WO2006046036A2 - Battery powered floor-care vacuum cleaner - Google Patents

Battery powered floor-care vacuum cleaner Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2006046036A2
WO2006046036A2 PCT/GB2005/004139 GB2005004139W WO2006046036A2 WO 2006046036 A2 WO2006046036 A2 WO 2006046036A2 GB 2005004139 W GB2005004139 W GB 2005004139W WO 2006046036 A2 WO2006046036 A2 WO 2006046036A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
vacuum cleaner
fan
air
dust
motor
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/GB2005/004139
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2006046036A3 (en
Inventor
Graham Capron-Tee
Original Assignee
Jacm Limited
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
Priority claimed from GB0423680A external-priority patent/GB0423680D0/en
Application filed by Jacm Limited filed Critical Jacm Limited
Priority to US11/666,120 priority Critical patent/US20080086833A1/en
Publication of WO2006046036A2 publication Critical patent/WO2006046036A2/en
Publication of WO2006046036A3 publication Critical patent/WO2006046036A3/en

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47LDOMESTIC WASHING OR CLEANING; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47L9/00Details or accessories of suction cleaners, e.g. mechanical means for controlling the suction or for effecting pulsating action; Storing devices specially adapted to suction cleaners or parts thereof; Carrying-vehicles specially adapted for suction cleaners
    • A47L9/28Installation of the electric equipment, e.g. adaptation or attachment to the suction cleaner; Controlling suction cleaners by electric means
    • A47L9/2868Arrangements for power supply of vacuum cleaners or the accessories thereof
    • A47L9/2884Details of arrangements of batteries or their installation
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47LDOMESTIC WASHING OR CLEANING; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47L5/00Structural features of suction cleaners
    • A47L5/12Structural features of suction cleaners with power-driven air-pumps or air-compressors, e.g. driven by motor vehicle engine vacuum
    • A47L5/22Structural features of suction cleaners with power-driven air-pumps or air-compressors, e.g. driven by motor vehicle engine vacuum with rotary fans
    • A47L5/28Suction cleaners with handles and nozzles fixed on the casings, e.g. wheeled suction cleaners with steering handle
    • A47L5/30Suction cleaners with handles and nozzles fixed on the casings, e.g. wheeled suction cleaners with steering handle with driven dust-loosening tools, e.g. rotating brushes
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47LDOMESTIC WASHING OR CLEANING; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47L9/00Details or accessories of suction cleaners, e.g. mechanical means for controlling the suction or for effecting pulsating action; Storing devices specially adapted to suction cleaners or parts thereof; Carrying-vehicles specially adapted for suction cleaners
    • A47L9/0072Mechanical means for controlling the suction or for effecting pulsating action
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47LDOMESTIC WASHING OR CLEANING; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47L9/00Details or accessories of suction cleaners, e.g. mechanical means for controlling the suction or for effecting pulsating action; Storing devices specially adapted to suction cleaners or parts thereof; Carrying-vehicles specially adapted for suction cleaners
    • A47L9/0081Means for exhaust-air diffusion; Means for sound or vibration damping
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47LDOMESTIC WASHING OR CLEANING; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47L9/00Details or accessories of suction cleaners, e.g. mechanical means for controlling the suction or for effecting pulsating action; Storing devices specially adapted to suction cleaners or parts thereof; Carrying-vehicles specially adapted for suction cleaners
    • A47L9/02Nozzles
    • A47L9/08Nozzles with means adapted for blowing
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47LDOMESTIC WASHING OR CLEANING; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47L9/00Details or accessories of suction cleaners, e.g. mechanical means for controlling the suction or for effecting pulsating action; Storing devices specially adapted to suction cleaners or parts thereof; Carrying-vehicles specially adapted for suction cleaners
    • A47L9/28Installation of the electric equipment, e.g. adaptation or attachment to the suction cleaner; Controlling suction cleaners by electric means
    • A47L9/2868Arrangements for power supply of vacuum cleaners or the accessories thereof
    • A47L9/2873Docking units or charging stations

