WO2007019866A2 - Method for cleaning dirty surfaces on handballs, and an apparatus for the execution of the method - Google Patents

Method for cleaning dirty surfaces on handballs, and an apparatus for the execution of the method Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2007019866A2
WO2007019866A2 PCT/DK2006/050033 DK2006050033W WO2007019866A2 WO 2007019866 A2 WO2007019866 A2 WO 2007019866A2 DK 2006050033 W DK2006050033 W DK 2006050033W WO 2007019866 A2 WO2007019866 A2 WO 2007019866A2
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
ball
rollers
handball
cabinet
rotationally
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/DK2006/050033
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2007019866A3 (en
Inventor
Martin Smith
Morten SØNDERSKOV
Original Assignee
Ms2Solution Aps
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 Ms2Solution Aps filed Critical Ms2Solution Aps
Priority to EP06761878.5A priority Critical patent/EP1924332B1/en
Publication of WO2007019866A2 publication Critical patent/WO2007019866A2/en
Publication of WO2007019866A3 publication Critical patent/WO2007019866A3/en

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B47/00Devices for handling or treating balls, e.g. for holding or carrying balls
    • A63B47/04Devices for handling or treating balls, e.g. for holding or carrying balls for cleaning balls
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B47/00Devices for handling or treating balls, e.g. for holding or carrying balls
    • A63B47/04Devices for handling or treating balls, e.g. for holding or carrying balls for cleaning balls
    • A63B2047/046Motorised
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B2209/00Characteristics of used materials
    • A63B2209/10Characteristics of used materials with adhesive type surfaces, i.e. hook and loop-type fastener
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B2225/00Miscellaneous features of sport apparatus, devices or equipment
    • A63B2225/09Adjustable dimensions
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B2243/00Specific ball sports not provided for in A63B2102/00 - A63B2102/38
    • A63B2243/0033Handball
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B47/00Devices for handling or treating balls, e.g. for holding or carrying balls
    • A63B47/005Ball heating devices

