The present invention is in the field of assembling devices.
When installing a fan mounting assembly, the installer, i.e. a fan technician, usually fixes the fan housing onto supports attached to a surface, i.e. a ceiling, a wall, a drywall or a mounting structure. With the fan motor assembly installed in support bars, the technician will adjust its height to align the fan face to the wall or ceiling. This height is adjusted and secured with the pin head, that exerts reasonable compression at the inner face of the fan housing, securing the housing in a static position. Adjusting the fan in the wall or ceiling is made difficult due to lack of degrees of freedom from the surface.
One embodiment of the fan assembly from the art is provided by parallel supporting rods which are secured to a frame and subsequently receive the fan housing.
Typically, these rods have fixed lengths, or some have a sort of arms that allows their lengths to be increased if the frame engaging region has spans of different sizes for receiving each arm of the assembly.
However, in general, such concretizations allow only one degree of freedom, i.e. they allow the fan housings to be moved in only one axis, which allows adjusting in either the horizontal axis, or the vertical axis, for instance, which makes the installation difficult, expensive and time consuming, if the installer wishes to align the fan housing to the surface that it is being installed, such as a ceiling, wall or partition. Further, if necessary to change the height of the fan assembly, the installer must disassemble the entire structure plus the supporting bars, to reposition it and fix it in the frame and support again.
Disadvantageously, improperly installed fan assemblies can lead to loss of efficiency and noise.
An example of a prior art assembly which may allow the adjustment of positioning of the fan assembly on two distinct axes is revealed at CA2532841, published on Jul. 13, 2007, originally entitled “Hanger assembly”, which discloses the use of mounting arms for installing the fan housing in a support structure, wherein such mounting arms allow sliding of the fan housing along a longitudinal axis. Furthermore, these mounting arms comprise mounting flaps having apertures which allow their attachment in various directions, including having oblong slots which could allow adjustment of the mounting position of the fan housing along a transverse axis.
However, in a disadvantageous manner, the art does not provide means for adjusting the positioning of the fan housing after its installation in the support structure, without depending on the disassembly of the assembly already installed. Moreover, disadvantageously, no means of adjusting the vertical positioning together with the horizontal position of the fan housing is provided.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a fan assembly with two degrees of freedom, facilitating assembly and reducing installation time of the fan assembly.
The present disclosure generally relates to hanger assemblies and, more particularly, to a hanger assembly for mounting and positioning a fan housing in a building.
The present invention relates to improvements in supporting provisions for fans, and more particularly to an improved, easily installed arrangement for a two degrees of freedom fan, while permitting easy physical positioning of the assembly in a surface, a wall, drywall or structure, as well as facilitating the mounting of the fan assembly.
Before any embodiments are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including,” “comprising,” or “having” and variations thereof herein are meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items. Unless specified or limited otherwise, the terms “mounted,” “connected,” “supported,” and “coupled” and variations thereof are used broadly and encompass both direct and indirect mountings, connections, supports, and couplings.
The pins are preferably screws and, provided with nuts, allow adjusting the tightness of the grip between the supports and the fan housing, making easier to install the fan housing to the pins. For instance, if the user wishes the fan housing to be secured only after installation of the adjusting fan assembly, the fan housing is positioned and slidably secured by the pins at the desired position, screwing the screws and nuts, the screws and nuts are tightened together, and the fan housing becomes immovable. If the user prefers the fan housing closer or farther from the surface (i.e. a ceiling, a wall), the screws and nuts are loosened, allowing the screws to slide/travel along the cutouts and the fan housing is positioned in the desired position.
The fan housing is secured by the pin (20) to a first support (30) and by a second pin (21) to a second support (40) (see
The first hanger (50) and the second hanger (55) having a longitudinal length defining a hanger axis (200) (see
The support (30) is slidably engaged to the fan housing (10) by the pin (20) and is slidably engaged to the hanger (50) by the clamp. The support (40) is also slidably engaged to the fan housing (10) by the pin (21) and is slidably engaged to the hanger (55) by the clamp.
The construction fan housing (10) plus pins (30,40) plus the hangers (50, 55) allow a positioning of the fan housing relative to the structure joists (60) in a surface (70) in two degrees of freedom.