Definitions

  • This invention relates to vacuum cleaners.
  • the development of the modern vacuum cleaner in recent years has been characterised by the use of more and more powerful motors. Installed powers of 1500w or even more are now common, most of which is expended in sucking air through ever more complicated filtration systems. Yet these daunting machines (at least when sold for domestic use) have a very low utilisation; the average person spends only a few minutes a week vacuuming his/her home.
  • the present invention provides in one aspect a floor-care vacuum cleaner comprising a floor-contacting body having an air inlet for vacuuming-up dust, a fan driven by a motor permanently installed in the body, and means for accommodating at least one on-board battery as a source of power for the motor.
  • the motor is of at least 200w, and more preferably at least 25Ow 1 rated power.
  • the battery or batteries have a total capacity of at least 2.5 Ah 1 and more preferably at least 3 Ah.
  • a significant advantage brought by the invention is that the vacuum cleaner can be "cordless" and the user is spared the inconvenience of trailing an electric cable connected to a mains socket.
  • One important preferred feature of a vacuum cleaner according to the first aspect of the invention is that the fan is located upstream of dust collecting means.
  • the invention provides a floor-care vacuum cleaner having an air inlet for vacuuming-up dust from a floor, a fan driven by a motor of at least 20Ow rated power and located upstream of dust collecting means, and means for accommodating at least one on-board battery as a source of power for the motor.
  • the fan may be located upstream of the air inlet, the arrangement being such that a flow of air from the fan draws in dust- bearing air through the air inlet.
  • the diverting means is a porous conduit between the fan and the dust collecting means.
  • the motor can have its own internal fan to take in clean air for cooling and then to discharge it into the main dust-laden airflow.
  • a preferred form of the invention is an upright vacuum cleaner, although its application to the cylinder type of cleaner is not excluded.
  • the handle may include the means for accommodating at least one battery.
  • the dust collecting means may comprise a disposable container formed of porous filtering material.
  • a re-usable and preferably washable bag or rigid container may be employed.
  • the dust collecting means may be contained within or may be carried by a handle of the vacuum cleaner, the porous conduit extending upwardly to deliver dust-laden air to an upper part of the dust collecting means.
  • the cleaner may comprise a fence bounding at least a substantial proportion of the rear periphery of the air inlet, the fence being displaceable between a retracted position when the floor surface is carpeted and a deployed position when the floor surface is uncarpeted, so as to reduce the ingress of air to the air inlet around the periphery thereof.
  • the battery is rechargeable, the vacuum cleaner being in combination with a docking station having battery charging means, the cleaner and the docking station having complementary electrical connectors where by the at least one battery of the cleaner can be charged without removal from the cleaner.
  • Figure 1 is a side elevation of a first embodiment of a vacuum cleaner of the invention.
  • Figure 2 is a diagrammatic vertical cross-section through the vacuum cleaner of figure 1 ;
  • Figure 3 is a diagrammatic horizontal cross-section on line 3-3 of figure 2;
  • Figures 4 and 5 are respectively whole and partial side elevations of other vacuum cleaners according to the invention; and Figures 6 and 7 are respectively horizontal (plan) and vertical sections through a further vacuum cleaner according to the invention.
  • an upright floor-care vacuum cleaner comprises a body 10 which contacts a floor 12 to be cleaned via wheels 14.
  • the underside of the body at least when standing on a hard floor surface, is close to but not touching the floor and has an air inlet 16 for sucking in air and entrained dust from the floor.
  • a handle 18 is provided for manipulation of the cleaner, and a dust- collecting bag is suspended from the handle in a well-ventilated casing 20 and connected to an air outlet 21 from the body.
  • a permanently-installed 24V DC motor 22 of 25Ow rated power On an output shaft 24 of the motor is provided a centrifugal fan 26 for sucking air in through the inlet 16.
  • the output shaft 24 also carries a pulley which via a belt 29 drives a beater rotor or agitator 28 which extends across the air inlet.
  • the rotors carry respective oppositely-handed helical beater bars or brushes 30 which beat a carpet being cleaned to dislodge dust so that it can be entrained by the air entering the air inlet.
