Bagless vacuum cleaner with filter cleaning member
US-9980620-B2 · May 29, 2018 · US
US12029375B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-12029375-B2 |
| Application number | US-202318387907-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Nov 8, 2023 |
| Priority date | Sep 22, 2017 |
| Publication date | Jul 9, 2024 |
| Grant date | Jul 9, 2024 |
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Official abstract text for this publication.
In general, the present disclosure is directed to a hand-held surface cleaning device that includes a relatively compact form-factor to allow users to store the same in a nearby location (e.g., in a drawer, in an associated charging dock, on a table top) for easy access to perform relatively small cleaning tasks that would otherwise require retrieving a full-size vacuum from storage. A hand-held surface cleaning device consistent with aspects of the present disclosure includes a body (or body portion) with a motor, power source and dust cup disposed therein. The body portion also functions as a handgrip to allow the hand-held surface cleaning device to be operated by one hand, for example.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A hand-held surface cleaning device comprising: a handle, the handle configured to receive at least one battery; a nozzle, the nozzle defining a nozzle dirty air inlet; a motor configured to be powered by the at least one battery for generating suction and drawing air into the nozzle dirty air inlet; a dust cup, the dust cup having a first end adjacent the motor and comprising a collection area, the collection area being configured to receive debris drawn into the nozzle dirty air inlet and store the debris; and a door, the door having a closed position for retaining the debris in the collection area and an open position for emptying the debris from the collection area, and the door being coupled to the dust cup for rotation about an axis adjacent a second end of the dust cup to move between the closed position and the open position, the handle being positioned substantially coaxially with respect to the motor and the dust cup. 2. The hand-held surface cleaning device of claim 1 , the device further comprising a removable filter, wherein the filter is positioned substantially coaxially with the dust cup and the motor. 3. The hand-held surface cleaning device of claim 1 , wherein the dust cup has a substantially cylindrical shape. 4. The hand-held surface cleaning device of claim 1 , wherein the nozzle is removably coupled to the dust cup. 5. The hand-held surface cleaning device of claim 1 , wherein the dust cup is removably coupled to the motor. 6. A surface cleaning device comprising: a frame; a cleaning head including a cleaning head dirty air inlet; and a hand-held surface cleaning device according to claim 1 removably coupled to the frame such that suction generated by the hand-held surface cleaning device draws air into the cleaning head dirty air inlet. 7. The surface cleaning device of claim 6 , wherein the hand-held surface cleaning device is configured to be coupled to the frame such that suction generated by the hand-held surface cleaning device draws air into the cleaning head dirty air inlet and into the nozzle dirty air inlet to store debris in the dust cup. 8. The surface cleaning device of claim 6 , the device further comprising a joint disposed between the frame and the cleaning head. 9. A hand-held surface cleaning device comprising: a handle, the handle configured to receive at least one battery; a nozzle, the nozzle defining a nozzle dirty air inlet; a motor configured to be powered by the at least one battery for generating suction and drawing air into the nozzle dirty air inlet; a dust cup, the dust cup having a substantially cylindrical shape, the dust cup having a first end adjacent the motor and comprising a collection area, the collection area being configured to receive debris drawn into the nozzle dirty air inlet and store the debris, and the nozzle being removably coupled to the dust cup; a door, the door having a closed position for retaining the debris in the collection area and an open position for emptying the debris from the collection area, and the door being coupled to the dust cup for rotation about an axis adjacent a second end of the dust cup to move between the closed position and the open position; and a removable filter, the removable filter being positioned substantially coaxially with respect to the handle, the dust cup and the motor. 10. The hand-held surface cleaning device of claim 9 , wherein the dust cup is removably coupled to the motor. 11. A surface cleaning device comprising: a frame; a cleaning head including a cleaning head dirty air inlet; and a hand-held surface cleaning device according to claim 9 removably coupled to the frame such that suction generated by the hand-held surface cleaning device draws air into the cleaning head dirty air inlet. 12. The surface cleaning device of claim 11 , wherein the hand-held surface cleaning device is configured to be coupled to the frame such that suction generated by the hand-held surface cleaning device draws air into the cleaning head dirty air inlet and into the nozzle dirty air inlet to store debris in the dust cup. 13. The surface cleaning device of claim 11 , the device further comprising a joint disposed between the frame and the cleaning head. 14. A method of operating a hand-held surface cleaning device, the method comprising: grasping a handle of the device, the handle being positioned substantially coaxially with respect to a motor of the device and a dust cup of the device; directing a nozzle of the device toward debris; energizing the motor of the device to draw the debris into a collection area of the dust cup of the device, the dust cup having a first end disposed adjacent the motor; and causing rotation of a door about an axis adjacent a second end of the dust cup to move the door from a closed position wherein the debris is retained in the dust cup to an open position to empty the debris from the dust cup. 15. The method of claim 14 , the method further comprising: removing the dust cup from the device. 16. The method of claim 14 , the method further comprising removing the nozzle from the device. 17. The method of claim 14 , the method further comprising coupling a frame to the device, the frame having a cleaning head coupled to an end of the frame.
Handles · CPC title
Rolls · CPC title
with driven dust-loosening tools · CPC title
Mounting or coupling means for cyclonic chamber or dust receptacles · CPC title
Construction of inlets · CPC title
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