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US2984094A - Washing machine - Google Patents

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US2984094A
US2984094A US770055A US77005558A US2984094A US 2984094 A US2984094 A US 2984094A US 770055 A US770055 A US 770055A US 77005558 A US77005558 A US 77005558A US 2984094 A US2984094 A US 2984094A
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Prior art keywords
drum
washing
inertia
annular
chamber
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US770055A
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Belaieff James Frank
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Frame SA
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Frame SA
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06FLAUNDERING, DRYING, IRONING, PRESSING OR FOLDING TEXTILE ARTICLES
    • D06F37/00Details specific to washing machines covered by groups D06F21/00 - D06F25/00
    • D06F37/20Mountings, e.g. resilient mountings, for the rotary receptacle, motor, tub or casing; Preventing or damping vibrations
    • D06F37/22Mountings, e.g. resilient mountings, for the rotary receptacle, motor, tub or casing; Preventing or damping vibrations in machines with a receptacle rotating or oscillating about a horizontal axis
    • D06F37/225Damping vibrations by displacing, supplying or ejecting a material, e.g. liquid, into or from counterbalancing pockets

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  • the present invention has for object a washing machine of the type comprising a rotary drum permitting of washing and wringing, secured to a nonvertical drivmg shaft rotating in at least one bearing provided in one of the end walls of a tank suspended elastically inside a frame.
  • Washing machines of this kind do not permit eflicient wringing of the linen after washing, because the irregular distribution of the linen, loaded with water, along the inner wall of the drum, does not permit of driving said drum at a sulficient rotary speed to obtain a sufiicient expulsion of water from the linen, under the action of centrifugal force.
  • the said drum is provided with a balancing device formed by inertia bodies immersed in a liquid and rolling freely inside at least one annular shaped chamber, hermetically sealed and fixed to the drum, transfer passages being provided between the saidinertia bodies and the walls of the chamber and by the fact that the free section of the said transfer passages, the density of the inertia bodies and the viscosity of the liquid filling the chamber, have values such that for the speed of rotation of the drum corresponding to the washing, the inertia bodies are inactive and, under the elfect of gravity, roll in the lower region of thechamber, whereas, for a speed of rotation exceeding that for the washing, but lower than that necessary for wringing, the said inertia bodies are driven in the movement of the drum and are distributed automatically along the annular cham-v ber, so as to balance the bundles of linen irregularly distributed inside the drum.
  • Fig. 1 is an outer perspective view of the first embodiment. 7
  • Fig. 2 is a view in axial section of the machine shown in Fig. 1 and equipped with inertia bodies according to a first variant.
  • Fig. 3 is a sectional view along line III-III of Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 4 is a perspective view and on a larger scale of aninertia bodv.,-
  • Fig. 5 is a view on a very large scale of a detail.
  • Figs. 6 to 9 are diagrams showing the operation of a first variant of the balancing device.
  • Fig. 10 shows the operation of a second variant of the balancing device.
  • Fig. 11 is a view of a variant of an inertia body, certain parts being shown in section.
  • Fig. 12 is a view in profile and on a large scale of an inertia body according to another variant. 7
  • Fig. 13 is a view in axial section of the second embodiment of the washing machine.
  • the washing machine comprises a frame formed by a chassis 1, fixed to a base 2 and the front wall of which is provided with a door 3 giving access to the inside of a rotary drum 4 (Fig. 2) secured to the end of a driving shaft 5.
  • the said shaft rotates freely in a bearing 6, provided in the end wall 7 of a tank 8 surrounding the rotary drum 4 the peripheral wall of which has a large number of perforations 9.
  • An electric motor M secured to the lower part of the tank 8 drives, on the one hand, a pump 11 and, on the other hand, the shaft 5 through the agency of a change speed V and a trapezoidal belt transmission 12.
  • the tank 8 is suspended inside the frame through the agency of suspension devices comprising, on the one hand, springs 14 secured to the frame and connected to the tank 8 by cables 15 passing over pulleys 16 and, on the other hand, shock absorbers 17 fixed to the tank 8 and to the frame.-
  • the said tank 8 is thus able to move inside the frame.
  • the rear end wall 18 of the drum is rigidly secured to the end of the driving shaft 5, and its front wall 19 is provided with a central orifice 20 and an approach passage 21.
  • the said rotary drum is further provided with a balancing device comprising two annular chambers 22 hermetically sealed and the outer diameter of which corresponds approximately to the diameter of the drum 4.
  • Each chamber 22 is completely filled with a liquid
  • At least two inertia bodies formed by rollers 26 (Figs. 4 and 5), rotate freely inside each annular chamber 22.
  • Each roller 26 is of general cylindrical shape and is provided, on the one hand, with two circular roller-tracks 27 and, on the other hand, with balls 28 partly engaged in housings 29 made in each of its end faces 30 and regularly distributed along a circle concentric with the axis of rotation of the roller.
  • the said roller-tracks and the said balls provide between the walls.
  • each chamber 22 and each roller 26 transfer passages 31 which convey to the rollers a certain liberty of movement inside their annular chamber, by permitting the liquid to flow on either side of each roller.
  • the surface of the balls 28, are polished and have a hardness at least equal to that of hardened steel and a very small friction coefficient, for example, at the most equal, to that of hardened steel.
  • the contact surface be tween the rollers and the walls of the chamber 22 are reduced as much as possible, and friction is reduced to a sufliciently low degree to permit as described hereafter a movement of the rollers during the wringing in order to restore the balance of the drum 4 as the water is extracted.
  • the user After having introduced the linen by the door 3 into the drum 4 and having introduced in the tank 8 the necessary quantity of water, the user actuates a control member 32 from the position of rest O'to the position L, so as to start up the electric motor M and drive the drum 4 at a speed of about 60 revolutions per minute necessary for washing the linen. At this speed of rotation, the rollers 26 are inoperative and roll in the lower part (Fig. 6) of each annular chamber 22.
  • the friction of the rollers along the walls of the annular chambers is negligible and the said rollers cannot therefore be driven along with the drum and, moreover, the section of the transfer passages 31 is of sufficient size, relative to the viscosity of the liquid filling the chambers 22, for the resistance offered, by the said passages to the flow of liquid therethrough, to be insufiicient to overcome the action of the weight of the rollers and drive them in the movement of rotation of the drum.
  • the user empties the tank 8 by operating a control member 33 which puts into operation the pump 11. Once the emptying is finished, the user operates the control member 32 to the position E, in order to bring about, through the agency of the change speed V, a progressive increase in the speed of the drum 4 to a speed of 600, 700 or even. 1000 revolutions per minute in order to effect the wringing of the linen.
  • the motor generally rotates at a speed much lower than its working speed, so that in order to overcome the braking torque created by the sudden acceleration of the inertia bodies when the balancing device is operated, it would be necessary to over dimension the driving motor to an exaggerated degree, that is to say, to equip the machine with a motor of a power equal to a multiple of the power of motors which normally equip machines of this kind.
  • the rollers 26 have reached the speed of the drum, the inertia bodies and the drum together are progressively accelerated to the wringing speed.
  • the rollers 26 distribute themselves regularly (Fig. 7) about the axis of rotation of the drum, whereas if the bundles of linen 34 are distributed irregularly, the rollers 26 place themselves automatically opposite the said bundles of linen (Figs. 8 and 9) and so as to balance said bundles.
  • the drum is provided with two annular chambers provided with rollers forming inertia bodies and which are situated at the two ends of the drum, a practically perfect balance is obtained, so that it is possible to drive the said drum without risk of damaging the hearings or of dangerous action on the frame, at speeds quite sufficiently high to obtain an efiicient wringing of the linen, so that after a short period, the user may stop the motor M, open the door 3 and withdraw his linen sufiiciently wrung for it to be ironed without previous drying.
  • the rollers 26 be not only dynamically balanced in relation to their axis of rotation, but also that in each elementary ring concentric to the axis of the roller, the elementary masses be distributed in a homogeneous manner. Indeed, if this condition is not fulfilled, the centrifugal force acting on the elementary sector of an elementary ring comprising a larger number of elementary masses and which is furthest from the axis of rotation of the drum 4, brings about a movement of the said roller along the wall 41, until the said elementary sector which comprises a larger number of elementary masses be situated in a radial plane of the drum. Consequently, the said centrifugal force generally tends to maintain the roller out of its exact balancing position.
  • the housings 29-, provided for the balls 28, have a larger volume than that of the part of the ball housed inside the said housing.
  • the volume of the space 35 (Fig. 5) is such that the weight of a corresponding volume of the material of said roller 26'is equal to the weight of the part of the ball 28 projecting from the endwall 30 of the roller 26.
  • the elementary masses of the elementary ring containing the balls being distributed in a homonogeneous manner throughout the volume of the said elementary ring, the centrifugal force, acting on eachelementary sector of the said elementary ring, is of the same amount and therefore has no further influence on the position of the roller, so that the latter places itself automatically in its exact balancing position.
  • the number of inertia bodies rolling in each chamber 22 is at least equal to two. However, the smaller the number of the inertia bodies is, the greater is the volume of each inertia body. For this reason, it is often advantageous to provide for a large number of inertia bodies 26a, as shown in Fig. 10, which permits of producing a balancing device in which the annular chambers 22 are of less volume. In order to avoid an untimely driving of the inertia bodies during the period of washing, the number of the said inertia bodies is at the most equal to that filling half the length of the chamber 22 (Fig. 10).
  • each inertia body is formed by a roller 26b the front faces 30b of which comprises a bearing surface 36 concentric to the axis of rotation of the roller.
  • a ring of balls 37,.fixed on each bearing surface 36, permitsof reducing, to a large extent, the friction be tween the roller and the walls 24 of the chamber 22;
  • the roller tracks 27b may bed one piece with the body of the roller or may be formed by hardened steel circles hooped on the body of the roller.”
  • Fig. 11 shows a variant of an inertia body formed by a' hollow cylinder 23 closed at its two ends and filled with a liquid of high density such as mercury or with pieces of a material having a density at least equal to that of steel. Satisfactory results have been obtained with iron or lead shot.
  • the end walls 25 of the cylinder are provided with balls 28c placed in the housings 38 in the shape of a portion of a sphere.
  • the cylinder 23 is provided with two ball bearings 39 the inner ring of which is integral with the said cylinder, while the outer ring rolls along the wall 41 of the chamber 22.
  • the distribution of the elementary masses in the cylinder 23 may be of any kind, homogeneous or not, because the centrifugal force, acting on an elementary sector which comprises a larger number of elementary masses, merely produces a rotation of the cylinder inside the outer ring of the ball bearings, but no movement of the inertia body out of its exact balancing position.
  • the hollow cylinder 23 may be replaced by a length of a metal bar having a high density, such as lead for example.
  • the said cylinder may then be provided with a single roller bearing 39.
  • Fig. 13 shows a washing machine of the type comprising a drum 4a supported at its two ends.
  • the motor M drives the drum 4a through the agency of the change speed V and trapezoidal belts.
  • This change speed is of known type comprising two grooved pulleys 42 connected by a trapezoidal belt 43 and each formed of two cheeks movable one with respect to the other.
  • the relative position of the cheeks of one of the pul- Ieys is controlled by a control device comprising an operating member secured to the end of a rod t which carries one of the checks of the pulley 42.
  • the tank 8 connected to the frame 1, 2 by elastic devices and shock absorbers (not shown), comprises an opening 44 corresponding to a loading opening 45 made in the upper wall 46 of the frame and closed by a cover 47.
  • the drum 4a carried at each end by a spindle rotating freely in a bearing 6a, also comprises an opening 48, closed by a small door 49.
  • This drum is provided with a balancing device similar to the one described above and which comprises two annular chambers 22 in which roll inertia bodies such as spheres 50, preferably of hardened steel.
  • Each annular chamber is formed by a dished base 51 to which is electrically soldered a dished cheek 52.
  • An annular joint 53 ensures imperviousness and a steel band 54 applied elastically against the inner wall 55 of greater diameter of the chamber 22 ensures a practically everlasting runway.
  • the section of the transfer passages 31 is adapted to the density of the inertia bodies and to the viscosity of the liquid filling the chamber 22 through modification of the shape of the parts 56 and 57 of the base and the check which form Walls cutting two opposite angles of the'chamber 22, so that the cross section of the said chamber has the general shape of a square of which two opposite angles are taken oif.
  • this second embodiment of the washing machine is similar to that of the washing machine described with reference to Figs. 1 to 3, but oifers from the constructional point of view certain advantages, particularly as regards the realization of the annular chambers and the inertia bodies.
  • the drum a general shape of a double cone, so that the bundles of linen distribute themselves in a nearly equal manner on either side of a diametral plane passing through the annular chamber of the balancing device.
  • the annular chambers could be disposed either inside the drum, or on its circumference. However, it is advantageous to provide annular chambers '22 having a mean diameter as large as possible, so as to obtain, by means of inertia bodies of a given weight, a balancing eifect as great as possible.
  • the annular chamber fixed to the front wall of the drum must necessarily, in the case of a machine provided with a side door 3, have an inner diameter at least equal to that of the channel 21 giving access to the inside of the drum 4. It is advantageous to dispose the annular chambers of the balancing de-.
  • the rollers 26 may have the general shape of barrels of double cones or any other shape whereby they may roll along the outer wall of the annular chamber with a minimum of friction between them and the side walls, so that they may adopt freely, and at any moment, their exact balancing position.
  • the annular chambers being subjected to relatively wide ranges of temperature, it is advantageous to fill the annular chambers of the balancing device with a liquid whose variation in viscosity in function of the temperature is relatively small. Indeed, during washing, the hot water at a temperature of about 70 to C. (i.e. 158 to F.) maintains inside the tank and the annular chambers a temperature about the same amount, whereas, during the periods of rinsing the cold water used lowers the temperature inside the drum and in the annular chambers to a temperature of about 15 to 25 C. (i.e. 59 to 77 F).
  • the washing machine comprises a drum 4, 4a rotating on a horizontal axis, but it is obvious that in a modified embodiment the said axis could be slanting.
  • the drum could be provided pri'sifig' a' frame; a tank having and walls elastically suspended inside said frame, a nonvertical driving shaft, a bearing provided in at least one of the ends walls of said tank, said driving shaft rotating in said bearing and a perforated-rotary drum fastened to said driving shaft and intended to' receive linen to be washed and enabling the wringing of said Washed linen, and in which said drum is provided with a balancing device comprising two herrnetically closed chambers of annular shape each secured c'oaxially with said drum at one end thereof, a liquid filling completely each of said annular chambers, and inertia bodies of higher specific weight than said liquid immersed in said liquid and rolling freely inside said annular chambers, transfer passages provided between said inertia bodies and the walls of said annular chambers whereby the free section of said transfer passages, the density of said inertia bodies and the viscosity of said liquid
  • each of said inertia bodies is of a cross sectional shape differing from that of the walls of said annular chambers to thereby provide between each inertia body and the walls of said annular chambers passages enabling said liquid to circulate.
  • each inertia body comprises at least a roller bearing the inner ring of which is integral with the said cylindrical body, whereas the outer ring of said bearing'rolls along the wall of greater diameter of said annular chamber, the cylindrical body turning inside said outer ring.
  • each of said inertia bodies is formed of steel spheres, a hardened steel band lining the wall of greater diamete'r'of the'chambers, said inertia bodies rolling along said hardened steel band.
  • a washing and wringing machine in which each of said inertia bodies is a sphere.
  • annular chambers are each formed by a generally'transverse wall of said drum, said transverse wall having anintegral peripheral flange and a cheek secured to said drum transverse wall, said cheek having a part generally parallel to and inwardly spaced from said flange and another part generally parallel to a'ndspaced from said drum transverse wall, said cheek and drum'forming an annular passage of generally rectilinear cross section.
  • a washing and wringing machine in which the transverse and peripheral parts of at least one of said drum and cheekare connected by'an inclined portion.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Main Body Construction Of Washing Machines And Laundry Dryers (AREA)

Description

May 16, 1961 J. F. BELAIEFF WASHING MACHINE 5 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed Oct. 28, 1958 y 1961 J. F. BELAIEVFF 2,984,094
WASHING MACHINE Filed Oct. 28, 1958 3 Sheets-Sheet 2 179.12 r? O 1? M 11 B an; ,4 WM
May 16, 1961 J. F. BELAIEFF 2,984,094
WASHING MACHINE Filed Oct. 28, 1958 3 Sheets-Sheet. 3
United" States Patent O WASHING MACHINE James Frank Belaieif, Collonge-Bellerive, Switzerland,
assignor to Frame S.A., Fribourg, Switzerland, a Swiss company 'The present invention has for object a washing machine of the type comprising a rotary drum permitting of washing and wringing, secured to a nonvertical drivmg shaft rotating in at least one bearing provided in one of the end walls of a tank suspended elastically inside a frame. Washing machines of this kind, at present known, do not permit eflicient wringing of the linen after washing, because the irregular distribution of the linen, loaded with water, along the inner wall of the drum, does not permit of driving said drum at a sulficient rotary speed to obtain a sufiicient expulsion of water from the linen, under the action of centrifugal force. Indeed, the irregular and unbalanced distribution of the bundles of linen soaked in water, creates forces which have a destructive action on the frame of the machine and on the bearings of the shaft carrying the drum, the values of which are a function of the speed of rotation and of the diameter of the drum. Now, experience has shown in actual fact that in a washing machine of normal or standard dimensions, comprising, for example, a horizontal drum of a diameter of 40 to 60 cm. (i.e. about 15 to 23 inches), it is practically impossible to drive the said drum at a speed exceeding 400 or 500 revolutions per minute, while, in
order to obtain a wringing of the linen which may be considered as suflicient, a speed of rotation of at least 600 to 700 revolutions per minute would be necessary. The washing machine, object of the present invention,
tends to overcome this disadvantage by the fact thatthe said drum is provided with a balancing device formed by inertia bodies immersed in a liquid and rolling freely inside at least one annular shaped chamber, hermetically sealed and fixed to the drum, transfer passages being provided between the saidinertia bodies and the walls of the chamber and by the fact that the free section of the said transfer passages, the density of the inertia bodies and the viscosity of the liquid filling the chamber, have values such that for the speed of rotation of the drum corresponding to the washing, the inertia bodies are inactive and, under the elfect of gravity, roll in the lower region of thechamber, whereas, for a speed of rotation exceeding that for the washing, but lower than that necessary for wringing, the said inertia bodies are driven in the movement of the drum and are distributed automatically along the annular cham-v ber, so as to balance the bundles of linen irregularly distributed inside the drum.
The accompanying drawing shows diagrammatically andby way of example two embodiments of a washing machine according to the invention.
Fig. 1 is an outer perspective view of the first embodiment. 7
Fig. 2 isa view in axial section of the machine shown in Fig. 1 and equipped with inertia bodies according to a first variant. Fig. 3 is a sectional view along line III-III of Fig. 2.
Fig. 4 is a perspective view and on a larger scale of aninertia bodv.,-
Fig. 5 is a view on a very large scale of a detail.
' Figs. 6 to 9 are diagrams showing the operation of a first variant of the balancing device.
Fig. 10 shows the operation of a second variant of the balancing device.
Fig. 11 is a view of a variant of an inertia body, certain parts being shown in section.
Fig. 12 is a view in profile and on a large scale of an inertia body according to another variant. 7
Fig. 13 is a view in axial section of the second embodiment of the washing machine.
According to Figs. 1 to 3 of the accompanying drawing, the washing machine comprises a frame formed by a chassis 1, fixed to a base 2 and the front wall of which is provided with a door 3 giving access to the inside of a rotary drum 4 (Fig. 2) secured to the end of a driving shaft 5. The said shaft rotates freely in a bearing 6, provided in the end wall 7 of a tank 8 surrounding the rotary drum 4 the peripheral wall of which has a large number of perforations 9. An electric motor M secured to the lower part of the tank 8 drives, on the one hand, a pump 11 and, on the other hand, the shaft 5 through the agency of a change speed V and a trapezoidal belt transmission 12. The tank 8 is suspended inside the frame through the agency of suspension devices comprising, on the one hand, springs 14 secured to the frame and connected to the tank 8 by cables 15 passing over pulleys 16 and, on the other hand, shock absorbers 17 fixed to the tank 8 and to the frame.-
The said tank 8 is thus able to move inside the frame.
against the action of the suspension devices, but cannot be driven in the rotary motion of the drum 4. The rear end wall 18 of the drum is rigidly secured to the end of the driving shaft 5, and its front wall 19 is provided with a central orifice 20 and an approach passage 21.
The said rotary drum is further provided with a balancing device comprising two annular chambers 22 hermetically sealed and the outer diameter of which corresponds approximately to the diameter of the drum 4.
Each chamber 22 is completely filled with a liquid,
such as oil. At least two inertia bodies, formed by rollers 26 (Figs. 4 and 5), rotate freely inside each annular chamber 22. Each roller 26 is of general cylindrical shape and is provided, on the one hand, with two circular roller-tracks 27 and, on the other hand, with balls 28 partly engaged in housings 29 made in each of its end faces 30 and regularly distributed along a circle concentric with the axis of rotation of the roller. The said roller-tracks and the said balls provide between the walls.
of each chamber 22 and each roller 26 transfer passages 31 which convey to the rollers a certain liberty of movement inside their annular chamber, by permitting the liquid to flow on either side of each roller.
The surface of the said roller-tracks 27, as well as;
the surface of the balls 28, are polished and have a hardness at least equal to that of hardened steel and a very small friction coefficient, for example, at the most equal, to that of hardened steel. Thus, the contact surface be tween the rollers and the walls of the chamber 22 are reduced as much as possible, and friction is reduced to a sufliciently low degree to permit as described hereafter a movement of the rollers during the wringing in order to restore the balance of the drum 4 as the water is extracted.
The operation of the washing machine described is the, following:
After having introduced the linen by the door 3 into the drum 4 and having introduced in the tank 8 the necessary quantity of water, the user actuates a control member 32 from the position of rest O'to the position L, so as to start up the electric motor M and drive the drum 4 at a speed of about 60 revolutions per minute necessary for washing the linen. At this speed of rotation, the rollers 26 are inoperative and roll in the lower part (Fig. 6) of each annular chamber 22. Indeed, the friction of the rollers along the walls of the annular chambers is negligible and the said rollers cannot therefore be driven along with the drum and, moreover, the section of the transfer passages 31 is of sufficient size, relative to the viscosity of the liquid filling the chambers 22, for the resistance offered, by the said passages to the flow of liquid therethrough, to be insufiicient to overcome the action of the weight of the rollers and drive them in the movement of rotation of the drum.
At this speed of 60 revolutions per minute, the weight of the rollers 26 rolling in the lower part of each annular chamber is not troublesome, all the more so since the lower part of the drum bathes in the washing water.
When the washing of the linen is finished, the user empties the tank 8 by operating a control member 33 which puts into operation the pump 11. Once the emptying is finished, the user operates the control member 32 to the position E, in order to bring about, through the agency of the change speed V, a progressive increase in the speed of the drum 4 to a speed of 600, 700 or even. 1000 revolutions per minute in order to effect the wringing of the linen.
At a speed of rotation of 250 to 300 revolutions per minute, the friction of the rollers 26 along the walls of the annular chambers 22, but particularly, the liquid enclosed in the said chambers, the viscosity of which is too great relative to the section of the transfer passages 31 to allow a rapid flow of the liquid from one side to the other of each roller, drives the said rollers against the action of their gravity to above the horizontal diametral plane of the drum 4.
At that moment, the inertia bodies are rapidly accelerated up to the speed of rotation of the drum, thus bringing about a temporary increase of the couple necessary for driving the drum 4. Due to the fact that the said drum is connected to the motor M through the agency of the change speed V, the motor rotates during the whole period of acceleration of the drum, approximately at its working speed, so that, a motor M of a power equal to that of motors generally employed to drive the drum of a known washing machine of this kind, is capable of providing the temporary motor torque necessary for the setting in action of the balancing device, which occurs at a speed which is a function of the running conditions and, in particular, of thev temperature of the liquid enclosed in the annular chambers 22. On the other hand, by equipping the washing machine described as in the case of washing machines of this kind at present in use, with a two speeds motor or with a change speed with two or even three speeds, at the moment of setting in action the balancing device, the motor generally rotates at a speed much lower than its working speed, so that in order to overcome the braking torque created by the sudden acceleration of the inertia bodies when the balancing device is operated, it would be necessary to over dimension the driving motor to an exaggerated degree, that is to say, to equip the machine with a motor of a power equal to a multiple of the power of motors which normally equip machines of this kind. As soon as the rollers 26 have reached the speed of the drum, the inertia bodies and the drum together are progressively accelerated to the wringing speed.
If the bundles of linen 34 soaked with water are distributed regularly or symmetrically along the inner wall of the drum, the rollers 26 distribute themselves regularly (Fig. 7) about the axis of rotation of the drum, whereas if the bundles of linen 34 are distributed irregularly, the rollers 26 place themselves automatically opposite the said bundles of linen (Figs. 8 and 9) and so as to balance said bundles.
Due to the fact that the drum is provided with two annular chambers provided with rollers forming inertia bodies and which are situated at the two ends of the drum, a practically perfect balance is obtained, so that it is possible to drive the said drum without risk of damaging the hearings or of dangerous action on the frame, at speeds quite sufficiently high to obtain an efiicient wringing of the linen, so that after a short period, the user may stop the motor M, open the door 3 and withdraw his linen sufiiciently wrung for it to be ironed without previous drying.
The tests carried out have shown that when the friction of the inertia bodies 26 between each other and along the walls of the chambers 22 is sufiiciently low, the balancing of the lump or lumps formed by the bundles of linen 34, irregularly distributed inside the drum, takes place automatically and that, further, the relative positions of the inertia bodies are modified automatically as the extraction of the water proceeds during the wringing of the linen, so that the said device automatically maintains a practically perfect balancing of the drum 4, in spite of the continual modifications in the weight of the bundles irregularly distributed in the said drum.
However, in order to realize such a balancing of the drum, it is still necessary that the rollers 26 be not only dynamically balanced in relation to their axis of rotation, but also that in each elementary ring concentric to the axis of the roller, the elementary masses be distributed in a homogeneous manner. Indeed, if this condition is not fulfilled, the centrifugal force acting on the elementary sector of an elementary ring comprising a larger number of elementary masses and which is furthest from the axis of rotation of the drum 4, brings about a movement of the said roller along the wall 41, until the said elementary sector which comprises a larger number of elementary masses be situated in a radial plane of the drum. Consequently, the said centrifugal force generally tends to maintain the roller out of its exact balancing position.
In order to take this action into account, the housings 29-, provided for the balls 28, have a larger volume than that of the part of the ball housed inside the said housing. The volume of the space 35 (Fig. 5) is such that the weight of a corresponding volume of the material of said roller 26'is equal to the weight of the part of the ball 28 projecting from the endwall 30 of the roller 26. In this manner, the elementary masses of the elementary ring containing the balls being distributed in a homonogeneous manner throughout the volume of the said elementary ring, the centrifugal force, acting on eachelementary sector of the said elementary ring, is of the same amount and therefore has no further influence on the position of the roller, so that the latter places itself automatically in its exact balancing position.
The number of inertia bodies rolling in each chamber 22 is at least equal to two. However, the smaller the number of the inertia bodies is, the greater is the volume of each inertia body. For this reason, it is often advantageous to provide for a large number of inertia bodies 26a, as shown in Fig. 10, which permits of producing a balancing device in which the annular chambers 22 are of less volume. In order to avoid an untimely driving of the inertia bodies during the period of washing, the number of the said inertia bodies is at the most equal to that filling half the length of the chamber 22 (Fig. 10).
According to Fig. 12, each inertia body is formed by a roller 26b the front faces 30b of which comprises a bearing surface 36 concentric to the axis of rotation of the roller. A ring of balls 37,.fixed on each bearing surface 36, permitsof reducing, to a large extent, the friction be tween the roller and the walls 24 of the chamber 22;
The roller tracks 27b may bed one piece with the body of the roller or may be formed by hardened steel circles hooped on the body of the roller."
. Fig. 11 shows a variant of an inertia body formed by a' hollow cylinder 23 closed at its two ends and filled with a liquid of high density such as mercury or with pieces of a material having a density at least equal to that of steel. Satisfactory results have been obtained with iron or lead shot. The end walls 25 of the cylinder are provided with balls 28c placed in the housings 38 in the shape of a portion of a sphere.
The cylinder 23 is provided with two ball bearings 39 the inner ring of which is integral with the said cylinder, while the outer ring rolls along the wall 41 of the chamber 22. In this variant, the distribution of the elementary masses in the cylinder 23 may be of any kind, homogeneous or not, because the centrifugal force, acting on an elementary sector which comprises a larger number of elementary masses, merely produces a rotation of the cylinder inside the outer ring of the ball bearings, but no movement of the inertia body out of its exact balancing position.
It is obvious that, in a variant of this embodiment the hollow cylinder 23 may be replaced by a length of a metal bar having a high density, such as lead for example.
When the length of the cylinder 23 is small, for ex ample at the most equal to three times the width of the ring of the ball bearing 39, the said cylinder may then be provided with a single roller bearing 39.
Fig. 13 shows a washing machine of the type comprising a drum 4a supported at its two ends. In this figure, the elements and members already described with reference to Figs. 1 to 3 bear the same reference ciphers. The motor M drives the drum 4a through the agency of the change speed V and trapezoidal belts. This change speed is of known type comprising two grooved pulleys 42 connected by a trapezoidal belt 43 and each formed of two cheeks movable one with respect to the other.
The relative position of the cheeks of one of the pul- Ieys is controlled by a control device comprising an operating member secured to the end of a rod t which carries one of the checks of the pulley 42.
The tank 8, connected to the frame 1, 2 by elastic devices and shock absorbers (not shown), comprises an opening 44 corresponding to a loading opening 45 made in the upper wall 46 of the frame and closed by a cover 47.
The drum 4a, carried at each end by a spindle rotating freely in a bearing 6a, also comprises an opening 48, closed by a small door 49.
This drum is provided with a balancing device similar to the one described above and which comprises two annular chambers 22 in which roll inertia bodies such as spheres 50, preferably of hardened steel. Each annular chamber is formed by a dished base 51 to which is electrically soldered a dished cheek 52. An annular joint 53 ensures imperviousness and a steel band 54 applied elastically against the inner wall 55 of greater diameter of the chamber 22 ensures a practically everlasting runway.
The section of the transfer passages 31 is adapted to the density of the inertia bodies and to the viscosity of the liquid filling the chamber 22 through modification of the shape of the parts 56 and 57 of the base and the check which form Walls cutting two opposite angles of the'chamber 22, so that the cross section of the said chamber has the general shape of a square of which two opposite angles are taken oif.
The operation of this second embodiment of the washing machine is similar to that of the washing machine described with reference to Figs. 1 to 3, but oifers from the constructional point of view certain advantages, particularly as regards the realization of the annular chambers and the inertia bodies.
Two embodiments of the washing machine, objects of the invention, have been described above by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawing, but it is obvious that many variants may be pro- 6 vided. Thus,- for example, with only one annular chamber filled with a liquid and provided with inertia bodies. In such a case, it is preferable to dispose the said annular chamber in the median plane of the drum. Although in order to produce a dynamic balancing, at least two annular chambers provided with inertia bodies are necessary, satisfactory results have been obtained by means of a balancing device comprising only one annular chamber provided with inertia bodies. In such a case, it is however preferable to give the drum a general shape of a double cone, so that the bundles of linen distribute themselves in a nearly equal manner on either side of a diametral plane passing through the annular chamber of the balancing device.
The annular chambers could be disposed either inside the drum, or on its circumference. However, it is advantageous to provide annular chambers '22 having a mean diameter as large as possible, so as to obtain, by means of inertia bodies of a given weight, a balancing eifect as great as possible. The annular chamber fixed to the front wall of the drum must necessarily, in the case of a machine provided with a side door 3, have an inner diameter at least equal to that of the channel 21 giving access to the inside of the drum 4. It is advantageous to dispose the annular chambers of the balancing de-. vice relative to the drum 4 in such a way that they are situated out of the path traversed by the drops of water expulsed from the linen during the wringing and that, further, the said annular chambers do not hinder the free circulation of the water between the tank and the inside of the drum during the washing operation.
The rollers 26 may have the general shape of barrels of double cones or any other shape whereby they may roll along the outer wall of the annular chamber with a minimum of friction between them and the side walls, so that they may adopt freely, and at any moment, their exact balancing position.
The annular chambers being subjected to relatively wide ranges of temperature, it is advantageous to fill the annular chambers of the balancing device with a liquid whose variation in viscosity in function of the temperature is relatively small. Indeed, during washing, the hot water at a temperature of about 70 to C. (i.e. 158 to F.) maintains inside the tank and the annular chambers a temperature about the same amount, whereas, during the periods of rinsing the cold water used lowers the temperature inside the drum and in the annular chambers to a temperature of about 15 to 25 C. (i.e. 59 to 77 F).
It is therefore advantageous that, for a variation in temperature Within the said limits, the viscosity of the liquid enclosed in the annular chambers should remain as constant as possible and that the relation of the viscosities should be equal at most to 1/10.
Mineral oils of so-called constant viscosity as well as silicone oils have given satisfactory results.
In order to permit the expansion of the liquid enclosed in the annular chambers, corresponding to the temperature variations indicated above, it is necessary to provide, during the filling of each chamber, a space for the expansion of the said liquid.
In practice, use is made of a liquid the viscosity of which is sufiicient for it to be driven in the rotation of the drum so as to constitute a driving agent for the inertia bodies in the movement of rotation of the drum, as well as a shock absorber which opposes itself during the operation of the balancing device, to a clashing of the inertia bodies which would produce a disagreeable noise for the user.
In all the embodiments described, the washing machine comprises a drum 4, 4a rotating on a horizontal axis, but it is obvious that in a modified embodiment the said axis could be slanting.
I claim:
1. In a washing and wringing machine of the kind com the drum could be provided pri'sifig' a' frame; a tank having and walls elastically suspended inside said frame, a nonvertical driving shaft, a bearing provided in at least one of the ends walls of said tank, said driving shaft rotating in said bearing and a perforated-rotary drum fastened to said driving shaft and intended to' receive linen to be washed and enabling the wringing of said Washed linen, and in which said drum is provided with a balancing device comprising two herrnetically closed chambers of annular shape each secured c'oaxially with said drum at one end thereof, a liquid filling completely each of said annular chambers, and inertia bodies of higher specific weight than said liquid immersed in said liquid and rolling freely inside said annular chambers, transfer passages provided between said inertia bodies and the walls of said annular chambers whereby the free section of said transfer passages, the density of said inertia bodies and the viscosity of said liquid filling said annular chambers have values such that for the speed of rotation of the drum corresponding to the washing, the inertia bodies are inactive and, under the effect of gravity, roll in the lower part of said annular chambers, whereas, for a speed of rotation exceeding that for the washing, but less than that necessary for the wringing, the said inertia bodies are driven in the movement of said drum and distribute themselves automatically along said annular chambers, so as to balance the bundles of linen irregularly distributed inside said drum.
2. A washing and wringing machine as claimed in claim 1 and comprising a driving motor, a change speed device connecting said motor to said driving shaft in order to enable said motor to operate at its working speed during the acceleration of said drum and the setting in action of said balancing device.
3. A washing and wringing machine as claimed in claim 1 and in which each of said inertia bodies is of a cross sectional shape differing from that of the walls of said annular chambers to thereby provide between each inertia body and the walls of said annular chambers passages enabling said liquid to circulate.
4; A washing and wringing machine as claimed in claim 3 and in which said liquid filling said annular chambers constitutes simultaneously a driving agent for said inertia bodies in the movement of said rotary drum and a shock absorber opposing a clashing of the inertia bodies during the operation of said balancing device.
5. A washing and wringing machine as claimed in claim 1 and in which the interior wall of said annular chamber having'the largest diameter is of a hardness at least equal to that of hardened steel and has a coefficient of friction at the most equal to that of hardened steel.
6. A washing and wringingmachine as claimed in claim 5 and in which the crosssection of said annular chamber presents the general shape of a rectangle and each of said inertia bodies is constituted by a body of general cylindrical shape comprising balls disposed at the ends of the said cylindrical body and bearing on the side walls of the annular chamber.
7. A washing and wringing machine as claimed in claim 6 and in which in each elementary ring of material of said inertia body concentric with the axis of rotation of each inertia body, the elementary masses are distributed in a homogeneous manner.
ename 8 A washing'andwringing' machine'asclainied'inclaim 7' and in'which each of said inertia bodiespresent's ho'usfl ing's" forsaid'balls, said balls being only partly engaged 1n said'housin'g'sand in which the total volume of each housing'is such that the weight of the said same volume of material of said inertia body is equal to the weight of said ball;
9. Awashing and wringing machine as'claimed in claim 6' and in which each inertia body comprises at least a roller bearing the inner ring of which is integral with the said cylindrical body, whereas the outer ring of said bearing'rolls along the wall of greater diameter of said annular chamber, the cylindrical body turning inside said outer ring.
10. A washing and wringing machine as claimed in claim land in which each of said inertia bodies is formed of steel spheres, a hardened steel band lining the wall of greater diamete'r'of the'chambers, said inertia bodies rolling along said hardened steel band.
11. A washing and wringing machine as claimed in claim 1 and in which said annular chambers are disposed at the ends of said drum so as to, on the one hand, be out of the path of the wrung water particles and, on the other hand, to preserve a free circulation of the water between the tank and the inside of said drum during the washing operation.
12. A washing and wringingrna'chine as claimed in claim 1 and in which the cross section of each annular chamber has' the general shape of a square of which two opposed angles are taken otf and said chamber being closed, on the one hand, by a' part of an end wall of the drum and, on the other hand, by a cheek shaped edge secured to the said end-wan.
13. A washing and wringing machine according to'claim 1, in which each of said inertia bodies is a sphere.
14. A washing and wringing machine according to claim 13 in which the annular chambers are each formed by a generally'transverse wall of said drum, said transverse wall having anintegral peripheral flange and a cheek secured to said drum transverse wall, said cheek having a part generally parallel to and inwardly spaced from said flange and another part generally parallel to a'ndspaced from said drum transverse wall, said cheek and drum'forming an annular passage of generally rectilinear cross section. I
15. A washing and wringing machine according to claim-14 in which the transverse and peripheral parts of at least one of said drum and cheekare connected by'an inclined portion.
References Cite'din the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 414,642 Herrick Nov. 5, 1889 1,314,005 Louden Aug. 26, 1919 1,521,858 Bock Jan. 6, 1925' 2,296,257 Breckenridge Sept. 22, 1942 2,760,383 De Moss Aug. 28, 1956 2,780,086 Dunlap Feb. 5, 1957 2,795,126 Sisson June 11, 1957 2,836,083 Smith May 27, 1958
US770055A 1957-11-08 1958-10-28 Washing machine Expired - Lifetime US2984094A (en)

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US3089326A (en) * 1960-06-08 1963-05-14 Frame Sa Washing machine
US3178916A (en) * 1962-02-26 1965-04-20 Frame Machine for washing and centrifuging textile
US3435639A (en) * 1966-01-17 1969-04-01 Philips Corp Machine for washing and centrifuging laundry
US3683647A (en) * 1970-10-09 1972-08-15 Chester L Coshow Washing machine
US4423607A (en) 1980-07-03 1984-01-03 Industrie Zanussi S.P.A. Wash tub of plastics material for clothes washing machines
US4433592A (en) 1981-08-26 1984-02-28 Tokyo Shibaura Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Balancer for use in centrifugal rotary machine
US5115651A (en) * 1989-10-05 1992-05-26 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Drum-type washing machine
US5345792A (en) * 1992-12-28 1994-09-13 Whirlpool Corporation Balancer for an automatic washer
US5433091A (en) * 1992-10-29 1995-07-18 Zanussi Elettrodomestici Plastic drum for clothes washing machines
US5460017A (en) * 1992-05-21 1995-10-24 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating apparatus
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US5605078A (en) * 1992-05-21 1997-02-25 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating method and apparatus
US5613408A (en) * 1992-05-21 1997-03-25 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating method and apparatus
EP0768422A2 (en) 1995-10-13 1997-04-16 ELECTROLUX ZANUSSI ELETTRODOMESTICI S.p.A. A laundry washer with improved dynamic equilibration system
WO1997016657A1 (en) * 1995-10-30 1997-05-09 Aktiebolaget Skf (Publ) Automatic balancing device
US5724862A (en) * 1992-05-21 1998-03-10 Eti Technologies Inc. Dynamic balancing method and apparatus
US5768730A (en) * 1994-12-06 1998-06-23 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Drum type washing machine and dryer
US5802885A (en) * 1996-05-30 1998-09-08 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Balancing device for drum washing machine
US5816074A (en) * 1996-05-30 1998-10-06 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Balancing device for a drum washing machine
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US6129768A (en) * 1998-11-06 2000-10-10 Maytag Corporation Method and apparatus for operating an automatic balancing system
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WO2002063089A1 (en) * 2001-02-06 2002-08-15 Aktiebolaget Electrolux Arrangement for balancing of rotating bodies
US6502433B1 (en) * 1998-12-16 2003-01-07 Aktiebolaget Electrolux Drum-shaped container for a laundry washing or drying machine
US6550292B1 (en) * 2000-04-03 2003-04-22 Whirlpool Corporation Dynamic balancer for an automatic washer
US6578225B2 (en) 2000-05-25 2003-06-17 Skf Autobalance Systems Ab Low-speed prebalancing for washing machines
EP1396570A3 (en) * 1996-01-31 2004-05-12 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Drum washer-drier which reduces vibration to floor and operating method thereof
US20050144736A1 (en) * 2002-05-22 2005-07-07 Jones David M. Automatic balancing device
US20050274159A1 (en) * 2004-06-09 2005-12-15 Lg Electronics Inc. Drum type washing machine and drum therefor
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US3178916A (en) * 1962-02-26 1965-04-20 Frame Machine for washing and centrifuging textile
US3435639A (en) * 1966-01-17 1969-04-01 Philips Corp Machine for washing and centrifuging laundry
US3683647A (en) * 1970-10-09 1972-08-15 Chester L Coshow Washing machine
US4423607A (en) 1980-07-03 1984-01-03 Industrie Zanussi S.P.A. Wash tub of plastics material for clothes washing machines
US4433592A (en) 1981-08-26 1984-02-28 Tokyo Shibaura Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Balancer for use in centrifugal rotary machine
US5115651A (en) * 1989-10-05 1992-05-26 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Drum-type washing machine
US5592858A (en) * 1992-05-21 1997-01-14 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating method and apparatus
US5768951A (en) * 1992-05-21 1998-06-23 Eti Technologies Inc. Dynamic balancing method and apparatus
US5605078A (en) * 1992-05-21 1997-02-25 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating method and apparatus
US5613408A (en) * 1992-05-21 1997-03-25 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating method and apparatus
US5460017A (en) * 1992-05-21 1995-10-24 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating apparatus
US5845542A (en) * 1992-05-21 1998-12-08 Eti Technologies Inc. Dynamic balancing method and apparatus
US5829318A (en) * 1992-05-21 1998-11-03 Eti Technologies Inc. Dynamic balancing method and apparatus
US5711190A (en) * 1992-05-21 1998-01-27 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating method and apparatus
US5724862A (en) * 1992-05-21 1998-03-10 Eti Technologies Inc. Dynamic balancing method and apparatus
US5816115A (en) * 1992-05-21 1998-10-06 Eti Technologies Inc. Weight compensating method and apparatus
US5433091A (en) * 1992-10-29 1995-07-18 Zanussi Elettrodomestici Plastic drum for clothes washing machines
US5345792A (en) * 1992-12-28 1994-09-13 Whirlpool Corporation Balancer for an automatic washer
US5768730A (en) * 1994-12-06 1998-06-23 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Drum type washing machine and dryer
US5548979A (en) * 1995-01-23 1996-08-27 General Electric Company Horizontal axis clothes washing machine with tub suspension
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EP1396570A3 (en) * 1996-01-31 2004-05-12 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Drum washer-drier which reduces vibration to floor and operating method thereof
US5906756A (en) * 1996-05-11 1999-05-25 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Method of making balancing device for a drum washing machine
US5850749A (en) * 1996-05-30 1998-12-22 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Balancing device for a drum washing machine
US5802885A (en) * 1996-05-30 1998-09-08 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Balancing device for drum washing machine
US5816074A (en) * 1996-05-30 1998-10-06 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Balancing device for a drum washing machine
US6295678B1 (en) * 1998-10-19 2001-10-02 Skf Autobalance Systems Ab Method for pre-balancing a rotating drum having a temporarily shifting unbalance
US6129768A (en) * 1998-11-06 2000-10-10 Maytag Corporation Method and apparatus for operating an automatic balancing system
US6502433B1 (en) * 1998-12-16 2003-01-07 Aktiebolaget Electrolux Drum-shaped container for a laundry washing or drying machine
US6550292B1 (en) * 2000-04-03 2003-04-22 Whirlpool Corporation Dynamic balancer for an automatic washer
US6578225B2 (en) 2000-05-25 2003-06-17 Skf Autobalance Systems Ab Low-speed prebalancing for washing machines
US20040112155A1 (en) * 2001-02-06 2004-06-17 Goran Uhlin Arrangement for balancing of rotating bodies
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US7509825B2 (en) 2002-05-22 2009-03-31 Dyson Technology Limited Automatic balancing device
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