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a method for cleaning surfaces on handballs which have been treated with a sticky/adhering material, mainly resin, which by use of the handball has become dirty, and an apparatus for the execution of the method according to the invention.
  • One of these methods can consist of smearing the ball with brown soap, packing the ball in a bag and letting the soap "dissolve" the resin.
  • this process takes approximately one week, and naturally with the consequence that the ball cannot be used.
  • the process has a highly detrimental effect on the leather, and can only be carried out a few times before the ball is ruined.
  • Another alternative is that of removing the resin mechanically by scraping, e.g. with a knife, or some other suitable tool or utensil, but in all probability this will result in damage to the surface of the ball, and the process takes a relatively long time.
  • a portable golf ball cleaner comprising a U-shaped cabinet, the two opposing sides of which comprise projecting brushes, and the bottom of which has a sponge for the moistening of the surface of a golf ball placed in the cabinet.
  • the cleaner functions by the golf ball being manually pressed down against the moistened sponge in the bottom, after which it is rotated manually whereby the surface of the golf ball is processed by the brushes standing out from the sides, whereby the golf ball is cleaned.
  • JP2002113211 there is known a cleaning machine for the cleaning of balls for gaming machines, this comprising a partly open cabinet containing rotating brushes in connection with a tray for collection of said balls, and where the balls are processed mechanically with the two rotating brushes for the removal of dirt which is collected in an underlying tray, after which the balls are led out of the machine in the cleaned condition for further use.
  • This object is achieved with a method whereby the cleaning takes place by the heating of the surface of the ball, in a cleaning area which consists of a dirtied part area of the ball, and herewith softening the sticky material adhering to the ball until it is almost fluid, and where in immediate association herewith there is carried out a removal of the dirtied sticky/adhering material by mechanical processing of the cleaning area on the surface of the ball, or of said relevant parts of the surface of the handball, and that a turning of the actual ball is carried out, after which the procedure is repeated until the whole surface of the ball has been cleaned.
  • an apparatus which is characterised in that it comprises a partly open cabinet comprising at least one heating element and at least one blower aggregate associated herewith with an opening placed close to a partly open area in the enclosure, where there is at least one roller with protruding elements which can be ro- tated for mechanical processing of relevant parts of the surface of a ball, or what can be termed the cleaning area of a ball, which is pressed against the protruding elements on the rotationally-driven roller.
  • the apparatus can be provided with a sensor whereby the apparatus is activated when a ball is introduced into the processing area.
  • the cabinet further comprises at least two support rollers for the guiding and the pressing of the surface of a ball placed in the cabinet against the protruding elements on the at least two rotationally-driven rollers in the cabinet, where the mutual axle distance of said support rollers is adapted to the size of an actual ball, and where under the rotating rollers there is provided a detachable tray for the collection of dirt removed from the surface of the ball.
  • this operation can however be rendered superfluous by providing the apparatus according to the invention with a feeding arrangement which has a supply of dirtied balls, a guiding arrangement which guides the cleaned balls out of the apparatus cabinet, and a sensor unit with an activation switch for the apparatus, and a control unit for controlling the supply of dirty balls to and the exit of cleaned balls from the apparatus.
  • the cleaning of dirtied resin from handballs can hereby be carried out in a fully automatic manner and, except for the placing of dirtied handballs in the supply and the fetching of the cleaned balls, without any noteworthy manual labour.
  • the apparatus can be arranged so that the distance between the axles of the support rollers and the rotationally-driven rollers with protruding elements is adjustable in accordance with the size of an actual ball
  • the apparatus according to the invention can with advantage be arranged so that the axle distance between the support rollers is adjustable, in that at least one of the axles of the support rollers is housed in the cabinet in a dispiaceable and lockable manner, and where at least one of the rotationally-driven rollers with protruding elements is housed in the cabinet in a dispiaceable manner, so that the distance between these and the support rollers, and the distance between the rotationally-driven rollers with protruding elements is adjustable.
  • the apparatus can also be provided with a ball-size sensor coupled with actuators for adjustment of said axle distances, so that with the registration of a deviating ball type in the cabinet, the apparatus automatically adjusts the axle distance for an optimum cleaning of dirtied resin from the surface of the ball.
  • the protruding elements can with advantage consist of brushes and/or segments which stand out from the surfaces of the rollers in a mainly radial manner, the free ends of said brushes/segments together forming a concave section in the longitudinal direction of the rollers, which section corresponds substantially to the curva- ture on a handball.
  • the apparatus can be arranged so that the direction of rotation of the rollers with protruding elements is oppositely- directed and with asynchronous peripheral speed.
  • the apparatus according to the invention can be arranged so that the cabinet comprises an adjustable thermostat which is connected to the heating element for adjustment of the temperature of the air emitted from the blower aggregate.
  • Fig. 1 is a side-sectional view of a first embodiment of an apparatus for the cleaning of the surfaces of handballs according to the invention
  • Fig. 2 is a sectional view of the apparatus shown in fig. 1 seen along the line A-A 1
  • Fig. 3 is a side-sectional view of a second embodiment of an apparatus for the cleaning of the surfaces of handballs according to the invention
  • Fig. 4 is a plan view of the apparatus shown in fig, 3
  • Fig. 5 is an end view of the apparatus shown in fig.3.
