (en) Suspension for laundry machines
US2243565A (en) Washing machine
US2844225A (en) Drive mechanism for clothes washers and the like
US2797569A (en) Clothes washing machine
US3535897A (en) Clothes washing machines
US2995023A (en) Pulsator mechanism for washing machines
US3488982A (en) Clothes washing machines
US2957331A (en) Tub support
US3080059A (en) Automatic counterbalancing control means for a rotating receptacle
US2580435A (en) Washing machine
US2836301A (en) Tub structure
US2687215A (en) Automatic balancing of horizontal extractors
US2873599A (en) Basket mounting arrangement for laundry machine
US2296259A (en) Laundry apparatus
US2275846A (en) Washing machine
US4007612A (en) Washing machine balance and suspension system
US2643538A (en) Washing machine provided with resilient vibration control door sealing means
US2775883A (en) Centrifugal extracting and washing machine
US5117658A (en) Washing machine having improved out-of-balance performance
US2964192A (en) Liquid centrifugal balancer
US3116813A (en) Vibration damping mechanism