Powered edge cleaning vacuum

An apparatus and method suitable to remove dirt and debris from the floor edge, where a wall meets the floor, with a power driven brush in conjunction with a vacuum unit.

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Description
REFERENCES CITED U.S. PATENTS DOCUMENTS

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OTHER BACKGROUND

There are many different types of vacuum units that successfully remove floor contaminates, such as dirt, hair, dust, etc., from open carpet areas. These units do not perform adequately in removing the floor contaminates from wall edges and next to obstacles such as furniture because the vacuums powered brushing mechanisms do not reach to the outside surface of the vacuum housing unit. There have been many attempts to incorporate edge agitation devises into vacuum cleaning units, however none of them aggressively clean to the edge of the vacuum head. Some existing edge cleaners are simple add-on fixed mount brushes that when the vacuum head moves across the floor, this edge cleaner scraps the top surface of the carpet in order to flick the debris into the air so that the air flow from the vacuum will draw the debris into the vacuum unit. There is another mechanically actuated brush technique whereby a brush is horizontally driven back and forth in the front to rear plane of the vacuum head to lift the dirt with multiple passes thereby flicking more of the dirt or dust into the air so that the air flow from the vacuum will draw the debris into the vacuum unit. One sweeping unit incorporates a horizontally rotating wheel to brush on top of the carpet surface so that the large particulate matter can be brushed into the path of the sweeping unit. In addition, there are a multitude of handheld attachments to vacuum units for edge cleaning which are functioned by the operator applying the required effort to manually remove dirt and debris. None of these instruments have solved the root cause of the problem in getting a mechanically operated device to aggressively clean edges. If left uncleaned, a darkened dirt laden strip will form at the floor edge next to the wall. This invention's powered brush provides the aggressive agitating action at the edge of the vacuum head to remove the contaminates from the edge formed by the wall and floor.

SUMMARY

The present invention has been made in view of the above-explained inadequacies of the known method of edge cleaning apparatus and methods and has the objective to provide a simple easy to use instrument. To achieve a rotary brushing action, bearings are utilized thus allowing the brushes to spin at a high rate of rotation in order to actively brush contaminates into the vacuum unit. Vacuum rotary brushes have bearings that are mounted on the extreme limits of the brush ends. The vacuum head has the other side of the bearing mounted near the inner wall of the head. The space occupied by the bearings, mountings, and pivot points leaves a gap at the outer edges of the vacuum unit. This creates a vacuumed but non-agitated zone between the end of the rotating brush and the outside surface of the housing. This space has become quite large on some units which only exasterbates the problem. This brush and housing assembly invention is different than conventional assemblies because the bearings are set at one side of the vacuum head to allow the power rotating brushes to extend to the outer surface of the vacuum head. The vacuum head sidewall at the rotating brush location can be an ultra thin piece of the housing, no housing at all, or it can be open except covered with a thin portion of the vacuum head bumper seal. The vacuum head is also adapted to receive the bearings and mounts for easy removal, brush replacement, or belt replacement.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is an illustration view of the instrument

FIG. 2 is a detail view of the instrument

DETAILED DESCRIPTION PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

The preferred embodiment is as per FIG. 1 in which piece number 1 is the vacuum head. Piece number 2 is the bearing that attaches to the rotary brush, piece number 3, on the inside bearing surface and the outer bearing surface attaches to the bearing mounting assembly piece number 4. The bearing mounting assembly, piece number 4, secures the brush and bearings to the vacuum head at bearing mounting assembly locations formed into the vacuum head, piece number 5. The wall of the vacuum head, is left open or covered by the vacuum head bumper guard, piece number 6, if so desired. Piece number 7 is the suctions device of the vacuum unit. FIG. 2 shows the drive belt, piece number 8, vacuum throat, piece number 9, and drive gear, piece number 10 which can be molded into the brush shaft. Piece number 12 is a power drive for agitation and piece number 12 is a vacuum unit with filter which can be housed in any number of fixture types.

Alternatives to this preferred embodiment also include:

A hand held unit for use as a stand alone unit with a similar bearing offset placement power rotating head that has a vacuum devise included.

There are many variations to the preferred embodiments described in this application that those skilled in the art will recognize. Although only a few variations are described in this invention, it is understood that the application of these variations or practices or any similar are contained in the spirit and scope of the following claims.

Claims

1. An apparatus for cleaning floor/wall edges comprising:

A means of cleaning to the edged of a vacuum head housing
A means of rotary brushing to the edge of a vacuum head housing
A means to increase agitation and maintain airflow at the outside edge of a vacuum housing

2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the bearings are inset from the outside edge of the rotary brush thus allowing full agitation at the extremity of the brush and vacuum head.

3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the vacuum head housing is adapted to receive the inset bearings to induce airflow and agitation at the outside edges of the head.

4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the instrument can be made as part a typical house sized vacuum units.

5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the instrument can be a stand-alone tool for power agitated hand cleaning.

6. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the insturment can be an additional tool for typical house sized vacuum units.

7. the apparatus of claim 1, wherein the drive belt can be positioned between the bearings, or to the outside of both bearings in a cantilevered fashion.

8. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the bearing assembly and mounting fixture is easily removable from the vacuum head.

9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the brushes and bearing assembly may be made with multiple brush pieces or injection molded as a single unit.

10. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the unit is fabricated of metals, plastic, or other and combinations of these or like items.

11. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the instrument can have brushes extend to the outer edge of the cylindrical brush.

12. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein a fine mist water spray attachment is added to dampen the top surface of the carpet to facilitate dust/dirt removal.

13. A method for cleaning floor/wall edges comprising the steps of

Operating a handheld unit with edge cleaning brushes
Operating a typical house cleaning vacuum with edge cleaning brushes
Operating unit adaptable to vacuum cleaners with edge cleaning powered brushes

14. A method of claim 13, wherein the brushes are an integral design of the typical house cleaning vacuum unit.

15. A method of claim 13, wherein a handheld stand alone unit is used to apply rotary brush power agitation to the edge of the handheld unit.

16. A method of claim 13, wherein the unit can be an add-on attachment to the vacuum unit where the air flow drives the powered brushes that extend to the edge of the housing unit.

17. A method of claim 13, wherein the brushes can be easily replace if worn to maximize edge agitation.

18. A method of claim 13, wherein a fine mist water spray attachment is added to dampen the top surface of the carpet to facilitate dust/dirt removal.

Patent History
Publication number: 20050091788
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 30, 2003
Publication Date: May 5, 2005
Inventors: Bruce Forsberg (Hazel Green, AL), Linda Forsberg (Hazel Green, AL)
Application Number: 10/696,606
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: 15/383.000; 15/377.000