  • the bars or brushes also serve (due to their helical shape) to sweep dust towards the centre of the air inlet, whereat the entry to the fan 26 is located.
  • a fence or air dam 32 is slidably mounted in a slot extending across the rear and sides of the periphery of the air inlet.
  • the fence When the cleaner is used on carpet, the fence is pushed up into the slot by the carpet or can be retracted manually or automatically.
  • the fence drops downwardly to contact the floor and reduce the ingress of air other than from the front of the cleaner, when it is drawn across the area swept by the beater bar.
  • the motor is shown here as having a fore-and-aft orientation with an inclined axis, but other dispositions are possible eg. with a vertical axis (see figure 6) or cross-wise across the cleaner body. The latter avoids the need to twist the belt drive through 90°.
  • the motor 22 is powered by a Ni-Cd battery 34 (or other battery type having adequate capacity within the space available for it) removeably received in a housing 36 on the top of the cleaner.
  • the battery has a capacity of 3 Ah, which would give around 15 minutes usage of the cleaner per charge at full motor power of 25Ow. Using the cleaner at reduced power (less power is required for a hard floor) will give a longer duty cycle.
  • a power control advantageously can be provided on the handle 18 for this purpose, together with an on-off switch.
  • a recessed plug 38 is provided on the body 10 so that the cleaner can be parked in a docking station when not in use, and the battery connected to a charger within the docking station.
  • the cleaner can be kept fully charged and ready for use; a modern electronically-controlled charger can maintain the battery in optimum condition and ensure maximum life.
  • the battery can be removed for charging separately, and preferably replaced by a further previously-charged battery so that the cleaner remains immediately available.
  • Air is taken in by the fan through the air inlet and discharged radially outwardly into a plenum chamber 40 and then into an delivery passage 42. Some of the air passes through the motor to cool it, and rejoins the main air flow further downstream.
  • the delivery passage delivers the air and entrained dust to the air outlet
  • FIG. 4 shows a second embodiment in which the battery 34 is replaced by several (eg. three or four) smaller batteries 52 stacked in series in a hollow portion of the handle 18. This enables the body 10 to be made flatter, and thus more able to be directed under furniture etc.
  • a sintered porous tube 54 extends from the air outlet 21 upwardly to the top of a disposable dust bag 56 which is carried by the handle 18. Entrained dust is carried at high velocity up the tube 54 by the airflow and is delivered to the bag.
  • the porous tube acts as a bypass for the air if the bag surface becomes clogged. Air can escape through its permeable surface, but much of the entrained dust will still pass into the bag, (unless the bag is badly clogged) due to its momentum and to the velocity of the remaining airflow into the bag.
  • the small-pored material of the sintered tube prevents substantial escape of dust through the wall of the tube, and the tube itself can be washed periodically to remove dust adhering to its wall.
  • the porous tube has the advantage that the cleaner can be operated for a short period without significant loss of suction if the bag 56 is clogged. Thus a cleaning cycle may be completed and the bag emptied more conveniently at the end of the cycle, rather than mid-way through it.
  • the fan 26 is upstream of the dust-collecting bag. This enables the fan to drive the air through the filter constituted by the bag, rather than suck it through a filter downstream of a dust-collecting bag as in conventional cleaners. This more efficient arrangement is preferred because it permits a significantly smaller motor to be used, and assists in making a self- contained battery-powered cordless design practicable.
  • the fan 26 also is upstream of the vacuuming air inlet 16. Air is drawn into the fan at fan inlet 60 and directed along a shaped duct 62 which delivers it through an elongated nozzle 64 extending across the full width of vacuuming air inlet 16, where it passes at high velocity through an agitator chamber 66 across the top of beater rotors (agitators) 28. This high velocity flow causes suction at the air inlet 16, causing air to be drawn in together with loose dust, which has been disturbed by the rotors 28 which rotate clockwise as seen in figure 7. The dust-laden air then passes as previously described via delivery passage 42 to the dust-collecting bag 50. This embodiment avoids the contamination of the fan 26 by dust-laden air.
  • Each feature disclosed in this specification (which term includes the claims) and/or shown in the drawings may be incorporated in the invention independently of other disclosed and/or illustrated features.

Abstract

A floor-care vacuum cleaner comprising a floor-contracting body having an air inlet (16) for vacuuming-up dust, a fan (26) driven by a motor (22) permanently installed in the body, and means for accommodating at least one on-board battery (34) as a source of power for the motor.

Description

VACUUM CLEANER
This invention relates to vacuum cleaners. The development of the modern vacuum cleaner in recent years has been characterised by the use of more and more powerful motors. Installed powers of 1500w or even more are now common, most of which is expended in sucking air through ever more complicated filtration systems. Yet these formidable machines (at least when sold for domestic use) have a very low utilisation; the average person spends only a few minutes a week vacuuming his/her home.
We have recognised that the conventional approach to vacuum cleaner design is in fact misconceived. Because utilisation is so low, we have determined that it is possible with appropriate design to provide a vacuum cleaner which can dispose of a practical weekly duty cycle using no more energy than can be stored in a reasonably sized battery or set of batteries, for example of the Ni-Cd type.
Therefore, the present invention provides in one aspect a floor-care vacuum cleaner comprising a floor-contacting body having an air inlet for vacuuming-up dust, a fan driven by a motor permanently installed in the body, and means for accommodating at least one on-board battery as a source of power for the motor.
Preferably the motor is of at least 200w, and more preferably at least 25Ow1 rated power.
Preferably the battery or batteries have a total capacity of at least 2.5 Ah1 and more preferably at least 3 Ah.
A significant advantage brought by the invention is that the vacuum cleaner can be "cordless" and the user is spared the inconvenience of trailing an electric cable connected to a mains socket.
One important preferred feature of a vacuum cleaner according to the first aspect of the invention is that the fan is located upstream of dust collecting means.
In a second aspect the invention provides a floor-care vacuum cleaner having an air inlet for vacuuming-up dust from a floor, a fan driven by a motor of at least 20Ow rated power and located upstream of dust collecting means, and means for accommodating at least one on-board battery as a source of power for the motor.
In an embodiment of the invention the fan may be located upstream of the air inlet, the arrangement being such that a flow of air from the fan draws in dust- bearing air through the air inlet.
There may be an agitator for disturbing dust from a carpeted floor so that it is entrained by air entering the air inlet.
There may be means for passing an airflow from the fan through the dust collecting means, and means for diverting at least part of the airflow if the exit thereof from the dust collecting means is impeded, the arrangement being such that at least a substantial proportion of dust entrained in the to-be-diverted air is captured.
Preferably the diverting means is a porous conduit between the fan and the dust collecting means. There may be means for passing a portion of the airflow from the fan through the motor as cooling air and thence returning it to the airflow. Alternatively the motor can have its own internal fan to take in clean air for cooling and then to discharge it into the main dust-laden airflow.
A preferred form of the invention is an upright vacuum cleaner, although its application to the cylinder type of cleaner is not excluded. In an upright cleaner, the handle may include the means for accommodating at least one battery.
The dust collecting means may comprise a disposable container formed of porous filtering material. Alternatively a re-usable and preferably washable bag or rigid container may be employed.
In an upright cleaner according to the invention, the dust collecting means may be contained within or may be carried by a handle of the vacuum cleaner, the porous conduit extending upwardly to deliver dust-laden air to an upper part of the dust collecting means.
The cleaner may comprise a fence bounding at least a substantial proportion of the rear periphery of the air inlet, the fence being displaceable between a retracted position when the floor surface is carpeted and a deployed position when the floor surface is uncarpeted, so as to reduce the ingress of air to the air inlet around the periphery thereof.
Preferably the battery is rechargeable, the vacuum cleaner being in combination with a docking station having battery charging means, the cleaner and the docking station having complementary electrical connectors where by the at least one battery of the cleaner can be charged without removal from the cleaner.
An embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Figure 1 is a side elevation of a first embodiment of a vacuum cleaner of the invention. Figure 2 is a diagrammatic vertical cross-section through the vacuum cleaner of figure 1 ;
Figure 3 is a diagrammatic horizontal cross-section on line 3-3 of figure 2;
Figures 4 and 5 are respectively whole and partial side elevations of other vacuum cleaners according to the invention; and Figures 6 and 7 are respectively horizontal (plan) and vertical sections through a further vacuum cleaner according to the invention.
Referring to figures 1 , 2 and 3, an upright floor-care vacuum cleaner comprises a body 10 which contacts a floor 12 to be cleaned via wheels 14. As known per se, the underside of the body, at least when standing on a hard floor surface, is close to but not touching the floor and has an air inlet 16 for sucking in air and entrained dust from the floor.
A handle 18 is provided for manipulation of the cleaner, and a dust- collecting bag is suspended from the handle in a well-ventilated casing 20 and connected to an air outlet 21 from the body.
Within the body 10 is provided a permanently-installed 24V DC motor 22 of 25Ow rated power. On an output shaft 24 of the motor is provided a centrifugal fan 26 for sucking air in through the inlet 16. The output shaft 24 also carries a pulley which via a belt 29 drives a beater rotor or agitator 28 which extends across the air inlet. As known per se the rotors carry respective oppositely-handed helical beater bars or brushes 30 which beat a carpet being cleaned to dislodge dust so that it can be entrained by the air entering the air inlet. The bars or brushes also serve (due to their helical shape) to sweep dust towards the centre of the air inlet, whereat the entry to the fan 26 is located. A fence or air dam 32 is slidably mounted in a slot extending across the rear and sides of the periphery of the air inlet. When the cleaner is used on carpet, the fence is pushed up into the slot by the carpet or can be retracted manually or automatically. When the cleaner is used on a hard floor, the fence drops downwardly to contact the floor and reduce the ingress of air other than from the front of the cleaner, when it is drawn across the area swept by the beater bar.
The motor is shown here as having a fore-and-aft orientation with an inclined axis, but other dispositions are possible eg. with a vertical axis (see figure 6) or cross-wise across the cleaner body. The latter avoids the need to twist the belt drive through 90°. The motor 22 is powered by a Ni-Cd battery 34 (or other battery type having adequate capacity within the space available for it) removeably received in a housing 36 on the top of the cleaner. The battery has a capacity of 3 Ah, which would give around 15 minutes usage of the cleaner per charge at full motor power of 25Ow. Using the cleaner at reduced power (less power is required for a hard floor) will give a longer duty cycle. A power control advantageously can be provided on the handle 18 for this purpose, together with an on-off switch.
A recessed plug 38 is provided on the body 10 so that the cleaner can be parked in a docking station when not in use, and the battery connected to a charger within the docking station. Thus the cleaner can be kept fully charged and ready for use; a modern electronically-controlled charger can maintain the battery in optimum condition and ensure maximum life. Alternatively the battery can be removed for charging separately, and preferably replaced by a further previously-charged battery so that the cleaner remains immediately available.
Air is taken in by the fan through the air inlet and discharged radially outwardly into a plenum chamber 40 and then into an delivery passage 42. Some of the air passes through the motor to cool it, and rejoins the main air flow further downstream. The delivery passage delivers the air and entrained dust to the air outlet
21 , and thence into the bag 50. The bag is of a small-pored permeable filter material which due to its large surface provides only a small resistance to the escaping air whilst effectively retaining dust and other debris. The bag can be re-usable but preferably is disposable and discarded when full. Figure 4 shows a second embodiment in which the battery 34 is replaced by several (eg. three or four) smaller batteries 52 stacked in series in a hollow portion of the handle 18. This enables the body 10 to be made flatter, and thus more able to be directed under furniture etc. This embodiment is otherwise as described with reference to figures 1 to 3. Referring to figure 5, in this embodiment a sintered porous tube 54 extends from the air outlet 21 upwardly to the top of a disposable dust bag 56 which is carried by the handle 18. Entrained dust is carried at high velocity up the tube 54 by the airflow and is delivered to the bag.
The porous tube acts as a bypass for the air if the bag surface becomes clogged. Air can escape through its permeable surface, but much of the entrained dust will still pass into the bag, (unless the bag is badly clogged) due to its momentum and to the velocity of the remaining airflow into the bag. The small-pored material of the sintered tube prevents substantial escape of dust through the wall of the tube, and the tube itself can be washed periodically to remove dust adhering to its wall. The porous tube has the advantage that the cleaner can be operated for a short period without significant loss of suction if the bag 56 is clogged. Thus a cleaning cycle may be completed and the bag emptied more conveniently at the end of the cycle, rather than mid-way through it.
It will be noted that in all described embodiments and contrary to conventional practice, the fan 26 is upstream of the dust-collecting bag. This enables the fan to drive the air through the filter constituted by the bag, rather than suck it through a filter downstream of a dust-collecting bag as in conventional cleaners. This more efficient arrangement is preferred because it permits a significantly smaller motor to be used, and assists in making a self- contained battery-powered cordless design practicable.
In the embodiment of figures 6 and 7 the fan 26 also is upstream of the vacuuming air inlet 16. Air is drawn into the fan at fan inlet 60 and directed along a shaped duct 62 which delivers it through an elongated nozzle 64 extending across the full width of vacuuming air inlet 16, where it passes at high velocity through an agitator chamber 66 across the top of beater rotors (agitators) 28. This high velocity flow causes suction at the air inlet 16, causing air to be drawn in together with loose dust, which has been disturbed by the rotors 28 which rotate clockwise as seen in figure 7. The dust-laden air then passes as previously described via delivery passage 42 to the dust-collecting bag 50. This embodiment avoids the contamination of the fan 26 by dust-laden air. Each feature disclosed in this specification (which term includes the claims) and/or shown in the drawings may be incorporated in the invention independently of other disclosed and/or illustrated features.

Claims

1. A floor-care vacuum cleaner comprising a floor-contacting body having an air inlet for vacuuming-up dust, a fan driven by a motor permanently installed in the body, and means for accommodating at least one on-board battery as a source of power for the motor.
2. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in claim 1 wherein the motor is of at least 200w, and preferably at least 25Ow, rated power.
3. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 comprising a battery or batteries having a total capacity of at least 2.5 Ah, and preferably at least 3 Ah.
4. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the fan is located upstream of dust collecting means.
5. A floor-care vacuum cleaner having an air inlet for vacuuming-up dust from a floor, a fan driven by a motor of at least 20Ow rated power and located upstream of dust collecting means, and means for accommodating at least one on-board battery as a source of power for the motor.
6. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the fan is located upstream of the air inlet, the arrangement being such that a flow of air from the fan draws in dust-bearing air through the air inlet.
7. A vacuum cleaner according to claim 6 comprising an agitator for disturbing dust from a carpeted floor so that it is entrained by air entering the air inlet.
8. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in any of claims 4 to 7 comprising means for passing an airflow from the fan through the dust collecting means, and means for diverting at least part of the airflow if the exit thereof from the dust collecting means is impeded, the arrangement being such that at least a substantial proportion of dust entrained in the to-be-diverted air is captured.
9. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in claim 8 wherein the diverting means is a porous conduit between the fan and the dust collecting means.
10. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in any preceding claim comprising means for passing a portion of the airflow from the fan through the motor as cooling air and thence returning it to the airflow.
11. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in any of claims 1 to 9 wherein the motor has a cooling fan for passing cooling air through the motor and thence delivering it to the airflow from the first-mentioned fan.
12. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in any preceding claim, being an upright vacuum cleaner.
13. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in claim 9 comprising a handle wherein the means for accommodating the at least one battery are provided.
14. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in claim 9 or 13 wherein the dust collecting means comprises a disposable container formed of porous filtering material.
15. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in claim 7 and any of claims 12 to 14, wherein the dust collecting means is contained within or is carried by a handle of the vacuum cleaner, the porous conduit extending upwardly to deliver dust-laden air to an upper part of the dust collecting means.
16. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in any of claims 12 to 15 comprising a fence bounding at least a substantial proportion of the rear periphery of the air inlet, the fence being displaceable between a retracted position when the floor surface is carpeted and a deployed position when the floor surface is uncarpeted, so as to reduce the ingress of air to the air inlet around the periphery thereof.
17. A vacuum cleaner as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the at least one battery is rechargeable, the vacuum cleaner being in combination with a docking station having battery charging means, the cleaner and the docking station having complementary electrical connectors where by the at least one battery of the cleaner can be charged without removal from the cleaner.
18. A vacuum cleaner substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
PCT/GB2005/004139 2004-10-25 2005-10-25 Battery powered floor-care vacuum cleaner WO2006046036A2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/666,120 US20080086833A1 (en) 2004-10-25 2005-10-25 Vacuum Cleaner

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0423680.8 2004-10-25
GB0423680A GB0423680D0 (en) 2004-10-25 2004-10-25 Vacuum cleaner
GB0425065A GB2419275A (en) 2004-10-25 2004-11-12 Battery-powered vacuum cleaner
GB0425065.0 2004-11-12

Publications (2)

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WO2006046036A2 true WO2006046036A2 (en) 2006-05-04
WO2006046036A3 WO2006046036A3 (en) 2006-07-27

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WO2017096721A1 (en) * 2015-12-10 2017-06-15 江苏美的清洁电器股份有限公司 Upright vacuum cleaner
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