UNIVERSAL HANDHELD GRIP FOR CLEANING
20210196097 · 2021-07-01
Inventors
Cpc classification
B24D15/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A47L13/44
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A47L13/46
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A47L13/46
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A cleaning tool having a multi-functional lower surface for attaching a variety of cleaning fabrics and absorbent sheets, including fabric towels and paper towels. The cleaning device includes a connecting portion for engaging an elongate handle. The connecting portion is rotatable, such that cleaning device may rotate at a connection between the cleaning portion and the handle. The connecting portion rotates such that a gripping portion is capable of clasping the cleaning sheet for hands-free removal and disposal.
Claims
1. A system for cleaning, comprising: a cleaning tool having a hand grip; a lower portion affixed to the hand grip, wherein the lower portion is a flat surface; an adhesive portion affixed to the lower portion, whereby the adhesive portion forms a flat surface; wherein an adhesive is exposed on the adhesive portion; a rotatable forked connector attached to the hand grip; wherein the rotatable forked connector is attached to an elongate handle.
2. The system for cleaning of claim 1, wherein the elongate handle is attached to the rotatable forked connector by a male-female threaded adapter.
3. The system for cleaning of claim 1, wherein a connection between the hand grip and the rotatable forked connector is through a first male-female cleaning tool adapter and a second male-female cleaning tool adapter, wherein the first male-female cleaning tool adapter and the second male-female cleaning tool adapter are situated on opposite sides of the hand grip.
4. The system for cleaning of claim 1, wherein the rotatable forked connector includes an upper gripping surface situated below the handle and wherein the lower portion of the cleaning tool includes a lower gripping surface for grasping a cleaning sheet between the upper gripping surface and the lower gripping surface.
5. The system for cleaning of claim 4, wherein the rotatable forked connector is attached to an elastic band; wherein the rotatable forked connector includes elastic band grooves for securing the elastic band; wherein the elastic band is in contact with a rear portion of the hand grip when the hand grip is secured to the forked connector, such that a rotational force is applied to the hand grip by the elastic band when the handle is rotated forward with respect to the hand grip.
6. The system for cleaning of claim 1, wherein at least one spring is mounted between handle and the hand grip to provide a force to close the gap between an upper gripping surface and a lower gripping surface and thereby grip a cleaning sheet or cleaning element.
7. The system for cleaning of claim 1, further comprising a cleaning sheet removably bound to the adhesive portion.
8. A system for cleaning, comprising: a cleaning tool having a hand grip; a lower portion affixed to the hand grip, wherein the lower portion is a flat surface; an adhesive portion affixed to the lower portion, whereby the adhesive portion forms a flat surface; wherein an adhesive is exposed on the adhesive portion; a rotatable connector attached to the hand grip; wherein the rotatable connector is attached to an elongate handle.
9. The system for cleaning of claim 8, wherein the rotatable connector is a rotatable forked connector.
10. The system for cleaning of claim 9, wherein the elongate handle is attached to the rotatable forked connector by a male-female threaded adapter.
11. The system for cleaning of claim 10, wherein a connection between the hand grip and the rotatable forked connector is through a first male-female cleaning tool adapter and a second male-female cleaning tool adapter, wherein the first male-female cleaning tool adapter and the second male-female cleaning tool adapter are situated on opposite sides of the hand grip.
12. The system for cleaning of claim 11, wherein the rotatable forked connector includes an upper gripping surface situated below the handle and wherein a lower portion of the cleaning tool includes a lower gripping surface for grasping a cleaning sheet between the upper gripping surface and the lower gripping surface.
13. The system for cleaning of claim 12, wherein the rotatable forked connector is attached to an elastic band; wherein the rotatable forked connector includes elastic band grooves for securing the elastic band; wherein the elastic band is in contact with a rear portion of the hand grip when the hand grip is secured to the forked connector, such that a rotational force is applied to the hand grip by the elastic band when the handle is rotated forward with respect to the hand grip.
14. The system for cleaning of claim 8, wherein at least one spring is mounted between handle and the hand grip to provide force to close the gap between upper gripping portion contact edge and lower gripping portion contact edge and thereby grip a cleaning sheet or cleaning element.
