The present disclosure relates generally to a roof vent for venting the roof of a building such as a house.
Roof vents provide the necessary ventilation to the roof of a house or other building, inhibiting condensation in the roof from the infiltration or collection of moisture into the roof or attic cavity. Various roof vents employ vanes, grates and louvers to permit atmosphere to be channeled between the roof and the atmosphere and to try to inhibit rain and snow from entering the roof through the roof vent. A variety of caps and covers have been used to act as a guard to prevent the infiltration of rain and snow.
Current roof vents typically include a horizontal top edge that provides an area for precipitation to accumulate when the roof vent is placed on a sloped roof. If precipitation is allowed to build up on a top edge of a roof vent, moisture can creep under the roof shingles and potentially damage the roof structure. For example, water can damage the plywood under the shingles causing rot which may lead to leakage and damage to other aspects of the building. Accumulation of snow at the top edge of a roof vent can also create an area of increased loading on a roof surface.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a roof vent that obviates or mitigates at least some of the above-presented disadvantages in the art.
An improved roof vent for ventilating a sloped roof of a building via a hole in the roof to atmosphere but inhibits the infiltration of precipitation is desired. A top edge of a roof vent such as this may act as an atmospherefoil leading edge capable of changing the direction of atmosphere flow as atmosphere travels down the surface of a roof. This change of direction inhibits the stagnation of atmosphere and atmosphereborne particulates such as rain or snow at the top edge of the roof vent.
A first aspect provided is a roof vent for ventilating a sloped roof of a building via a hole in the roof to atmosphere, the roof vent comprising a flange portion for affixing on the roof, the flange portion having an opening in communication with the hole in the roof; a wall surface extending upwardly from the flange portion and extending around a perimeter of the opening to inhibit precipitation travelling along the flange portion from entering the opening; a cap having a first face for directing towards a peak of the roof, a second face opposite the first face, two opposing faces each connecting the first face to the second face, and a cover surface extending in a region between the first face, the second face and the two opposing side faces for inhibiting precipitation from entering the opening, the cap being supported by at least one support member and dimensioned to cover over the opening while providing a gap between the flange portion and one or more of the faces for facilitating passage of the atmosphere between the wall surface and the one or more of the faces; and the first face having a first surface connecting the two opposing side faces, the first surface extending from the cover surface towards the flange portion, wherein at least a portion of the first surface is curvilinear and the first surface is positioned outside a portion of the region between the two opposing faces.
For a better understanding of the various embodiments described herein and to show more clearly how they may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example only, to the accompanying drawings which show at least one exemplary embodiment of an arch top roof vent.
In the drawings like characters of reference indicate corresponding parts in the different figures.
It will be appreciated that for simplicity and clarity of illustration, where considered appropriate, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the exemplary embodiments described herein. However, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that the embodiments described herein may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures and components have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the embodiments described herein. Furthermore, this description is not to be considered as limiting the scope of the embodiments described herein in any way, but rather as merely describing the implementations of various embodiments described herein.
As shown in
As can be seen in
Wall surface 11 can extend transversely (eg. perpendicular) to opening 22. Cap 16 can be dimensioned to cover over opening 22 from above. An atmosphere passage 20 can be formed between cap 16 and wall surface 11 so that atmospheric particles can flow through a side wall of wall surface 11 and atmosphere passage 20 and out gap 18. Any wind driven precipitation or other undesired particulates can be deflected by the wall surface 11 and cap 16 and thus be inhibited from entering the hole 28 and the attic space 30. Since atmosphere passage 20 can be larger than gap 18, a quantity of precipitation in the atmosphere can be deflected by the outside of wall surface 11 and not inhibit the flow of atmosphere outside of the roof vent 10 and attic interior 30.
Referring again to
Opposing faces 64 and 66 refer to the two portions of the circular shape connecting the first face 62 to the second face 63.
The cap 16 can be supported by either of a plurality of separate support members 14 or by support members incorporated into the wall structure 11. The cap is dimensioned to cover over the wall surface 11 and the opening 22 while providing a gap 18 between the flange portion 12 and the cap 16. Gap 18 is illustrated in
First face 62 of cap 16 extends towards roof 50 to overlap with at least a portion of wall surface 11 at overlap region 71 (see
The surface of first face 62 is shaped to direct and deflect precipitation moving towards the first face 62 towards the two opposing side faces 64 and 66 of the cap 16.
The shape of first face 62 can dictate the direction in which precipitation is directed as it moves down the surface of roof 50 towards first face 62. First face 62 directs precipitation away from a midline X of roof vent 10 as shown in
In one embodiment, first face 62 is arcuately shaped over all or a portion of its surface which connects the two opposing faces 64 and 66, where arcuately shaped is any shape that is curvilinear and curvilinear shapes are such that consist of a curved line or lines. One example of such an arcuate shape for first face 62 is shown in
The first face 62 is outside of the region 90 of the cover surface 17 between the two opposing side faces 64,66. A portion of cover surface 17 that is directly adjacent to the first face 62 is also outside of the region 90 between the two opposing side faces 64,66. Cover surface 17 has a region 90 and a region 92 where region 90 is outside of the region 92 that is between the opposing side faces 64,66 of the cap 16.
As precipitation travels along the surface of roof 50 and flange portion 12 towards first side 70, either directly on the surface of roof 50 or in the atmosphere space immediately above the surface of roof 50, the arcuate shape of first face 62 can change the direction of the precipitation so the precipitation is no longer directed towards the hole in the roof. This redirection prevents stagnation and accumulation of such precipitation at the surface of first face 62 and/or first side 70.
The shape of the remaining faces of cap 16 can vary but preferably, the first face 62 maintains a curved or arcuate shape to limit accumulation of snow or rain at the surface of the first face 62 and/or the first side 70 adjacent the roof 50. The perimeter of cap 16 shown in
In one embodiment the first face 62, the second face 63 and the opposing side faces 64, 66 may combine to form a substantially diamond-shape (see
First side 70 of wall surface 11 extends from the surface of roof 50 and provides a surface to inhibit the movement of rain and snow from entering the interior attic space 30 through the hole 28 in the roof 50. First side 70 is preferably planar and shaped to direct objects in the atmosphere 32 moving through gap 18 towards the first side 70 towards the two opposing sides 74 and 76 of the wall surface 11.
The shape of first side 70 can dictate the direction in which undesired atmosphereborne particulates are directed as they move down the surface 19 of roof 50 towards first side 70. First side 70 can also direct snow, rain and atmosphereborne particulates away from a midline X of roof vent 10 as shown in
In one embodiment, first side 70 has an arcuate shape over its entire surface.
This embodiment is shown in
The first side 70 of wall surface 11 is outside of the region 90 of the cover surface 17 between the two opposing sides 74,76. A portion of cover surface 17 that is directly adjacent to the first side 70 is also outside of the region 90 between the two opposing side faces 74,76. Cover surface 17 has a region 90 and a region 92 where region 90 is outside of the region 92 that is between the opposing side faces 74,76 of the cap 16.
The shape of the remaining faces of wall surface 11 can vary but preferably, the first side 70 maintains a curve or arcuate shape to limit accumulation of snow or rain. The perimeter of wall surface 11 shown in
While the exemplary embodiments have been described herein, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments. The invention is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims, and scope of the claims is to be accorded an interpretation that encompasses all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61901779 | Nov 2013 | US |