TECHNICAL FIELD
[0001] The invention relates in general to a drum for a washing machine and in particular
to the design of the paddles and drainage holes of the drum for ensuring efficient
evacuation or removal of undesired particles and/or water from the drum at the same
time.
BACKGROUND ART
[0002] Drums, or washing drums, designed for today's washing machines must preferably be
designed so as to be able to ensure a good washing action, such that laundry is made
clean, and efficient spin-drying, such that the drying of the laundry, after the latter
has been washed, is quicker and more energy-efficient. Washing machines can be divided
into two main groups, the first group being agitator machines which are provided with
an agitator or stirrer that is normally placed in the centre of the drum, in which
case the agitator, during rotation, moves round and stirs the laundry in a usually
vertical drum.
[0003] The second type of machine has a rotating drum whose rotation causes the laundry
to be stirred and rinsed around in the washing water. The rotating drums are normally
placed such that they have a horizontal rotation axis around which they rotate. To
improve the ability to stir the laundry around, the inside of the jacket surface of
the rotating drum is usually provided with a number of paddles placed equidistantly
from one another. During washing, the drum rotates and the paddles help to lift the
laundry slightly before its falls from the paddle, thus improving the stirring action
compared to the situation if the drum was completely smooth. The drum is also usually
provided with perforations in the jacket surface, so-called drainage holes, through
which washing and rinsing water can pass in and out.
[0004] These holes also function for drainage of small particles that may have been present
in the laundry when the latter was loaded into the drum. There is normally a requirement
that these drainage holes must be relatively large in respect of the actual washing
process, in order to achieve good drainage of water and particles and also good mixing
of detergent with the water. In spin-drying, however, there is an opposite requirement
as regards the size of the drainage holes, i.e. they must be relatively small in order
to permit spin-drying that is as gentle as possible. The invention relates to a washing
drum that is designed to solve this problem, i.e. a washing drum that ensures efficient
drainage and also ensures gentle spin-drying.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION
[0005] The invention thus relates to a drum, or washing drum, for a washing machine. The
drum comprises a jacket surface provided with drainage holes and at least one paddle.
There are normally at least two paddles in the washing drum, usually two to four washing
paddles, placed on the jacket surface of the inside of the drum. These paddles are
preferably placed rotationally symmetrically such that the drum, during rotation,
is subjected to the lowest possible rolling forces. A usual construction is for the
paddle to extend parallel to the centre axis of the drum, i.e. along generatrices
of the drum, and along almost the entire extent of the drum in the axial direction.
The paddle can also be shorter and/or slightly angled with respect to the centre axis
of the drum. The paddles can vary considerably in appearance.
[0006] The simplest type of paddle consists of a plate that protrudes from the inside face
of the drum. However, the paddles usually have more sophisticated shapes and can,
for example, be substantially V-shaped (seen in a radial cross section of the drum)
with two equilateral walls which are secured to the jacket surface of the drum and
form the broad base and come together at a top which is usually slightly rounded in
order to avoid too sharp an edge pulling too hard on the laundry.
[0007] It is also possible to design the paddle with unequal sides, such that one side is
relatively gently sloping and provides a relatively soft transition between the jacket
surface of the drum and the paddle, while the other side of the paddle has a more
vertical angle with respect to the jacket surface. The paddle can also be U-shaped
with substantially perpendicular walls at its base on the jacket surface of the drum
and a gently rounded top or can be of a shape that is a combination of a U-shape and
the previously described variants of the V-shape. The shape of the paddle can also
resemble a sinus curve or can be of a type that has a more or less cuboid character
with walls secured to the jacket surface and, between these, a more clearly defined
"roof" which constitutes the top of the paddle at its distal end as seen from the
jacket surface of the drum. The shape of the paddle can also vary along its axial
extent along the drum, and such variations will be described in more detail below.
The paddles can thus be configured in a number of different ways in order to perform
their function of stirring the laundry.
