Valved volume dividing means

4143430
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Inventors

Joshi, Devendra C.
Sharma, Virendra

Application #

816900

Filed

Jul-18-1977

Published

Mar-13-1979

Current US Class

004/324
004/346
004/364
004/415

International Classes

E03D 001/14

Field of Search

4/364 4/326 4/346 4/325 4/363 4/353 4/415 4/378 4/249 4/324 251/12 251/65 220/230

Examiners

Aegerter; Richard E.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Johnson; Russell L.

US Patent References

4000526   Toilet flushing app...
4044407   Toilet water saver d...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

Steenburgh, IBM Tech. Discl. Bull., Apr. 1969, vol. 11, No. 11.

Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
This invention relates to water conserving devices to be used in the water closets of bathroom toilets. The devices may also find applications in other liquid containing and discharging vessels. The invention consists of a partition wall or alternatively a minitank installable in the water closet of a toilet so as to divide the water closet into two separate liquid holding compartments. A flapper valve with a magnetic closure, fitted into the partition wall or into the minitank, opens and closes a port which communicates between the compartments. The actuating means of the flapper valve is operably connected to the existing trip lever of the water closet in such a way that the valve will be actuated only after the existing discharge valve has been actuated first. This arrangement permits the user to discharge water from one or both compartments of the water closet according to his needs. In the preferred embodiments, the devices are installable by anyone possessing only the skills and tools commonly found in an ordinary household.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. A water closet tank discharge regulating means comprising:

(a) a compartmentalizing unit whereby the tank is divided into water retaining compartments; a first compartment and a second compartment,

(b) a port in the compartmentalizing unit through which water may pass between the first compartment and the second compartment,

(c) a valve which serves to seal and open the port,

(d) an actuator linking unit by means of which the valve is operably connected to an existing flush arm of the tank.

(e) an adjustment means which is employable to set the degree of rotation of the flush arm needed for a valve opening, and

(f) means for providing that the compartmentalizing unit, the actuator linkage unit, and the adjustment means are directly installable in the tank without modifying or significantly disturbing the existing in-tank mechanisms and the installation of the discharge regulating means requires no specialized tools and no specialized skills.



Description
HISTORY OF THE INVENTION

The concept of selecting the amount of water to flush a toilet according to the nature and the quantity of the materials to be flushed is not new. For instance, C. W. Brown in U.S. Pat. No. 1,805,204 issued to him in 1931 proposes a "Closet Flushing Device" wherein the tank is divided into two unequal compartments. The user, as a result, is provided with the option of three flushing volumes; namely the volume of the small compartment or of the larger compartment, or of both compartments together.

The Brown patent is interesting, further, in the sense that the in-tank mechanisms illustrated by him and of course used earlier are functionally identical to, and physically nearly identical to, the in-tank mechanisms employed today in the overwhelming majority of toilet tanks.

Considerable amount of effort has been invested by different people, as the large number of patents issued over the years indicates, to bring the concepts exemplified by Brown into the general usage. However, their efforts have met with limited success at best. For the most part, the devices and means proposed in the prior art appear to be able to perform their intended functions satisfactorily. Yet, none of these patented inventions has made any significant impact on the industry. Toilets, water closets, toilet in-take mechanisms and flush actuators are essentially the same today as they were several decades ago. The following sets forth some of the inadequacies of the prior art devices and explains why they have not made any commercial impact.
 
  A vacuum flush water closet having a bowl and rim which are made from steel stampings covered with chemical resistant procelain. The water closet has a...  This invention relates to water conserving devices to be used in the water closets of bathroom toilets. The devices may also find applications in other...