  • FIG. 1 there is shown a first embodiment of an apparatus 2 for the cleaning of the surface 4 on a handball 6 which has been coated with dirty resin 8.
  • the ap- paratus 2 comprises a cabinet 10 provided with a partial enclosure 12 in which a blower 14 and the heating elements 16 are placed.
  • the blower 14 has an air intake from the surroundings via a grating 18 in the side of the cabinet 10, and the partial enclosure has a discharge opening 20 placed over a rotational ly-d riven roller 22 comprising protruding elements 24 in the form of brushes, the free ends 26 of which in combination form a concave section 28, cf. fig.
  • said concave section 28 correspondingly substantially to the curvature of the surface on a handball 6, whereby a more uniform processing of a greater part-area of a handball is achieved than if the free ends in combination had formed a rectilinear section in the longitudinal direction of the roller.
  • the rotat- ing roller 22 in the embodiment shown is driven by an electric motor 30 via a belt 32. It shall be noted that the brushes 24 on the roller 22 are protruding through an opening 25 in the lower end of the cabinet 10.
  • the apparatus 2 functions as follows: The apparatus is activated, i.e. the blower motor 14, the heating element 16 and the el-motor 30 which drives the roller 22 with the brushes 24 are activated. In a special embodiment of the apparatus (not shown), this can take place automatically via a movement sensor placed near the opening 25 and connected to a control unit (not shown).
  • a handball 6 with a surface dirtied by resin 8 which is desired to be cleaned is placed in the apparatus with the brushes 24 on the rotating roller 22.
  • hot air which flows out through the opening 20 is blown onto that part of the ball's surface 4 which is processed by the brushes 24.
  • the dirty resin 8 is hereby softened in the cleaning area 5, and hereafter the dirty resin 8 is able to be removed as particles 8' by the processing with the brushes 24, as is indicated in fig, 1. It will thus be necessary for the user of the apparatus to turn the handball 6 and bring new part areas of the ball's surface 4 with dirtied resin 8 against the brushes 24, until the surface 4 of the handball 6 has been satis- factorily cleaned.
  • FIG. 3 fig. 4 and fig. 5 there is shown a second embodiment of the apparatus 2 according to the invention.
  • This similarly comprises a cabinet 10 having a partial enclosure 12 in which there is placed a blower 14 and a heating element 16.
  • the blower 14 has an air intake from the surroundings via a grating 18 in the side of the cabinet 10, and the partial enclosure 12 has an outflow opening 20 placed over two rotationally-driven rollers 22 comprising outstanding elements 24 in the form of brushes, the free ends 26 of which in combination form a concave extent 8, cf. fig. 4, in the longitudinal direction of the rollers, which corresponds substantially to the curvature on the surface of a handball 6.
  • the shown embodiment also comprises support rollers 38 which are housed on a cover 40 which is connected to the cabinet 10 by a hinge connection 42.
  • the support rollers can be brought into contact with a handball 6 placed in the cabinet by a closing of the cover 40, whereby the support rollers 38 are brought into contact with the surface 4 of the handball 6, so that this is held in contact with the free ends 26, 26' of the brushes 24, 24' on the rollers 22, 22'.
  • the apparatus 2 also comprises a collection tray 44 for the collection of dirty resin removed by the cleaning of the surfaces of the handball, as shown in fig.1.
  • the collection tray 44 can be removed in a known manner via an opening (not shown) in the cabinet 10.
  • the rotating rollers 22, 22' are driven by an electric motor 30 via a belt 32 which, in the shown embodiment, extends via a reversing wheel 34 so that the rollers rotate in opposite directions, as indicated by the arrows B and C in fig. 3.
  • the diameter of the drive wheel 36 on the roller 22' is smaller that the diameter on the drive wheel 36 on the roller 22, the result being that the speed of rotation of the rollers is asynchronous, which means that a handball 6 which is placed in the apparatus with the rotating brushes 24, 24' will be brought into rotation around itself, the result being that when a handball 6 with a surface 4 from which dirtied resin 8 shall be cleaned is placed in the apparatus, the whole of the surface 4 will be processed automatically.
  • the apparatus shown in fig. 3, fig. 4 and fig. 5 for the cleaning of a dirtied layer of resin 8 from the surface 4 of handballs 6 functions as follows: An actual handball 6 placed in the cabinet 10 as indicated in fig. 1 is brought into contact with the free ends of the brushes 24, 24' on the rollers 22, 22', after which the cover 40 is closed and the apparatus is activated, i.e. the blower motor 14, the heating element 16 and the el-motor 30 which drives the rollers 22, 22' with the brushes 24 are activated.
  • the activation can possibly take place automatically by means of a not-shown switch which is activated when the cover 40 is in the closed position.
  • the surface 4 of the ball is heated by the blowing-on of hot air from the heating element 16 in the proximity of the opening 20, whereby the dirtied restn 8 which has adhered to the surface 4 is softened to such an extent that it allows itself to be removed by processing with the brushes 24, 24' on the underlying rotating rollers 22, 22', as shown in fig.1 , where the dirtied resin 8' cleaned from the ball falls down under gravitation into the collection tray 44, which is emptied when and as required.
  • a handball 6 placed in the cabinet 10 will rotate around itself, whereby the dirtied resin will be removed from the whole of its surface in a relatively quick manner, without any assistance by a person being necessary for the manipulation of the ball.
  • the heating of the dirtied resin takes place by the blowing-on of hot air, and in this connection the apparatus in a not-shown embodiment can be provided with a temperature sensor and a control unit for controlling the temperature of the hot air blown onto the surface 4 of the handball so that it lies within a preferred interval, within which the dirtied resin on a handball's surface allows itself to be removed in the best and the quickest manner.
  • the apparatus shown in fig. 3, 4 and 5 can be provided with a feeding arrangement for the supply of handballs with surfaces from which dirtied resin shall be removed, and a control arrangement for the leading of cleaned handballs out of the cabin, and a control unit for the coordination of the feeding and leading-out arrangements and for the apparatus.