[0008] According to a first embodiment of the invention, at least one of the paddles is
provided with at least one evacuation hole. The aim of such an evacuation hole is
to ensure that coarse particles of dirt, for example grit or small stones, which cannot
normally pass through the drainage holes of the washing drum, will be able to pass
through the evacuation holes and in this way be evacuated from the drum during washing.
[0009] The evacuation hole or evacuation holes is/are normally positioned in the paddle
near the base thereof on the jacket surface of the drum, such that the undesired particles
that have ended up in the drum can easily be conveyed into the evacuation holes during
washing. In normal cases, the particles that are freed from the laundry gather in
the lower part of the drum and rest against the jacket surface of the drum. During
rotation of the drum, the particles which rest against the surface of the drum, but
which are too large to pass through the usual drainage holes in the jacket surface
of the drum, are transported towards the paddle, where they can then disappear from
the drum through the evacuation holes in the paddle. Drainage holes mean the holes
which are formed in the jacket surface of the drum and which are open and are intended
to be in contact with the laundry during washing. Therefore, drainage holes are not
holes that lie hidden underneath or behind the paddle and are thus protected from
direct contact with the laundry.
[0010] When the evacuation holes are said to lie near the surface of the drum, this means
that the holes are placed at most 2 cm from the jacket surface of the drum and more
preferably less than 1 cm from the jacket surface of the drum. A normally advantageous
position of the evacuation hole is one in which it adjoins the jacket surface.
[0011] In order to provide good evacuation of particles, the area of the evacuation hole
should be at least twice as great as the mean area of the drainage holes located in
the jacket surface of the drum, and the size of the evacuation holes is often up to
3 times as great or even 4 times as great as the mean area of the drainage holes in
the jacket surface. The drainage holes in the jacket surface can vary in size and
shape but are normally round holes with a diameter of between 2 and 4 mm. To ensure
that the evacuation holes perform a good function, they should be larger than the
largest drainage holes in the jacket surface of the drum, and the evacuation holes
are normally at least twice as large as the largest holes and in many cases at least
3 times as large.
[0012] In addition to the size of the evacuation holes, the shape of the holes may also
be of great importance. While the usual drainage holes in the washing drum are in
most cases round, the shape of the evacuation holes can vary from oblong parallelepipeds
to rectangular or round, semicircular or oval. In order to achieve good evacuation
of different types of particles, it may be an advantage to provide the paddles with
evacuation holes of different sizes and different shapes.
[0013] The evacuation holes should be at least 20 square millimetres, and in many cases
it is preferable for them to be larger and the evacuation holes can be at least 30
square millimetres or even 40 square millimetres. As regards the maximum size, it
should be small enough to minimize the risk of any laundry becoming stuck in the evacuation
hole. In addition to its size, the shape of the hole and the configuration of its
opening are also of importance as regards the risk of laundry becoming stuck in the
hole.
[0014] For machines designed for domestic use with great variation in the laundry in the
form of different items of clothing and the like, the shape and size of the hole should
be adopted such that, for example, buttons or other parts of an item of clothing cannot
become stuck in the evacuation holes such that the clothes are torn mechanically by
some of them getting caught in the hole. For these machines, the size of the evacuation
hole is not normally greater than 1 square centimetre, in order to avoid damage to
the laundry. The size of the evacuation holes is normally between 20 and 100 square
millimetres, although there may be deviations from this range.
[0015] As has been described earlier, the paddle can vary in terms of its shape, and, by
adapting the paddle according to the position of the evacuation holes, the evacuation
of particles through these holes can be improved. Evacuation can be improved many
times over if the angle between the side surface of the paddle, in which the evacuation
hole is located, and the jacket surface of the drum is less than 135 degrees, preferably
less than 120 degrees and most preferably less than 105 degrees. By having the evacuation
hole located in a wall or side surface of the paddle that is relatively vertical,
the particles located in the washing drum follow the paddle further than if the side
surface of the paddle lies relatively flat along the jacket surface of the drum.
[0016] In order to further improve the evacuation of particles through the evacuation hole
or the evacuation holes in the paddle, the base of the paddle, where it bears against
the jacket surface of the drum, can be designed such that particles are conveyed in
the axial direction towards the evacuation hole during rotation of the drum. For example,
the base could be outwardly wedge-shaped or convex in the middle part of the paddle
in the longitudinal extent thereof (i.e. the paddle is provided, in its middle part,
with an outward curve or wedge in the direction of rotation of the drum), which normally
coincides with the axial direction of the drum, such that particles resting against
the base of the paddle on the jacket surface of the drum are guided to each end of
the paddle towards evacuation holes located relatively near the ends.
[0017] It is of course also possible to design the base of the paddle such that it is wider
at the ends of the paddle, in the longitudinal direction, than at its middle, with
the effect that particles are conveyed in towards the middle where one or more evacuation
holes are located. It is of course also possible that the base has an undulating or
sawtooth-shaped geometry, such that it bulges out and curves in with uniform (or non-uniform)
spaces there between, and that evacuation holes are positioned in the inward curves
to which particles are conveyed and can disappear through the evacuation holes. Another
possible configuration is one in which the base of the paddle has a contour narrowing
in the longitudinal direction, such that the paddle, at its base, is narrower at one
end of the drum than at the other end, and such that particles are conveyed towards
evacuation holes placed at one end of the drum.
[0018] A method of further improving the properties of the washing drum, both in terms of
its drainage properties and also in terms of its ability to perform gentle spin-drying,
can be achieved if the jacket surface of the drum comprises at least one axially limited
first zone with drainage holes (3) primarily designed to ensure good drainage during
washing (drainage zone), and also an axially limited second zone with drainage holes
primarily designed to ensure support of the laundry during spin-drying (spin-drying
zone).
[0019] It is obvious to a person skilled in the art that such a division into different
zones would also be possible without these zones being used in a drum provided with
evacuation holes in the paddles. It is also obvious that the measures described below
for guiding the wash in the drum also function without evacuation holes in the paddles.
If the drum is provided with two or more different zones (spin-drying zones and drainage
zones), the drum should be designed such that the laundry is initially guided towards
the zone or zones of the drum that are designed for gentle spin-drying. In many cases,
when it is desirable to have gentle spin-drying, this entails laundry that is quite
delicate and, consequently, in many instances such laundry is washed separately or
in washes with relatively little detergent in the drum, such that the latter is not
full. By various measures, the laundry can therefore be more or less guided to axially
different zones of the drum. Such guiding could, for example, take place if the centre
axis of the drum slopes, such that the laundry is guided towards one of the two edges
in the axial direction.
[0020] It is also possible to guide the laundry by having the jacket surface of the drum
curved, for example by having the drum narrow slightly at the centre such that it
has a smaller radius at its middle, in the axial direction, than at its axial ends,
i.e. a contour resembling an hour-glass, which carries the laundry towards the ends
in the axial direction. It is also possible to imagine the drum having a greater radius
at its middle, in the axial direction, than at its axial ends, such that it has a
barrel-shaped contour, and such that the laundry in such a drum is guided away from
the ends of the "barrel" towards the middle of the barrel in the axial direction.
A further possibility is one in which the drum is slightly conical and has the shape
of a truncated cone, such that its radius at one axial end is smaller than at its
other axial end, and such that the laundry is thus guided during washing towards the
end with the greater radius. It may also be possible to guide the laundry to different
zones of the drum by means of the design of the paddles of the drum.
[0021] The side surface of the paddle can be shaped at its upper part or distal end, i.e.
the end of the side surface farthest away from the base on the jacket surface of the
drum, in such a way that it is concave, convex or wedge-shaped in the longitudinal
direction, such that laundry is conveyed in the axial direction, during rotation of
the drum, towards the zone of the drum in the axial direction that is designed for
spin-drying the laundry. Therefore, at least the upper third of the side surface is
preferably designed in this way, and in some cases the entire side surface, from its
base to its distal end, can have such a configuration. It will be noted that the paddle
does not need to have a special configuration of this kind along the entire longitudinal
extent, and in many cases only part of the paddle in the longitudinal extent is designed
in this way.
[0022] Another way of guiding the laundry towards the desired part of the drum in the axial
direction can be if the angle between the side surface of the paddle and the jacket
surface of the drum differs along the longitudinal extent of the paddle. By means
of the inclination of the paddle differing, the ability of the laundry to follow the
paddle during rotation differs along the longitudinal extent of the paddle. If the
angle between the paddle is more or less a right angle, i.e. around 90 degrees or
even below 90 degrees, the laundry is guided a relatively long distance. By contrast,
if the angle is greater than 90 degrees, for example from 105 degrees and upwards,
the laundry will drop from the paddle at an earlier stage. As the laundry drops, laundry
lying to the side of the laundry is able to move towards the space that has been emptied,
and the laundry is thus guided to the desired part of the drum in the axial direction.
[0023] The movement of the laundry towards the space that has been emptied often occurs
as a result of the fact that the laundry has been partially pressed together, and
a spontaneous shifting of the laundry takes place in the direction towards the space
that has been emptied when the laundry drops from the paddle. The guiding of the laundry
is especially of interest for the spin-drying phase of the wash cycle, and the drum
is therefore intended to be designed such that the part of the paddle placed in the
spin-drying zone or the spin-drying zones has, on average, a greater angle than the
part of the paddle (5) placed in the drainage zone or drainage zones, which means
that the laundry, during rotation of the drum, will drop earlier from those parts
of the paddle located in the spin-drying zone, and the laundry is thus guided towards
the spin-drying zone.
[0024] According to one embodiment of the invention, the above two principles concerning
the design of the paddle for guiding the laundry can be combined, that is to say,
on the one hand, the paddle has a different inclination in different parts of its
longitudinal extent, such that the laundry drops earlier at those parts that are more
angled, and, on the other hand, the paddle is concave, convex or wedge-shaped in the
longitudinal extent, such that laundry is conveyed in the axial direction during rotation
of the drum. These features are preferably arranged such that they cooperate to guide
the laundry towards the desired axial position, which is normally the zone of the
drum where the laundry is to be located during spin-drying.
[0025] If the drum comprises paddles provided with evacuation holes, these holes can advantageously
be placed in the axially defined first zone (first type of zone) that is designed
for good drainage (drainage zone).
[0026] For a drum comprising different types of axially limited zones, it is normally the
case that the mean area of the drainage holes in the first zone, the drainage zone,
is greater than the mean area of the drainage holes in the second zone, the spin-drying
zone. The different zones can, for example, consist of round drainage holes, of the
same size in each zone, in the jacket surface of the drum, and the holes in the spin-drying
zone can, for example, have a diameter of between just below 2 mm and up to 4 mm,
while the radius of the holes in the drainage zone is, for example, from ca. 3 mm
up to ca. 5 mm. These values apply normally to a washing machine designed for domestic
use and for normal domestic laundry. Deviations can of course occur in the size of
the holes, especially for washing machines designed for other areas of application.
Normally, however, the area of the holes (or, in the case of holes with different
areas within each zone, the mean area of the holes in the zone) is preferably at least
twice as great for the holes in the drainage zone as for the holes in the spin-drying
zone.