15. The system for cleaning of claim 8, further comprising a cleaning sheet removably bound to the adhesive portion.
16. The system for cleaning of claim 8, wherein the adhesive portion is a reusable dry adhesive.
17. A system for cleaning, comprising: a cleaning tool having a hand grip; a lower portion affixed to the hand grip, wherein the lower portion is a flat surface; an adhesive portion affixed to the lower portion, whereby the adhesive portion forms a flat surface; wherein the adhesive portion is comprised of a reusable dry adhesive; a rotatable forked connector attached to the hand grip; wherein the rotatable connector is attached to an elongate handle; wherein the elongate handle is attached to the rotatable forked connector by a male-female threaded adapter; wherein a connection between the hand grip and the rotatable forked connector is through a first male-female cleaning tool adapter and a second male-female cleaning tool adapter, wherein the first male-female cleaning tool adapter and the second male-female cleaning tool adapter are situated on opposite sides of the hand grip; wherein the rotatable forked connector includes an upper gripping surface situated below the handle and wherein a lower portion of the cleaning tool includes a lower gripping surface for grasping a cleaning sheet between the upper gripping surface and the lower gripping surface.
18. The system for cleaning of claim 18, wherein the rotatable forked connector is attached to an elastic band; wherein the rotatable forked connector includes elastic band grooves for securing the elastic band; wherein the elastic band is in contact with a rear portion of the hand grip when the hand grip is secured to the forked connector, such that a rotational force is applied to the hand grip by the elastic band when the handle is rotated with respect to the hand grip.
19. The system for cleaning of claim 16, wherein at least one spring is mounted between handle and the hand grip to provide force to close the gap between an upper gripping portion contact edge and a lower gripping portion contact edge and thereby grasp a cleaning sheet or cleaning element.
20. The system for cleaning of claim 18, wherein a resilient material is situated between the handle and the hand grip, such that a forward rotational force applied to the handle is met with resistance by the resilient material to resist, but not stop, rotation of the handle with respect to the hand grip.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0034] Referring to
[0035] Embodiments of the present disclosure are directed toward providing a cleaning tool and a method of using the cleaning tool. Certain details are set forth below to provide a sufficient understanding of the disclosure. However, it will be clear to one skilled in the art that the disclosure may be practiced without these particular details.
[0036] Referring to
[0037] A hand grip 12 of the cleaning tool 10 is curved whereas a lower portion 16 is flat. The lower portion has a width in a direction perpendicular to the longitudinal direction that is greater than a width of the upper surface 16. The narrower width of the upper portion, or hand grip 12 corresponds to the narrowing necessary to cause the curved upper surface to have an arc length 24 about equal to the width of the lower surface. The radius of curvature of the curved hand grip 12 may vary with distance from the center of the cleaning tool 10. The radius of curvature preferably decreases with distance from the center. A front portion 18 of the hand grip 12 may be curved and extend to a point flush with the lower portion 16. Hand grip 12 may be extendable, through a telescopic rod, sliding bracket or other means as would be known to one of ordinary skill in the art, for overhead use and for lower cleanups such as liquid pet mess.
[0038] In other embodiments the hand grip 12 may be a handle or other device capable of being used to hold and object during cleaning, as would be known to one of ordinary skill in the art. The hand grip 12 of the cleaning tool 10 may be ergonomically designed to support the elbow and forearm while cleaning. This structure may not only reduce tension from the wrist, cervical vertebrae, shoulder and arm, but also effectively relieves pains from the arm, shoulder and neck muscles as well as localized pressure on the wrist. The cleaning tool 10 may be comprised of strong plastic, or memory foam.
[0039] Referring to
[0040] Adhesives according to the present disclosure may include dry adhesives and water-resistant, or washable, adhesives. A typical dry adhesive is reusable and releasable. A dry adhesive is intended to create a nondestructive temporary bond which may be undone and repeated many times without prohibitively degrading its adhesive performance between bond cycles. A dry adhesive must, according to the present disclosure, be capable of generating a bond to cleaning sheet 40 (as shown in
[0041] A typical size of a manufactured paper towel is a square 11 inches by 11 inches. Some paper towels have perforations to easily divide towels into 11-by-5.5-inch sections. Thus, the strength of the bond between the total surface area of the adhesive sheet 20 contacting cleaning sheet 40 must be of sufficient strength to support a wet paper towel of at least these sizes, as could be determined by one of ordinary skill in the art. The dimensions of the region adhesive sheet that contact cleaning sheet 40 may be adjusted to support a paper towel of a desired size. Cleaning sheet 40 sections may be linked through perforations and multiple sections may be removed at one time and folded prior to adhering to adhesive sheet 20. To support such use, bond area or the adhesive strength of the dry adhesive may be adjusted accordingly.