Abstract

On a world basis, thousands of handballs are discarded every year after a relatively short lifetime (approx. 1 -1 ½ years) as a consequence of the use of resin by the players. The players use the sticky resin to improve their grip on the ball. But 'smearing' of the ball in resin has the result that dirt and dust from the floor adheres to the ball. Therefore, a crust of these materials is formed relatively quickly on the surface of the ball, which reduces the softness of the leather and makes the ball very smooth to play with, and which can be removed only with great difficulty. The result is that handball clubs use a great deal of money every year in the purchase of new balls. There is disclosed a method and an apparatus (2) for the removal of said un-desired crust from the surface of handballs (6), which is characteristic in that a heating is carried out of the surface (4) of the ball, or relevant parts of this, and where in association herewith there is carried out a mechanical processing of the surface (4) of the ball or of said relevant parts of the surface.

Description

Title: Method for cleaning dirty surfaces on handballs, and an apparatus for the execution of the method.
The present invention relates to a method for cleaning surfaces on handballs which have been treated with a sticky/adhering material, mainly resin, which by use of the handball has become dirty, and an apparatus for the execution of the method according to the invention.
On a worldwide basis, thousands or handballs are discarded every year after a relatively short lifetime (approx. VA years). The replacement of the balls is due primarily to the players' use of resin. The players use the sticky resin in order to improve the grip around the handball. But the "smearing" of the bali with resin has the result that dirt and dust from the floor adheres to the ball. Therefore, in a relatively short time, a crust of these materials is formed on the surface of the ball. The crust reduces the softness of the leather and makes the ball very smooth to play with. As a consequence hereof, the handball clubs spend a lot of money every year in the purchase of new balls, money which could be used for many other purposes within the sport. An alternative to the purchasing of new balls is that of cleaning the balls to remove said crust, and use is made at present of various methods for this purpose.
One of these methods can consist of smearing the ball with brown soap, packing the ball in a bag and letting the soap "dissolve" the resin. However, this process takes approximately one week, and naturally with the consequence that the ball cannot be used. At the same time, the process has a highly detrimental effect on the leather, and can only be carried out a few times before the ball is ruined. Another alternative is that of removing the resin mechanically by scraping, e.g. with a knife, or some other suitable tool or utensil, but in all probability this will result in damage to the surface of the ball, and the process takes a relatively long time.
From WO 02096526 there is known a portable golf ball cleaner comprising a U-shaped cabinet, the two opposing sides of which comprise projecting brushes, and the bottom of which has a sponge for the moistening of the surface of a golf ball placed in the cabinet. The cleaner functions by the golf ball being manually pressed down against the moistened sponge in the bottom, after which it is rotated manually whereby the surface of the golf ball is processed by the brushes standing out from the sides, whereby the golf ball is cleaned. From JP2002113211 there is known a cleaning machine for the cleaning of balls for gaming machines, this comprising a partly open cabinet containing rotating brushes in connection with a tray for collection of said balls, and where the balls are processed mechanically with the two rotating brushes for the removal of dirt which is collected in an underlying tray, after which the balls are led out of the machine in the cleaned condition for further use.
Said methods will hardly be applicable for the cleaning of the dirtied resin from a handball, the reason being that the resin does not lend itself to removal merely by normal mechanical processing alone.
It is thus the object of the present invention to provide a method for an effective and relatively brief cleaning procedure for the cleaning of resin-treated handballs which have become dirty.
This object is achieved with a method whereby the cleaning takes place by the heating of the surface of the ball, in a cleaning area which consists of a dirtied part area of the ball, and herewith softening the sticky material adhering to the ball until it is almost fluid, and where in immediate association herewith there is carried out a removal of the dirtied sticky/adhering material by mechanical processing of the cleaning area on the surface of the ball, or of said relevant parts of the surface of the handball, and that a turning of the actual ball is carried out, after which the procedure is repeated until the whole surface of the ball has been cleaned.
There is hereby achieved the advantage that the dirtied resin on the surface of the ball is more easily cleaned off, inasmuch as the resin is softened by being heated, whereby this allows itself to be removed by a mechanical processing of the surface of the ball.
There are numerous possibilities in the manner in which operations could be carried out in the execution of the above-mentioned method, for instance in the ways in which the dirtied surface of the ball could be heated, and also in the implementation of the mechanical processing. Without renouncing other methods, it can be mentioned that the heating of the surface of the ball can with advantage be carried out with a flow of hot air, and that the mechanical processing can with advantage be carried out by means of elements standing out from rotating rollers. It can be mentioned that the relevant cleaning temperature can with advantage be lying within the interval of 30-1300C, typically within the interval 45-120°C and preferably 55-1100C.
For the execution of the method according to the invention, there is disclosed an apparatus which is characterised in that it comprises a partly open cabinet comprising at least one heating element and at least one blower aggregate associated herewith with an opening placed close to a partly open area in the enclosure, where there is at least one roller with protruding elements which can be ro- tated for mechanical processing of relevant parts of the surface of a ball, or what can be termed the cleaning area of a ball, which is pressed against the protruding elements on the rotationally-driven roller.
By placing the mouth of the blower aggregate in the vicinity of the rotation- ally-driven rollers with the protruding elements, it is achieved that the part area of a handball which has been coated with resin and has become dirty is processed mechanically by the protruding elements in the immediate vicinity of the place where the heating is carried out, which will result in a more effective removal of the layer of dirty resin on the ball. The embodiment disclosed is primarily envisaged as a more simple embodiment of the apparatus for the execution of the method according to the invention, where the user manually introduces the handball into the flow of heated air, whereby the layer of dirty resin is heated in a relevant part area (the cleaning area), which at the same time is processed/cleaned mechanically by means of the protruding elements on the rotating roller. In a special embodiment, the apparatus can be provided with a sensor whereby the apparatus is activated when a ball is introduced into the processing area.
In a preferred embodiment of the apparatus for the execution of the method, this can be arranged so that the cabinet further comprises at least two support rollers for the guiding and the pressing of the surface of a ball placed in the cabinet against the protruding elements on the at least two rotationally-driven rollers in the cabinet, where the mutual axle distance of said support rollers is adapted to the size of an actual ball, and where under the rotating rollers there is provided a detachable tray for the collection of dirt removed from the surface of the ball.
There is hereby achieved an automatic cleaning of dirtied resin from the ball, where the handball is simply placed in the cavity in the cabinet of the apparatus in contact respectively with the support rollers and the elements protruding from the two rotationally-driven rollers, after which the apparatus is started by activation of heating elements and the blower aggregate and the drive unit for the rollers, after which the surface of the ball is heated and processed mechanically by the elements protruding from the rotating rollers, whereby the dirty resin on the surface of the ball is cleaned off and collected in the collection tray. The person responsible for the maintenance of the balls can thus undertake other work while the ball is being cleaned. However, after a suitable cleaning time, this person will be required to remove the cleaned ball from the apparatus and, if necessary, place another dirty ball in the apparatus for cleaning. In a special embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention, this operation can however be rendered superfluous by providing the apparatus according to the invention with a feeding arrangement which has a supply of dirtied balls, a guiding arrangement which guides the cleaned balls out of the apparatus cabinet, and a sensor unit with an activation switch for the apparatus, and a control unit for controlling the supply of dirty balls to and the exit of cleaned balls from the apparatus. The cleaning of dirtied resin from handballs can hereby be carried out in a fully automatic manner and, except for the placing of dirtied handballs in the supply and the fetching of the cleaned balls, without any noteworthy manual labour.
Since there is a difference in the size of the handballs used by male players and female players, the apparatus can be arranged so that the distance between the axles of the support rollers and the rotationally-driven rollers with protruding elements is adjustable in accordance with the size of an actual ball
With the object of providing an apparatus with the flexibility necessary for being able to be used for the cleaning of handballs of different sizes, the apparatus according to the invention can with advantage be arranged so that the axle distance between the support rollers is adjustable, in that at least one of the axles of the support rollers is housed in the cabinet in a dispiaceable and lockable manner, and where at least one of the rotationally-driven rollers with protruding elements is housed in the cabinet in a dispiaceable manner, so that the distance between these and the support rollers, and the distance between the rotationally-driven rollers with protruding elements is adjustable.