[0027] A drum can therefore be designed such that at least the width of one of its paddles,
at the distal end thereof, is narrower in the middle third of the longitudinal extent
of the paddle than in the two outer thirds. This means therefore that the paddle in
its uppermost part, that is to say the part of the paddle or side wall of the paddle
farthest from its base, is designed such that, when normally placed in the drum with
an extent in the longitudinal direction substantially parallel to the axial direction
of the drum and along most of the length of the drum in the axial direction, is wider
at its ends placed near the axial ends of the drum than at the axial middle of the
drum, i.e. the distal part has a contour resembling an hour-glass. According to one
embodiment, such a contour in the upper, distal part of the paddle is combined with
a contour in which the paddle, at its base, curves outwards at the middle in the longitudinal
direction of the paddle and narrows at its ends.
[0028] If the paddle sits securely on the jacket surface of the drum with an extent in the
longitudinal direction substantially parallel to the axial direction of the drum,
such a shape of the paddle would have the effect that, during washing of laundry,
i.e. during rotation of the drum about its axis, material or particles primarily in
contact with the base of the paddle will be guided out towards the axial ends of the
drum, whereas particles or material primarily in contact with the upper part of the
paddles and with the distal end of the side walls of the paddle will be centred towards
the middle. This normally means that small particles lying against the jacket surface
of the drum, for example grit, are primarily in contact with the base of the paddle
and are guided out towards the ends of the paddle, whereas larger units, normally
laundry, often lie more against the upper part of the paddle and are thus guided towards
the middle of the paddle. Such a design can be especially suitable for a drum which,
in a zone around the drum in the axially middle part of the drum, is primarily designed
with drainage holes for ensuring support for gentle spin-drying of the laundry, which
corresponds to a spin-drying zone, and if the drum, in the axially outer zones on
each side of the central zone, is primarily designed with drainage holes for ensuring
good drainage of the drum during washing, which corresponds to a drainage zone. If
the paddle is additionally provided with drainage holes, these are in this case placed,
for example, in the outer zones, the drainage zones, or near these zones.
[0029] The design of the paddle at its base and its design at different heights do not always
need to be adapted to each other and can be designed independently of each other according
to which functions it is desired to achieve. For example, it is possible to combine
a paddle whose average width at its base is wider in the middle third of the longitudinal
direction of the paddle than in the two outer thirds with many different shapes of
the paddle in its upper parts, for example if it is only of interest to guide those
items and particles that are relatively small and lie against the jacket surface of
the drum in the lower region thereof, for example grit, and it is not of interest
to seek to any great extent to guide other larger items, for example laundry, to a
particular axial position.
[0030] It is also obvious that different shapes of the paddle can be combined with different
geometries of the actual drum, in order to enhance the effect of guiding particles
and laundry, or that different effects can be allowed to complement one another. In
many cases it is undesirable for laundry and/or particles to be guided too far out
towards the axial edges of the drum. This can be remedied, for example, by the radius
of the drum being greater at the middle of its axial extent than at each axial end.
Such a design of the drum can be suitable, for example, if the average width of the
paddle at its base is wider in the middle third of the longitudinal extent of the
paddle, for example by having an outwardly rounded curve, than in the two outer thirds,
where the paddle can be substantially straight. If the paddle is provided with evacuation
holes, these can in this case be located at one or both of the outer thirds, such
that, during rotation of the drum, particles and grit are carried outwards from the
middle by the design of the paddle, whereas grit and particles at the distal ends
of the drum are conveyed inwards by the shape of the jacket surface of the drum, and,
in this way, the particles both from the ends and from the middle are conveyed towards
the evacuation hole.
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0031]
Fig. 1 shows a perspective view of a drum provided with a paddle according to a first
embodiment of the invention, with a first type of evacuation hole,
Fig. 2 shows an axial cross section of the drum in Figure 1 according to the first
embodiment,
Fig. 3 shows an enlarged view of a paddle from Figure 1 according to the first embodiment,
Fig. 4 shows a paddle according to the first embodiment of the invention, in a perspective
view from above,
Fig. 5 shows a paddle according to the first embodiment of the invention, in a perspective
view from below,
Fig. 6 shows a perspective view of a barrel provided with a paddle according to a
second embodiment of the invention,
Fig. 7 shows an axial cross section through the drum in Figure 6 according to the
second embodiment,
Fig. 8 shows an enlarged view of a paddle from Figure 6 according to the second embodiment,
Fig. 9 shows a paddle according to the first embodiment of the invention, in a perspective
view from above, with a second type of evacuation hole,
Fig. 10 shows a paddle according to the first embodiment of the invention, in a perspective
view from above, with a third type of evacuation hole.
PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0032] Figures 1 and 2 show a drum 1 designed to be placed in a washing machine, in which
it constitutes part of the boundary surface for the laundry that is intended to be
washed in the washing machine. In the figures, the drum is shown with openings at
both ends thereof in the axial direction. When mounted in a washing machine, one opening
comes to be blocked off by a back piece, while the front end can normally be closed
by a door in the front of the washing machine and is used to allow laundry to be loaded
into and removed from the drum 1. The drum 1, or wash drum as it can also be called,
has a jacket surface 2 that is normally made of stainless metal but can also be made
of other materials. As regards the concept of the invention, the choice of material
for the drum 1 is not considered to be of particular importance.
[0033] The jacket surface 2 has been provided with a number of drainage holes 3, 4, which
are intended to allow washing water and rinsing water to pass through the jacket surface
2 of the drum and in this way give a good washing and rinsing action. Drums with drainage
holes 3, 4 of the same size are presumably most common, but there are also variants
with holes of different sizes, and, in the drum 1 shown here, there are two axially
outer regions with larger drainage holes 3, and these holes are advantageous primarily
on account of their ability to allow particles and water out of the drum 1, while
the central region of the drum 1 is provided with smaller drainage holes 4, which
means that the surface of the drum is less uneven or does not have such large depressions,
thus providing better support during spin-drying of the laundry. These different zones
can, for example, function as what are here called spin-drying zones (the central
zone with smaller holes) and drainage zones (the zones with larger drainage holes
located on both sides of the spin-drying zone).
[0034] The drum is also provided with three paddles 5, of which only one is seen clearly
in the figure, while the others can only be gleaned from the design of the outside
of the lower part of the drum in Figure 1, where the drum has been provided with outlet
holes 12 under the paddle, and can be discerned in the upper left part of the figure.
The three paddles 5 are placed equidistantly around the jacket surface of the drum
1, such that the paddles 5 are placed rotationally symmetrically. In this case, the
longitudinal extents of the paddles 5 are parallel to the centre axis of the drum,
although it is possible to imagine them having an extent that is at a slight angle
with respect to the axial direction of the drum.
[0035] The paddle that is visible in Figure 1 is shown in an enlarged view in Figure 3.
In this figure, it is easier to see the evacuation holes 6 that are located on the
paddle 5, or more precisely in the side surface 7 of the paddle, quite near the longitudinal
ends of the paddle. The evacuation holes 6 are located at the base 8 of the paddle,
such that they adjoin the jacket surface 2. The holes are rectangular, as can be seen
more clearly from Figure 4. The latter also shows the general shape of the paddle
which, at the base 8 thereof, is uniformly thick at the longitudinal ends but bulges
out or is convex at the longitudinal middle part of the paddle, i.e. the central part
in the axial direction of the drum.
[0036] At the upper part and distal end 9 of the paddle, i.e. the part farthest from the
base of the paddle, the paddle 5 is uniformly thick at its longitudinal ends, while
the longitudinal middle part curves inwards, and the upper part of the paddle 5 is
thus reminiscent of the contour of an hour-glass. In this embodiment, most of the
middle part or middle segment of the paddle 5 is designed with a surface having a
shape similar to part of a ball or a sphere which, at the far bottom at the base 8,
has been provided with an edge. The aim of this design is, on the one hand, to provide
a middle part of the side surface 7 of the paddle that slopes more than the outer
parts of the paddle 5 relative to the jacket surface 2 of the drum and, in this way,
ensure that the laundry rolls off the paddle 5 at an earlier stage during rotation
of the drum 1, and the hollowing-out in the middle part of the drum 1 ensures that
the laundry is more easily moved in towards the centre of the drum 1 and thus provides
a movement of the laundry in the desired direction.
[0037] With a paddle 5 designed and placed in the drum 1 according to this first embodiment,
the laundry is thus guided to the middle part of the drum (the spin-drying zone) which,
by virtue of its design with the relatively small drainage holes 4, is specially adapted
for spin-drying the laundry. In this embodiment, the holes in the spin-drying zone
are of uniform size and round, with a hole diameter of 2.2 mm, while the round and
uniform holes in the outer drainage zones are 3.3 mm. It is of course possible to
use other sizes or shapes of the holes in the different zones, and the holes also
do not need to be the same size or the same shape within one zone.
[0038] The paddle 5 according to the first embodiment is shown in a view from above in Figure
4. The evacuation holes 6 can be seen more clearly here, and it can be seen that they
have a rectangular shape. A suitable size of the holes is that they are ca. 10 mm
long and 5 mm high, i.e. have an area of ca. 50 square millimetres. This can be compared
to the sizes of the drainage holes 3, 4 which measure ca. 7 and 10 square millimetres,
respectively. In this case, therefore, the evacuation hole 6 is 5 times as large as
the largest drainage holes 3. However, the difference in size between the drainage
holes 3, 4 and the evacuation hole 6 can vary considerably and is usually in the range
of 2 to 10 times different.
[0039] Figure 5 shows the paddle 5 in a perspective view from below. It will be seen here
how the evacuation hole 6 is connected via a channel 10 to an outlet 11, where the
particles can be conveyed out of the drum 1. The outlet 11 is adapted to fit into
specially punched outlet holes 12 in the drum (see Figure 1), which are placed under
the paddle 5. The channel 10, the outlet 11 and the outlet hole 12 should be designed
such that particles and the like that may pass through the evacuation hole 6 do not
become stuck in any of them and instead can be conveyed out of the drum 1.
[0040] Figures 6, 7 and 8 correspond substantially to Figures 1, 2 and 3 but show a paddle
5' according to a second embodiment of the invention. In this embodiment, the portion
that in the first embodiment was placed in the middle of the drum 1 (see Figure 1)
has been shifted towards one of the edges of the drum 1'. During rotation of the drum
1', the laundry is therefore moved to the site where the paddle 5' narrows at its
distal end 8, which corresponds to a position, in the axial direction of the drum
1', nearer to one edge and has an axially delimited spin-drying zone all around the
drum, which is provided with relatively small drainage holes 4 and functions as a
good support surface for the laundry during spin-drying.
[0041] This spin-drying zone is preferably offset toward that end of the drum 1' nearest
to the rear part of a washing machine when the drum is mounted in same. The reason
for this is that, for a front-load washing machine, the drum is usually suspended
and supported in the rear part of the washing machine and, by guiding the laundry
towards the rear part, the forces acting on the suspension during spin-drying are
lower than if the laundry is placed farther forwards in the drum, i.e. nearer the
part that is nearest the loading door.
[0042] In this embodiment, there are no evacuation holes in the paddle 5'. It is of course
possible to provide the paddle 5' according to the second embodiment with evacuation
holes if so desired. It is of course also possible, conversely, to use a paddle as
shown in Figures 1-5 according to the first embodiment of the invention without any
evacuation hole, if it is only the function whereby the paddle 5 axially moves the
laundry that is of interest.
[0043] Figure 9 shows a second type of evacuation hole 6' in the form of a semicircular
hole in the paddle 5, and Figure 10 shows a third type of evacuation hole 6" in the
form of a triangular hole. It is therefore possible to use a number of different shapes
and sizes of holes.
[0044] In the various figures shown, these have shown that each paddle is provided with
2 evacuation holes on each side of the paddle. It is obvious that the paddle can be
provided with fewer or more holes if so desired, and that these can have different
shapes. For example, one hole could be relatively narrow and one wide, and another
hole more square or round, such that the holes can be adapted to allow particles of
different shapes to pass through. In another example, the paddle, in the lower part
thereof, can have a system more like bars, such that it resembles a comb which has
gap-like openings along part or all of the lower part of the paddle, on the base thereof.
Therefore, within the scope of the invention, there are a number of variants as regards
the appearance of the evacuation holes.
1. A drum (1) for a washing machine comprising a jacket surface (2) and at least one
paddle (5),
characterized in
that the side surface (7) of the paddle (5) is concave, convex or wedge-shaped at the
distal end (9) thereof, such that laundry is conveyed in the axial direction from
one zone (drainage zone), during rotation of the drum (1), towards the zone (spin-drying
zone) of the drum in the axial direction that is designed for spin-drying the laundry.
2. A drum (1) according to claim 1, wherein the jacket surface (2) of the drum comprises
at least one axially limited first zone with drainage holes (3) primarily designed
to ensure good drainage during washing (drainage zone), and also an axially limited
second zone with drainage holes (4) primarily designed to ensure support of the laundry
during spin-drying (spin-drying zone).
3. A drum (1) according to any of the claims 1 and 2, wherein the angle between the side
surface (7) of the paddle (5) and the jacket surface (2) of the drum differs along
the longitudinal extent of the paddle, and in that the part of the paddle (5) placed
in the spin-drying zone or spin-drying zones has, on average, a greater angle than
the part of the paddle (5) placed in the drainage zone or drainage zones.
4. A drum (1) according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the mean area of the
drainage holes (3) in the first zone, the drainage zone, is greater than the mean
area of the drainage holes (4) in the second zone, the spin-drying zone, preferably
at least twice as great.
5. A drum (1) according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the average width of
the paddle (5) at the distal end (9) thereof is narrower in the middle third of the
length of the paddle (5), in the longitudinal direction thereof, than in the two outer
thirds.
6. A drum (1) according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the average width of
the paddle (5), at the base (8) thereof, is wider in the middle third of the length
of the paddle (5), in the longitudinal direction, than in the two outer thirds.
7. A drum (1) according to any of the preceding claims, wherein the radius of the drum
is greater at the centre of the axial extent thereof than at each axial end.
8. A drum (1) according to any of the preceding claims, wherein said at least one paddle
(5) is provided with at least one evacuation hole (6).
9. A drum (1) according to claim 8, wherein the evacuation hole (6) adjoins the jacket
surface (2).
10. A drum (1) according to any of the claims 8 and 9, wherein the area of the evacuation
hole (6) is at least 2 times as great as the mean area of the drainage holes (3, 4)
in the jacket surface (2) of the drum (1), more preferably at least 3 times as great,
and most preferably 4 times as great.
11. A drum (1) according to any of the claims 8-10, wherein the area of the evacuation
hole (6) is greater than the largest drainage hole (3) in the jacket surface (2) of
the drum and preferably at least 2 times as great as the area of the largest drainage
hole (3).
12. A drum (1) according to any of the claims 8-11, wherein the area of the evacuation
hole (6) is at least 20 square millimetres, preferably at least 30 square millimetres,
and most preferably at least 40 square millimetres.
13. A drum (1) according to any of the claims 8-12, wherein the angle between the side
surface (7) of the paddle (5), in which the evacuation hole (6) is located, and the
jacket surface (2) of the drum is less than 135 degrees, preferably less than 120
degrees, and most preferably less than 105 degrees.
14. A drum (1) according to any of the claims 8-13, wherein the paddle (5), at the base
(8) thereof, is wedge-shaped, concave or convex, such that particles are conveyed
in the axial direction towards the evacuation hole (6) during rotation of the drum
(1).