No cross reference is made to other applications.
No Federal Government support was received in the development of this Invention.
No sequence listing, table, or computer program is attached or accompanies this application.
This Invention relates generally to bathing area fittings connecting to pipes, and more particularly to drainage of showers fitted with a tile pan.
A shower drain fitting refers to an assembly of parts that are attached to a hole or holes in a shower pan to effect attachment to drainage piping leading away from the shower and to a sewer or other drainage destination. A shower pan can be a pre-manufactured dish perforated by a drainage hole, or a tile pan consisting of an assembly of liners, surface treatments, packing and other materials that function to present a waterproof shower floor surface that is appropriately sloped to direct drainage water from the shower floor to the drainage hole. The Invention in this application is designed to be installed in tile pans. A shower drain can be a point drain consisting of a simple appurtenance to a drain pipe end, said appurtenance which attaches to the drainage hole in the shower floor, or a linear drain, commonly consisting of a box with an upper grate and containing a hole in the base of the box again attached to a drain pipe end, or a polygonal drain, commonly consisting of a polygonal box with an upper grate and containing a hole in the base of the box again attached to a drain pipe end. Linear and polygonal drains are also called perimeter drains in that an area of the floor space is bounded by such drains in concert with vertical barriers to force shower water to egress down the drain pipe serving the shower space. Said vertical barriers may be walls or built up, sloped portion of the tiled floor. A grate refers to the topmost horizontal portion of a drain through or around which water egresses the shower floor and finds ingress into the drainage fitting. A grate may be a perforated horizontal surface or a support for tiles incorporating a means for ingress of water into the drain. The shower floor refers generally to the surface upon which the shower user stands, the sub-floor to the undermost wood deck comprising a horizontal sheet of plywood supported by joists, a membrane refers to an water resistant flexible sheet upon which or under which sloping support material is applied. The upper surface of the floor is finished with a flooring material such as tile. Other layers of adhesive or sealant occur in a variety of arrangements. A shoe refers to a drainage part sealed beneath the drainage hole in the shower pan, the shoe itself presenting an upper flanged pipe concentric with the drainage hole, said flanged pipe leading to one or more egresses decorated with hubs to which drainage pipe is attached. Unique to this Invention is a new concept, the drain surface floor, which consists of the flat surface beneath the grates, surrounding the two or more point drains, and bounded by built up portions of the shower floor sloped to drain to this drain surface floor and any walls of the shower cubical itself. The drain surface floor provides a boxlike receptacle for drainage of shower water beneath the grates, without having to install a box. It can be surfaced with any water resistant layering assembly but, since it is largely obscured by the overlying grates, it can be more simply sealed than the decorative tile surface above.
In this Invention called the bridge drain, the simplicity and economy of installation of the point drain compared with box drains is employed by providing point drains supporting an said grate using bridge engineering components including the supports, cantilevers attached to the supports, and decks running between the extremes of the two cantilevers to form a bridge. Said grate can be supported to said deck using a plurality of attachment methods.
Through the provision of two supports, a linear drain can be provided without the expense and difficulty of installation of an underlying box. Further, a plurality of linear drains can be supported from one support, enabling a range of polygonal linear drains and corners to be achieved. Further, without end of a linear drain box abutting a wall, installation of a bridge drain will allow for a gap between the wall and the grate that is unobstructed down to the drain surface floor. Sloping of the drain surface floor beneath the grate is also less critical since the drainage water will flow out one drain or the other if there is a slight departure from the horizontal in the drain surface floor beneath the grate, providing the drainage surface floor is at least planar. Accordingly the Invention described in this application is important to provide for new flexibility and economy in the installation of perimeter drains in a shower space.
Accordingly, it is an objection of this invention to at least partially overcome some of the disadvantages of the prior art.
The Invention, a bridge drain as described in this application is a drainage fitting attached to one or more drain holes in said shower pan, comprising a drainage shoe sealed to the underside of said subfloor, a flanged externally threaded pipe threading through the shower pan drainage hole and threading directly into the internal threads of the underlying drainage shoe. The upper portion of said flanged externally threaded pipe comprises a round pipe perforated for drainage from the drain surface floor, said round pipe also providing support for one or more cantilevers. The distal ends of said cantilevers are decorated with attachment devices to support a complementary deck between said cantilevers. Just as a bridge in transport may require more than one support to span a given length, a plurality of supports may support a plurality of decks in either collinear or polygonal fashion. Any polygon of more than four sides composed of bridge drains on all sides may be constructed, and the polygon need not be regular. Partial polygonal constructions may work in concert with other vertical barriers such as walls in a similar fashion hitherto unobtainable with box drains.
In the drawings, which illustrate embodiments of the invention:
The Invention described in this application is novel drain fitting for a plurality of the water fixtures known as shower pans. Three bridge drains are illustrated in
In
The bridge drain is shown in front view in
The isometric drawing in
The following Claims are made about the bridge drain Invention described in this application for use in draining water drained from a bathing area surface: