Floor cleaning machine
First Claim
1. A machine for cleaning floors comprising:
- a pair of driven, counterrotating cylindrical brushes having bristles with bristle ends for engaging the floor and picking up dirt therefrom, the brushes being rotated such that the bristles on both brushes are moved upwardly through an area between the brushes and away from each other over an upper half of the brushes;
a housing for said pair of driven counterrotating cylindrical brushes comprising side plates for rotatably supporting shafts respectively attached to the cylindrical brushes and a top shield for covering the brushes; and
whereineach brush has at least one fixed sweeper held by said housing and extending parallel to a longitudinal axis of the brush and located at least partly inside an outer periphery of the bristle ends thereof at a place along the upper half of the brush, each sweeper serving to locally and temporarily hold back the bristle ends and cause the bristle ends to flick forwardly in a direction of rotation of the brush when the bristle ends leave contact with the sweeper to cause floor dirt collected by the bristle ends to be thrown off outwardly and forwardly relative to rotary motion of the brush; and
said top shield guides the dirt thrown off the bristle ends further in a direction of rotation of the brushes towards dust collecting receivers arranged at respective opposite ends of the top shield.
1 Assignment
0 Petitions
Accused Products
Abstract
A cleaning machine, especially for professional cleaning, comprises two parallel and cylindrical brushes driven reversedly about a horizontal axis, the brushes being placed so closely together that the ends of the brushes in the plane defined by the rotational axes of the brushes almost join, touch one another or just overlap. Above said plane one or more sweepers in the form of bars, pipes, stretched wires or the like are arranged in the longitudinal direction of the brushes and extend into the course of rotation of the brush ends. There is a shield above the brushes for collecting the dirt that is thrown off them when meeting the sweepers. At the exterior of the brushes the shield ends in collecting receivers from which the collected dirt may pass to a collecting tank. This design proves capable of performing a simultaneous sweeping and washing of a floor. At the same time the construction is sufficiently compact to accommodate a polishing unit such that a simultaneous polishing of the floor is possible.
44 Citations
13 Claims
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1. A machine for cleaning floors comprising:
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a pair of driven, counterrotating cylindrical brushes having bristles with bristle ends for engaging the floor and picking up dirt therefrom, the brushes being rotated such that the bristles on both brushes are moved upwardly through an area between the brushes and away from each other over an upper half of the brushes; a housing for said pair of driven counterrotating cylindrical brushes comprising side plates for rotatably supporting shafts respectively attached to the cylindrical brushes and a top shield for covering the brushes; and
whereineach brush has at least one fixed sweeper held by said housing and extending parallel to a longitudinal axis of the brush and located at least partly inside an outer periphery of the bristle ends thereof at a place along the upper half of the brush, each sweeper serving to locally and temporarily hold back the bristle ends and cause the bristle ends to flick forwardly in a direction of rotation of the brush when the bristle ends leave contact with the sweeper to cause floor dirt collected by the bristle ends to be thrown off outwardly and forwardly relative to rotary motion of the brush; and said top shield guides the dirt thrown off the bristle ends further in a direction of rotation of the brushes towards dust collecting receivers arranged at respective opposite ends of the top shield. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13)
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Specification