Handheld Rotary Wheel Cleaning Brush
A handheld rotary bristle brush head especially useful for cleaning the detail on vehicle wheels, as well as being useful for cleaning larger surfaces on the wheels and the vehicle. The brush head has a block with a generally dome-shaped main body of bristles, and a distinct forward cluster of bristles extending axially forward of the main body of bristles from a rounded end of the block in a flared cone. The forward bristle cluster has a smaller diameter than the main body of bristles, and can accordingly be applied to a surface or recess to be cleaned independently of the main body of bristles. The density and angle of the forward cluster gives a more thorough cleaning in tight, hard-to-reach spaces. The main body of bristles remains useful for cleaning larger surfaces.
The present invention is in the field of handheld rotating brushes used for cleaning vehicles, especially vehicle wheels.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION AND DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ARTMany vehicle owners clean their own vehicles. The racks of hardware and retail automotive supply stores are typically well-stocked with manual brushes, sprayers, squeegees, buckets, and cleaning agents specially designed for cleaning vehicles at home. Vehicle owners are often known for the great care they put into cleaning their vehicles, the more so if the vehicle is valuable or customized or a collector's item.
Soft rotary polishing balls driven by handheld motors such as cordless drills are commercially available. These are soft balls of compressible foam or foam strips, with a shank to fit a cordless chuck-type drill, used for buffing and polishing painted surfaces, wheels, fiberglass, metal, and other surfaces on automobiles and boats. These soft polishing balls are typically used with the addition of polishing compounds specially designed for the surface being polished or buffed. The softness or compressibility of the foam heads is advertised as allowing the heads to conform to irregular or hard-to-reach surfaces and spaces such as the detail on custom aluminum wheels.
It has also been known to rotate brush heads on the ends of cordless drills or dedicated handheld motors to clean both household items and vehicles. Cleaning brushes with dedicated handheld motor units and disc-, cylinder-, and dome-shaped brush heads are known for cleaning toilets, dishes, and other household items. In one product (the “Ultimate Scrubber”) with multiple interchangeable brush heads for household cleaning chores, a set of auto detailing “brushes” (actually disc-shaped sponge heads) is offered as an option.
Another prior art brush known to the inventor(s) is a dome-shaped bristle brush head adapted to fit a cordless drill, and particularly adapted to clean vehicle wheels with a central cluster of generally axial bristles at the tip of the “dome” defined by the main body of bristles. The bristles are mounted on a conical hub or block, and the tips of the bristles of the central cluster follow the contour of the main dome-shaped body.
None of the foregoing prior art devices is considered by the present inventors to be ideal for truly cleaning the details on vehicle wheels, such as lug nut pockets and the spaces between wire wheel spokes, and still remain useful for cleaning bigger, easier to reach surfaces.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is an improved bristle arrangement for a generally dome-shaped bristle head of a vehicle cleaning brush, particularly useful for cleaning vehicle wheels. “Dome-shaped” is used herein to mean the range of shapes in which the main body of bristles changes from a generally radial bristle orientation to a more forwardly-angled orientation from the motor-driven base toward the outer free end of the bristle head, such that the outer end of the bristle head can be applied generally axially against a surface to be cleaned; this would include spherical bristle heads since the forward or outer half of spherical bristle heads can be considered dome-shaped, and would be the primary cleaning portion of the brush head.
The cleaning head of the brush has a hub or “block” with a main body of standard bristles projecting radially from the block at an increasing forward angle as they approach a rounded outer end of the block, creating the dome shape. By “rounded” is meant a block with at least an outer free end that curves or reduces in diameter to a rounded tip; this would include bullet-shaped, hemispherical, and spherical blocks. However, the main body of bristles is interrupted below the rounded outer end or tip of the block, and a forward cluster of bristles extends from the outer end of the block in a flared cone at a forward angle greater than the angle of the nearest bristles of the main body. The bristle ends of the forward cluster extend beyond the main body of bristles, such that the forward cluster forms a distinct flared brush portion projecting axially beyond the main body of bristles and having a diameter smaller than the main body of bristles. The forward cluster can accordingly be placed in and around lug nuts and other hard to reach places to clean them, independently of the main body of bristles.
In a further form of the invention, the forward cluster of bristles has a greater bristle density than the main body of bristles.
In a further preferred form, outer bristles in the forward cluster are flared or set at an acute forward angle relative to the block axis, and inner bristles are aligned with the block axis for a more cylindrical configuration.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent upon further reading of the specification in light of the accompanying drawings.
Brush head 10 has a plastic block 16, in the form of a straight-walled or tapered cylinder with a rounded, substantially hemispherical end 16c. A main body of bristles 18 is attached to the main body of block 16 in known fashion, for example by staple-fitting tufts 18b of nylon bristle into blind bores or sockets 16b (
However, bristles 18 do not cover the entire block 16 in conventional fashion to create a uniform dome contour, but are replaced at the rounded outer end 16c of the block with a distinct forward cluster of bristles 20. Forward bristle cluster 20 has a flared cone shape extending farther from the block than the nearest (outer/forward-most) portion 18c of the main body of bristles 18, as best shown in
As best shown in
It will be understood that while the brush head 10 is especially designed for cleaning vehicle wheels, it may have utility for cleaning other parts of a vehicle (and even for cleaning objects other than vehicles) as well.
It will finally be understood that the disclosed embodiments are representative of presently preferred forms of the invention, but are intended to be illustrative rather than definitive of the invention. The scope of the invention is defined by the following claims. We accordingly claim:
Claims
1. In a rotary cleaning bristle brush head adapted to be driven by a handheld motor drive unit to clean a vehicle, the brush head having a block and a main body of bristles extending from the block in generally dome-shaped fashion, the improvement comprising:
- a forward bristle cluster extending from a rounded outer end of the block in a flared cone, the forward bristle cluster having a smaller diameter than a diameter of the main body of bristles and comprising bristle ends axially spaced forwardly and distinct from the main body of bristles on the block, such that the bristle ends of the forward bristle cluster can be applied to a surface or recess to be cleaned without placing the main body of bristles in contact with the surface.
2. The brush head of claim 1, wherein the forward bristle cluster has a bristle density greater than a bristle density of the main body of bristles.
3. The brush head of claim 1, wherein outer bristles in the forward bristle cluster are flared and inner bristles in the forward bristle cluster are axial.
4. The brush head of claim 1, wherein an outer angle of the forward bristle cluster is a forward angle closer to the block axis than the angle of the nearest portion of the main body of bristles.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 23, 2006
Publication Date: Feb 28, 2008
Inventors: John S. Kolarevic (Traverse City, MI), Michael D. Kolarevic (Traverse City, MI)
Application Number: 11/466,696
International Classification: A46B 7/10 (20060101);