FLOOR TREATMENT MACHINE
20210267427 · 2021-09-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
A47L11/4091
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to the field of floor treatment machines for scrubbing, polishing, sanding or burnishing floors, and in particular machines in which one or more driven rotatable work heads (such as scrubbing brushes) are provided for agitating the floor surface. In one aspect there is provided a walk-behind floor treatment machine comprising: a base portion provided with and supported by at least one rotatable work head for treating the floor, a handle portion for steering or guiding the machine along a working direction of travel and adapted to be pivotable with respect to the base portion, drive means for rotating the work head with respect to the base portion, floor-engaging wheel means for supporting the handle portion, the wheel means having a substantially transverse axis of rotation so as to permit travel in the working direction, the wheel means being coupled to the base portion by a linkage which permits vertical travel of the base portion and associated work head or heads with respect to the wheel means, but which provides transverse constraint to limit or prevent yawing of the base portion with respect to the wheel means, wherein a lower region of the handle portion is pivotably connected to the wheel means via an articulated joint, the arrangement being such that the handle portion may be manipulated to act on the wheel means so as to yaw steer the wheel means about a yaw axis defined by the floor-engaging contact of the wheel means, the yawing of the wheel means causing the base portion to yaw in response to yaw steering. The wheel means may comprise a wheel, roller or ball, preferably a single wheel, roller or ball, disposed at a lower region of the handle portion. The wheel means preferably has a fixed transverse axis of rotation.
Claims
1. A walk-behind floor treatment machine comprising: a base portion provided with and supported by at least one rotatable work head for treating the floor, a handle portion for steering or guiding the machine along a working direction of travel and adapted to be pivotable with respect to the base portion, drive means for rotating the work head with respect to the base portion, floor-engaging wheel means for supporting the handle portion, the wheel means having a substantially transverse axis of rotation so as to permit travel in the working direction, the wheel means being coupled to the base portion by a linkage which permits vertical travel of the base portion and associated work head or heads with respect to the wheel means, but which provides transverse constraint to limit or prevent yawing of the base portion with respect to the wheel means, wherein a lower region of the handle portion is pivotably connected to the wheel means via an articulated joint, the arrangement being such that the handle portion may be manipulated to act on the wheel means so as to yaw steer the wheel means about a yaw axis defined by the floor-engaging contact of the wheel means, the yawing of the wheel means causing the base portion to yaw in response to yaw steering.
2. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 1 wherein the wheel means comprises a wheel, roller or ball, preferably a single wheel, roller or ball, disposed at a lower region of the handle portion.
3. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein the wheel means has a fixed transverse axis of rotation.
4. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the linkage comprises a pitch pivotal connection to the wheel means, and preferably the connection is coaxial with the wheel means axis of rotation.
5. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any preceding claim wherein the linkage comprises a pitch pivotal connection to the base portion.
6. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 4 and claim 5 wherein said pitch pivotal connections permit the vertical travel of the base portion with respect to the wheel means.
7. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any of the preceding claims wherein said one or more rotatable work head supports the base portion on the floor surface with the linkage permitting floating vertical travel of the work heads with respect to the wheel means.
8. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any or the preceding claims wherein a lower region of the handle portion is attached to the wheel means via an articulated joint which permits up/down pivoting of the handle about the joint.
9. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 8 wherein the articulated joint permits side-to-side pivoting of the handle about the joint.
10. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 9 wherein the up/down pivot of the articulated joint is provided at a pivot co-axial with the wheel means axis of rotation.
11. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any of the preceding claims wherein the side-to-side pivot of the articulated joint is provided at a location vertically spaced apart from the up/down pivot.
12. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 11 wherein the articulated joint comprises a yoke which accommodates a wheel, roller or ball of the wheel means, which yoke pivots about the wheel rotation axis.
13. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 12 wherein the side-to-side pivot is disposed on an upper bridging portion of the yoke.
14. A floor treatment machine as claimed in in claim 13 wherein the side-to-side pivot comprises a U-section bracket rotated 90 degrees with respect to the yoke and which receives a lower end of the handle.
15. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any of the preceding claims wherein the base portion and associated work head or heads are provided at a front region of the machine, the wheel means is disposed aft of the work head or heads and base portion with the linkage there between, and preferably disposed generally centrally with respect to the work head or heads.
16. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any of the preceding claims wherein the machine is a wet scrubbing machine provided with a cleaning fluid reservoir and cleaning fluid delivery outlet.
17. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 16 wherein a trailing squeegee liquid collector is provided which is coupled to the machine by a trailing linkage which permits up/down pivoting of the squeegee collector with respect to the wheels means.
18. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 17 wherein two spaced apart, rear facing support wheels or rollers are provided projecting to the rear of the squeegee collector.
19. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 17 or 18 wherein the trailing linkage is pivotably coupled to the wheel means co-axially with the transverse axis of the wheel means.
20. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any of the preceding claims wherein forward propulsion of the machine is provided by work head rotation.
21. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any of the preceding machines wherein the drive means comprises one or more electric motors carried by the base portion and coupled to the work head or heads.
22. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 21 wherein there are two generally disc-shaped work heads disposed side-by-side and oriented to rotate about a respective vertical axis of rotation, with two electric motors, each disposed above its associated work head.
23. A floor treatment machine as claimed in claim 22 wherein the motors are configured and/or controlled to cause the work heads to counter rotate with respect to one another, thereby to provide a propulsive force.
24. A floor treatment machine as claimed in any of the preceding claims wherein a distal end of the handle portion is provided with a transversely oriented handle bar for the user to grip with a hand on each side of the bar.
Description
[0020] In the drawings:
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025] In
[0026] The bottom end region of the handle portion 12 is pivotally attached between upstanding ear portions of a U-section mounting bracket 14. The pivot is oriented fore-aft to enable side-to-side rotation of the handle portion relative to the bracket 14 about a pivot axis 15, as shown in the arrows A, A′ of
[0027] The bracket 14 has a lower region which is configured as a fork or yoke 17 formed by two spaced apart downwardly extending cheek plates. A guide wheel 18 is located between the cheek plates and mounted for rotation about an axle 19, as shown in
[0028] In the present embodiment the wheel 18 is arranged to enable rotation about a single axis and is otherwise fixed in position. However, in other embodiments, the wheel 18 may be configured to lean either left or right into a turn as a user manoeuvres the machine 18 around the floor surface. This can improve the handling of the machine 10. The same leaning could apply to other wheel means such as rollers or balls
[0029] A pair of elongate, forwardly extending, spaced apart mounting struts 21 are pivotally attached at rear end regions thereof to opposite respective sides the wheel axle 19 projecting from either side of the wheel 18. Front end regions of each strut are attached to a pair of upstanding, spaced apart generally triangular brackets 22 formed on a rectangular work base plate 23. The attachment is made via a pivot connection 24 having a transverse axis of rotation.
[0030] The base portion supports thereon two electric motors side by side which are a left scrubber electric motor 25 and a right scrubber electric motor 26. A left scrubber brush 27 and a right scrubber brush 28 are attached under the base portion 23 to depending respective rotors (not shown) of the electric motors. The left scrubber and right scrubber are mounted to the rotors using conventional means such as a hub or chuck (not shown).
[0031] Each scrubber brush 27, 28 comprises a disc shaped base portion 29, and an annular array of fibre brushes 30, fixed an underside of the base portion. The scrubber brushes are arranged to enable rotation in opposite directions and about parallel vertical axes as shown in
[0032] Pivotally mounted to the rear of the wheel 18 is a squeegee collector 30, best seen in
[0033] A left rear wheel assembly 35 and a right rear wheel assembly 36 are both mounted to the collector arm 31 and projecting rearwardly and co-terminously. Each rear wheel assembly comprises a rear castor wheel. The squeegee collector is attached to the wheel axis 19 by a pair of transversely spaced apart rearwardly extending struts 38, so that the collector can pivot up/down around the wheels axis. The squeegee collector can thus be folded up or down for storage. Furthermore the collector can, when in use, follow floor undulations without losing suction as the machine move forwards.
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038] In the foregoing description and the associated drawings we have not shown features which will typically be present but which are not essential to the core aspects of the invention. These include a cleaning liquid reservoir and dispenser, a suction drive for the squeegee collector, or a dirty water reservoir fed by the squeegee collector. These are well known to the person skilled in the art so are not described in detail herein. For polishing machines or burnishing machines and the like no such ancillary features may be necessary.
[0039] In use the machine of the present invention has several unique features and benefits. There is now a further contact point arranged between the scrubber base portion and the floor so the base portion remains stably horizontal to the floor supported by this contact point and the rotating brushes. In this arrangement the wheel 18 rotates as the machine moves forwards but provides a fixed, set distance from the floor to the base portion. This arrangement gives better handling than prior art machines without the guide wheel because the guide wheel acts to prevent yawing of the whole machine base, giving a more positive stable control. It gives longitudinal stability by virtue of its fixed transverse rotational axis, and helps to prevent skidding or slipping of the machine base over the surface of the floor.
[0040] Another advantage of the guide wheel is the ability for weight to be carried by the handle over the guide wheel without this weight directly acting on the scrubber brushes to cause the brush filaments to bend excessively or interfere with smooth rotation and scrubbing. Thus heavy machine elements such as clean water or dirty water collection reservoirs can be carried attached to the handle. Similarly suction drive motors or batteries could be carried by, or attached to the handle (preferably in the lower region so as to ensure that weight is transferred to the wheel rather than shared excessively with handle held by the user-operator). In this arrangement the machine provides a stable scrubbing deck which has a performance unaffected by weight changes due to cleaning liquid use or collection.