[0042] The strength of an adhesive bond is typically measured either in terms of its load bearing capacity at failure, or in terms of the energy dissipated during the separation of adhesive and adherent. This measured “maximum” adhesive strength of a dry adhesive bond will vary depending on many factors regarding both adhesive and adherend. Nonetheless, dry adhesives are capable of generating adequate strength for low and moderate load situations, as is the case for the present disclosure, particularly when bond area may be increased.
[0043] As illustrated in
[0044] Cleaning sheet 40 may be a conventional paper towel, as would be known to one of ordinary skill in the art. Paper towels may be packaged as a roll of perforated sheets or in stacks of pre-cut and pre-folded layers for use in paper-towel dispensers. Unlike cloth towels, paper towels are disposable and intended to be used only once. Paper towels soak up water because they are loosely woven which enables water to travel between the fibers. Paper towels have similar purposes to conventional towels, such as drying hands, wiping windows and other surfaces, dusting and cleaning up spills. Paper may be made from either virgin or recycled paper pulp which is extracted from wood or fiber crops. Paper towels are sometimes bleached during the production process to lighten the paper's coloration. Resin size may be used to improve the wet strength. Paper towels may be packed individually and sold as stacks, or are held on a continuous roll, and come in two distinct classes: domestic and institutional. Many companies produce paper towels, as would be known to one of ordinary skill in the art.
[0045] As shown in
[0046] Lower portion 16 may be an elongated piece of material such as plastic, metal or other material. Lower portion 16 may be a rectangular plate, block or sheet having four corners, such that the corners may be used to access hard to reach areas such as corners of windows or walls. Shapes other than rectangular are contemplated within the scope of the present disclosure. Lower portion 16 may be generally rectangular with a side-to-side width less than its front-to-back length. Adhesive sheet stack 22 and hook fastener portion 30 may be attached to lower portion 16 with an adhesive or other means of attachment, as would be known to one of ordinary skill in the art. Lower portion 16 may be attached to hand grip 12 with adhesives, screws, nails, pins, stakes, or other attachment means, which may be used to secure the lower portion 16 to hand grip 12.
[0047] The cleaning material according to the present disclosure may be of two types, where the first is a cleaning sheet capable of only binding to the adhesive, and the second being a cleaning material that will attach to a hook fastener portion 30 of a hook and loop fastener. In
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[0054] In some embodiments, cleaning sheet 40 or other cleaning material may stay attached to the bottom of cleaning tool 10 such that it is ready for use. Additionally, if the cleaning sheet 40 is used to clean spills the cleaning sheet 40 may dry out and may be reused with the grip in place.
[0055] The aperture 62 at the back of cleaning tool 10 may be used to hang cleaning tool 10 on a hook, although other methods of storage are contemplated within the present disclosure, including by attaching cleaning tool 10 to loop sections to form a conventional hook and loop fastener attachment. A wall mounted holster or a counter top receptacle may also be used. Each storage means would allow for air flow to enable the sticky surface to dry.
[0056] Force applied to the top of cleaning tool 10 flattens the hooks while pushing the adhesive sheet 20 down in order to contact cleaning sheet 40. Such force, in this case, does not dislodge adhesive sheet stack 22 from the stack recess 24 as a pressure fit from all sides holds the adhesive sheet stack 22 in place.
[0057] Cleaning tool 10 may be comprised of a foam material such that it may compress for lower shipping costs. Cleaning tool 10, in this embodiment, would decompress when opened by a user. A smaller version of cleaning tool 10 may be utilized for areas with limited space. Scaling would be accomplished as would be known to one of ordinary skill in the art. A metal version of cleaning tool 10 could be used to clean restaurant cooking grills.
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[0059] With regard to
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[0062] As shown in
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[0064] Alternative means for connecting handle 110 to hand grip 12 are contemplated within the scope of the present invention, including a spring-operated mechanism that may replace elastic band 146, wherein springs, or at least one spring, may be mounted between handle 110 and hand grip 12 to provide force to close the gap between upper gripping portion contact edge 122, wherein an edge may also be referred to as a surface, and lower gripping portion contact edge 124, wherein an edge may also be referred to as a surface, and thereby grip a cleaning sheet or cleaning element.
[0065] In view of the teaching presented herein, other modifications and variations of the present disclosures will be readily apparent to those of skill in the art. The foregoing drawings, discussion, and description are illustrated of some embodiments of the present invention, but are not meant to be limitations on the practice thereof. It is the following claims, including all equivalents, which define the scope of the invention.
[0066] The above description is presented to enable a person skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and is provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. Various modifications to the preferred embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Thus, this invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein.