Hand dryer
09743813 · 2017-08-29
Assignee
Inventors
- Stephen Benjamin Courtney (Malmesbury, GB)
- Peter David Gammack (Malmesbury, GB)
- Leigh Michael Ryan (Malmesbury, GB)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A wall-mountable hand dryer for drying one side of a user's hands at a time, the dryer having two nozzle sections—one for each hand—which nozzle sections are positioned towards the front of the dryer so that they are spaced away from the wall in use, the nozzle sections each extending to span the width of a user's open hand and being arranged for directing drying air down onto the front or back of said hand as it is inserted lengthwise underneath the nozzle sections from the front of the dryer, wherein the dryer comprises a downwardly pitched guide part positioned behind each nozzle section for guiding the pitch of the user's hands underneath the nozzle sections.
Claims
1. A wall-mountable hand dryer for drying one side of a user's hands at a time, the dryer having two nozzle sections—one for each hand—which nozzle sections are positioned towards the front of the dryer so that they are spaced away from the wall in use, the nozzle sections each extending to span the width of a user's open hand and being arranged for directing drying air down onto the front or back of said hand as it is inserted lengthwise underneath the nozzle sections from the front of the dryer, wherein the dryer comprises a downwardly pitched continuous straight ramp surface positioned entirely behind each nozzle section on an underside of the hand dryer for guiding the pitch of the user's hands underneath the nozzle sections, and wherein the start of the ramp surface is set back from the nozzle sections a distance in excess of 5 mm and a terminal end of the ramp surface abuts the wall in use.
2. The hand dryer of claim 1, wherein the pitch of the ramp surface is 45 degrees.
3. The hand dryer of claim 2, in which the nozzle sections each comprise an elongate slot or row of nozzles.
4. The hand dryer of claim 1, wherein the width of the ramp surface behind each nozzle section is such as to span the entire length of the nozzle section.
5. The hand dryer of claim 4, in which the nozzle sections each comprise an elongate slot or row of nozzles.
6. The hand dryer of claim 1, in which the nozzle sections each comprise an elongate slot or row of nozzles.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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(23) The hand dryer 1 comprises a main casing 3, which houses a ducted fan 5. A motor 7 is provided inside the main casing to drive the fan 5, which draws air through intakes 9 on either side of the main casing 3 and forces the air at high speed (>100 m/s) out through two nozzle sections: a left-hand nozzle section 11, on the left-hand side of the dryer 1, and a right-hand nozzle section 13 on the right-hand side of the dryer 1. These nozzle sections 11, 13 are positioned on an underside 15 of the dryer 1, and run along a front lower edge of the main casing 3 so that they are spaced from the wall 17 a distance x in use (
(24) The nozzle sections 11, 13 are each in the form of an elongate air slot—less than 1 mm in width—arranged so that they are generally parallel with the wall (the elongate air slot 13 is shown in
(25) Each air slot 11, 13 is 120 mm in length: intended so that the corresponding ‘air-sheets’ 11a, 13a each span the width of a user's open hand.
(26) In use, the hands are inserted lengthwise front-to-back underneath the nozzle sections 11, 13, and the high-speed air-sheets 11a, 13a are directed down onto the hands to ‘scrape’ water from the hands as they are subsequently withdrawn underneath the nozzle sections 11, 13.
(27) The hands are dried one side at a time: first, the user passes his (or her) hands forth and back underneath the nozzle sections with the palm facing up towards the nozzle sections (referred to below as the “standard pass”). This is illustrated in
(28) A conventional sensor arrangement (not shown) can be used to turn on the motor in response to the detection of a user's hands. The same sensor arrangement may be used subsequently to turn the motor off in response to a null detection, or else the motor may be operated on a timer. Use of a sensor arrangement is not essential: the dryer may alternatively be arranged for manual operation.
(29) The left-hand nozzle section 11 is banked to the right and the right-hand nozzle section 13 is banked to the left. This is best illustrated in
(30) In use, the user banks his hands accordingly during both the standard pass and the reverse pass. This is illustrated in
(31) It is preferable for the user to pitch his hands downwards in use, because this increases the effective depth of the dryer 1 on the wall, reducing the tendency for the user's fingertips to come into contact with the wall 17, underneath the dryer 1. This pitching action of the hands is illustrated in
(32) A downwardly-pitched guide part is provided behind each of the nozzle sections 11, 13 to help control the pitch angle, θ, of the hands in use. This guide part is in the form of a continuous ramp surface 19 with terminal end 34 which encourages the user to pitch his hands in order to avoid making contact with the ramp surface.
(33) The user will generally pitch his hands in sympathy with the ramp surface 19, and so as a general rule the pitch of the ramp surface 19 can be set to provide the desired effective depth y for a given depth x according to the equation:
y=x/cos σ,
where σ is the pitch angle of the ramp surface 19.
(34) For example, if the depth x is 200 mm, then the ramp surface 19 may be pitched at an angle of 45 degrees to provide an effective depth of approximately 280 mm.
(35) Again, because the nozzle sections 11, 13 are banked, the user is able comfortably to hold his hands palm upwards in close proximity to the air slots 11, 13, even when the hands are pitched downwards at an angle, which otherwise would be quite uncomfortable for the user if the user were required to hold his hands flat (roll angle=0°).
(36) The start 33 of the ramp surface 19 is set back from the air nozzles to help prevent the airflow laminating on the ramp surface which is undesirable for optimum performance (compare
(37) The precise direction of the drying airflow may vary, independently of the bank angle of the nozzle sections 11, 13. In the arrangement shown in
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(39) In general, the degree of blow-back and spray-back experienced by the user will depend both upon the angle of declination, β, and the angle of divergence, φ, of the first and second directions A, B. Relatively small angles of declination may be compensated for by relatively large angles of divergence and vice versa: if the air is directed straight down towards the floor, for example, the angle of divergence may be 0 degrees or close to 0 degrees (see hand dryer 1′ in
(40) Though not essential (see
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(42) In the arrangement shown in
(43) The guide part behind the nozzle sections need not be a continuous ramped surface.
(44) Banked nozzle sections are not essential, though they make the drying action more comfortable.