The possibility is hereby achieved of being able to use the same apparatus for the cleaning of balls of both types. In a further embodiment of the invention, the apparatus can also be provided with a ball-size sensor coupled with actuators for adjustment of said axle distances, so that with the registration of a deviating ball type in the cabinet, the apparatus automatically adjusts the axle distance for an optimum cleaning of dirtied resin from the surface of the ball.
Without renouncing the rights to other embodiments, it can be mentioned that the protruding elements can with advantage consist of brushes and/or segments which stand out from the surfaces of the rollers in a mainly radial manner, the free ends of said brushes/segments together forming a concave section in the longitudinal direction of the rollers, which section corresponds substantially to the curva- ture on a handball.
There is hereby achieved a suitable though lenient processing of the surface of the ball at the same time that the dirtied resin allows itself to be removed, and with the concave extent of the brushes/segments it is achieved that a uniform processing of a larger area of the surface of the handball is carried out at one and the same time.
With the object of ensuring that the dirtied resin is cleaned from the whole of the surface of a ball placed in the cabinet, the apparatus can be arranged so that the direction of rotation of the rollers with protruding elements is oppositely- directed and with asynchronous peripheral speed.
It is hereby achieved that, during the processing of the ball by the elements protruding from the rotating rollers, the ball will fortuitously rotate, which will result in the whole surface of the ball being heated and processed mechanically by the protruding elements, and will hereby be cleaned of dirtied resin.
With the object of ensuring that a preferred working temperature is maintained in the cabinet, the apparatus according to the invention can be arranged so that the cabinet comprises an adjustable thermostat which is connected to the heating element for adjustment of the temperature of the air emitted from the blower aggregate.
The working temperature preferred for the removal of the dirtied resin on the surface of a relevant ball can thus be maintained, whereby the cleaning time becomes optimal, and working temperatures which are too high and can result in damage to the ball can hereby be avoided. In the following, the invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the drawing, where
Fig. 1 is a side-sectional view of a first embodiment of an apparatus for the cleaning of the surfaces of handballs according to the invention,
Fig. 2 is a sectional view of the apparatus shown in fig. 1 seen along the line A-A1
Fig. 3 is a side-sectional view of a second embodiment of an apparatus for the cleaning of the surfaces of handballs according to the invention, Fig. 4 is a plan view of the apparatus shown in fig, 3, and
Fig. 5 is an end view of the apparatus shown in fig.3.
In fig. 1 there is shown a first embodiment of an apparatus 2 for the cleaning of the surface 4 on a handball 6 which has been coated with dirty resin 8. The ap- paratus 2 comprises a cabinet 10 provided with a partial enclosure 12 in which a blower 14 and the heating elements 16 are placed. The blower 14 has an air intake from the surroundings via a grating 18 in the side of the cabinet 10, and the partial enclosure has a discharge opening 20 placed over a rotational ly-d riven roller 22 comprising protruding elements 24 in the form of brushes, the free ends 26 of which in combination form a concave section 28, cf. fig. 2, in the longitudinal direction of the roller 22, said concave section 28 correspondingly substantially to the curvature of the surface on a handball 6, whereby a more uniform processing of a greater part-area of a handball is achieved than if the free ends in combination had formed a rectilinear section in the longitudinal direction of the roller. The rotat- ing roller 22 in the embodiment shown is driven by an electric motor 30 via a belt 32. It shall be noted that the brushes 24 on the roller 22 are protruding through an opening 25 in the lower end of the cabinet 10.
With reference to fig. 1 , the apparatus 2 functions as follows: The apparatus is activated, i.e. the blower motor 14, the heating element 16 and the el-motor 30 which drives the roller 22 with the brushes 24 are activated. In a special embodiment of the apparatus (not shown), this can take place automatically via a movement sensor placed near the opening 25 and connected to a control unit (not shown). Hereafter, a handball 6 with a surface dirtied by resin 8 which is desired to be cleaned is placed in the apparatus with the brushes 24 on the rotating roller 22. At the same time, hot air which flows out through the opening 20 is blown onto that part of the ball's surface 4 which is processed by the brushes 24. The dirty resin 8 is hereby softened in the cleaning area 5, and hereafter the dirty resin 8 is able to be removed as particles 8' by the processing with the brushes 24, as is indicated in fig, 1. It will thus be necessary for the user of the apparatus to turn the handball 6 and bring new part areas of the ball's surface 4 with dirtied resin 8 against the brushes 24, until the surface 4 of the handball 6 has been satis- factorily cleaned.
In fig. 3, fig. 4 and fig. 5 there is shown a second embodiment of the apparatus 2 according to the invention. This similarly comprises a cabinet 10 having a partial enclosure 12 in which there is placed a blower 14 and a heating element 16. The blower 14 has an air intake from the surroundings via a grating 18 in the side of the cabinet 10, and the partial enclosure 12 has an outflow opening 20 placed over two rotationally-driven rollers 22 comprising outstanding elements 24 in the form of brushes, the free ends 26 of which in combination form a concave extent 8, cf. fig. 4, in the longitudinal direction of the rollers, which corresponds substantially to the curvature on the surface of a handball 6. The shown embodiment also comprises support rollers 38 which are housed on a cover 40 which is connected to the cabinet 10 by a hinge connection 42. The support rollers can be brought into contact with a handball 6 placed in the cabinet by a closing of the cover 40, whereby the support rollers 38 are brought into contact with the surface 4 of the handball 6, so that this is held in contact with the free ends 26, 26' of the brushes 24, 24' on the rollers 22, 22'. In this embodiment, the apparatus 2 also comprises a collection tray 44 for the collection of dirty resin removed by the cleaning of the surfaces of the handball, as shown in fig.1. The collection tray 44 can be removed in a known manner via an opening (not shown) in the cabinet 10.
In the shown embodiment, the rotating rollers 22, 22' are driven by an electric motor 30 via a belt 32 which, in the shown embodiment, extends via a reversing wheel 34 so that the rollers rotate in opposite directions, as indicated by the arrows B and C in fig. 3. It shall also be noted that the diameter of the drive wheel 36 on the roller 22' is smaller that the diameter on the drive wheel 36 on the roller 22, the result being that the speed of rotation of the rollers is asynchronous, which means that a handball 6 which is placed in the apparatus with the rotating brushes 24, 24' will be brought into rotation around itself, the result being that when a handball 6 with a surface 4 from which dirtied resin 8 shall be cleaned is placed in the apparatus, the whole of the surface 4 will be processed automatically.
The apparatus shown in fig. 3, fig. 4 and fig. 5 for the cleaning of a dirtied layer of resin 8 from the surface 4 of handballs 6 functions as follows: An actual handball 6 placed in the cabinet 10 as indicated in fig. 1 is brought into contact with the free ends of the brushes 24, 24' on the rollers 22, 22', after which the cover 40 is closed and the apparatus is activated, i.e. the blower motor 14, the heating element 16 and the el-motor 30 which drives the rollers 22, 22' with the brushes 24 are activated. The activation can possibly take place automatically by means of a not-shown switch which is activated when the cover 40 is in the closed position. The surface 4 of the ball is heated by the blowing-on of hot air from the heating element 16 in the proximity of the opening 20, whereby the dirtied restn 8 which has adhered to the surface 4 is softened to such an extent that it allows itself to be removed by processing with the brushes 24, 24' on the underlying rotating rollers 22, 22', as shown in fig.1 , where the dirtied resin 8' cleaned from the ball falls down under gravitation into the collection tray 44, which is emptied when and as required. With the asynchronous, oppositely-directed rotation of the rollers 22, 22', a handball 6 placed in the cabinet 10 will rotate around itself, whereby the dirtied resin will be removed from the whole of its surface in a relatively quick manner, without any assistance by a person being necessary for the manipulation of the ball. Trials have shown the cleaning of dirtied resin 8 from the surface of a handball will have a duration of approx. 1-3 minutes, which in comparison with methods which have hitherto been accessible is a particularly short cleaning time, and the balls will be able to be used a relatively short time after the treatment.
The heating of the dirtied resin takes place by the blowing-on of hot air, and in this connection the apparatus in a not-shown embodiment can be provided with a temperature sensor and a control unit for controlling the temperature of the hot air blown onto the surface 4 of the handball so that it lies within a preferred interval, within which the dirtied resin on a handball's surface allows itself to be removed in the best and the quickest manner.
In a further not-shown embodiment, the apparatus shown in fig. 3, 4 and 5 can be provided with a feeding arrangement for the supply of handballs with surfaces from which dirtied resin shall be removed, and a control arrangement for the leading of cleaned handballs out of the cabin, and a control unit for the coordination of the feeding and leading-out arrangements and for the apparatus.
With the invention, there is thus disclosed an arrangement which, with use in an active handball club, will enable significant savings to be made in the purchase of new handballs, for the reason that the lifetime for a handball from which dirtied resin is cleaned according to the method and an apparatus for the execution of said method will be able to be increased twofold, which will result in a reduction of up to 50% in the costs involved for a club in the purchase of new balls.

