Paint roller
10335825 ยท 2019-07-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
B05C17/0207
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T29/49817
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A paint roller sleeve assembly and a method for washing it for reuse. The sleeve assembly includes a core of a size to fit a conventional paint roller handle. The core is compressible by hand radially, to allow a tubular flexible outer cover including a backing layer and a layer of paint-carrying fiber pile to be removed for washing and thereafter be replaced on the core for reuse.
Claims
1. A paint roller sleeve assembly, comprising: (a) a hollow cylindrical core in the form of a resiliently compressible tube having a length and a cylindrical tube wall, the cylindrical tube wall defining a continuous slit extending longitudinally over all of said length, and the cylindrical core being free from structures extending inwardly from the wall; (b) a flexible tubular outer cover surrounding the cylindrical core and kept tight thereon by elastic expansive force exerted outwardly by the cylindrical core, the outer cover having a flexible paint-carrying pile layer and a flexible backing layer; (c) the thus assembled cylindrical core and flexible tubular outer cover defining an unobstructed cylindrical interior space and being configured so that the assembled cylindrical core and flexible tubular outer cover can be mounted on a conventional sleeve support portion of a conventional paint roller handle, in place of a conventional paint roller sleeve; and (d) wherein the cylindrical core is sufficiently elastic to be resiliently and temporarily reduced in diameter by a great enough distance to relax outward pressure of the cylindrical core against an interior of the flexible tubular outer cover and thus to enable the outer cover to be slid longitudinally along and removed from the cylindrical core and similarly to be replaced onto the cylindrical core without damage to the flexible tubular outer cover when the paint roller sleeve assembly is separate and apart from and not mounted on a sleeve support portion of a paint roller handle.
2. The sleeve assembly of claim 1 wherein the slit has a slit width that is great enough that the cylindrical core can be compressed radially far enough so that the outer cover can freely slide longitudinally along the cylindrical core during removal from or replacement onto the cylindrical core.
3. The roller sleeve assembly of claim 1 wherein the backing layer of the outer cover is of a porous, dimensionally stable textile fabric that is pervious to liquids.
4. The roller sleeve assembly of claim 1 wherein the outer cover includes an inner, secondary, backing, layer of a dimensionally stable sheet material.
5. The roller sleeve assembly of claim 4 wherein the inner backing layer is perforated.
6. The roller sleeve assembly of claim 4 wherein said inner backing layer is of a sheet material including an inner surface having a non-slip texture.
7. The roller sleeve assembly of claim 1 wherein said cylindrical core has a slip-resistant rough outer surface capable of engaging an inner surface of the outer cover, thereby preventing the outer cover from slipping relative to the cylindrical core except when the cylindrical core has been reduced in diameter.
8. The roller sleeve assembly of claim 7 wherein the cylindrical tube wall is perforated with a plurality of holes distributed over the cylindrical core and thereby providing a path to permit paint to be delivered to the outer cover from within the cylindrical core.
9. The roller sleeve assembly of claim 1 wherein said cylindrical core has a slip-resistant outer surface and includes a plurality of protrusions distributed about an outer surface of the cylindrical core.
10. The roller sleeve assembly of claim 1 wherein said cylindrical core has an exterior surface including a slip-resistant orange peel configuration capable of engaging an inner surface of the outer cover and thereby preventing the outer cover from slipping relative to the cylindrical core.
11. A method of washing a paint roller sleeve assembly, comprising: (a) providing: (i) a paint roller sleeve assembly including a hollow cylindrical core in the form of a resiliently compressible tube of an elastic material having a length and a cylindrical tube wall, the cylindrical tube wall defining a continuous slit extending longitudinally over all of said length, and the cylindrical core being free from structures extending inwardly from the tube wall; (ii) a flexible tubular outer cover surrounding the cylindrical core and kept tight thereon by elastic expansive force exerted outwardly by the cylindrical core, the outer cover having a flexible paint-carrying pile layer and a backing layer of flexible fabric; (iii) the thus assembled cylindrical core and flexible tubular out cover defining an unobstructed cylindrical interior space and being configured so that the assembled cylindrical core and flexible tubular outer cover can be mounted on a conventional sleeve support portion of a conventional paint roller handle, in place of a conventional paint roller sleeve; and (iv) wherein the hollow cylindrical core is sufficiently elastic to be resiliently and temporarily reduced in diameter by a great enough distance to relax outward pressure of the cylindrical core against an interior of the flexible tubular outer cover and thus to enable the outer cover to be slid longitudinally along and removed from the cylindrical core and similarly to be replaced onto the cylindrical core without damage to the flexible tubular outer cover; and (b) when the paint roller sleeve is separate and apart from and not mounted on a sleeve support portion of a paint roller handle, compressing the hollow cylindrical core within the surrounding tubular outer cover sufficiently to loosen the tubular outer cover; (c) sliding the flexible tubular outer cover along the length of the hollow cylindrical core and thereby removing the flexible tubular outer cover from the hollow cylindrical core; (d) washing the hollow cylindrical core and the flexible tubular outer cover separately; and (e) thereafter, compressing the hollow cylindrical core sufficiently to fit inside the flexible tubular outer cover and replacing the flexible tubular outer cover onto the hollow cylindrical core.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(8) Referring now to the drawings which form a part of the disclosure herein,
(9) As shown in
(10) It is critical, however, that the interior diameter 48 of the core 30 be chosen to fit the sleeve support 20 portion of the handle assembly 12 when the sleeve assembly 14 is assembled with an outer cover 32 on the core 30.
(11) As shown in
(12) The outer cover 32 has a nap or pile 56 of wool, polyester fibers, or other material commonly used for the pile of a conventional paint roller sleeve, and may be manufactured in any of several different pile depths, ranging, for example, from 5 millimeters through 30 millimeters in radial thickness, and can be manufactured with different densities or textures and trimmed to desired surface shapes as with conventional paint roller sleeves. The pile 56 may be manufactured of conventionally used materials including a primary backing fabric such as a conventional knitted backing material that may be treated with a stabilizing coating composition so that it is dimensionally stable, to retain its shape and size in use and when subjected to the elastic force of the core 32 attempting to resume its expanded, relaxed, size.
(13) Arranged within the primary backing layer 58 is an inner or secondary backing layer 60 of a strong, dimensionally stable fabric, also formed into a cylindrical configuration and bonded to the outer, primary backing layer 58, either by adhesives or by thermal bonding, depending upon the materials of the two backing layers 58 and 60. Both the primary backing layer 58 carrying the outer pile layer 56 and the inner, secondary backing material must be amply porous to permit passage of water or other paint solvents through the outer cover 32 from within the interior of the outer cover 32, so as to flush paint effectively from the fibers of the pile 56.
(14) It is also desirable that the material of the inner, secondary backing layer 60 have a rubber-like slip-resistant surface texture as the interior surface 62 of the outer cover 32. The secondary or inner backing layer 60 may be of a thin, strong rubber or synthetic rubber or silicone material or of a durable, pliable textile fabric treated with a rubber-like material to provide the desired texture for the interior surface 62. For a material which is not inherently porous a pattern of small holes may be provided in the inner backing material of the layer 60. Such holes may be of different sizes, for example .sup.th inch to inch in diameter as circular holes, and may be of various shapes, depending upon the material and its ability to withstand the stresses of washing the outer cover 32.
(15) As may be seen in
(16) As may be seen in
(17) It is known for paint rollers to be specially equipped to deliver a quantity of paint through the handle assembly 12 to the interior of a paint roller sleeve specially manufactured to include perforations in the cardboard or plastic core, to deliver paint from the interior of the special sleeve and thus obviate having to dip the roller periodically when painting. As shown in
(18) The outer cover 32 may be manufactured in at least two different manners. As discussed briefly above, a long strip of the inner, secondary backing material 60 can be wrapped into a tubular form on a suitable mandrel as a spiral, i.e., helical, wrap using known techniques for manufacture of conventional paint roller covers. The desired primary or outer backing layer 58 carrying the required pile layer 56 is then glued to the inner, secondary backing layer 60 in an offset location, similarly applying a long strip in a helical winding.
(19) Alternatively, the outer cover 32 may be manufactured from sheet goods, with the secondary backing layer 60 applied to the primary backing layer 58 carrying the pile, using a gluing station to apply an adhesive in conventional ways such as a glue wheel or a spray applicator. Thereafter the combined layers may be moved through a joining and cutting station to compress the two backing layers together and cut the materials to a length corresponding to the circumference of the outer cover 32, so that when it is assembled its interior diameter will be slightly smaller than the outer diameter of the core 30, as described above. Sheets of the inner, secondary backing layer 60 material and primary backing material 58 and the associated pile 56 are combined in an offset pattern to keep the seams of the two products separate from each other. The glued combined layers may be moved onto an assembly rod or mandrel by a series of wheels that form the material into the required tubular shape and adhere the seams, compressing them for a secure bond.
(20) Thereafter the assembly rod is rotated at a high rate to centrifugally fluff the fibers of the pile layer 56 while the pile is trimmed to the desired depth and the excess materials are removed to leave the outer cover 32 clean. Thereafter V notches are cut into the long tubes to establish the length of each separate outer cover 32 being manufactured, and finally the outer covers 32 are separated by cutting through the layers 58 and 60 of backing materials at the center of each V notch. The independent individual outer covers are then removed from the assembly rods and vacuumed clean for packaging.
(21) Each outer cover 32 can be mounted on an associated core 30 when it is squeezed by hand to the extent possible as limited by the slit width 44. Once the outer cover 32 is in place surrounding the core 30, with the ends of the core 30 aligned with the ends of the outer cover 32, the grip on the core 30 can be released, allowing the core 30 to expand within the confines of the outer cover 32. The elastic force of the core 30 attempting to expand the holds the cover 32 securely in place on its core 30 to complete the sleeve assembly 14.
(22) Placement of the sleeve assembly 14 onto the sleeve support 20 tends to expand the core 30 even more, as the rods 24 of a typical sleeve support 20 press outwardly against the interior of the core 30.
(23) After the paint roller 10 has been used, the sleeve assembly 14 can be slid off the sleeve support portion 20 of the handle assembly 12, and by then manually squeezing the sleeve assembly 14, the core 30 can be compressed to release the outer cover 32 so that it can be removed from the core 30. With the outer cover 32 removed, the core 30 can easily be washed clean, and the outer cover 32 can also be washed clean, by spraying water or other paint solvent from within the outer cover 32 to remove paint from the fabric of the inner backing layer 60 and outer backing layer 58, as well as from the pile 56. The entire outer cover 32 can be squeezed while it is being rinsed and can also be squeezed to remove water from it after it has been rinsed clean. The ability to move water through the backing layers 58 and 60 as well as the nap or pile 56 reduces the amount of water necessary to clean the roller properly, potentially saving millions of gallons of water. The ease of cleaning the components of the sleeve assembly 14 described above makes it practical and economical to use the same outer cover 32 many times, in contrast to throwing an entire conventional roller sleeve away after a single day's use.
(24) The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.