Claims

1. Method for the cleaning of the surfaces (4) of handballs (6) which have been treated with sticky/adhering material, chiefly resin, which with use of an actual handball (6) has become dirty, characterised in that in a cleaning area (5) which consists of a dirtied part-area of the handball's surface (4) there is carried out a heating of the surface (4) of the ball and herewith the dirtied sticky/adhering material (8) until this is softened or almost fluid, and where in im¬ mediate association herewith there is effected a removal of the dirtied sticky/adhering material (8,8') by mechanical processing of the cleaning area (5) on the surface (4) of the ball, or of said relevant parts of the handball's surface (4), and that a turning of the actual handball (6) is carried out, after which the process is repeated until the whole of the surface (4) has been cleaned.
2. Method according to claim ^characterised in that the heating of the surface (4) is effected by a flow of hot air, and that the mechanical processing takes place by protruding elements (24), preferably brushes protruding from rotating rollers (22).
3. Method according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that the relevant cleaning temperature lies within the interval 30-130°C, typically within the interval 45-1200C and preferably 55-1100C.
4. Apparatus (2) for the execution of the method according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that this comprises at least one blower aggregate (14) with an opening (20) placed near a partly open area in the enclosure, where there is at least one rotationally-driven roller (22) with protruding elements (24) for mechanical processing of the cleaning area (5) or relevant parts of the surface (4) of a ball (6) which is pressed against the protruding elements (24) on the rotationally- driven roller (22).
5. Apparatus (2) according to claim 4, characterised in that the cabinet (10) further comprises at least two support rollers (38) for controlling and the pressing of the surface (4) of a ball (6) placed in the cabinet (10) against the pro- truding elements (24,24') on at least two rotationally-driven rollers (22,22') in the cabinet (10), where the mutual axle distance of said support rollers conforms with the size of an actual ball (6), and where under the rotationally-driven rollers (22,22') there is a detachable collection tray (44) for the collection of dirt (8') cleaned from the surface (4) of the ball.
6. Apparatus (2) according to claim 5, characterised in that the distance between the axles of the support rollers and the rotationally-driven rollers (22, 22') with protruding elements (24, 24') conforms with the size of an actual ball (6).
7. Apparatus (2) according to claim 5 or 6, characterised in that the distance of the axles between the support rollers (38) is adjustable, with at least one of the axles of the support rollers being housed in the cabinet (10) in a manner in which it can be displaced and locked, and that at least one of the rollers (22, 22') with protruding elements (24, 24') is housed in the cabinet (10) in a manner in which it can be displaced, so that the distance between these and the support rollers (38) and the distance between the rotationally-driven rollers (22, 22') with pro- truding elements (24, 24') is adjustable.
8. Apparatus (2) according to any of the claims 4-7, characterised in that the protruding elements (24, 24') on the rollers (22, 22') consist of brushes and/or segments which extend from the surfaces of the rollers in a substantially radial manner, the free ends (26, 26') of said brushes/segments in combination forming a concave section which corresponds substantially to the curvature (4) of the surface of a handball (6).
9. Apparatus (2) according to any of the claims 5-8, characterised in that the direction of rotation of the rotationally-driven rollers (22, 22') with protruding eiements (24, 24') is in opposite directions, and with asynchronous peripheral speed.
10. Apparatus (2) according to any of the claims 5-9, characterised in that the cabinet (10) comprises an adjustable thermostat which is connected to the heating element for adjustment of the temperature of the air emitted from the blower aggregate.
PCT/DK2006/050033 2005-08-16 2006-08-14 Method for cleaning dirty surfaces on handballs, and an apparatus for the execution of the method WO2007019866A2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP06761878.5A EP1924332B1 (en) 2005-08-16 2006-08-14 Method for cleaning dirty surfaces on handballs, and an apparatus for the execution of the method

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DKPA200501151A DK177254B1 (en) 2005-08-16 2005-08-16 ball Cleaner
DKPA200501151 2005-08-16

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WO2007019866A2 true WO2007019866A2 (en) 2007-02-22
WO2007019866A3 WO2007019866A3 (en) 2007-05-24

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CN111228760B (en) * 2020-03-26 2021-03-16 景德镇学院 Tennis ball collection device for tennis training
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US3078591A (en) 1959-08-18 1963-02-26 Paul O Carpenter Football dryer
US5660751A (en) 1995-06-02 1997-08-26 O'rorke; Blondale Bowling ball rejuvenator
JP2002113211A (en) 2000-10-11 2002-04-16 Maruhon Ind Co Ltd Game ball cleaner and game machine containing the same
WO2002096526A1 (en) 2001-05-25 2002-12-05 Jamie Austin Tyner Portable ball cleaning device

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DE3049229A1 (en) * 1980-12-27 1982-07-29 Herbert 6800 Mannheim Hegel Washing machine for leather footballs - is fully automatic, and consists of housing with tub inside and lid covering top of housing

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3078591A (en) 1959-08-18 1963-02-26 Paul O Carpenter Football dryer
US5660751A (en) 1995-06-02 1997-08-26 O'rorke; Blondale Bowling ball rejuvenator
JP2002113211A (en) 2000-10-11 2002-04-16 Maruhon Ind Co Ltd Game ball cleaner and game machine containing the same
WO2002096526A1 (en) 2001-05-25 2002-12-05 Jamie Austin Tyner Portable ball cleaning device

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE102015107641A1 (en) 2015-05-15 2016-11-17 Alfred Kärcher Gmbh & Co. Kg Apparatus and method for cleaning a spherical article

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DK177254B1 (en) 2012-08-20
EP1924332A2 (en) 2008-05-28
EP1924332B1 (en) 2019-01-23
DK200501151A (en) 2007-02-17
WO2007019866A3 (en) 2007-05-24

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